Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 19 Feb 1959, p. 7

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2 ,4. , Te aiee s e N 2C ‘\,t. ow I T ‘“"‘_ ie s a i k s Thursday, February 19, 19569 %» ANSWER: Perhaps we should first define investment, which is the employment of money. Employed money, just as an employed person, usually earns income. Money saved up in a maitress is not employed monâ€" ey. Money deposited in a bank savings account is employed, as is money invested in investment securities. QUESTION: What is an inâ€" vestment security? An Investment security, l broadly speaking, is any medâ€" ium in which money is emâ€" ploved with the assumption that either now or in the future it will earn income or increase in value. We usually refer to| bonds, debentures and invest-i ment grade stocks as investâ€"‘ ment securities. : & BIf OF WHIMSEY Filbert didn‘t feel thirsty all sudden. u«...m;cmhm-nh‘-;-‘* lmside the bar it was diin and cool with legs, th Ui« mlnunberdammuh.onm.)ztthmm- bert knew the intimate Rabits of the drinking set, because to him it was a rare adventureentering a bar. inz his daily poon hour constitnutional i was just that he hadn‘t realized he was quite so thirsty, ho reasoned, until he saw the sign outside the bar that adveriised: "For the non ateohol drinker â€" Kee Cuold Buttermilk." He knew then Oh he‘d tried a weak Gin Collins one summer several years ago in an adventurepacked moment, but the dirty looks he‘d received when he fell into a foodâ€"loaded table cured bim of booring right then and there. Filbert found a space at the bar, bellied up and orderâ€" ed a cold buttermilk. When it arrived he squeezed his hands around it to get the feel of its coolness, then cocked ene foot on the bar rail, tossed back a large swallow, and looking. Something like Alan Ladd, he dreamed. The trouble started at a table almost directly behind him. He could see it in the mirror. A tough looking, sharply dressed character who reminded him somewhat of Humâ€" phrey Bogart, suddenly leaned across the table and belted his female partner elean out of her chair. When the third party at the table, a husky young college type stood up to confront the Bogart menace, he was immediately doubled up with a short left delivered smack in his middle by the Filbert had had enough. Tirning slowly from the bar and hitching his belt up with the thumb nuckles of both hands, he uncoiled his streamlirned, sixfootthreeâ€"inch frame and in three steps was in front of the stillâ€"seated thug. With an instinct born of a hundred roughâ€"andâ€"tumble back alley brawls, and without seeming to move his Adonis like body, Filbert eased his head a fraction to one side, caught the lunging thug in his Triple Deltoid Sleeper Hold he‘d initially tried out on the sinceâ€"deceased gorilla King Kong, and with a dextrous flip, shot the completely paralyâ€" zed attacker through the swinging doors onto the sidewalk. "Stand up junior," Filbert breathed slowly through taut lips as his steely gaze bored into the eyes of the seated man. *"Stand up or I‘ll lift you." With an animalâ€"like snarl the burly thusy sprang straight from the chair, teeth bared and cords of anger standing out on his bullâ€"like neck, a wicked, razor sharp stiletio apâ€" pearinz as if by magic in his right hand, the point aimed directly at Filbert‘s exposed throat. "‘Nothing. Nothing at all ma‘am. Anytime," smiled Filâ€" bert as he turned back to the bar for another double Scotch and a further look at his handsome profile in the mirror. "Oh thank you sir. Thank you. You saved my life," the bemfiful doll said, nursing her bleeding lips. "Wake up buddy," said the bartender, "your butterâ€" milk‘s getting sour." He looked almost ethereal in the dim, reflected light, “‘}Y!xat now?" he mused as he felt someone shaking his so thirsiy he couldn‘t wa"t further without a cold QUESTION set date in the future, and in the meantime to pay interest at a fixed rate at regular inâ€" tervals. A stock on the other hand, is the evidence of a parâ€" tial ownership in a company. Bonds are issued by governâ€" ments, corporations and reliâ€" gious orders, while stocks are issued only by limited companâ€" 1es. The 1958 strike of nickel wdrkers resulted in the loss of jfist under 1,000,000 manâ€"days of work; the Hamilton steel strike cost 500,000 manâ€"days of work. Record loss of work in Canada was 1,225,000 manâ€"days in an Alberta coal miners strike in 1924. im 49 @9 4 i z_ u_ _1 # i & KMLKC s 45 § <a o *Tb 2: | & ’ \: 4 t . :..:;' â€"â€" PM n €5 e l/ enquiries about ecoins and pap er money from dozens of read ers of this Newspaper since our have not had a chance to ex this head 1986 ‘Dot‘ Alerander Watt. ANA., CNA. We have been swamped with COIN CRAZY! aVCWEpaDCL DNRUE iBE 6 a week ago under e â€" FM @ 1 ..,.\» Lagy had a i wfi‘sgu € m“ Canadian cent. Weu rionte , 9# rers a Ar6ge ES _ interiors LTp. CUSTOM DRAPES 119 KING ST. S. Waterloo SH 3â€"5283 E&7 «] II wlort [E C ([P i tfl.""lp % [ PPE [ Sfly Wnn 8 i hay GINGER Aut al people had old large Cana@| _ _ ____ _ _‘ __â€"___ _ °_ ian cents and early Tokens that (Continued on Page 8 & 9) 102 EYES EXAMINED B PTOmETRIST, gto’%@ \ 4o we hadâ€"referred to, and as U# is not possible to value a coin over the telephone without seeo

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