Playgrounds The on tie continues of the your Central, Alexandra anc m All three & picnics today morrow will see the . The on tife Waterloo Wflm&u to hold the of the youngsters at Central, Alexandra and St. Louis m. All three groups are picnics today while toâ€" morrow will see the fudging of ml‘:nmdc from ovilcloth by the this past week. Next week will be another busy one with feltwork holding sway in crafts classes. The travelling library will make its weekly apâ€" pearance on Monday afternoon while trips to Schneider‘s plant and Weston‘s bakery will take place on Tuud:a.' A doll show will be held on ednesdaly with an lncerphÂ¥pound softball game between Alexandra and Central on Thursday. St. Louis will hold ;‘ctoquet tournament on Thursâ€" y. Mme o # 0# e e o+ The ladies‘ section of the softâ€" fball loop is runnin& along smoothâ€" ‘The final standing of the men‘s\ly with Galley‘s Gals on top by section in the Waterloo Recreaâ€")virtue of five wins in as many wion Softball League will,not be games. Ray‘s Butcher Girls hold 1%% Erb St. West * AUTO * TELEYVISION * HOME â€" AM â€" FM y a ‘ 24 r& A '\\ Te AND RECREATION NOTES By "JIM" New Offering It is Easy to Buy Bonds by Mail You merely telephone or write to let us know how much you wish to apply for and whether you wish to send us your cheque or wish us to send your bonds to your bank for payment. Then we send you a statement showing the amount to be paid. If you send us your cheque for the amount shown, we send your securities to you by registered and insured mail. If you prefer, we send them to your bank and you pay for them there. Inquiries Invited Buy Bonds v | For Stability and Safety MARRISON & COMPANY LIMITED, 66 King Streat West, Toronto 1, Ontario. HARRISON & COMPANY Without the slightest obligation on my part, please mail me particulars No. 53 Within a few days we will be making an attractive offering of Mrst Mortgage bonds having the following features: o 5/2% interest per year payoble June 1st and December 1st. © For a great mony years this business has been earning several times the interest on the new bonds, in fact, for more than the last twenty, even through the "depression years", this business unfailingly earmed more than enough to pay this interest. ® These bonds are secured by a First Mortgage on all present and future land, buildings, plant and equipment. © Each $1,000 bond is secured by over $2,000 of assets. @ Sinking Fund requires the company to buy in enough bonds each year to payâ€"them all off by maturity. _ â€" @ No other bonds can be issued to rank with or ahead of these bonds. @ These bonds are legal for investment by Canadian Life Insurance companies. ® A bonus of Common shares is given at the rate of 20 shares per $1,000 bond. Bonds with bonus are also available in $500 denominations. * @ Bonus shares provide opportunity for additional income and profit through appreciation. When your bonds are paid off, you still retain your bonus shares unless you have already realized a profit by selling these. This offering will be muiled to our regular clients and although most of these bonds will be taken up by them, we would like to hear from others who would like to receive a larger return than they are now receiving. Without the slightest obligation on your part, we will be pleased to send particulars of this very attractive offering, if you will fill out and mail the coupon betow. doll show 66 KING‘STRBBT"WEST, TORONTO 1, CANADA TELEPHONE: WAverley 1891 H. W. MacADAMS Harrison & Company Limited, Representative A First Mortgage bond is a secured contract to assure you a definite income each year and the return of your money in a definite number of years at maturity or earlier by operation of the sinking fund. . esd is coiLtht 4ol Coonigh: "ai‘sion of Jada Dahmer, Bruce Lit. q‘?:terlo& ‘l;ï¬ 0:,,:; l{.;», willer‘s Tigers have a 5â€"2 record y i and lead the loop. Butcher Boys and CEd:r smed:rl.llnohun"il{‘aw&av- have won g:r ::1111 qlas)xm [ :;:‘ f:cc |four out of seven while Don Beckâ€" ie n m Post onl hok wio‘e aap aiare 90 it Rog: Boys lost to DeLuxe on three tilts in eight starts. othy Brodhaecker, Mildred Pauli; | * % & (% % Tuesday past, they will need a| w‘mhher; b‘gr usuh re themselves of“ Swimming. Pool a playo th. > |\ Inflated tire tubes and water The clubs have agreed t hold balls are not the best things in the piay&r picturé overâ€"unt!l the |the world to give nonâ€"swimmers second weefk 81' Aulg.u.lt whgrlxl tL\: and ‘begignlers. according to Miss majority o e ers wi Mariogp Coleman, swimming inâ€" back from their gol{days. Plans |structress for the Waterloo Reâ€" ‘?“ for the first mndh tognh phc; cl:‘r‘ekltion (é})nunliuiorl\D ‘kl %%ver eams to meet with the secon e in aterloo Park. ese and third place teams meeting ln!blown-uf articles give parents a the other series. The winners will |"sense of false security", but they then meet in the finals. J:re verg ;fa\sfl{ turned over and ‘have a habit 0 their comâ€" * * * * * _ |panions off by n ermscives The clubs have agreed t« hold the piayélr picture overâ€"until the second week of Auï¬un when the majority of the K yers will be back from their holidays. Plans call for the first and fourth place teams to meet with the second and third place teams meeting in the other series. The winners will then meet in the finals. MAiL THIS COUPON TODAY The Peeâ€"weasection of the Waâ€" terloo Recreation Baseball League is developing into a closely batâ€" tled threeâ€"team race. l’hyéslau their games in the morning at Waâ€" terloo Park under the superviâ€" sion of Jada Dahmer, Bruce Litâ€" willer‘s Tigers have a 5â€"2 record in seven games and lead the loop. John Hause‘s Braves have won four out of seven while Don Beckâ€" ner‘s White Sox have copped three tilts in eight starts. A list of "do‘s and don‘ts" listed by Miss Coleman will be found here, most of them instructions given by the instructress to her pupils at Silver Lake. At the present time there are approximâ€" ately 60 girls and 20 boys along with a small adult class, taking instructions. There are instrucâ€" tion periods each weekâ€"day morâ€" ‘nlngl but Saturday, with the firls holding sway from 10 until 11 a.m., while the boys‘ session is from 11 until 12 noon. There is still room for more pupils and Phns are underway to have ‘kickboards" available for beginâ€" ‘ners along with different colored bathing caps to denote different classes of swimmers. A public adâ€" dress system will also be erected this week to aid in lifeguard work. Don‘t swim alone. Do swim with a buddy always. Don‘t dive into strange waters indiscriminately. _ . . _ Do make sure there is enough depth and no holes or hidden obâ€" stacles. swim pai*allel' to the shore. Pssls Gaw 12 cssb saw Don‘t try to teach some one shorter than yourself by taking them into water up to your neck. Do help him in his own depth. Don‘t give nonâ€"swimmers or beâ€" binners tire tubes or water balls to play with. _ â€" ty Don‘t overestimate your abiliâ€" l?o stay in your own depth and Do try to arrange for them to ‘*_~~ ~ 8E W ! The second singâ€"song of the season staged by the Waterloo Recreation Commission will be held this Sunday at Waterloo Park starting at nine o‘clock it has been announced by Recreaâ€" tion Director Jim McCormick. Over 2,000 persons watched the Ifirst effort two weeks ago and it is planned to have an even better program for this Sunday. learn to swim properly. Don‘t swim w’hxf e overt immediately after eating _ Do take time to cool offâ€"and allow 1% to 2 hours after a meal. â€" Talent is still wanted for the shows whichâ€" is comprised of community singing, six or seven acts of variety entertainment, muâ€" sic by a fiveâ€"piece band and two or three comic "shorts" or carâ€" toons. Any person wanting to appear on the show should contact Jim McCormick at 2â€"3240 immediately as rehearsal for this week‘s show is being held tonight at the Waâ€" terloo Market Community Hall. signed I guess there are people with less courage than one who writes to a newspaper and is afraid to sign his name to the criticism he has to express, but personally we doubt it. This particular individual went to all the trouble to mark up one of the Chronicle supplements and mail it in to us with a notation across the top of his column to the effect that "the conservation club members were interested in conservation until they got out and then were our bigï¬est game hogs. . . that they sacrificed sleep and everything else including Sunday church worship to get out and kill off our game population. He ended his tirade by wanting to know how many times "Smith had been out fishing this year and how many fish had he caught?" We‘ll answer his last (ï¬:estion first by simply saying that it‘s none of his dâ€" business how maâ€" ny times we have been out, and add that we have caught lots of fish and killed mighty few of them. As for the club members being game hogs. . . there is ten times more the possibility my friend, that you are a religious hypocrite, than that these men are game" hogsâ€"otherwiseâ€"why criâ€" ticize what they do on Sunday. As one of the boys said when we showed them your little note, "that bird probably carries a biâ€" 721 # 0 wper canumes CARLING‘S ‘ *"The old belt shrinking again, dear?" I‘m almost ashamed to write this arâ€" ticle, if for no other reason than that I swore I would never quote from any inforâ€" mation sent in to me and not By Herb Smith LAFF â€" A â€" DAY Tly. overheated or Canada‘s national animal, the beaver, is one of nature‘s most energatic conservationists. The dams they build heip to held back the rushing waters in the spring, storing them up for the dry summer months. Beavers and the dams they bulld should never be molested by vnauthorixed persons. Copr. 1949, King Festurm Syadicate, fac., World sights reserved. (ostast) _ CHRONICLE ble under his arn know what‘s inside know what‘s inside it." No one could have any more respect for a "good" church man than we have, even if we are t:oor attenders. â€" Unfortunately ere are always a few that feel they must convert ‘"all the poor heaâ€" thens who take pleasure out of going fishing on a Sunday." This man is only one of several who has less courage than a field mouse, but who wanted to critiâ€" cize anrway, May we point out again: If you want to criticizeâ€" by all means do soâ€"we don‘t mind it in the leastâ€"but at least be man enough to sign your criâ€" ticism. Most of the discussion centred around the flheasants which will be arriving this week, and also the coming crow shoot. Unfortunateâ€"| ly, many of the executive were; away on holidays or businm.} Your president is sorry as heck| fellows, but we had a date with some trout that just wouldn‘t keep. After all, even newspaperâ€"; men have to have a holiday once( in a while, even if a lot of you; th‘i&k we have a "soft" job to start with. f Turnout to the meeting held this month of the Waterloo Rod and Gun Club was light, but not as small as was expected. Conâ€" sidering that a lot of the members are away on holidays, the meeting was not too badly attended. _ We will promise though to be at the next meeting, regardless of what happens. In the meantime, if you are called on to help on one of the various committees, don‘t refuse. Remember, we are a small on purpose so that all memâ€" bers will have a chance to particiâ€" pate in the activities. _ were away on holidays to talk to‘ members of several of the clubs similar to our own, but located ; in the eastern part of the proâ€" vince. All of these clubs are going | in for the raising and liberating | pheasants in a big way, so there, ought to be good shoo&ng in seyâ€"| ?;f]l different districts this coming | had anything but praise for the efforts put forth b{Q the Departâ€" ment of Lands and Forests in tryâ€" ing to make this grand game bird more plentiful. Talking to one of the farmers near Hayden, we are told that the local conservation club will be reâ€" leasing several hundred fullâ€" grown pheasants this fall, but that he fieh% t&\e{l sli:ould :nold drives and kill off the heavy fox poj â€" tion before thei\lr release any m He says that he doesn‘t see any sense in releasing these birds just to feed a bunch of hungry fox. We Have a golden opportunity in this district to also do someâ€" thing, for there is plenty of excelâ€" lent cover for pheasants. . He may have something at that, and it may be an idea to work something of the kind here. Cerâ€" tainly there are plenty of fox in this district and they should be thinned out before the birds are We were fortunate while we None of the men we talked to club and it is «» YOURS 10 ENJOY â€" YQUL% 10 PR91TL8T WE‘VE CONSTRUCTED THIS PAM _ WITH A LONG GENTLE BACKâ€"SLOPE §0 THE FLOOD WATER WILL NOT ~_ UNDERMINE UT _______ooosr l his arm and doesn‘t kept Conestogo : when we drove over to the Speed m“wï¬nl.ug:.-v- P-fll-ullbheh on keep dgu-,u'u.' & any it sure )wuahctdnbtdunm- ing them. Have you tried it? lflmn'oh-nhldmak:‘. time was while we were on holiâ€" days, and went brown trout fishâ€" ing with a chap that believed all f#y fishermen were liars and caught their fish on worms when no one was lookine was when he came over to u:m before we left for home and raise about a dozen more, while the bait fisherman didn‘t get a very sheepishly if we would mind tieing him up a few of the flies we had been using. We sure will The engagement is announced of Miss Esther Martin, oldest daughter of Mrs. William Martin Mr. and Mrs. Titus Hallman and son Maynard of Rochester, N.Y., Mrs. Alma Bergman and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Morrow of Kitchener, were recent visitors at the home of Mrs. Hallman‘s brother. Mr. Charles R. Koch and Mrs. Koch. and the late M‘ Martin, to Mr. Douglas Waugh, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Waugh of RR. 3, Kitchener. The man-hse to take r(hce in St. Joseph‘s R.C. Church, itchener, August 6th at 9 a.m. Mr. Oscar Stroh is a patient in Kâ€"W Hospital, where he underâ€" went a critical operation early last week. He is reported to be making satisfactory> progress toâ€" wards recovery. _ _ _ _ C The best part of the whole deal The Herb Gies and Waiter By Noab Strob iChronicle Correspondent) %@ whinke you yma Comfort is the word for Canadian National travel. Whether you ride in coach or parlor car, you enjoy roomy armchair ease as the miles speed smoothly by. The hours pass swiftly, perhaps in interesting + conversation, in reading, letterâ€"writing â€" or in just relaxing. Stretch your legs when so minded, by a stroll to the smoking compartment or dining car. Canadian National service ensures your every comfort. You arrive relaxed and refreshed â€" when you go Canadian National, For dependable allâ€"weather service, travel by train. day afternoon. Burial tollowed in St. James Lutheran Church Ceâ€" meu&uln St. Jacobs. The late Mr. tzke was a fOÂ¥fher Conâ€" estogo boy and local friends reâ€" gret his early passing. lr‘u:dï¬.uerbuudm were business visitors in Hamilton Tuesday of last week. _ Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Dahmer and sons Lyle and Neil were Sunâ€" Mr. and Mrs. Byron Schwartz have returned from a week‘s comâ€" bined business and pleasure trip to Montreal and other eastern z_vcul local youths were ul-; teuding the Lutheran Boys‘ Camp | at Edgewood Park during the| Camp term. A lewcg‘irls left to attend the Girls‘ mp bemg/ conducted at the Park. Mrs. John Hoyt is spending a few weeks with friends in Chicaâ€" go. . 20000 _ 80. CARLING‘S Tat Cagline srEwEkits limitee witsa100, entiaie en s 2M â€" Kitchener OVER 25 YEARS OF SERVICE | Eyestrain | OPTOMETRIST 102 King W. Phon Causes Headaches day visitors with rélatives in the Gowanstown district. Mr. Wm&'ri‘hzol&m muu?cndin.meunca home his son, Oliver and Mrs. family of Kitchener were Sunday Wright ï¬ueua at the home of Mr. and rs. Byron A. Letson. Local relatives and friends have visited Mr. Oscar Stroh at the Kâ€"W Hospital, since the operaâ€" tion early in the past week. _ Mrs. Wm. Becker, Miss Cora Becker and Wm. Becker Jr., of Elmira and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. R. Stroh of the Balsam Grove seeâ€" ton were Sunday visitors at the Stroh home The Community Club is having another dance this Friday evenâ€" ing. These events sponsored by the Club have been well patronâ€" ized in the past. _ 00 Mr. and Mrs. Norman Weber of Stratford were weekâ€"end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Rohr C. F. PRICE Friday, July 22, 1948 Phone 2â€"1936 D4}6