14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, November 20, 1959 TODAY'S TORONTO, MONTREAL STOCKS TORONTO By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--Nov. (Quotations in »=0dd lot, xd wvights, sw--Ex-warrants.) INDUSTRIALS 20 cents unless marked §. - Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- Stock Sales Wigh Lew 11 ie 100 175 z10 $16 815 8 Propane Suptest ord Toon T Fin A Tr Can PL Trans Mt Un Gas U Corp A Un Telef Walk GW Woodwd A 240 sir 125 50 sega gs s¥xy H Net Sales High Low 11 4.m. Ch'ge 225 © Hydro Car 210 CIL 220 2110 420 25) 25 2150 200 Cdn Oil CPR C. Vickers Chart Trust Comb Ent Cin Gas rby vt Crain RL Fed Grain pr 50 $27% rd m Fr Pete pr iL. Pow wis GN Gas $93 9 0 $10% 10% 10% 625 625 625 $13% 13% 13% 7% 8 SleBuSuEsssy a $83% $100 $2344 pd pt bri A 6% EBuER zB E3 F313 ETS 5 S3N=REsBERENSEEE: S eS "NL 882 HEH HHH 88 6 18 +% gagens I ®F 1+ H gs | 1 y * s = s = + » s Spe. g g HelBELBREEREE 5 Ss i i] B » ¥ sesesiinyoubieiuseinat sts uabenataunhntul FHT Ef8gangnet s¥slacunbradsscisnonaoniiguaisla 238s Steck Sales High Low 11 a.m. on, 2 sgess igv.duleyiiing i wuRy § R ; i § a "0866 4 Li RRL LRLE LEE gong nciiy § £878 = + ¥F 5 ule CEE £3 FgusBsiBoguull EEE tH i EEE g Zz» a tf + gu seslaciuluedBacise anpnonipusistiogn + = ¥ sxSenclazun YT = Sze-Besess 4 : 518,000. Stock Abitibi Algoma Alumin Sales 350 Bo sen un 11:30 Net oe am. on W% 9% + BY 6% $28% 2% WU ~ % 11 § H BEEnnBRHIBuiEel 8928 8 5! 55 LF Ho HG ESnEuREEEBu YER EEERSRRERRERS i] 1 jain $48% 48% $40 $27% a3 - #¥s 352% 54% I+1+11 FREFER ae wy ® OF 3 fs : 8 ann > RB | * ag Ek] > > > | 238 8 9 7 21 1 8 s 9 LU 1 3 ] . QUEBEC LoBaR HARBOR & ? HOCKLAND " i M TREAL PORTLAND go FORTSMOL TH * LES A098. This map indicates the flow of shipping that would result if thé Chignecto Canal were con- structed as a natural extension of the St. Lawrence Seaway. Construction of a 16-mile canal atross the narrow neck of land Stpacating Nova Scotia from New Brunswick has been pro- jected since 1686. It was révived several times and now the Chignecto Canal Commit- tee has been re-established to B.C. i the only province in Canada and| . body devoted entirely to conser- : |nual session, is. displaying its op- 1 112 years ago as a permanent and + |independent conservation organi- : |zation with representatives from THE CHIGNECTO CANAL canal on the BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT been no indication of when it will be established. By JIM PEACOCK Canadian Press Staf Writer HARRISON HOT SPRINGS, (CP)--British Columbia is possibly the only place in the Western world with an organi Conservation Tops In B.C. has won a respected position In the minds of all sections of 50-| ciety and has, persistently and fairly, successfully pursued its objectives. These are to contribute to pub- d|lic under ding of our primary vation education. That is the purpose of the Brit- ish Columbia Natural Resources Conference which, in its 12th an- erational methods here this week. The conference was established industry government and univer- sity filling its executive posts on a voluntary basis. It is a non-profit organization, the Atlantic provinces. The pro- posed canal would provide a shortened route down the east coast and ships would save at least 500 miles on voyages be- tween St. Lawrence River ports and harbors on the east coast of Canada and the Urited States. Advocates of the canal say it may be one of the major reme- dies for the age-old transporta- tion that has hindered develop- ment of Maritime industry. ic life of |, d through registration fees at its annual meeting and through contributions from industry and individuals. No salaries are paid, so operating expenses are small. SPARKED BY TURNER It was established largely through the work of Dr. Dave B. Turner, an Edmonton-born con- servationist once one of Canada's outstanding soccer players and who now is B.C.'s deputy minister and commissioner of fisheries appraise the effects of the Industrials Only Index Winners TORONTO | (CP)--A late-after- noon selling sent the stock market back into a decline Thursday amid the heaviest an ing since Nov. 9. ] Industrials were the only index] winners. Index changes: Industrials up .24 at 53.03; golds down .07 at 86,95; base metals down .10° at| 166.95; and westernoils down .31| at' 99.78. Final volume was 2,075,000 shares. Final volume Wednesday was 1,834,000. Great Lakes Paper led indus-| trial winners, up 1% points at| 39%. General Motors jumped 1% points at 49%. Loblaw Inc. slipped 2% points| to 123% and Canadian Malting| fell 1% to 55%. Canadian Iron| Foundries was down 1% at 22%. In mines, New Mylamaque traded 421,080 shares and gained six cents at $1.02. Lorado and Starratt, traded more than 100,- 000 shares. In senior uraniums, lost % at 10%. Western oils slipped back into the doldrums before the market closed. Gunnar |eration). Bank Of Canada Interest Rate Up" OTTAWA (CP)--The Bank of Canada interest rate moved up- wards today to 5.16 per cent from 5.13 last week with the sale of $100,000,000 in 91-day government treasury bills. The increase was the second consecutive rise. Newsprint Make Slightly Increased MONTREAL (CP) -- Canadian newsprint production for the first 10 months this year amounted to 5,292,399 tons com- |pared with 5,101,221 for the cor- |responding period last year, an | increase of 49,074 tons, the News- print Association of Canada re- ported today. STOCK MARKET NET EARNINGS with the recreation and conmser- vation department. The conference executive in- cludes a representative -- an ex- pert in his field--from each B.C. rimary resource. One threeday meeting oF the conference is held each year, when each resource is entitled to a minimum of one hour on the program. Special panels on gen- eral subjects, pertinent to imte- grated resource development and use, also are presented. From 250 to 300 delegates turn out and Dr. Turner says they usually seem bent on benefitting from the three-day short course. ONLY ON INVITATION The conference is open to any- one and special invitations are not issued except to the patron, in this case B.C. Mines Minister Kenneth Kiernan. Dr. Turner says the conference Brock (Whithy) -- Marks -- Trouble". > Regent -- "North by Northwest' resources and to emphasize the principle that all our resources are interdependent and hence DANCE TONITE OLD TIME -- MODERN Music by the TORNADOES Featured on NORTH BAY TELEVISION with CALLER--BOB FOWLER ADMISSION $1.00 RED BARN their development and use must be co-ordinated. RR SSRN a fo CT FMA UNEMPLOYMENT UP Unemployment in Canada | farm jobs, where there was a stood at 237,000 on Oct. 17, up | drop of 52,000. The October fig- 24,000 from a month earlier. | ure was considerably better The Dominion Bureau of Sta- | than a year ago when 313,000 tistics reported all of the de- | were out of work. cline in employment came in --CP Newsmap ers) -- Finance and trade min- The governments of Britaw, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Aus- tria, Portugal and Switzerland were to ratify the complex con- vention later. Free Trade Area Made [cco mu STOCKHOLM, Sweden (Reut-|Outer Seven free trade associa- tion would be a step toward a wider ae oclation among Euro. pean countries including the six- nation Common Market of France, Italy, West Holland, isters of seven countries agreed create a E association se ple an free trade Germany, g 90,000,000 peo- Belgium and Luxem- BOWERY BOYS a -- ain ". "Fighting Trouble" A AA CLUB Loreloy DANCE SATURDAY, NOV. 21, 1959, 8 P.M. UKRAINIAN HALL Corner Bloor St., and Simcoe St. S., Oshawa o EVERYONE WELCOME o Back in Business Again . THANK YOU FOR THE PAST PATRONAGE ORGAN MUSIC Colin Corbett, The Poet Of The Hammend Organ, APPEARING NIGHTLY AT THE GENOSHA HOTEL EK ADAMS - MARCEL DALIO- JULIA MEADE Adult Entertain nent mn Eastman COLOR + CINEMASCOPE [XY TYG wow pLaving 3 Features ot 1.45 -- 3.40 -- 5.35 -- 7.30 -- 9.30 P.M. The conference makes free and wide distribution of the annual meeting deliberations to all senior | and junior high schools, universi- ties, public. libraries, provincial newspapers, members, of Parlia- ment, community leaders and senior government officials through the province. WIDE INTEREST These reports also are dis tributed os 3h outside Canada. Dr. Turner says the major aim of the conference is educational, the objective being to bring the facts of natural resources of the province to the attention of all its citizens. It is mot an action body and resolutions are not per- mitted. Currently the conference is being. studied by federal conser- vationists with the intention of tion on a national level in Can establishing & similar organiza-|§ TONIGHT DANGE 9 TO 12 P.M. Y.W.C.A. 199 CENTRE ST. ADULTS STUDENTS . CARY GRANT EVA MARIE SAINT JAMES MASON Was Tenor 4 TODAY at... Prices For This Engagement 1:40-4:10-6:40-9:10 \ MATINEE EVENING . 60c ADULTS . 85¢ . 40c STUDENTS .. 50¢ ICHILDREN | ada. This, however, | is still in the forthative stage and there has 25¢ CHILDREN .. LOGES 10¢ EXTRA THEATRE GUIDE "The Diary of Anne Frank", 6.30, 9.15 p.m. Last complete show 9.00 p.m. "The Sad Horse", 12.25, 205 p.m. "The Fighting 1.45, 5.35 9.30 p.m. "The Restless Breed", 2.50, 6.40, 10.25 p.m. Last complete show 8.05 p.m. "Pillow Talk", 3.40, 5.35, 7.30, 9.30 p.m. 4.10, 145 in technicolor, shown daily at 1.40, 4.10, 6.40, 9.10 p.m. Last complete show at 9.00 p.m. By THE CANADIAN PRESS nk year ! : 1958 $5,241,477, $2.91. (Shares increased during the year.) Merrill Island Mining Corp. SHEN = we orn UE VETS Ltd., year ended June 30: 1959, LAST $432,714. (First full year of op [AY "Farewell To Arms" AY -- BIG Action Show--TOMORROW! wou "Plunder Roa? 4 \ WILSON & LEE LIMITED Register Now For Lessons On These Popular Instruments MUSIC STUDIOS SAXOPHONE ACCORDION VIOLIN SPANISH GUITAR POPULAR PIANO TRUMPET ® CLARINET ® HAWAIIAN GUITAR © TROMBONE ® VIOLA eo CELLO inner's course on the accordion includes the FREE use of an taken Our 6-week at $1.50 week accordion during that period which is home for practice. 87 SIMCOE ST. WILSON & LEE MUSIC STORE NORTH Raii------ wg H Exotic SPECIAL ON [0] Oriental | puNers and ® BANQUETS P. Canadian © LUNCHEONS ® CHINESE FOODS TAKE-OUT ORDERS OUR SPECIALTY DIAL RA 5-2543 19 KING ST. WEST OSHAWA HOUSE Meagher's present VOCALION 4 Product of DECCA RECORDS ONLY 1 98 LONG PLAY ® HAPPY DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN- Bango Barons -- The Ames Bros. A TRIBUTE TO GLENN MILLER - Jerry Gray -- Bing Crosby sings IN A MELLOW TONE - Mills Bros. DANCE PARTY -- Tommy Dorsey DON CORNELL SINGS POLKA PARTY - Harry Harden Orchestra LET'S DANCE - Russ Morgan ETHEL SMITH AT THE ORGAN HIS CHAMPAGNE MUSIC - Lawrence Welk SONGS OF OUR TIMES - For danc- ing . , . for listening Many Many More to Choose From on DISPLAY AT MEAGHER'S RECORD BAR 5 KING ST. WEST RA 3-342%