THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, June 9, 1961 15 Exchange joes spomucar NET EARNINGS wwe | POrtable Pension Plan Complexities ums Ltd., year ended March 31: 1961, $11,471; 1960, $772,160. MARKET PRICES By FORBES RHUDE | portability is a "political hot dian Press Busi Editor Potato" that spells trouble for Sh lany government which tries to TORONTO (CP) -- Wholesale | The principle of portable pen- enforce it. fruit and vegetable prices at [sions seems simple enough at 9:30 a.m.: Apples, controlled |first glance but it runs into Mcintosh $6.75-7 bus., B.C. many complexities, differing) Winesap 5.75-6, Spies 6-6.50; opinions and differing philoso- asparagus 11-qt. basket, loose |Phies. 2.25-2.50, bunched 3-3.25; beans, This was BIRTHS GRIFFITH -- Lew and Barbara (nee Rawlins) are happy to announce the ar- fival of a son (8 Ibs. 4 ozs.), Ian Wil- Ham, on Saturday, June 3, 1961 at Osb- wa General Hospital. ----- Today's Stock Market Listings Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge 125 125 128 $15% 15% x5% -- 4 $16 1 16 380 375 35 $20 20 2 $21% 21% 21% $45% 45% 45% $153 15% 13% $581 58 58 $8% 8Y 8% $55% 5% 5% 0 $6% 6% 6% -- 15 2 S483, 48% 48% 5 $724 T¥a TM + $48 48 48 eC Th $I MH AN he. Ts $8% 8% 8% + C Ex Gas 415 410 415 « High Cr Si Lig Cent Del 50 240 Charter Oil $lie 11% C Mic Mac 2 Ed 2 C West P 1300 243 on Toronto 11 Ne Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge TORONTO 11 AM. STOCKS By The Canadian Press et High Low s.m. Ch'ge $10% 10% 10% 4 44 #8 -2 2Is 215 203 wo 170 170 14 4 14 $321 52% 32% -- WU 33 33 41 45 4% 4% 89% 885 835 Stock Curb Anglo-Nfid C Paper D Glass pr Dupont Int Pap MO Paper Ogilvie Ogilvie Stock Denison Delhi Pae Dicknsn East Mal Eldrich Falcon Sales 300 500 100 Sales =n 150 0 950 100 300 Stock Great West Gr Wpg G Greyhnd Horne PI Imp Inv A Tiny 125 p Imp Of Imp Tob Ind Accep Ingersoll A Inglis Inland Gas Int Util pr Inter PL Inv Syn A Jamaica PS Jefferson Jockey C Jock C pr Lakeland Levy Levy pr 294 8% 8 1] 175 $43 43 » $14 14 14 4 21 32% -- % 31% 52 138 Toronto Stock Exchange--June 9 (Quotations In cents unless marked §. 2-0dd lot, xd -- Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is from previous day's close.) INDUSTRIALS 11 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 470 337% ITV 3TH + 14 B% h-- % +2 BK +H 25 $105% 105% 105% 14% 91% 19% 18 OWENS -- Bob and Ann (nee Allo. " way) are proud to announce the arrival of ® baby girl (7 Ibs. 11 ozs.) Jo-Ann, on Thursday, June 8, 1961, at Oshawa General Hospital. ' WEST -- Austin and Vina (nee Long) are happy to announce the birth of their son, 9 lbs. 8 ozs., on Wednesday, June 7, 1961 at the Oshawa General Hospital. A GOOD NEWS STORY--When you h of your child in the Oshawa Times. clippings of the no. tice are available for Baby's Book, Family Tree Records and to mail your friends and relatives in 'hose far-away places. To place birth announcement, eal The Oshaws Times Phone RA 3.3492 --- Ya 40 831% 31% 10 $52 52 108138 138 OILS 162 $12% 12% 825 725 710 00 $17% 17% 600 440 200 410 275 170 1500 27 100 635 400 138 710 255 Fatima Glenn Uran Gunnar Har-Min High Beli Hud Bay Int Moly Int Nickel Irish Cop Jacobus Stock " Abitibi Abit pr 9 9 16 218 218 218 41 Ci 5 853. 5 53 5 "We as 4% 3 875 4% 75 120 120 70 Anglo Am Bailey S A ho Cal Ed illustrated at this DEATHS CUTHBERT, Amnle E. At Oshawa General Hospital on Thurs day, June 8, 1961, Annie Elizabeth Mainds, beloved wife of Ralph Cuthbert (218 Albert Street) and loving mother of Mrs. W. Kantores (Joan) West Hill. The late Mrs, Cuthbert is resting at Melntosh-Anderson Funeral Home. Ser- vice in the Chapel on Monday, June 13, at 3 p.m.nterment Union Ce- metery. FELT, Nell E, Entered into rest in the family resi- deice, 94 Alexandra Street, Oshawa, on Wednesday, June 7, 1961, Neil E. Felt, beloved husband of Helen Hay. eraft and brother of Marion in his 66th year. Resting at the Armstrong Fu- neral Home, Oshawa, with Memorial Service, in the Chapel Saturday, June 10, 2 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn, Cem- metery, Oshawa. s3EsuNnE Can Foils A Cdn Brew C Collieries C Dredge CG Sec A C Imp Bk C CIL Sx 88E825 Beni FLINTOFF, Mary Into rest in Bowmanville Hos-| 1 on Thursday, June 3, 1961, Mary | an Volkenburg, beloved wife of Al- fred Raymond Flintoff and mother of Mrs. Bill Gingerich (Joyce) Oshawa in| her 57th year. Resting at the Arm- slong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with Memorial Service in the Chapel Satur-| day, June 10 at 3.15 p.m. Interment r Cemetery. | McKENNA, Jessie E. At Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Toronto, | on Thursday, June 8, 1961, Jessie] Elizabeth Knight, beloved wife of the late Michael McKenna, and loving mo- ther of Robert of Richmond Hill, in her 78th year. The late Mrs. McKenna is resting at MecIntosh-Anderson Funeral | Home. Service in the Chapel on Satur-| Interment | day, June 10, 230 p.m. Mount Lawn Cemetery. GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all RA 8-6226 390 KING STREET WEST 105 $19% 19% 19% 90 $87 87 87 85 $15334 153% 153% -- 225 $12% 12% 12% 10 $143 100 $81 3% GNGas w 1000 250 250 GNGas B w 300 210 270 370 LobCo A T.0bCo B Loeb M Lowney MacLeods A MB and PR M Leaf Mill Mass-F Moore Page-Hers Pbina QN Gas Roe AV C Rothman Royal Bank Royalite Russell Salada-8 Salada-wts Seven Arts Shawin Simpsons Southam Stedman Steel Can Steel rts Texaco pr Thom Pap Thornelf Tor-Dom T Fin A T Fin 57 w Tr Can PL Trans-Mt Union Acc Un Gas Un Steel Walk GW W C Brew Weston A West A wt Woodwd A 841% $19% 4% Dev-Pal 2500 Dynamic rt 1000 Fr Pete pr 300 HB Oil G 175 Pac Pete 50 Place 1000 Tidal 1000 Triad OA 0 Un Reef P 100 Un Oils 500 Wstates W Decalta Yan Can 1000 100 Agnicn Anacon A Arcadia 8900 Beveon Broswk Camp Chib C Astoria Can-Erin C Bellek C Discov C Fen CG Arrow C Halll Con M § CN 1 « « North Cons Que C Sannorm 2000 Coprand Cralgmt D'Aragon x 400 10% 1000 19% 3B MINES 9109 122 Deer Horn ¢ 3000 Maritime Martin 66 1 440 S14 14% sy uY% 4 Ed & 63 187 Mu McKen Mentor 1000 1005 5000 1000 5 150 $ Jason Newlund Nickel MS Noranda Normetal N Coldstrm N te 8 7 10 135 Ascot Que Lith Quemont Rayrock §'scoe Steep R Sturgeon Sud Cont Sullivan Sunburst Territory Tombill Ult-Shaw U Asbestos Un Keno Ventures Waite Am Werner Willroy V Harg 1000 4000 1900 2300 4000 7 c 3000 120 1 14% BK BVHh-B BB Cu Yukon Con 1000 5 80 --4 24 -- 2 Sales fo 11 a.m.: 563,000. green 5-5.25 hamper; new beets 50-1b. bag 2.85-3; broccoli 3-3.25 case; cabbage, new 3.75-4; new red 5.25-5.50; carrots, Texas 50- Ib. bag 4.25-4.50, California 48s 5.50-5.75; cauliflower 12s, 3.25, 16s 3; celery, Florida 3.754 case; queen cucumbers 24s, 2.90-3, king 3.25-3.50; leeks 11- qt. basket 1.50; onions, Chile Spanish 50-1b.s bag 3.75-4, Texas 3-3.25, Texas white 2.85-3; spin- ach, Canadian 1.50-2 bus.; rhu- barb, outdoor 12s .60-75; to- matoes, cello 1.50, No. 1 hot house 10 Ib. carton 2.25-2.75; turnips unwaxed 1.75, waxed 2.25-2.50; pineapples, Mexican 12s 3.25-3.50, cantaloupe 9-10.50. TORONTO (CP) Potato prices today: P.E.L 75-1b. bags, off truck $2.25, to trade 2.50; N.B. 1.75, to trade 2-2.25. P.E.I. 50-lb. bags 1.50, to trade 1.50-1.65; N.B. 1.10, to trade 130-1.40 P.E.L 10 Ib. bags .35, to trade .35-.40, N.B. .26, to trade .29-.33. NORTHERN TRIP BRISTOL, England (CP)-- The steamship Birmingham City which plies between Mont- real and Bristol will visit the Hudson Bay port of Churchill this summer. --y Many Ycung Children Threaten, Try, Suicide week's annual meeting in Van- couver of the Canadian Manu- facturers' Association when some speakers: favored the idea and others 'assailed it. Here is how a portable pen- sion works: When you leave one job and its pension plan you take whatever you have in the plan into the pension plan of your next job. In your former job you presumably couldn't touch the money until retire- ment E, and in your new job you similarly can't touch it until retirement. At this point disagreement arises. Some say that when you leave one job you should be able to take out your interest in cash. They argue that it is your money and no one has the right {to say you can't have it; an |that, if you wish to start up a | business of your own, it supplies [you with capital. {CONFUSED WITH SAVINGS | Others say this is confusing a pension plan with a savings plan. A pension plan, they state, is to assure you income when you retire and you shouldn't be able to imperil it. An employee almost invari- ably is able to take out what he himself has contributed. However, he generally doesn't have a right to his employer's contributions until after a num- ber of years, usually running from 10 to 20. Generally, if the employee leaves his own money in a pen- sion scheme, the employer con- tribution stays too. But if he takes his own contributions in| cash, then the employer contri-| WOODBINE RACES dl | SATURDAYS June 10 to July 15 | Daylight Time * EXPRESS BUSES Leave OSHAWA 11:30 a.m. Leave WHITBY 11:40 a.m. 2 INCLUDES RETURN FARE RETURN LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements ond floral requirements for all occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE RA 8-6555 IN MEMORIAM DOVE -- In loving memory of our dear sister, Sandra Isabel Dove, who passed away June 9, 1953. In our hearts your memory lingers, Sweetly tender, fond and true, There is not a day, dear Sandra, By KEN SMITH Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) -- Children joscents was an unsatisfactory|people can be affected by the #itry to kill themselves or threaten to much more frequen- tly than is generally realized, Dr. J. M. Toolan of New York } said Wednesday. | He told the World Congress of Psychiatry that one of the most common reasons for a child turning to suicide is to call at- poston told the panel there is man Who was told by a doctor {tention to an emotional prob- em. fg | 'They feel they want to show |someone or to get back at some- of 102 attempted or threatened suicides among children or ado- home life. Dr. Toolan appeared on a pa- nel with several other U.S. doc-| tors analysing the psychological reasons back of suicides. DIE OF SUGGESTION Dr. Thomas P. Hackett of no question that people can die of suggestion if they believe it| implicitly. {bution doesn't go with him un- { A common factor in a study/on them by a medicine man, | ..c he has been with the com- but only recently have tfiey re-| alized that so « called civilized|P2Y, the required pumber of |years. Accordingly, employees . : " {who take cash often lose poten- same kind of suggestion. tial retirement- Such a suggestion could be|from the employer contribu- made unintentionally by a doc-| tions. tor who erroneously tells a pa-| tient he has an incurable dis- CONSIDER PORTABILITY ; ease, Dr. Hackett said. | Yaris provinces are songs. i . {ering $ % He described the case of a ing portability compulsory. Many employers see prospect of great confusion if there is a multiplicity of provincial laws. They think any legislation he had cancer. The man started to waste away and was actually dying when he went to anothet doctor who discovered there was time benefit} FARE ADMISSION Leave AJAX 11:50 a.m. 2.20 : ADMISSION Return after last race (RETURN FARE Tickets and Information et Oshawa shoyld be federal, even if it re- quires a constitutional amend- ment. L. F. Wills, vice-president and general manager of Honeywell Controls Ltd., Toronto, chair- man of the portable pensions committee of the association's Ontario division, sees portable pensions as a desirable social objective if properly handled. William M. Mercer, Vancou- ver pension consultant, said He said authorities long have| __|accepted the fact that natives lean die of a '""voodoo hex" put hn -- |BELIEVED AND DIED Several cases were known of {persons who sincerely believed |they would not survive an ill- Y ness or an operation. They al- ! most invariably died. { i \ | Charges Such persons showed no fear | of death, but were completely | # [resigned to it, Dr. Hackett said. onstrous Alcoholics Anonymous would be more effective if so many of TORONTO (CP) -- Four its members were not opposed | sharge aéotra suburban Mi. 10 other methods of treating janny town and it apparently chan ty laid ao uman Mh the problem, Dr. Joel Fort of paic off in part. : months 'after the alleged of- Alameda, Calif., said. Irate av er falling Potato fences, were dismissed Thurs: He told a panel discussion that Prices an govemment arm |, Magistrate Fred Thomp-|{AA has been of "great help" |elled: Sponsored by a grocery poy: he me lic armers to about half the "relatively|chain, the show included clothes |acied A ihe be lous AIZIeTs | ve magistrate said Mimico/Small segment" of alcoholics|for attendants and mothers as : a Rs i 2 |" Waving pitehforks, the farm.|did 'a monstrous and immoral who have tried it. 'well as brides. SHEARER -- In loving memory of & : | i thing' in delaying the ch | dear father, Robert Shearer, who pass. G ers occupied the government against Tri gl a 2 bod oo Company Limited and its pres- ed away June 9, 1960. AL 4 hig Bh RT [headquarters building here for Joseph Kastelic. Witnesses said that a house That we do not think of you. ~Lovingly remembered by Evelyn, Donald and John. DOVE -- In loving memory of eur Sandra Isabel Dove, who passed away June 9, 1953. Every day in some small way Memories of you come our ways no cancer. The man immediat- ely started to recover. one," he said. "| Farmers Go On Rampage In France MORLAIX, France (Reuters) Angry farmers staged a "potato {putsch" Thursday in this Brit- Bus Terminal 18 Prince St., RA 3-2241 Whitby -- Harry Donald Ltd. Phone MO 8-3678 Ajox South -- The Coffes Cup, Phone WH 2-2940 Ajax North -- Ajax Coffees Shop, Phone WH 2-3390 Though absent you are ever near, Still missed, still loved and ever dear. ~--Lovingly remembered by Mother Dad. JOHNSTON -- In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother, Mabel | Johnston, who passed away one year ago today. E --Ever remembered by her family, Phyllis and Nelsen Johnston, Linda a Phyllis, Lillian and Russell Hayward,| Carolyn and Lillian. BRIDAL SHOW MONTREAL (CP) -- More than 1,000 June brides - to - be |jammed the "Grand Salon" of a montreal hotel to see the latest in bridal fashions mod- KOBERNICK -- In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother, Helen Emily, who passed away June 9, 1958, Past her suffering, past her pain, Cease to weep for tears are vain, She who suffered is at rest, Gone to Heaven with the blest. --Sadly missed and ever remembered by son Jack, daughter-in-law Zena and granddaughter Jacque ay by son And they put him 'neath the clay, % ; F But one sweet day, by and by, i ; 8 | A littic later, the government|ident, He is doing to meet his Saviour up {announced a number of emer-!| --Lovingly remembered by sem Jack {gency measures to prop up po- built by Kastelic's company had and daughter-in-law Jenny. |tato prices. more than the legal floor area, But, still, the potato pot was|/was five feet longer than its kept a-boiling. original plan and was six in- : i A mass meeting here was told|ches closer to its boundary line is expected Saturday. {by farmers' representatives that| because of plans which had been --(CP Wirephoto) |i1. farmers gave the govern. "varied illegally." : | [Tent hous to change its, The building was completed in ; * | farm policy--"or we will re- late August or early September, 1 £8 AE I a ty INTERPRETING THE NEWS | Weekl {sume our action in still greater|1960, but charges were not laid { bi ' ; strength." {until April, 1961. i ¥ | | . i : x Livestock | | 1VestoC i daughter-in-law Hilda, | j S. Stra g i evil ew é SHEARER -- In loving Inemoty On Laos Fails TORONTO (CP) ~ Cows suid. A Beautiful Oshawa Home Adams, the distiller who made history with the By HAROLD MORRISON Kennedy met with Soviet Pre-% cents per, hundredweight Canadian Press Staff Writer |mier Khrushchev at Vienna. higher this week at the Ontario nited States strategy to tie Khrushchev was Te public stockyards. " ported to 4 up the Communists in confer, ve agreed at Vienna that an| Slaughter cattle traded activ- now famous Private Stock, has done it again! Adams now presents Gold Stripe, another Custom Blend, at a moderate price, created especially for the Ontario taste, ence table chatter as a means r i | of slowing down the Red vic. effective cease-fire is important.(¢y at firm prices after a dull Next time you buy, try mellow custom-blended Gold Stripe in its tall, handsome flask bottle Undoubtedly Russia could ex-|oPening. Replacement cattle lercise tremendous influence in|Were in broad demand at firm in 25 ounce and 12 ounce sizes, and you'll agree, Adams has done it again! BUILDING DYKE trol wall built following disas- | level of that year River crest | | SHEARER -- In loving memory of & dear husband who passed away June 9, 1960, one year ago. We often think of days gone by, When we were all together; A shadow o'er our lives has cast, Our loved one's gone forever, ~Sadly missed by wife Alma. Workmen in Trail, BC hurriedly construct two-foot plank dike above flood con- trous 1948 floods as Columbia | | River creeps steadily towards | of a earer we are all alone, For memory is the only thing That grief can call its own --Lovingly remembered by son Bob, daughter - in - law Joyce, grandchildren Danny and Doug. SHEARER--- In loving memory of a dear father, Robert Shearer, who pass- ed away June 9 ,1960. You're not forgotten, father dear, Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last 1 shall remember thee. Lovingly remembered by daughter | Irene, son-in-law Howard, grandchil. (tory march in Laos appears to dren Janice and Donny {be in danger of collapse. { rs 3 -- 1" fighting a rearguard dip- ; | |prices, while veal calves were NATIVE HOUSE lomatic manoeuvre when the|the advance of the Pathet Lao. Pr 2%. ¥ GUILDFORD, England (CP) West lacked sufficient determin. | Soviet planes are supplying the| Under pressure and sold fully $1 A Maori native house that was ation to show military strength rebel forces. The U.S. state de- PT hundredweight lower. Hog brought from New Zealand in|in Laos, President Kennedy WON partment says these supplies Prices were uneven and spring i wit! % i donated by the. New. Zealant sia. and Bed Cola to Sete to|7® Continuing. And so _are|lamb prices barely steady to §2 government and banking conference negotiations and to|American supplies to the royal per undredweight lower ; houses. It stands in the grounds support moves to halt the Lao- government forces -- patheti.| Slaughter cattle: Choice steers $22.50-23, with singles and, old head lots to 23.30; good 22-| of Clandon Park in Surrey. {tian jungle war. |cally weak in the face of the 22.50; medium 20-22; commons 124 WINONA AVENUE 4 T But as Kennedy has discov-| VISIT CANADA rebel advance i Si .|ered, there is a great gap be-| . SO DON Ce tween Communist words and| On the basis of events so far,|16-19; choice heifers 22; good VaR amas this needs and a great gap in East- the West may soon be con-20.50-21.50; medium 19-20.50; summer under an educational West definitions of what consti- gd yh - Ligeia lings 23 gp ge Year E ; ed tutues war and o 4 in Laos -- complete lings 23-24; good 21-23; good scheme. They will visit Quebec, peace, demo-|,.,. ver of the tiny country by| cows 17.50-18, sales to 18.50; cracy, neutrality, a ssion a Tome aud Niagara | nd popular will. ogre {pro-Communist forces. {medium 16-17; common 15-16; » ' and cutter 12.14.50; | While the Communists agreed| And so the conversations at canners HARSH FINDINGS to sit down and talk at Geneva Geneva appear to be in vain.|good heavy bologna bulls 19-19. LONDON (CP)--An-article in/about establishing a neutral Britain and the United States 50, odd tops to 20, common and| the medical journal Family Laos and after an international have strongly condemned the medium 16-18.50 Doctor comparing smokers with/t ru ce commission reported evident violations of whatever] Replacment cattle: Good non-smokers, says the former, fighting had died down, pro-Red| cease-fire existed and Britain steer stockers 22-24 with West. | drink more alcohol, get di- (action in Laos suddenly flared has postponed the l4-country ern steer stock calves 20-22, vorced more often, are poor anew and another royal govern-| conference until there is greater|plain ends downward to 16. | drivers and worry about their|ment community fell to the Pa- assurance that the fighting had| (Calves: Choice vealers 31-32, | thet Lao. odd sales to 33; good 27-30; me-| dium 23-26; common 19-22; bon- ers 14-18 | Seven rooms, beautifully landscaped lot. Broadloom throughout; ceramic - tiled bathroom and 2-pc. powder room. Very modern kitchen with new deluxe dishwasher; crystal fixtures, custom drapes through- out. Beautiful large recreation room with indirect lighting and natural brick and stone fireplace. Screened Summer room overlooking garden; very economical oil heating $27,700 health. halted. BRIGHTER LOOK HOPES DASHED {TALKS CONTINUE MEXBOROUGH, England Padong is gone and there is/ Me 2 n while "consultations" . : (CP)--Council of this Yorkshire no telling where the Pathet Lao among some of the countries Hogs: Grade A 30-31.75, heavy town has provided changing will strike next, though again|are to continue, apparently -in'SOWs 20.30-21.25; stags 17.50 on rooms for garbage collectors, so/there is talk of a temporary the hope of reaching some bet. a dressed weight basis they can come to work in their lull in ground action. The signi- ter understanding of what the, Sheep and lambs: Spring best suits. Officials said this will|ficance of Padong is that the Geneva meeting can accom- lambs 23-24 per hundredweight; | raise the workers' status. flare-up came some time" after|plish. |sheep 3-10 according to quality. | PHONE OWNER FOR APPOINTMENT TO INSPECT RA 3-4959