Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 31 Aug 1961, p. 18

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16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, August 31, 1961 terials are directly implicated in| article advises. focation. Nitrogen dioxide is some farm deaths. | There should be good venti-| heavier than air, orange-yellow For F armers | An outline of the perils is lation to blow away the gases--| at room temperature and black Protesting | given by the occupational health with fencing to keep away child- | at higher temperatures. | i +g| division of the national health| ren and cattle--and the blower| | OTTAWA (CP) -- Silo fill | | dapan di OE Te known tq| department. Nitrogen dioxide is| fan always should be run before, SUSPENSE MASTER / many farmers but it can kill the culprit. |a silo is entered. Before he began directing mo- - : Gases from silos have been a| No one should be allowed to| Scientists have known about tion pictures in 1925 Alfred 1 in farm hazard for centuries Butjenter a silo for any purpose at nitrogen dioxide since 1868 but Hitchcock was a scenario only in the last few years has|all from the time the filling silage poisonings in man were | writer, an art director and pro- AUCKLAND (CP)--Japanese| it been realized that nitrogen' begins until seven to 10 days'attributed until recently to car- duction manager. 'fue oxides from fermenting silo ma-|after filling has stopped, the bon dioxide or just simple suf Silo Hazard trawlers are reaping a rich) harvest from the sea off the New Zealand coast and their| g - --- activity has brought increasing | Pig 3 MN protests. | 7 s The Japanese fishing fleets 1 % / S \ are penetrating ever further | | 8 / \ into the South Pacific. They now swarm off the New Zea- land coast in larger numbers | \ than ever before. +3 \ ------ For the most part, they re- main outside the three-mile \ limit. But New Zealand com- | | n } mercial fishermen complain { \ | I I that they are over - fishing | recognized grounds and using | smaller mesh nets than local | - 1 ° trawlers are permitted to em- | =A i \ il | 5 | witha | The protests have brought ib {limited support since New Zea: | \ : {land fishermen have not ex-| | \ 9, / -s panded their industry to any-| | { \ Py / | , 4 , GOLDEN HAWKS MEET CANADETTES fen, thes indus vo Sn: . : oi They supply only the local mar-| Members of the RCAF's | the Canadettes, chorus line | show in Toronto. Golden | at exhibition ket and Pp § LY the ar Golden Hawks aerobatic team | appearing at Canadian Na- | Hawks will perform Saturday | --CP Wirephoto |Australia. They maintain that it [ ~ meet some of the members of | tional Exhibition grandstand is not economic to develop trade : ~ Dd further afield. NS a ----- WRITING INSTRUMENT ~~ _,# One government official said lin an interview that though the MUGE INDUSTRY SEEN ; il A SHEArFeRS "Cartridge" Pen. Loads like a rifle Lanaaada An 2D. FAA VE Us tit is compicated, i's Seentiels have long main wih carige of "Si wring i. Cary par probably no more complex than| = 7=0 ie : pr | in pocket or purse -- they're spillproof'! 1 Canadian tariff laws. Moreover, | dustry could be developed in p y re spillp $2.95 SE hd + the seas near New Zealand | . most tariff disputes which reach| they teem with fine qual- 8 SHEAFFERS "Craftsman" Pen. 14 kt. gold point. LJ * Tight Economic Bonds iam muni rm : | Clean "Tip Dip" iling -- it fle right at the tp. | importer. : ardson, a former Canadian who \ Choice of colours and points. $3.95 : | "But it's pretty hard for the 10% is professor of zoology OTTAWA (CP) -- When the|ports promoters hammer at the|the U.S. has remained around Canaan yr. tangled with at Victoria University, Welling- | k vl C SHEAFFERS "Compact 5" Pen. New slim-line United States' economy catches| theme that the vast U.S. mar-|the 60-per-cent mark. |U.S. customs, to take that oh is prominent among those Ti | \ "compact" styling. Inner spring clip. Inlaid point with a cold, Canada's economy ket offers wide opportunities for| American tariff laws long|yjac » who have maintained that the / ous metal tip. Visual cartridge ink supply. $5.00 sneezes. |a great variety of manufactured have been a cause > concert | One difficulty. he said. is that| Prospects nave been ade- preci ' 8 Pply. 39. That holds especially true for Canadian goods. A big staff| Mr. Fleming, in his June in st cases the Canadiz _|quately exploited. y Ca IE Lory Tac aimee sta slbudint Spe. oil. levers kd He Canadian ex. Now Japanese fishermen are, "EN IT COMES TO WRITING ~ COME TO SHEAFFER'S1s W. A. SHEAFFER PEN CO. OF CANADA LTD., GODERICH, ONT. ernment economists and politi- ready to help Canadian ship-|U.S. tariff protection on many|_ 1S. duty i der giving point to these claims. clans regretfully concede that| pers through the snares in the products are still "inappropri- Ses he US, ny i oper Japanese catches among the SHEAFFER PENS AVAILABLE AT the situation isn't likely to|U.S. tariff law jungle. ately high. cases he goes further, shaving large schools of tuna in waters change for a long time. | Despite all efforts, Canada TOUGH BARRIERS his price and paying the freight near New Zealand have fi. K AR N DRU GS LIMI T E D a Snail fact . Re San hasn't made much of a dent in| Senator G. S. Thorvaldson, le customer's doorstep. jnaly avused Jocal interest. | 3 7 Fre : "lits huge trade deficit with the president of the national Pro-| e contracting character of ous Investigations are in MH thirds of Canadian exportsiyg giant. Statistics since 1900 gressive Conservative party as-|the two-way trade is shown Progress into the possibilities of 28 KING EAST OSHAWA PHONE 723-4621 across the border are in the chow an unbroken succession of sociation, said in a recent|clearly in trade statistics. establishing a large tuna-can- form of lumber and forest|yo.rs in which imports from the, speech: Top item in sales to the U.S. |ning industry. products, ores and concentrates, {7's have exceeded exports. "We have made too many pil-|1S newsprint paper--a manufac-| A new wave of protests has | metals, natural gas and oil. Not once in the last nine years grimages to Washington not to|tured product but still a raw arisen from the disclosure that SHEAFFER PENS AVAILABLE AT These are products sensitive] 1 oh er 00 Vl material for U.S. industry. S. [th ; " : has this deficit fallen below the know . ; material for U.S. industry. Sales/the Japanese are catchin J to the winds of economic|gas ois CR41C ae! 1056 SI EROW i pate, difficulties in| totalled $631,230,000 last year. Of | swordfish in quantity near New| Th h North $500,000,000 mark. In it, volved in selling to that coun A : J ® change. B To en a a reached a record $1,167,800,000. try anything except the things it|the 10 leading export items only| Zealand and developing a big| Ahm ast year. Canada's sajep| LAS Year It was SSTT8S.00. neds, and hence wan to buy ¥0, thers, are mamifactured: export trade with the United | 1 SIMCOE §. -- 723-3332 SHOPPING. CENTRE 757181 » t 5." | ) 3 § s > y L s to the U.S. fell 4.6 per cent to/ pAYMENTS SWELL TOTAL Tom us E. Coyne, former gov-| The others are raw materials: |are regarded as a delicacy. $3,036,400,000 despite a 20-per- | This imbalance is in commod-| anor of 'the Bank of Canada |uranium ores and concentrates,| Little use is made of the cent gain in exports to overseas jy trade alone. Adding on items|jast March said U.S. tariff pol.| lumber, woodpulp, iron ore,|large, numbers of swordfish markets. (such as interest and dividend joy_encouraging entry of raw|mickel, aluminum and petro-|caught annually by New Zea-| SHEAFFER PENS AVAILABLE AT This is the almost inevitable payments on American invest- materials but deterring manu. | eum. |land big game fishermen. ' result of the oft-stated fact that ments here, and the deficit inl¢, ac) | - _-- R. H. Barnsley, president of A A actured goods--has been more|CUT OFF URANIUM I o : Canada-U.S. trade is the world's i di Canada 1 i he New ¥ bilateral exci Sour st spending, Canada last important in shaping Canada's| The American market for the New Zealand Big Game 3 largest lateral exchange of year had a $1,377,000,000 deficit. | economic development than has|uranium --a $236,600,000 item Fishing council, has expressed 14 SIMCOE SOUTH OSHAWA HONE-728-8821 goods. | , Finance Minister Fleming, in| Canadian tariff policy. last year--is due to disappear cOncern that Japanese commer- HOPE FOR GAINS the Commons Opposition before "We have been trying and|in five years. It's hoped that a/cial fishing Will deplete the| With U.S. economic recovery| 1957, said too many Cae ba oping for 100 years or more to|good share of this loss can be [TONNE 8 Em Yuin an portant apparent this year, trade of-| "| get better access to the United replaced by increasing exports ® . i ficials expect Canadian exports ket. States market, equal to the ac-|of iron ore and of natural gas SHEAFFER PFNS AVAILABLE AT there to pick up. Moreover, the] The share of Canada's import cess we give you to our mar-|through a proposed pipeline to|and parts exceeded $660,000,000 BURNS CREDIT EWELLERS LTD biggest gains are likely to be market suplied by he 10) ket, Me Coyne told a New| California. {last year. The inflow of Ameri-| . in the group of industrial raw has steadily declined from 73.3 York audience. | .Of the top 10 items imported|can cars and trucks, vehicle en-| materials that dominates the per cent in 1955 to 67.3 per cent, *, . Not many Canadians|from the U.S., coal is the only |gines and parts for Canadian! 32 KING WEST OSHAWA PHONE 723-7022 north-to-south trade flow. {last year. But the proportion of now expect to see miracles in|non-manufactured item. |assembly lines totalled $393,000,- | The trade department's ex-'Canada's exports that go tolthis direction in their lifetime."| Imports of U.S. machinery! 000. | OUR BARGAINS GIVE YOU TWICE THE VALUE OF ANY DISCOUNT OPERATION BACK TO SCHOOL BARGAINS LB REG. 5.95--PENNYWORTH"S SUPER VALUE 3 WA GENUINE LEATHER ® Zippered all the way round OS HAWA v2 Axl ® Complete with pad, pencil, ruler, REG AJ AX braids 3.RING BINDERS . == 15 | tvoonsomms ® 3 large 3" Chrome rings BACK-TO-SCHOOL--Children's G.S.W. Patterned LADIES 1st QUALITY GIRLS' BOYS' - 8 TO 14 YRS. GIRLS' 8 TO 14 YEARS MEN'S WHITE AA ALL] ALL METAL Pee. Ski SHIRTS .-- Lunch Boxes | Zee Skit & | DRESSES REvERSIELE «| DUTTOWBLOUSES| DRESS SHIRES dors ato ex! JACKETS |x: @Qc| i PYJAMAS with lL) Vacuum Bottles Sizes 10-18. Reg. 5.93 Printed cottons. Sizes 3-6x ® Fully flannel-lined jacket 1.98 3.98 Py 3 WHILE only. ® Sturdy zipper. - = 1.99% 1.99 90. ic. 1.99 DRESS PANTS | "SHOES ; MC 3 WAN . 1.98 3.98 i a UALITY Half elasti t--Holf self belt | 3 les i -- CHILDREN'S ROOMY, LADIES --1st Q . 2 -- ire pi Charcoal : sof ge Bl an RIE STURDY PLAID CANVAS DRESSES and Grey. Sizes 3 to 6X, ® Black, brown or beige NOT A MISSPRINT SCHOOL BAGS Sizes 11-20 ond 163-24" 60 ANACIN CITRUS FLAVORED REG. Res. Vi svete guka PRICE 1 99 ANALGESIC TABLETS Alka-Seltzer ad i 1.44 - 1.99 2 PAIRS REG. 3.98 LADIES' COTTON LADIES' FIRST QUALITY 1.29 Cc Fast pain relief for headaches | TABLETS, for speedy relief CIRCULAR STITCH TERRY SPORT SOCKS ---- MEN'S 1st QUALITY and common colds. from upset stomach BRASSIERES Absorbent sotton and nlyon. 3.98 Ms ivan LAN SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION OF Sanforized Jeans : REG. REG. Reg. 99¢ 49 $ Colon TOP QUALITY, SMARTLY STYLED Sizes 30 to 44. 9 : [ 4 BACK TO SCHOOL Ren 299 2:89 89¢ 6H 79¢ 62 Each . . el" go or NYLON HOSE ¥ 2 FOR 79¢ - (S: ) 51 , 15.denier, top quality DRESSES, JUMPERS, RACE OUSE DIAPERS Don eri Sabin hi 9to ll. SKIRTS and BLOUSES Tors 4" SHORTS NAME BRAND are con 3.09 REG. 79¢ VALUE. SAVINGS up1025% |=". 3. 1.00 CIGARETTES No exchanges o Rotns | HOSEA 9°50 | 35¢ Pr. 3 for 1.00 Reg. 42¢ FRIDAY 10 om. to 8 pm SATURDAY 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. CHIX ? 9% GIRLS' 8 TO 14 YEARS BOYS' 8 TO 14 YEARS " Reg. 3.98. . MEN'S 1ST QUALITY MELBOURNE 100% Wool -- Girls 8 to 14 Years | CONTINENTAL WASHABLE 2.99 carton BOYS BACK-70.3CHEOL FLANNEL TYCONDA ETC. PLEATED SKIRTS | Pants wma $1.00 | meme os| heures | DRESS PANTS PURCHASE OF © Meds In Conade. Sizes 8 to 12. Jars Smsein Heit 3.99 we N88 | 5319 ven carton witnour punonnse | 1S Red 7 | tC 8dc| ii Sv 3.99

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