+12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, August 31, 1959 TODAY'S TORONTO, TORONTO TORONTO 11 AM, STOCKS THE CANADIAN PRESS 11:50 Net Sales Highlow a.m, Ch'ge 3% 31% + W STock Curd \sbesto: v Pape Dupont Int Utll Stock Joliet Kerr Add Bales 400 27a 2% 125 105 32 R% 125 sw--Exwarrants.) INDUSTRIALS Sales Figh Low 11 a.m. Cage 420 $37% ITH + % ¥% 200 $9% 9% M% 315 5 Stocx Abitibi Acad-Atl Alta Dist 1000 320 Alta Dist vt 200 255 256 Alta Gas 450 527% Mh Algoma 125 $394 39% Alumini $32% 32% Alum 2 pr 100 343% 43% Ang Pulppr 2 $82 = Anthes Fmp 25 S41 41 A 240pr $79% 79% $2514 2B $413 418% $37 36% $86 6 Mh a% $16 16 - = shESEylnsE ghnREyEaE -10 HEH 4 ES = =} = Atlas Steel Bell Phone BA Oil BCE 4%pr 2% BCE 5 pr 55 BC Pack B BC Pow Cal Pow § pr C Pack A 00 s858ng N Mylama Nor-Acme E5885 EH jesREsdig 35 E314 £ 5 hdd 100 100 $36 5 $101 2% $53 = 36 101 53 Yu # 7 $65 65 ) $120 12% $59% 50% 39 $16 Northeal Pac Pete Permo pr Petrol Phillips 21 Place 17% Provo Gas 26% Rock Pete Chart Trust Secur Free [§ 380 3 South U D 5 Stanwell Sub Oil Tex Cal Trans Can Triad Oil Un Oils We: Cdn Celan Cdn Wall B 50 C Chem deb 5 - 1700 3500 BERET TY FH * 5 1000 700 Sherritt 1 81 Stand dl St:cr R Hi ¥ Sturg=on Surf Inlet Teck-H Tiara 4000 - Tombill ac 100 Ye 1 1% U Asbestos Westburne 1400 Yiolam W Decalta 3950 Young HG Curb Zgame alhot y ur Dalhousie 260 hein . » 7 Sales to 11 a.m.: 652,000 D agnes Doin Stores Dom Tar Econ Inv Fam Play Ford US Fndtn Gatineau GL Paper GN Gas Gr Wpg G Acad Uran Am-Larder Anacon Ansil Aubelle 17700 3500 1000 1000 6142 MINES 12 35 72 MONTREAL MONTREAL 11:30 AM. STOCKS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal Stock Exchange--Aug. 31 11:30 Net High Low p.m. Ch'ge 27% --1% 20% Wh 20% 11:30 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 17% -- % --4 Stock std Str Stl Steel Can Steinbg A Walk GE Zellers MONTREAL STOCKS| Newc'sle Hatchery 100 817% 17% 431 881% 81% 81% 100 $2915 20. 29% 800 $374 37% 3% 175 837% 37% OANADIAN Ang Fiid $6% C Dredge C Ingersoll Cons . Paper Inland Chem Kelly Doug A Loblaw Co B Moore Reitmans Shp-Save Trans Mt 2 $214 Aull 500 Baker Tale 2100 Bateman 2000 Bellechas 5400 Bonnyvill 3038 Canorama 1200 Cariter Que 1000 N Formaque 500 N Santiago 5000 N A Asbes Opem Exp Oepemiska Orchan Paudash Que Chib Que Sm wis 1000 St Law Riv 200 Steep R 240 Titan 7750 Vanguard 1000 Wendell 2000 Mw 3% A Sales to 11:30 a.m.: Industrials 17.300: Mines 71,400 HEATHER QUEEN FROM CANADA MONTREAL (CP) Mrs Henry Van Droffelaan of Pres- cott, Ont., returned by plane Sun day from Holland, where she |was queen of the annual heather {festival held in Ede. The festival was dedicated 1500 2000 1000 | SALMON IN LAKE ONTARIO 'Now Only Memory Wind, Hail Ruin Crops DELHI (CP) -- A 10-minute de stroyed an estimated $83,000,000 tobacco crop in this area 24 miles southwest of Brantford The entire tobacco crop of 30 in the stream which, in 1824, the, He died in 1899, but the fish Rev. Anson Green had called hatchery he established carried "Salmon Creek." | : Mr. Wilmot dreamed of thel%h Fight up to the outbreak of World War I in 1914 when its ac- day when salmon would again be plentiful, and conceived the|tivities were transferred to Belle- idea of hatching them. Catching|yille. some mature fish, he extracted It is interesting to 'note the the eggs and was able to produce| joec' paid for - material and young fish. Elated with his suc-j po 0" i those by-gone days. In cess, he persuaded the BOVEr™ his book "The Townships of Dar- {lington and Clarke," John Squair hatchery, and on June 1, 1860, .00C xiract. fro th he was appointed superintendent |e an - extract om the of fish culture account book of Francis Squair For a year or two little was Who bought much of the mate- done with the simple equipment i at his disposal, until 1866 when|pRICES PAID the fish hatchery was built. In| The pump and pipes were very 1669, fish eggs were being ship-|costly for those days, $70, but the ped to the hatchery in suchicharge for transporting it from {Salmon failed quantities facilities were taxed Toronto to Newcastle was iy to their limit. In 1869 he decided more han 40 cents. Nails for the REMEMBER HATCHERY to install a pump, driven by project were bought from John There is nothing left today of Water power, to supply a largeriBaffet. a saddler who also sold ¢hat first fish hatchery, but there|20d steadier stream of water 0 hardware in Newcastle. ~The lare men still living in the village |the egg troughs. That pump must nails cost 96 cents. One solid oak who worked here before it was have been unsaisfactory. At any|plagk was bought from a Mr demolished shortly before World|rute, neither Ben Moyse nor Hyfton, a woodworker in Orono, (War 1 Fdgar Kennefirk remembers it itl for 47 cents. Blacksmithing, done "Sure | remember the old operation when they were fami- by Hiram Eddy of Orono. cost hatchery," Ben Moyse, of Beaver |liar with the hatchery $2.94. sireel, smiled remimecently "I ENTHUSIASM CATCHING | Materials were cheap by to- wor kod Shere op Eu cents a| "pop nearly thirty years Samuel day's standards, so was labor. day picking out bad eggs. ili ¥ 08 Some idea of the wages paid in There were never more than hig Sevoied the lattes part W those days can be pve from four or five regular employees, | 4 Gree gH trv which shows a Mr. and enthusiasm caught on. Heap enuwy Ww ¥ By FRANK PICKFORD | NEWCASTLE When a 15- pound salmon was caught in Lake Ontario recently, it created quite la stir among biologists of the On- tario Department of Lands and Forests who for many years /have tried unsuccessfully to re- stock salmon in the lake where they were once very common. Tradition says that around Newcastle, before there were mill-dams to interrupt them, sal- mon had been caught as far in- land as where Orono and Les- kard are now. The first public fish breeding station im North America was built at Newcastle in 1866 on what is now Wilmet's Creek, but all efforts to stop the decline in according to Mr. Moyse, although boys were taken on to help out during the busy season. Edgar Kennefick, whose fa- tier and uncle worked there, de- scribed the hatchery as he re- lived to see 12 new hatcheries es-|Linton was paid $13.75 for work- tablished in various parts of the {Dominion, but he never did suc- ing eleven days. As Ben Moyse commented, ceed in bringing back salmon in'"Those were the good old days, {abundance to the lake and but who'd want to go back to lever seen," said Richard d"Hondt who- lost 31 acres of tobacco. Farmers had just begun to har- vest their crops, which constitu ted the largest portion of On tario's tobacco this years. { Most of them had hail msur- ance on part of their crops, The storm knocked down trees and power lines, blacking out a wide area. : STOCK MARKET NET EARNINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Opemiska Copper Mines (Que bec) Lid., 3 mos. ended June 30: | ho(1959, $117,528; 1958, $12,672. New Taxes Passed In Michigan LANSING, Mich. (AP) -Mich- igan's state legislature, decad- {locked for 712 months over the |issue of new taxes, Jinally agreed {Saturday night on a new tax pro- gram which will bring in an ad ditional $128,500,000 a year. $38% id (Quotaflins in cents unless marked $. 200 1490 Amagque 16500 r--0dd lot, xd--Ex - Avilla 31000 ot, 3 Base Metals 700 rights, sw x-warrants.) Baska 1100 "0 Bethim fnland C pr 300 $22 Inland Gas 200 $5% Inlad Gas wt 100 220 Int Bronze 375 $19% Inter PL Intp St! Inv Syn A Jockey C Jock B wis Kelly wis Labatt Lafarge A Lakeland Lob Co A wt M Leaf Mill Mass-F Mass-F 5% Mid-West Mon Knit Moore Orange Cr Page-Hers Pbina Pow Corp Pres Elect Reichold Roe AV C Roe AV 3% Royal Bank iL Stedman Steel Can Sthg A § Propane xd 150 $18 5 a0 Switson Tor-Dom Bk T Fin A T Fin § pe Tr Can PL Trans- Mt Un Steel Un Telef Walk GW WC Brew W cop xr W Cop. wis 545 500 215 4600 220 19% $5415 34 $616 6% 10% 16% $10% $16% $8314 831% 83% $103 103% 10% $12% 12% 12% 8 $30% 304% 0% 175 115 178 5 450 450 450 kel $37 37 37 $81% 81 81% $29% 20% © 29% + 16 20 160 $38 30 350 3635 100 300 200 Bicroft Bidcop. Bonville Bordulac Boymar Brohrst Brunsman Buffad Buff Ank Bunker Hill Cadamet Camp Chib C Malart 500 17500 23500 1000 666 24500 54000 20000 200 1500 1025 200 1000 1000 110 500 2000 500 Colomac 31600 C Denison 863 C Den wits 300 C Fen 800 C Halliwell 5900 Con Howey 100 C Marben 2% Con MS 750 C Morris 700 C Northind 11700 C Regert 2000 Con Sud Cop Corp Coulee Crowpat 1200 780 100 Gunnar xd Gunnar wis H of Lakes 1000 Heva 36000 Hollinger xd 70 Hoyle 4950 Ind Lake Int Nickel Iron Bay Jacobus 7000 140 2000 1000 INDUSTRIALS Abit) Algoma Alumin Asbestos Bank Mont Bath Pow B Bell Phone Can Cem pr C Iron C Brew C Bronze C Cel C Cl Power C oi CPR Con M and 8 Corby A Dist Seag D Bridge D Fndry D Glass D Steel D Stores D Tar Ford US Galineau Home Oil A Imp Oil Ind Accep Ind Ac 450pr Inland C pr Int Bronze Int Nickel Int Util Interp PL 50 25 StL Corp 225 St L Corp Apr Shawin Simpsons ™ 50 670 8 17 963% 0% $36 ¥ dividend, xr--Esz- F EEFEESEF & to commemorating Canad ian- Dutch friendship. A local school house was converted into a "'Can- 'ada House" where a display of products, photographs and art of Canada was opened by Charles |Hebert, Canadian ambassador to | Holland Mrs. Van DROFFELAA elected queen in recognition of the pari she played as a mem- ber of the Dutch underground in Ede during Germany's wartime occupation of The Netherlands. She emigrated to Canada <'x years ago. Cabin Cruiser In Explosion | ST. CATHARINES (CP)--Four St. Catharines district residents { had a narrow escape Saturday when a 28-foot cabin cruiser ex- | ploded at Port Dalhousie harbor. | The explosion threw the owner |into the water and tossed the | three other occupants to the floor, Cabin fittings, shelves and win dows were blown out. Injured were Wilbert Watson, 63, Mr. and Mrs. John Rendall, both 45, of nearby Merritton, and Tom Wilson, 65. Mr. Watson was still in hospital Sunday after. be- ing treated for severe burns to his face, legs 'and arms. The others were released after treatment for minor burns. The boat was owned by Mr Rendall, who had just finished filling its gas tanks. Russ May Best Barring an unlikely snag, Mich- |igan taxpayers will start paying (for it next Tuesday The House of Representatives streams of Ontario. working for that kind of money?" | membered it, It was a two-storey frame building about 40 by 60 fee.. There were two types of| fish troughs used, one for trout MILLIONS salmon and the other, of a differ- ent type. for white-fish and her- {ring The upper storey a museum displaying all kinds of fish in glass cases and a collec- tion of stuffed moose, deer, bear)? and a huge white ox thal people drove from miles around to 'see. KEEN FISHERMAN Samuel Wilmot started it all. During 'the early sixties of the 19h century, he was a prosper ous merchant in Newcastle, a large buyer of wheat and other | OF DOLLARS |vi60 JUNE was used as|? M20 | ng grains. He was also a keen fish-| 7 erman. Baldwin's Creek. ni | Wilmot's Creek, like other spring- now water streams flowing into Lake| # | Ontario, had been noted in early|® * days for its salmon, trout and other fish which went up the stream to spawn. By 1860, how- lever, very few salmon were seen Northern Canada | Launching Site LONDON (Reuters)--The idea iof launching a spaceship from a |site in the northern territories of |Canada should be "carefully ex- |amined," the [x wealth Pe h OWING FINANCE | KP... COMPANIES credit farther than ever before | as the economic boom gather- ed steam at mid-summer. A large part of the demand for | credit was supplied | Canadians stretched their | lspaceflight symposium was told Saturday | Emest Wall, an official of the weapons division of the de Havil- {land Aircraft Company of Can- lada, gave 'three reasons why the |northlands would be am ideal he 'Brantford Boy swarm oF BEES U.S. Before 1970 1 WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- A (capital goods production to sup- 1 Joan Hits . Red China study prepared or the Senate/Port their campaign would be {foreign relations committee de-|aVailable oun. TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) -- Tv. clared Saturday that the Sovie| 4. The underdeveloped coun- shoon Joan struck the Commu. Union is likely to be a "formid-|tries were stirring under a world- ist Chinese mainland Sundav 8ble industrial nation" by 1970|Wide dissatisfaction with present after leaving 11 dead, three miss-|and probably would exceed the conditions and methods, and were ng, 74 injured and thousands Output of industrial equipment in impatient for rapid economic homeless on this Chinese Nation-/the United States by that ime. growth. . alist island. The study was prepared by the. 5. Loss of the resources of the Only the barrier of mountains| corporation for economic and in- underdeveloped countries to a eastern Formosa, which split|dusrial research, following a re.|communist community would the great storm in half and re-|view of foreign policy held by the completely change the world duced the winds, spared this suf-|senate committee last year balance of power in favour of the faring Send from even greater| Major conclusions were: | Soviet Vajos, By the time typhoon Joarl 1. The Soviet intention was to fa The Utter Slates Bow - struck the mainland northwest of 2U€mPt to take over the world trade in the fr world and Formosa, her winds had slack.|[oF communism. Its lates econ- 2 I e ice work an ged ad slac an example by removing its own | Lost At CNE TORONTO (CP)--A Brantford boy STICK TO CAR HAILEYBURY (CP--- has found a temporary home| (Clyde Giddings parked in a {after being lost at the Canadian National Exhibition, where he wrong place Saturday night-- |spent Friday night at a police] behind a beekeeper. | station. | Roger Johnson, 10, went to the ICNE with his mother who had [been working in the tobacco fields near Brantford He got lost and spent a few urs at |{the CNE children's shelter until {it closed at midnight. Then police took over. They called Roger's home in Brant- ford but could get no answer. They put two hard chairs to-| gether at the CNE police station and Roger slept there Saturday night Roger slept in a soft bed at the home of his father's employer, Alan McKen- from les |Omic plans showed that it was por i to po peak of es | mobilizing its rapidly growing in- Testrictions. thorities reported. dustrial strength for this purpose The fatalities were caused by 2. While the income of the So- collapsing homes. Police head- viet bloc would grow by 120 per quarters said 3,308 homes col-cent by 1970, that of the free - lapsed or were damaged world would grow by only 83 per Meeting Opens cent, and that of the United AIRBORNE CHICKS |States by less than 70 per cent,| HALIFAX (CP)--The tri-annual SYDNEY, Australia (AP)--Aus-|for consumers, he Soviet might Canadian Civil Service Federa- tralian hatcheries are shipping overtake. the United States before tion convention opened here to-| ; day-old chickens to places as far, 970. day with more than 350 delegates Allied apart as Mauritius, Fiji, Hong| 3. Soviet cold-way efforts wr | attending. Kong and Borneo. Quantas Air- now being focussed" increasingly ine announced it flew out 170,000 on the economic arena. They had marks the 50th anniversary of the dren and relatives of i chicks in the first seven months selected as tarkets the underde-|83,000 - member government em- ish A Hamid oe np of this year. veloped countries. Substantial ployees' federation. lin the airlift. |zie. Mr. McKenzie said the boy's {father is a transport driver and {left Friday for northern Quebec. "I'll keep the until his {father comes back," he said. Civil Service HONOR AIRLIFT DEAD BERLIN (AP)--West Berliners gratitude for | Klaas Bosch, Jr., 18, son of the owner of an apiary, ha | his car loaded with honey- | combs. When he drove away |" he left behind a swarm of bees on Giddings' car. Before he could get into his car Giddings had to call the young beekeeper to recapture the swarm. 'Miss Kincardine In Contest Final TORONTO (CP) - Hollands of Kincardine, Saturday night won the second round of the Canadian National Exhibition dairy queen contest. Miss Hol- \lands, iepresenting Bruce county, | |eliminated entrants from Brant, Lincoln, Prince Zdward and Wel- have donated $380,000 to express 102100 counties the 1948-49 airlift that defeated a Rus-|---- sian road blockade. The money | The week - long convention will finance scholarships for chil- Contest finals are Sept, 9. {location for satellite 1 | by the chartered banks, many | of which were promoting new pefsonal loan plans, Latest bureau of statistics figures CONSUMER CREDIT x (far 5 ¢ |state and then the Senate, meeting in {extraordinary Saturday night ses- sions, approved a compromise ax package carrying a one-cent {increase in the three-cent {tax and $8.500.000 in new business {taxs. | Governor G. Mennen Williams, from enthusiastic, said he would sign the bills without de- lay to put them into effect nex tax on personal and corporate in- come, The end to the bitter struggle ~ |between Republicans and Demo- crats came on the 140th day of a {session that began last Jan. 14. | In adopting the tax package. | Michigan became the third such in the union with a four- cent sales tax. The others are K i | Westingeon and Pennsylvania. 2 ¥ STRETCHING CREDIT show that consumer debt to finance compares, small loan companies and department stores rose to $1,466,000,000 at June 30 from $1,411,000,000 at June 30, 1958, Another $1,080, 000,000 was owed to banks in personal loans, up sharply from $809,000,000 a year earlier. --(CP Newsmap) If present revenue stimulates holdup, the new tax program will give the state a record general fund income of about $440,000,000 over the next 12 months, The state budget totals about $411,000,000. Par of the ax in- crease will retire a deficit that will soar o $114,000,000 by the end of the month. WOVE COTTON Early explorers reported that in 1522 both Peru and Mexico had well - developed cotton - mamu- facturing centres. BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT | The distance from populated {centres, a near-polar site could be of great importance to astro- |nautics and the intensity of radia- {tion belts decrease considerably |mear the megnetic poles. | Mangled Body Identified SUDBURY (CP) -- |police said today the mangled] body of a man found on CPR tracks Friday night near Cartier |has been identified as that of |Frank Cadieux, 21, 85 Olive St. (Midland. Identification was made by the youth's brother, John Cadieux, 28. who is working in the Sudbudy area. The younger Cadieux, employed | as a miner at Levack, came to {Sudbury July 20 from Sault Ste. {Marie. Police believe he fell from Provincial | By ALAN DONNELLY Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) Canada's farmers face an agricultural quarter-century. tural College. eggs, he says. It will be brought "The day may not be far off when one can buy a ton of hay in bulk pellets from a feed dealer, just as ome now buys | revolution in the next 10 years dairy ration." that likely will far surpass the| sweeping changes of the last ized beef and dairy farms is The change to large, special- "al. {most inevitable." That's the view of Prof. D. R.| What will this all mean? Campbell of the Ontario Agricul-| For ome thing, says Prof. Campbell, there will be a con- The revolution will be in the tinued decline in the number of production of meat, poultry and | farm ities in income between people. There will be wider] Meat, Poultry, Eggs Face Revolution (will be necessary to obtain the |necessary credit for big com- {mercial operations and reduce the risk of price declines. | Government farm credit poli- cies must change if they are to be effective. This could mean {larger loans, to fewer people. "To lend a young couple {enough money to start a small farm business, inadequately stocked with earning assets, is no favor to them or to agriculture." Prof. Campbell also predicts widespread incorporation of Ruth Anne| Steel Strike about by new developments I he ao ohare |farms, to facilitate transfers Bark. tea) a Marginal farmers may have to LOM father to son and to permit It will bring in its train fresh|joove the farm comm: t {estate planning. problems: a further fall-off of else small industri A or] - farm population; continued over-| ooo" oo Hie Bog ; en-| production and the related need beg bag) 1 rural How To Get People for price supports and other gov-| provide alternate Jobe. | iy etnment - aid; adjustments for| With continued over-production,, 10 Listen To You farm people in marginal areas|it will become more essenial to Ee ---- unable to keep up with the farmers to have the help of price] Want people to pay more atten- changes. supports, marketing boards, co- tion to what you're saying? Prof, Campbell, president of/oPeratives, ind closer coopera. Know how to prevent that the Agricultural Institute of Can-[tion With the processing and awkward silence in conversation ... how to disagree without being disagreeable? "In September Reader's Digest are 10 tips for better conversation a moving freight train. IMPORT SWATER GIBRALTAR (AP) -- The Rock of Gibraltar is importing water. | The city council chartered the oil tanker Asprella to bring 4,000,000 gallons of fresh water on her maiden voyage from Amster- dam to replenish drought - dwin- dled reservoirs. ada, takes this look into the fu. retailing sections of the food in- ture in a recent speech reprinted dustry. in the current Agricultural In: yERTICAL INTEGRATION stitite Review magazine. | There will be even more SOME IDEAS OUTMODED | Vertical integration" linking "The old idea that increased |1od_production, processing aud Wore tactful and mere popular! ltarm production requires new|retailing through contracts and Get your Reader's Digest today [1and other business relationships. This | --- 38 articles of lasting interest. 4 | The (easy to memorize) which will make you Lp Trust Certificates Issued for periods one to five years In amounts of $100.00 up Interest payable half yearly by cheque Authorized Trust Funds | Presi aconomic effects will pile up, th |tration is that, in view of the|in the raising of hogs, chickens report said. if the strike goes Still abundant steel supplies, the and turkeys, | through a second month. president intends to wait at least! "The revolution through mech- |" The walkout started July 15. Al-|until mid-September and possibly |anization of the '40s is likely to {ready it is the longest steel Oct. 1 before giving serious con- be greatly surpassed by the rev- % | strike since the war, except for a sideration to invoking the emer- (olution of the next 10 years in the | |59-day walkout in 1952. |gency provisions of the Taft.|management of liog, broiler, egg { Hartley law. This could result in (80d turkey en es." [NO PROGRESS stopping the strike for 80 days by| Tne size of mic farms | Joseph F. Finnegan, director of court injunction. |specializing in these) fields has jw|the federal Mediation and Conctli-| The strike effects report said STOW" tremendously 'and "there "| ation Service, said there has been 126,000 workers had been made |'S 800d reason to expect to see it| ho progress toward a settlement. [idle by mid-August in addition to | €XPand even more rapidly in the 1c IOWS Tay 1940s saw a - revolution " [He has been presiding over peace the 500,000 strikers. Close to one- | [fre talks in New York which now are third of the 126,000 layoffs were PELLETING OF FORAGE WASHINGTON (AP)--The la- normal levels through mid- c3used by farm mechanization bor department says the ecomo- September. Growing and possibly applied to crop production. There mic effect, of the first month of serious shortages are expected now are limits--caused by prob- the U.S. steal st ike, up to mid- after that lems of management and the August. was slight. But it said| lije-<in the development of big Saturday that the pinch is. stead-| PRESIDENT WAITING farm organizations for the grow. Wy growing worse. The word from high officials in|iDg of crops. But those limits More Job layoffs and: adverse d Eisenh 's adminis. [don't apply with the same force e |in recess until Wednesday |in the Pittsburgh, Chicago and| sj i & hd A The labor department survey Cleveland args . lio na Sang: hone Ine : facevirga 1 /; | made public Saturday was con Welfare applications were be- the problem is overcome of pro- for {ducted in 31 steel-producing and ginning to increase sharply in the viding forage for herds. One an- {consuming areas steel areas around Chicago, in|swer may lie in the pelleting of It said most areas reported Canton and Youngstown, Ohio, |forage--compressing "it info a i [steel plies to main. |and in Pittsburgh and Johnstown, form that can be shi and | tain pr tely Ws lsold' economically Investment for MAKE FRIENDS WITH THE EASTERN Rancis Th UST. €. FE SPENCER, Manager :: 61 Yonge St, TORONTO at appr