Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 29 Jul 1949, p. 4

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Mr. and Mrs. Michael Boshart and son William attended the wedding of their son and brother Eldon to Mrs. Doromanahmer, deughter of Mr. and . Joseph Diebold, Kitchener. The marriage was solemnized Saturday mornâ€" ing in St. Joseph‘s R.C. Church, Kitchener, with Mrs. Fred Arnold Mir. Herbert Herrgott of Toronâ€" . spent a few days at the home ent Sunday with Me€H a70°°C w and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Aen Snvder and {amily in choctth etrsspondent and Mrs. George Squire and ; spent Sunday at Gordon ean‘s Stratford. illiam Wiltord and son ith Mr. and Mrs. Alfred in Maryborough on Sunâ€" with The "cut in" driver is a menace to life and nreperty. PLAY FAIRâ€"PLAY SAFE. Follow the road lines laid out T SEmca io ooeionans ee television equipment to enable its central office to check records stored 285 miles away. Yale University has, for two years been advertising to find apâ€" plications for _ its $420â€"aâ€"year "Leavenworth Scholarship‘ open to men with the surname of Leaâ€" venworth m..dn-nd..dn.â€"flnhllyolkcvhgm.‘ol.o A London bank has installed tor your guidance: PUYIEISr The pen itself is built from | chicken wire and cedar posts, | which Harold Harnock, the youu‘ farmer on whose land the birds| are quartered, allowed the Field‘ Committee to cut from his bush. The pen is located under the pro-L tecting shade of several large trees and a big black and tan hound is tied to his kennel right at the corner of the pen, so there is little chance of losing any of these birds to Mr. Fox or Mr. Skunk. All in all in the setâ€"up would take a lot of improving on and the boys are to be congratuâ€" lated on taking the first really big step on our conservation program. | * L L * * l ‘_ Waterloo sportsmen lost one of ,â€" the oldest members of the fraterâ€"|. nity in the death of F. G. Hughes, for many years a dentist |in Waterloo. For all of his eighty j ‘ {ears. Mr. Hughes was still keenâ€"| |ly interested in fishing and the conservation that goes with it. The best we can wish for you| Doc is that, if there is an after‘ life, that there is a good trout | stream waiting for you to swing| a rod over it. We know too, havâ€"| ing had the pleasure of knowing | you, that those men who have‘ gone fishing with you in the past, | will carry your memory with | them on future fishing trips. | least it does for us. We spent most 1. of last Saturday on a stream, but ¢ the trout pretty well ignored us 1 until almost seven in the evenâ€"| ing. Even then we couldn‘t do |: anything right and while we had a fair number of good trout rise to | our dry fly, we managed to hang onto so few that we did not even have the pleasure of taking the hook out of them and putting them back to grow bigger. Sometimes I think these dogâ€" | gone fish are a lot smarter than we give them credit for. There | was one good sized trout that I rose on nearly every fly in the book and at three different times during the day. This fish was loâ€" cated in a heavy run of fast waâ€" ter which was difficult to throw a fly on without drag. If there was drag on the fly the first time it went over him, he wouldn‘t even rise, but if you could get the fly over him without there being any actual drag then he would come‘ up and admire the fly before goâ€" ing back to sit down and await your next effort. After out third try we gave it up for a bad job, 1but mentall{ reserved the right to come back again and see if â€"we \couldn't convince him that our flies were the real McCoy. Several of the local boys have been telling us tha® they have been getting real good catches of pickerel while they have been away on holidays. The only part they neglected to tell us was where they got them. Seems that all modern fishermen are getting a little smarter and it is not only the trout fishermen that tell whoppers when they are asked ! where they got there last catch. ‘Trout fishing continues poor, at i tinues poor, at ma The men‘s section of the Waâ€" terloo Reéreation Softball League r, at |completed their schedule_ last most | Thursday night with Cedar Snack , but | Bar finally edging out Sunshine d us |for the top spot in the loop standâ€" venâ€"|ing. The closely contested race t do |saw â€" Evangelical Church _ and : had | Ray‘s Butcher Boys pom;ll.etae th‘(: Manim m oi Ree en e ue playâ€"off picture, gaining third and fourth places respectively. Harâ€" mony Lunch ended up fifth, one game behind Ray‘s Boys while De Luxe Laâ€"zâ€"boys finished last. Playâ€"offs will start the second week of August with Cedar Bar taking on Ray‘s Boys and Sunâ€" shine meeting Evangelical Church. Both series will be twoâ€"gamesâ€" outâ€"ofâ€"three affairs. Waterloo Rod and Gun Club Get 70 Pheasants from Department Galley‘s Gals continue to doâ€" minate the ladies‘ section of the softball league, winning all seven of their starts so far. The rest of the teams are evenly balanced with Ray‘s Butcher Girls, Forâ€" ssyth's, Dominion Life, Cedar nack Bar and Seagram‘s followâ€" ing in that order. Most of the clubs are idle this week due to the \houday period but full play will be resumed the second week of August Last week the Waterloo Rod and Gun Club completed the first big step in its conservation program. Through the efforts of Bill Meyer and his Field Committee, 70 young pheasants were obtained from‘ the Deâ€" partment of Games and Fisheries for future release in local townships. Photo at left shows Mr. Meyer, Fred Merner, game overseer for this district, and John Neuman of the Dept. of Lands and Forvests examining d Amazing results are being acâ€" ‘complished at the Silver Lake swimming area, where Miss Marâ€" | ion Coleman, instruc]}\ress, has the ‘{oungsters learning how to swim. \Large groups are taking the lesâ€" | sons and at the present time seven youngsters, none of them knowing ‘how to swim three weeks ago, .V‘;l;.it:‘élc;; h;\./-e"ar(;p]iéd five tilts ~ #HB W AaATERLOO (Ontacio) BP S 4O ie oifi ol ie e "hn"it-b-utihlhllm?ldon'thnmunnybrlgb‘l': AND RECREATION NOTES By "J1M" LAFE â€" Aâ€"DAY of the Waâ€" have learned how to navigate unâ€" ball League|der their own steam and can now redule â€"last|lay claim to being able to swim. | Cedar Snack «‘ * * * * | it Sunshine| Another singâ€"song will be held : loop standâ€"| at the band shell in Waterloo itested race| Park this Sunday evening at nine hurch andlo'clock with the featured number omplete the|being the appearance of the Nick ng third and‘Antonelli Metronome Accordion ively. Harâ€"|Band of Guelph. The usual acts, ip fifth, onelcommumty singing and moving ys while De, pictures will also be included on ed last. p l the program. 2 SNOO U Sm Cenemeenpaned lined up for the youngsters on the playgrounds this coming week. Raffia work will be featured in the craft end of the menu, while the â€"travelling library, checker tournaments, _ chinese checker tournaments and picnics are all included Conestogo : Rev. S. J. Wittig of Hanover, was a recent visitor with Rev. H | Brose, at the parsonage. t Mrs. Clara Beisel and the" Misses Clara Herrman and Olive| Stroh of Elmira were midweek| visitors at the home of Mr. and ; Mrs. Walter Stroh. j Mr. August Schierholtz of La| Salle, IIL., and his mother, Mrs.\ Catharine Schierholtz of Elmira | were also recent visitors at the | Walter Stroh home. | Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Jonas left last weekâ€"end to visit at the latâ€"| ter‘s parental home in central | Saskatchewan for some time. \ Quite a number of farmers have finished the cutting of the earliest harvest on record. The crop in general is ve? short and is exâ€" pected to yiel far below the avâ€" erage. Present prospects are good for a heavy second crop of hay. Mr. and Mrs. Herb Eluehn had las guest Mrs. Mason of Toronto, |for the past week. | ‘The many friends of Mr. Oscar Another full program h.a.s be‘e_n By Noah Stroh (Chronicle Correspondent) CHRONICLE® Sntae‘ Stroh are flleased to learn he con: tinues making good progress to ward recovery from his recen operation Easte Mrs. T. Shoemaker of Trenton, NJ., was visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lorenz Haas over Sunday. Messrs. Arthur Kirch and Harâ€" old MacCandless were recent business visitors in the northern counties. The Eichwald family who have been loccoted at a farm home near here since their arrival from overâ€" seas and have now set up their BARRoON‘s MEN‘S WEAR StOCk' : Reducing Men‘s Dress Shirts Men‘s Sport Shirts Fine cotton â€" Special 1.29 Regular 4.25 â€" Special 1.95 Regular 5.95 â€" Special 3.50 Men‘s "T" Shirts the birds as they were released from the crates into the large pen. The pen, made of chicken wire and fence posts by Bill Meyer and his commitâ€" tee, is excellent for holding pheasants in. Photo at right shows Harold Harnock, owner of the farm where the pheasants are located, and his fatherâ€"inâ€"law, George Fisher of Preston. . 34 KING ST. SOUTH â€" â€" WATERLOO Washable. Long sleeves Fine Broadcloth Sometimes that paint job done at home does not prove as satisâ€" factory as was to be expected And assuming the surface to be painted was well prepared, the reason is generally because the paint was not properly mixed. Paint is a complex material consisting of oil, pigment, dryer and thinner. The proportions of each in any can of paint is a matâ€" ter of careful technical measureâ€" \ment. so that the resulting paint job can do a complete job of proâ€" tection and beautification. Beâ€" ALL SWIM TRUNKS 1 REDUCED ... STRIPED PATTERN _ â€" All Wool TROPICALS â€" GABARDINES _ _ â€" _ _â€" All Wool Cardigans Yellow only 7 95 Special 3.95 MEN‘S TROUSERS of Games and Fisheries ___ _Men‘s Sport Jackets the| ‘The Canadian Fisher, someâ€" nalihmcs called the Pennant or the ,yerllBiack Cat, is a furâ€"bearing memâ€" " of | ber of the weasel family, and is latâ€" the largest of the North American *E Martens. For its size, it is the aint : 4 )ro_‘b\\tll(‘bl and must deadly of our Beâ€"‘ furâ€"bearers. Reg. up !o 29.50. Special â€" â€" 15.00 cause of their different densities, Wail these materials tend to sepaâ€" rate when left standing, and the ‘mixture becomes good â€" paint again only after they are comâ€" letely pletely using Stirring is the most common way of blending the materials, but it must be thorough untl all the pigment, which settles at the bottom of the can, is mixed in withâ€"the liquids. It is not suffiâ€" cient to stir the paint only before starting the job, it should be mixed from time to time as the painting is done Friday, July blended together before 4.95 7.95

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