oe. > Pits HEP ge 'eas PELE ARIES ESR | ai ee ic ices ca ne Dominion Stores Annual Sales Up At the half-way mark in its current fiscal year, Stores, Limited gives indications of smashing the recocd sales and profit totals established last year. In his semi-annual! report to shareholders released President T, G. McCormack re- vealed that sales during the 25 weeks to September 15th, amounted to $207,974,305, an in- crease of $7,931,544 or 3.96% over last year. EXPENSES UP "Wages and employee bene- fits, various forms of taxation, occupancy costs, depreciation and virtually all other expenses continued to increase, but ef- fective cost controls and plan- ned improvements in efficiency perved to counteract part of the increased cost of doing busi- ness," Mr. McCormack repurt- ed today,|and Operating profit, before pro- viding for depreciation and taxes on income, amounted to $9,937,827 compared with §9,- 654,500 in the corresponding' period last year. After provid- ing' $2,227,257 for depreciation $4,000,000 for income taxes, net profit amounted to $3,710,570 with $3,627,501 in the previous year, in increase 29%. With current assets at 2.69 times current Habilities, work- ing capital reached an all-time high of $27,672,260. 540 Policemen Attend Funeral WOODSTOCK (CP) -- More than 540 police officers from 42 Ontario municipalities attended the funeral of Constable Thomas funeral ednesday with own service revolver as police tried to ehend two escap- of}ees trom the nearby Ontario One of the patients, Norman Bignell, 26, is still in fair con- dition in hospital with gunshot wounds, sustained in a down- town gun battle. Sgt. John Hogg, Teenage Driver Curfew Started BOSTON (AP) -- Massachu- setts's new teen-age drivers cur- few law went into effect Sunday. 'Chicken Hut' Growth Caused By Ignorance WATERLOO (CP) -- Lack of official support for the visual arts will result in poor taste and "ungodly looking' subur- ban developments, Alan Jarvis predicted Saturday. Mr. Jarvis, editor of Canadian art magazine and former direc- tor of the National Art Gallery, said lack of education in the visual arts results in the "chicken hut" suburbia that has been allowed to spring up all over Ontario. Dr, Jarvis was speaking at the autumn convocation of Wat- erloo Lutheran University, at which he received an honorary doctor of laws degree. Similar degrees were con- ferred on Douglas W A.mbridge, president of Abitibi Power and Paper Company; Rev. Ernest E. Long, secretary of the gen- eral council of the United Church of Canada; and Rev. John M. Zimmerman, chair- man of the board of governors of the university and president of the western Canada synod of the Lutheran Church in Amer- ica. Buy Lands For Future Parks, Delegates Told TORONTO (CP) -- Parks State police said any boy or girl 16 to 18 years old applying for a motor vehicle licence will be given a junior pemit. Hold- ers of junior permits caught driving between 1 a.m: and 5 a.m. will be charged with driv- oof without @ licence, police said. injured in a struggle with the other patient, is in good condi- tion. WAR PENSIONS Estimated annual liability for pensions paid to war veterans is more than $170,000,000. Unarmed Cop Takes Rifle From Drunk BRANTFORD (CP) -- Un- armed Constable Frederick Hill early Saturday remove4 »® rifle from a man who minutes be- fore had fired a shot at his feet. Const, Hill was manaced with the rifle after he and another policeman had gone to a local hotel to investigate a complaint from a man who claimed he had been "taken" for $500. The man who had been 4rink- ing heavily said he would "get even" and left. Police followed and apprehended him outside his home. After the shot was fired, Const, Hill removed his revolver and holster, left them in the po- lice cruiser and went back un- armed to confiscate the rifle. Albert Charles Stewart, 36, was remanded to next Friday on charges of pointing a frearm and discharging a firearm. Switch Saves U'S.| From Bomb Blast WASHINGTON (AP) --: Dr. nuclear thet packed a potential wallop of 24,000,000 tons of TNT. The defence department de- clined to affirm or deny Lapp's neport. In a book (Kill and Overkill) published Sunday, Lapp, who is 'not connected with the govern- ment's atomic program, says: "Nuclear weapons have been in- volved in about a dozen major jimcidents or accidents, mostly lane crashes, both in the United States and overseas." "In one of these incidents a B-52 bomber had to jettison a 24-megaton bomb over North Carolina, The bomb fell in a field without exploding. "The defence department has "after ball ; FOOTBALLER DIES ALTON, lil. (AP)--John Kesh-| The ner, 17, a Marquette High School football game death was due THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, October 22, 1962 7 , died Saturday|orum on CBC radio opens ite . duting a foot- Doctors said his on similar to a brain injury, the world, i i 3 E i a i iy E x Hf <a THIS DIAMOND 1S A MAN'S BEST FRIEND. And this diamond can put up to $2,500 in 286 King Street West, Telephone 728-1636 W, G. McKnight, Mem in ee a +S 8 p.m. -- 9 te 5 pm Branches Throughout Ontario me 700-Man Force Kills 66 Red Guerrillas SAIGON (AP) -- Leap-frog- ging government units killed 66 Communist guerrillas and cap- tured 17 others Sunday in an op- eration along the Gulf of Siam, South Vietnamese military sources claimed. The 700-man force met heavy Viet Cong resistance in several local clashes, however, and three government troops were killed and 14 wounded: Of 17 U.S. Army troop-carry- ing helicopters supporting the opration, three were hit by groundfire. One was forced to remain at an air strip in the town of Rach Gia near the oper- ating area 120 miles southwest of here. Before the attack, Vietnamese Air Force fighters poured rock- ets into the region where two Viet Cong battalions were be- lived operating. Five of the U.S. Army's new HU-1A escort helicopters flew shotgun for the lightly . armed troop carriers. Several HU-lAs responded to Communist groundfire with blasts from their under-slung rocket pods. one of the most successful in ith Viet Nam in weeks. authorities should not be afraid to buy land in advance for fu- ture use, William Hare, com- missioner of recreation and parks for Toronto Township, said Saturday. Agreeing with Mr. Hare's statement, made at a meeting of the Ontario Parks Associa- tion, William Taylor, Kitchener parks board chairman, told the 40 delegates of such a practice in his city. He said Kitchener' bought a farm six miles from the city, held it for future use, and a service club now is de- veloping part of it. Douglas Fiuhrer, Kingston parks superintendent told the delegates that parks authorities should have control of the city's trees rather than other groups such as public utilities commis- sions. He said that in Kingston sewer lines are sometimes re- routed to save trees. "You can build new parks but you can't build new trees," he said. Mine, Mill Local To Probe Labor Relations Board PORT COLBORNE (CP)--The Port Colborne local of the In- ternational Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (In.) called on Premier Robarts Sun- day to investigate the Ontario Labor Relations Board. The executive of Mine-Mill's Local 637 agreed at a meeting to ask the premier to set up a bipartisan legislature committee "to investigate the administra- tion of the provincial Labor Re- lations Act. by the Ontario La- bor Relations Board as presently constituted," This action was taken follow- ing the board's recent split de- cision to replace Mine-Mill's Lo- cal 598 in favor of the United Steelworkers of America (CLC) as bargaining agent for more than 14,000 workers at the Inter- national Nickel Company of Can- ada Limited, Sudbury. The Steelworkers last Decem- ber ousted Mine-Mill as bargain- ing agents for Inco workers at Port Colborne. Drill For Oil On Scout Land CHATHAM (CP) -- Outgoing president Herb Japp told the annual meeting of the Chatham Boy Scout Association Sunday that negotiations have been completed for drilling rights on its 110-acre scout camp at nearby Clearville. "We hope to have a good pay- ing oil well there next year," he said. The well will be drilled by Canadian Devonian Oil Com- pany. Pope John Bans Deathbed Photo VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope John made a slight change Sat- urday in the voting procedure for a new pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church. He also freed cardinals of the threat of excommunication for not attending a conclave to choose a new pope, and he banned photographs of a pope on his death bed. The Pope's rules were. con- tained in an apostolic letter, a motu proprio (a document signed by the Pope in his own hand), made public Saturday. framed by Pope Pius XII in 1945. The previous rules provided that a minimum of two-thirds of the voting big age plus one, was required to elect a e. Under the amendment Bese thirds majority is sufficient, However, if the number of car- dinals in the conclave cannot be divided into equal thirds, the new rules hold to the require- ment of "two-thirds plus one." In his letter, the Pope also ordered that no plaseraphs could be made of a dying pope, and that no sound recordings might be made in the death room. When Pope Pius XII died, newspapers in Italy and abroad published pictures of the pontiff on his death bed. Professor Ric- card Galeazzi- Lisi, personal physician of Pope Pius, was later ousted from the Rome Medical Association for selling photographs and newspaper ar- ticles "describing the pope's death agony. Later an appeals board annulled the expulsion, saying there were technical er- rors in the way the action was taken. Lagging Drivers Cause Accidents SUDBURY (CP)--Mr. Justice L, A. Landreville of the Ontario Supreme Court Saturday urged stricter law enforcement against slow drivers and drunk drivers. "Every laggard on the high- way is a contributing cause to accidents by inviting other ve- hicles to pass him," he told 300 delegates to a road-safety work- shop, Other suggestions Mr. Justice Landreville made: The public should refuse to buy cars of manufacturers who spend millions on color and de- sign but neglect safety features. Cars more than 10 years old should be removed from the road unless certified to be in a safe driving condition. Yearly vehicle inspections should be compulsory. VITAMINS TOILETRIES Halibut Liver 21.20 2M--250's B=) 5 "3.80 Excellent Source of Vitemins Oil Capsules} 2S 21.90 With B12--150's ADRIENNE SPRAY HAIR NET uty 21.50 22.00 1 l-on, Reg. 1.99 2-299 MULTIPLE VITAMIN TABLETS 50's Reg. 2.29 100's Reg. 3.98 250's Reg. 7.98 22.30 23.99 2 7.99 CREAM DEODORANT. 0270! } 2-0n. 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