TODAY'S TORONTO, TORONTO By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronte Stock Exchange--Aug. 24 in cents unless marked $. (Quotations »-Odd lot, xd_Ex - dividend, rights, sw--Ex-warrants). INDUSTRIALS n siock Abitibi 150 Alta Dist 100 Alta Dist wis 200 Alta Gas 495 Alg Cen 140 Algoma 110 Alumini 700 145 $26 305 $37 ITU 2% n CSL pr C Bank Com 1% Cdn Brew 50 CBAL A wis 5 Cdn Can A i + Celan Cockshutt Columbia Cel 500 Comb Ent 150 Con Gas 122 Con Gas B 3. Croby vt Dom Elee 225 § 25 D Fndry 100 §$ Dosco 25 Dom Stores 560 $64 Dom Tar 470 Fed Grain 5 Fed Grain Gatineau Gen Baks GMC GP Drill G SWares Goodyr pr Grafton A GL Paper GN Gas Gr Wpg vt Greyhnd Hrdee 1 Imp Invest A 25 Imp Inv 140 p 50 Imp Oil Ind Accep Inland C pr Inland Gas TLNT Pete Kelly DA Kelly wits Labatt Lakeland Lob Co A Lob Co B MacMill B Nor Star A NO NGas Orange Cr Page-Hers Parker Phina Powell R Royal Bank StL, Corp Salada-S Salada wits Sales HighLow a.m. Ch'ge 37% 320 320 320 150 7% 1% 2% 33% 36% 25% Stock Anchor Bailey 8 A Bailey § pr 1000 15 175 800 100 $20% *1--Ex. oo $21 % Bail § 5% pr Basco Britalta C Husky wis Cdn W Charter Oil C West Pete Cree wis 58 Dev-Pal Eastwd A Kroy Midcon Nat Pete Pac Pete Permo pr Phillips Place Prove Gas Quonte Royalite Royalite pr Stanwell Sub Oil Tidal Un Oils Wayne Wesburne Ww Cdn OG W Dtcalta Curb Dalhousie 130 Net +8 Abacus Am-Larder Arcadia Aumaque arnat Base Metals 1 2 Bicroft Bouzan Buffad Camp Chib C Dyno Cdn NW Can-Erin Cent Pat Cheskirk Chester seh Will CG Cc Halliwell C_ Marcus Con MS C Morrison C Mosher Con Nichol C Northland C Regcourt Conwest Cop Corp Cop-Man 500 23633 500 2000 45900 500 200 2000 1000 11 1000 700 2 Gold Eag Greyhk Gunnar wts Hollinger Int Nickel Int Ran frish Cop Iso Uran Jacobus Joliet Kerr Add Kilembe Jahrador Macfie MacLeod Madsen Magnet Malartie Marcon Maritime Martin Matach McKen McMar McWat Merrill Milliken Minda Nealon New Alger New Ath New Bid N Dicken New Hosco N Kelore WEEKEND FATALITIES Sales High Low 11 » Stock Fewluma N Man N Mylama Nickel MS Noranda N Goldert N Rank N Cldstrm 13 800 id 2] 2 15 5300 6500 MONTREAL STOCKS Stock Waterma 4866 800 If 1000 N Cidstm rt 3275 Que Lal Q Metal Qunston Quemont Radiore Realm San Ant Sheoritt Starratt Steep R Sullivan Sylvamte Teck-H Tombill Ult:Shaw Un Keno Upp Can Ventures War Harg Yale Lead Sales to 11 a MONT REAL By THE 1000 Young HG 2000 Westburne 4 Sales to 11:30 a.m. Industrials 16,2003 Mi nes 127,400 400. CANADIAN PRESS U Prin Pro Mn mn Russ Magazine 'Hosts West TREES KNOCKED DOWN THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, August 24, 1959 J 11:30 Net p.m. Ch'ge Sales High Low 25 --5 425 275 425 Big 200 --28 MINES 1000 WINDSOR (CP) -- A violent thunderstorm with winds up to 50 m.p.h. lashed the Detroit- Windsor area Sunday night caus- ing extensive property damage lacross the city. { 'The storm followed an easterly |path up the Detroit River and |then. turned inland about three feet. Thunderstorm Iho Detroit clear the thousands df strandegd cars from: the expressway sys tem which cuts through the heart of the metropolitan area. A golfer and two caddies were struck by lightning as they stood. under an umbrella at the jonable Detroit golf course ing out' the rain, Harold G. Woodruff, 86, of De: troit, was reported in good condi: over a moored ol down trees, ripped off Koos on houses, and carried lawn furniture with it. Worst damage was done to a {building supply company where {a wooden roof on a large; shed was torn off and thrown Streets were flooded across the oe from | downtown. It flipped 'UK. Geography Teacher 'On World Scooter Tour MONTREAL (CP) -- A ruddy- faced London geography beacher|rica in an Arab dhow 1100 | plans to travel across Canada, { {about the subject he teaches. |the United States and South Am- lerica by scooter to learn more Montreal Stock Exchange--Aug. 2 (Quotations in cents unltss marked §. xd Ex (2Odd Mt, rights, xw--Ex- INDUSTRIALS Stock Sale Abitibi Alum Argus Banque CN Bank Mont Bank NS Bell Phone Bowater BA Of BC Power Can Cem Can Iron C Bank Com C Brew N Chem Cen J 1 CL C Int Pow pr CPR C Pet pr Cockshutt Con MS Cdn Textile Dist Seag Dom fndry D Stores D Tar D Text Du Pont Ga"'nean Gen Dynam Hud Bay Imp Inv A Imo Of Ind Accep Int Nickel Interpr PL Iroq Glas pr Jamaica Labatt Loeb M Mass Fer Mass F pr 4% Molson A Molson B Mtl Loco Noranda Page Here Powell R Power Corp Price Br Roe Av Royal Bank $t L Corp Shawin Steel Can Steinbg A Tor-Dom Bk Trans C PL U Steel Walk GE Tellers CANADIAN 1000 42 Abitea Blue Bonnets 400 50 $10% 345% 45% 45% 50 $31 Drownings, Fire Boost Death Toll By THE CANADIAN PRESS Weekend traffic accidents in| Canada claimed at least 48 lives. Twelve drownings and the death of two small sisters in a fire in| Ontario raised the nation's leis-| ure-hour toll to 58. A Canadian Press survey shows Quebec recorded the high- est fatality count with 22 deaths, 17 by traffic mishaps. Five were drowned. Ontario had 25 fatal accidents, | 18 in traffic, five by drowning and the two deaths by fire. British Columbia had deaths, all by traffic The survey includes violent deaths and other fatal accidents) connected with holiday activities son of Dr. and Mrs. Ww. G. man, drowned Friday night Lake of his Kirkland Lake home. Marie-Anne Henri, 4, hit by a car Friday night near her home at Azilda, nine miles northwest of Sudbury. Cecil Harris, 69, of Lakeview near Toronto when struck by a| car as he crossed a highway near {his home Eriday night {FIRE VICTIMS Mary Gault, 8, and her sister srega, 5, daughters of Mr. and in Ber, g-| Thomas East, 73, of La Salle {struck by a car at Windsor Sun- Sesikenika, 20 miles north dar Wallace Leduce, 30, and Wil- liam Bonneville, 32, both of the Port Severn area, when their car crashed near the Georgian Bay |village of Victoria Harbor Sun- |day night. James, Fiachney, 16, of Willow-| dale, a Toronto suburb, killed when a car overturned near Call- {ander early Sunday. | Marcel Lacasse, 34, of Orelans, who was drowned in four feet of water in a cement cistern in the eight Mrs, William Gault when fire de-| basement of his home Sunday. |stroyed their home at Verona, 20| Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hallerud miles north of Kingston, {day night. Joseph Maxwell Satur- Hall, and their son Robert, 26, Chicago, and Sydney James Mills, 35, of 46, of Beacher, Ont., in a two-car col- 'n the period beginniig 6 p.m. North Bay, believed drowned in|lision near Thamesville Satur- local time Friday and ending|[ake Couchiching near Orillia! day iy midnight Sunday. LEVEL CROSSING DEATH The Ontario dead: Mrs. Dorothy Killick, 35, of | Minnow Lake near Sudbury killed when a car in which she | was travelling was struck by al train on a level crossing near her| home Friday night. Tommy 'Bergman, ,_two-year-ol¢ Black Day For Truckers TORONTO (CP) -- A Toronto | trucking firm, which boasted only one accident in three vears, had a black day Saturday when| three trucks were involved in mishaps. A Dalewood Transport truck overturned on a gravel detour at] the Orillia bypass when its cargo of newsprint shifted. Driver Ro- bert Willlami Brown, 33. of Grimsby walked away unhurt but damage was estimated at $4,000. Another Dalewood rig suffered the same fate when 19 tons of newsprint shifted and the vehicle tore out 12 guard rails near Co- balt. Driver Willlam Westaway, 30, of Toronto was pinned behind the steering wheel for an hour before police cut him free with hacksaws. He was uninjured. d| | 1 of the independently Local 354, Canadian Can Work- ers Federated Union, voted over- [signal passing boats. whelmingly early Sunday. Mrs. Sylvia Fisher burg; Mrs, Margaret Bock Winnipeg and Mr. and Mrs Leonard Young of Syracuse, N.Y.| lin a two-car collision 10 miles | least of Tillsonburg Saturday. Mrs. Amelia Kenehan, 82, nit! {by a car in front of her home at Godfrey, near Kingston, {day night John Edward Huck, 18, of Kitchener when the car he was driving crashed near his home. Garry Wilson, 7, of Newmar- {ket, drowned near Port McNicoll on Georgian Bay Sunday. | YOUTH DROWNED Russell Jewison, 16, of Bailie- boro, drowné. Sunday in Hali- burton Lake, about 45 miles north of Peterborough. Robert Patterson Smith, 20, of London, when his car collidded with a truck ou the outskirts of London. of Tillson- an Workers Vote, Retain Status HAMILTON (CP) -- Members - chartered Sunday to retain heir status and turned down a proposal to affiliate either with the United Steelworkers of Amer- ica (C LC) or the International Half an hour later the truck Association of Machinists (CLC). burst into flames. Damage on about $7,000 A third Dalewood truck was in volved in a mino vith collision and Brampton, ployees of Company Local 354 represents 500 em- the American Can here Three other locals at of Satur! 2 Businessmen 'Return Safely OWEN SOUND (CR) {Wiarton businessmen missing {since Thursday on Millar Lake in safe Sunday. George K. Hahn, 47, owner of a Wiarton motel, and Carl Lim- pert, 85, co-owner of the Wiarton Echo, went fishing Thursday in an 18-foot motor boat. The men said the motor ran out of gas off Tobermory at the tip of the Bruce Peninsula. Winds blew them far out into the bay until a shift of wind direction Saturday blew them back. After reaching shore they set out by foot for Highway 6 and had gone about six miles when thev were picked up. Both were | hungry but unharmed by the ex- perience. | Mr. Limpert said they had only [two chocolate bars, two lemons a bag of peanuts during the jn days in the boat. He esti. | mated they drifted about 60 miles {and on three occasions tried. to Record Crowds At Ottawa Fair OTTAWA (CP) -- The Central Oanada Exhibition whirled through its second day Saturday |with a near-record attendance of|Clubs Saturday Simcoe, 83,116, This was the best ever for| McGilly a gravel truck between London|/Chatham and Montreal have the first Saturday of the annual|Neal Gazeley {taken no action on the matter. eight-day event. MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Ted Wheatley, 25, arrived in crossed the Indian Ocean to Af-| "It was a very old sailing craft," Mr. Wheatley said. "I was hired as a mechanic which was a safe job as dhows have no engines." \EXPRESSWAYS CLOSED inches of city, reaching depths of three feet Welch, at some viaducts, in suburban Sion, Tie Suidice, George were Riverside, hundreds of basements| co... ¥ were flooded up to four feet deep. Tom el, hurt, Streets were 1 merged. Selling Your Hole ? PHOTO Co-0P 150 salesmen et your servies. Contact your local realtor, In Detroit, the more than two rainfall swamped the multimillion dollar expressway system, stranding thousands of motorists in water up to four feet in depth. A weather bureau spokesman described the storm as a "100-year rain," Detroit police closed both the Edsel Ford and John C. Lodge) expressways. Tow trucks were worked to wih pot "$50.7 $200.2 ; HOW MUCH 30 £31 10 2 -- Two | the Bruce Peninsula turned up humor | asked - dividend, xr._Ex- warrants) visits | chev Thi azine 11:30 Net s High Low a.m. Ch'ge $37%3% 37% 37% $3315 33% | Western cartoonists to | drawings on the coming exchange r magazine Krokodil has three American and other submit of Soviet Premier Khrush- and President Eisenhower. s is the first time the mag- has asked Western cartoon- | ists to contribute works for pub- un * { lication. | have ously, Cartoons by Westerners appeared in Krokodil previ- but they have been repro- | ductions. Krokodil { man | staffer Yuri Green- said the American cartoon- ists invited are Herbert Block of the Washington Post, Dan Dowl- ing of the New York Herald Trib- {une and Paul Carmack of the | Christian Science Monitor. nard | | been pects { died night The lice © camp Britain's David Low and Ber- Holloway also were invited as were other unnamed Western | European cartoonists. The publication date has pot set but the magazine ex- to publish all the accepted cartoons in the same issue, | Tobacco Worker Dies From Wounds TILLSONBURG identified tobacco harvest worker (CP)--An" un- of knife wounds Sunday in hospital. Police said they were holding a man 'in connection with the stabbing. victim, who carried no identification, was found by po- alled to a tobacco workers' in a gully near this town 35 miles southeast of London. He had several stomach wounds. 91% 3% " $11 330% By 31 10% -] 3% --- Bh" $1034 $21% 5 $37 $25% mos, 923, 3 STOCK MARKET NET EARNINGS THE CANADIAN PRESS Bicroft Uranium Mines Ltd, 6 ended June 30: 1 cents a share, 1959, $942,- (No figures for six months 1958). 160,000, 000 Peasants Mobilized In TOKYO (AP) China says it nearly 60,000,000 peasants to res cue the cracked and dusty earth in nine provinces from the worst | drought in 17 years. Working from dawn te dusk, this work force is reported. to be | digging wells, building reservoirs and dredging canals in an effort {to defeat this new threat to the country's food supply. Coming on the heels of disas-| jtrous floods in central and south Communist (China, and accompanied by has mobilized | cues of locusts, the five-week-old | Friday Red China pla-| drought appears fo jeopardize Communist plans to produce 525, 000,000 tons of grain this year, 40 per cent increase over 1958. The Chinese say that at least 32,000,000 acres of farmland w menaced. Peking earlier this year reported sersous food short- ages in 37 big cities HONG KONG SKEPTICAL In Hong Kong, economic and analysts said the pro- Prisoners Confined After Riots GUELPH (CP) Nearly 50 prisoners of the Ontario Reform. atory still are in solitary confine- ment today as evidence against them is reviewed at institutional trials About 700 prisoners rioted Fri. day, following small-scale riots! Wednesday and Thursday. Saturday, 350 inmates were herded into the basement audit- orium and spent the night there. | They were allowed to return tol their cells and their own beds! Sunday. About $12,000 damage was caused during the three worst days of rioting, mostly in the cafeteria and tailor shops. Guard George William An- drews is in serious condition in hospital with a ruptured kidney. Supetintendent Charles Sander- son said weather was a key fac- tor in the disturbances. He said| the heat and humidity of the last| week were used by a few trouble- | makers to create mob hysteria. Mr. Sanderson said he will confer with Wellington County | Crown Attorney J. M. Kearns about laying court charges| against six or eight youths. F orty | others are involved in institu- | tional trials being conducted by Mr. - Sandersof. NEWMAN CLUBS ELECT PRESIDENT |... dian Federation of Newman|t of lalected vice-president. has upwards of 300 invitations to speak in various Canadian. com- [oman Vichy at the polls Thursday, HALIFAX CP) -- The Cana-|/major election pledge elected Francis|Ottawa over the financial terms of Toronto president. of union to "the highest court in(to be the agriculture editor of a Kingston was [Canada the court of public opin-' newspaper on the North Amer- | Jon." ican continent. longed dry spell poses a potential threat to the 1959 harvest much more serious than that of the floods. Some, doubt on the size of the possible damage. 'Scare stories of this sort pro vide a good basis for 'struggle campaigns' to exhort the people] to even greater effort." A European analyst spent most of his life studying China expressed the opinion Pck- ing may be exaggerating the dis-| aster stories somewhat, "jn<' to be on the safe side" in the event of a failure to achieve the am- bitous 1959 Brain & target. Smallwood Undecided On Crusade ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Pre- mier Smallwood, resting after victorious, provincial election campaign, is undecided about when to begin his cross-Canada crusade for support of Newfound- land's case government "It may not even be this year, the relaxing premier said Satur- day at his farm about 40 miles from here. Beyond that he would not speculate. "It has to I- as to be well-planned and ont is Sam J. Rowland, 22. of well-timed," he said. The Liberal premier said he Smallwood led his party to was o ake Newfoundland's dispute with {Montreal from Capetown, South |Africa, on the freighter Thor- |scape after a tour,on his scooter {of Europe, the Middle East, In- |dia and Africa. | Now making the Canadian part of his North and South American tour, Mr. Wheatley's only planned stop was at Parry |Sound, Ont., where his brother [lives. He was visiting relatives here. He said in an interview that {his scooter adventure started last {September when he packed a tent and camping gear to tour {the world because he felt his own The scooter was lashed to the mast of the 70 - year - old ship which ran into a typhoon 1,000 miles from land, "We 'were very fortunate to escape with our lives." Leaving the dhow at Mom- basa, Kenya, he travelled to Capetown, camping along the way, but carrying no weapons. "I came within a yard of a leopard, and a hippopotamus knocked down half my tent, but both were accidents," he said, After Canada and th United States, Mr. Wheatley rlans to DO YOU NEED ? You're always welcome af $500.7 $1000. eas senaseres Largest All-Canadian Loon Company 37 KING ST. EAST Alger Bidg. (next to Biltmore Theatre), fre 22 -- RA 5-6561 travel to South America t6 em- bark either from Rio de Janeiro or Buenos Aires for his home port of London, England. | education was incomplete. He had saved £700 -- almost {$2,000--since he first thought up {the trip five years previously. He Open Until Noon on Saturdey ranches throughout Cenade Itravelled through Paris and Ven. {ice before crossing the Iron Cur- {tain into Yugoslavia and Bul- igaria. In Bulgaria, he was ar- rested and accused of being a spy. Officials seized his camera, !but when the film showed only {harmless snapshots, he was re- {1tased, {SAILED INDIAN OCEAN Next came Istanbul and Tehe- ran, before crossing into Pakis- tan and India. From there he i | Valve Fails | At Welland PORT COLBORNE (CP)--Traf- fic moved normally through the Welland Canal Sunday after it was interrupted for the third time in as many days wieh a lock- {filling valve failed a tthe twin flight locks at Thorold. The upbound section was used for about five hours Sunday mor- ning while repairs were com- pleted, Canal officials said traf- fic was fairly light with 10 ships walting outside the harbor here and eight at Port Weller, the Lake Ontario entrance. A fender at lock two was dam. aged Friday when it was struck by the American freighter hurri- cane. It was replaced and less than 24 hours later was hit again hy the freighter Santa Alicia, holding up traffic 42 hours. Eaton Company Executive Dies TORONTO (CP) -- R. Gordon however, threw who nas| al9 am, break. against the federal ol Barss, 53, an executive of the T. Eaton C died night after months' illness. A native of Owen Sound, he had a|been assistant general manager of Eaton's since 1955 and mer- | chandise manager for the na- tional mail order operation. 6 Convicts Saw Way Out Of Pen | | FORT MADISON, Iowa (AP)-- pro- Six convicts sawed their way out of the state penitentiary Sunday {during prisor church services. {Two still were at large today. It was the second time in less than three months that convicts |--armed with homemade knives |--had cut through the bars. | Warden John Bennett said he (had "asked time and again for new cell windows, but neither the "governor for the legislature has -- |done anything about it." "This is damned embarrass. ing," the warden added. "Those guys . . . knew they could cut through the bars, after those four convicts did it last June, Three of the escapees surren- dered without a struggle after holding a minister's wife, her two children and a neighbor boy at knife point for 2%. hours. The fourth was captured in the woods near the prison shortly after the at) this | | A house-by house search was launched for the two at large. Alleged Stabbing Near Castleton BELLEVILLE (CP) John Woodham, 18, of Vernonville, is in Cobourg hospital after drivi hig truck for some distance w knife wounds in his stomach. Charged with stabbing with in- Gretna, Va. The alleged stabbing took place at Castleton, 30 miles northwest of here. Woodham drove to the nearby farm of Frank Vaughan seeking aid. 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