RUSS JACKSON HONORED football club by hometown with the award. Fans were in- fans, admires this 1,000-pound vited to cast votes after each top grade steer" which went Ottawa game. | Shareholders | Claim Data Leaked Out TORONTO (CP)--An angry shareholder Wednesday accused! officials of Leland Publishing Co. of leaking information to the financial affairs of the com- Quarterback Russ Jackson, named most valuable player on the Ottawa Rough Rider BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Janitors Now Big Business Mr. Macken, western sales} manager of Modern Building VANCOUVER (CP)--Building| janitors have become big busi- ness. And they are striving to| Cleaninig Service of Canada change their public image. |Limited, says today's janitor The men no longer are calbed| really is different from his coun- janitors but "custodians." |terpart of years ago. Janitors-- Cleaning women are calledjor rather, custodians and ma- "matrons.' |trons--now go through a regular In Vancouver there are 180 li-/'raining program before they're| holders were notified. Leland showed a net loss of $557,227 for the year ending June 30, compared with a $336,- }099 net profit a year earlier. "By early July, Bay Street 1964, record Jan. RCMP Not Alarmed By Red Data Flow 'As part of the move to en-| The average male janitor is/president Harrison Verner at ciation of Building Maintenance/0!d-time janitors. And he bas company "and I wouldn't con- captain of Canada's Davis Cup/g-owth of the janitor services in|a loss because management de- ** of the janitor industry,|fices, he says. jthese costs are written off over joriginal capital investment in|months dropped by over 50 per fessional workers jto have a drop in sales during | } Huge Profits NET EARNINGS ses vs: scuane at nas in hee denied it is "making wind-|Co. Ltd., 9 months ended Sept. jtrading at about $3.80, No one normal refining margins overjof Canada, 9 months ended DIVIDENDS which has refineries in Torontolics Ltd., 6 month sended Sept.) Gas Co. + common + 4 meee ee eet | Dominion Coal Co, Ltd. year! y, Corby Distlilery Ltd., class food manufacturers and Cana-| , Lid., 3 months ended Sept.| General Pakeries Ltd. wugat contracts, the company' si4 969,000, 95 cents @ share;|common 15 cents, $2.50 pfd. as fre-jend ere. being "Mace at 8s fr 1962, $1,069,312, cents, Nov. 25, record Nov. 15. changed 89 times since Jan. 1--|ended Sept. id 1962, $350,- $ 5.4 per cent pfd. series A 27 again Thursday. jende Sept. 30: 1963, $575,000, rate of one additional share of {months ended Sept, 30 1963, Steinberg's Ltd,, class A Co, of Canada Ltd. Thursday|Sept, 30: 1963, $101,895 (no com-| last year jon 6,340, 394 shares outstanding hance the public image of jani-jOver 35 and a steady worker|the annual meeting. Contractors, Lower Mainland. [Plenty of modern equipment, ltirm or deny any rumors com- tennis team in his off-hours industry in recent years is ajcided to make a 100 per cent gays Mr. Macken. During the life of an averageja period of years. ieleaning and maintaining the|cent, Mr. Verner said the pub- February on the stock mar- TORONTO (CP) -- Canada; t 2 e fall protite'®. ase result-of the|20: 1063, $1,318,000; 196s, 91,-(*t the meeting questioned the raw sugar costs and not specu-| |Sept. 30: 1963, $50,550,424, $1. 92 Bulolo Gold Dredging Ltd., 25) and Montreal. |30: 1963, $683,477 (including) prices were extraordinarily high|Co. Ltd.); 1962, $422,000 (in-/Cents, Nov. 29, record Nov. "But supplies caught up sud-\ended July 31; 1963, $1,141.044;|4 "ron . voting' 50 cents' class dian sugar refiners loaded with 35° 1962" ga'974 900, 43 cents. a| cents, Jan, 28, says, Redpath Sugar is pricing| tg, "cts ¢gy' 000, $1.08. 16214 cents, $2.80 pid. 70 cents, t ren a share; quently to' follow its actua m8 Intorprovineial Pipeline Co,, 6" increases and 24 decreases.|000,. $3.14 a share; leents, Dec 14, record Nov. 22. 150 cents @ share; 1962, $512, 000, Stelco Profit Up comrion steck for each 50 $10,696,840, $1.60-a share; 1962 reported net profit of $27,552,778! parative figure). Sales for the period were 1962, $10, 627,000, $1.50 on 6,695,- pany to Bay Street before share-} per cent pfd. 28 cents, Dec, 2,) » 1244) OSHAWA BOARD OF EDUCATION OFTEN IRKS NEWSMEN At there's a growing tend- ency toward secret meet- a by boards and commit- tees handling public affairs, a reason may be that the laws governing such meet- ings aren't clear. In_ this ftory the situation in com- munities across Canada is discussd. By JOHN LeBLANC Canadian Press Staff Writer A school boa 'on't let a ratepayers' group photostat its minutes, Another resigns in a body when citizens protest secrecy. The chairman of another says it meets privately to cover up mistakes. A police commission ig com- pletely indifferent to the public and press. Some municipal officials put 'ja prohibitive price tag on the examination of municipal rec- ords by taxpayers. These are incidents, scattered around the country, of official secrecy about public business by boards, committees and pub- lic officials turned up in a Cross-Canada Survey by the Canadian Press. While they are not typical of jthe general run of public bodies, they illustrate what the public --and the press -- comes up against in keeping track of how its business is transacted and how its money is spent |LAWS UNCLEAR | The multiplicity of eiected and appointed groups taking 'care of the public's affains jacross the land has spawned jmyriad ways--some legitimate, 'some not wholly so--of keeping ithese doings under cover, at jleast until the officials decide |to lift the curtain. A complicating factor is a helter-skelter of provincial leg- islation--or lack of it~on the subject of public meetings by local bodies. By the time this has filtered through interpreta- tions at the bands of a miscel- lany of local councils and their subsidiarv' bodies, amy sem- blance of uniformity vanishes. Some statutes within a prov- ince appear to jar one another. New Brunswick seems to have no legislation on the -point, though in. practice municipal meetings are open for the most part. Quebec imposes a gener- ally open. policy from the top,|w: but local application var: ies widely LAWS ARE VAGUE The intent of Manssobva's leg: islation is described as "hard to define, at best." A correspond- ent summed up Newfoundland law governing St. John's city council: 'The sense of this act would appear to be that every meeting of the @uncil is a pub- lic meeting--unless it isn't." School and hospital boards 'seem to come into conflict most frequently with newspaper at- tempts to get ail the community news, according to replies to a questionnaire by CP member |dailies. Some of these are not legally obligated to have their discussions #1 public. Some are | With others, the dividing line is| shadowy The Truro Daily Ness reports that a "potentially dangerous trend (not only here but else- where) is the gradual taking lover of some public spending by various bodies set up by town and county councils which un- der their acts of incorporation cess side was chalked up by the Edmonton Journal after cam- paigning two years against a policy of closed meetings of the Edmonton hospital board. Now, not only are the meetings open to reporters, but they may join in the discussions to ask clari- fying questions. But the Fredericton Gleaner has been campaigning just. a3 long, and with no results, against. closed board meetings of Victoria Public Hospital, which spends public money but whose superintendent argues it is_a private institution. 'In Fredericton, too, school trustees opened up their meet- ings several years ago but some of their decisions came under community criticism when they were reported in detail. Now, there is a tendency for mow and more important business to be considered in. closed "com- mittee." Public Indifferent When Officials Hide Details From Press Reporters takes of the administration," he says. In Oshawa, Ont., not only does the board of education bar the press from many of its com- mittee meetings but recently it} réfused a public to' trustee A. E. O'Neill when he wanted to discuss his resigna- tion as chairman of the. man- agement committee. His reason for resignation was the claim that the board was deliberately bypassing the committee. At Woodstock, Ont., the. city counci] has taken to assigning specific studies to bodies other, than standing committees. They meet irregularly, and it is dif- ficult to keep up with what they are doing. The Kingston Whig-Standard reports a growing tendency for the city's inance committee to meet privately, just before an open council meeting, to discuss politically controversial and ACTS DIFFER Moose Jaw's Union Hospital board-has come up with a new twist for authorizing closed) meetings, Saskatchewan's Mu-} nicipal Act says hospital board} meetings are open; The Hospi- holds all meetings privately. La Presse of Montreal ran afoul of one out-of-town hospital in 1960 when it reported doctors wer using its operating rooms to operate on dogs. It could get no comment from the hospital. Neither could it get any news on accident cases from this hos- pital for a couple of months, There is a Gallic piquancy to are not required to hold public meetings." PRESS TAKES PART As with the municipal coun- cils themselves, the press has of it--in opening up thes: other bodies to public scrutiny A notable score of the suc- Living Q OTTAWA (CP) -- Creditiste Leader Real Caouette rebuked Commons Speaker Alan Mac- naughton Thursday in a sued to reporters. Mr. Caouette said the Speaker has refused to provide the Cre- ditiste leader with three con- necting offices and this consti- tuted "a new national shame ang another flagrant injustice" as far as 13 French-Canadian MPs were conce , Mr. Caouette also hit out at two former colleagues, Social Credit Leader Robert Thomp- son and H, A. Olson (SC--Medi- cine Hat)' as two "Anglo-Saxons who have perpetrated an outras- eous injustice against 600, 900 Quebec voters who voted for Le Ralliement des Creditistes in the last election." The statement said Mr. 'shompson and his 10 support- ers have 13 offices in the Par- liament buildings while the 13 Creditiste members have only 12 offices. Mr, Caouette complained that Mr. Thompson has two connect- ing offices while he has to share one office with three secretaries. SHOULD PROTEST "All true Canadians should {protest strongly this shameful and ignoble treatment tolerated TORONTO 11 A.M, STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--Nov. | Quotations In cents unless marked $. a--Odd xd--Ex-dividend, --xr---Ex- rights, xw4lxewarrants. Net change Is from previous board-lot closing sale. INDUSTRIALS } 11:00 Net Stock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge Abitibi Ma 46¥a 46a + Ve Alta Gas 284 e's 2 $18% St 18% -- a $64\2 642 64\2 a8 $71 Ne 1% + 125 $13% 1350 13% + Ve 805 $54 53% 54 --% 3000 230 220 =230 830 $27% 27% IW%a-- Va 2630 $24% 247% 24% 2033 8 4 +% 56 108 yn Bell Phone Brazil BA oll BC Pow BC Sugar BC Phone BUPh 5%pr Cal Pow Can Cem Cl Fndry Can Mit n 15 $108 108 wo $21 2 25.$377 37 3 168 $22%4 22% 22% z10 $21% 21 21 con Perm 100 $77¥e 77% 77%e-- % ass) Uo on Cc oro 1360 $10Ve 10 10 --% C Brew A pr 30 $50%e 50% 50% Cc Chem w 1600 5790 580 590 +10 C Found pr 100 $182 18% 18% + 14 100 $162 16% 16-- % 45 $63 63% 63% + Vo 630 $18% 184 184+ 210 390 390 390 3780 $35 35% 35% 0.2 8 Ws Wa strongly-worded statement is-| eensed firms that supply jani-|assigned to buildings. They're| a jhad an excellent idea of what tors and ring yp annual sales of ressed in uniforms and they're| 1% ee sag yah tors, Vancouver's biggest jani-|Who does 40 to 50 per cent more! qr "Verner said he had heard James R. Macken is the|says Mr, Macken, ing out of brokerage houses" 'The tion wants to em-|growing demand for '"'a higher|write - off of over $1,000,000 of office. building the owner will] In reply to a question as to structure, says Mr, Macken. \lishing business often went in the second half of a year, or ~ t aa Bealaton Samr Com.-| By THE CANADZAN PRESS ket and then crashed to a $3.05 "lcrash and no explanation was high raw sugar market. 195,000. . lating on supplies," said a state-|a share; 1962, $48,720,723, $2.03. cents, Dec. 13, record Nov. 22. "In 1921 a similar situation|earnings of Northwest Indus-| i the same reasons as today.|cluding earnings of Northwest! four per cent pfd. 20 cents, 34 }- denly and prices plummeted, al-|1952, $378,440, B non-voting 50 cents, Dec. 1, high prices inventories." |share; 1962, $6,936,000, 48 cents; |g, 1964. by day and) such supplies day by day Donohue Brothers Lid., 9 mos.|Dec. 2, record Nov, 22. daily raw sugar costs. '4 gia Motor Company, 9 mos. hy cents, Dec. 2, record Nov. The price was raised 20 cents, 14f),000, $3.18. Rockwell Standard Corp., 44 cents, shares of common stock held, *a40 $10,017,055, $1.50. Nearly $6 Million The N American Fund of Cents, Dec. 2, record Nov. for the first nine months of this| Pan - American World Air- » year compared with $21,726,982 |ways, 3 months ended Sept. 30: $276,992,845 compared with $253,097,392 in the first nine empl $2,000,000. ae Sere shareholder F. W. Cayley told tor companies formed the Asso-| work in one eight-hour shift than| rumors about the affairs of the group's interim president and; 'ne of the reasons for the fast} He said the company showed @s-|standard of housekeeping" in of-|pre - production costs. Normally spend almost as much as his|why sales in the second six Dd es Makin Owners therefore demand pro-|cycles and it was not unusual eni g vice versa Sany's Redpath sugar division| Bathurst Power and Paper| jlow last month. It is currently offered 'We are depending on our; The Bell Telephone agen emf ment issued by the company,| Canadian Aviation Electron-| Canadian Western Natural existed, Canadian refined sugar|tries Ltd., and Canadian Bronze) World supplies of raw cane/for 5 months). Teoond Nee. Ae most wiping out many large) Dessinton Tar and Chemical! record Nov. 7. aw Se ee te rae [2, mouths ended Sept. 30: 1963,! Great Northern Capital Co., fin rices adjustments in, refined Prices snded Sept. 30: 1963, $1,058,822, Hays Steel Products Ltd., 12% The price of refined sugar has Nea 3 46, "s "aig Lakeland Natural Gas Ltd., to $18.65 a 100 - pound bag John Woor Company, 9 mos. common two per cent, at the Moore Corporation Ltd., 9 Jan. 2, 1964, record Nov. 15, HAMILTON (CP)~The Stecl|Canada Eld., 9 months ended|five cents, Dec. 20, record Nov. for the corresponding period| 1963, $16,099,000, $2.54 a share months of 1962. Net profit amounted to $1.36 a share compared with $1.07 a share in the first three quarters of last year. V. W. Scully; president, said) production, sales and profits for the nine months were better than any previously attained in a similar period. Mr. Scully said indications are that the volume of business in the final quarter of 1963 should be good, having regard/$250,000, 2.2 cents; } | 134 shares; 9 months ended Sept. 30: 1963, $20,874,000, $3.29 a share:-1962, $9,271, 000, $1. 38. Be Brothers and Co. Ltd., 9 months ended Sept: 30; 1963, $5,073,000° 1962, $6,283,000. Reichhold Chemicals Inc,, 9 months ended Sept, 30: 1963, $1,678,000, 36 cents a ehare; 1962 $1,936,000, 42 cents. Saguenay Power Co. Lid months ended Sept. 30: ies, $977,257; 1962, $977,448. Sherritt Gordon Mines Ltd., 3 montrs ended Sept. 30: 1063, $539,000, 4.8 cents a share; 1962, 9 months tor the decline in shipments that ended Sept, 30: 1963, $2,091,000, norm can be expected ' inj18.5 cents @ share; weeks of the year. | 850,000, 16.4 cents, 1962, $1, TORONTO. (CP) RCMP Superintendent John Henry said Thursday his. department is not alarmed at reports about in- creased amounts of Communist literature being distributed in Toronto's Chinatown homes, 'We're not going to take any positive action on the informa- tion we have," said Superintend- §jent Henry. '"'We probably would, though, if an individual ap- proached us." He said there is nothing un- usual about statements made by Rev. Edward Kwan, a Chinese Ciairtone Chemceil Chemcell pr Col Cell Con M § Con Paper Con Gas n Gin Gas A Corby vt Coronation Crain. RL Crysh int Dist Seag D Bridge 'D Dairies Dofasco Dom Stores Canadian Baptist minister at the anua!. convention of Evangeli-| cal Baptist Churches of Canada in London, Ont. y. Dom Tar Du. Pont Biddy Mtcn Falcon Fed Grain Fraser $302 $33 $21 $17 $13 $7 $13% 100 $37% 33 2 v7 17 33 2 7 --~ Ve Ya 1 -- Yo +% 200 $8% 8% 615 $29% WW 295+ Ve 250 $39 se WY 5140 $11% 11% 11%-- Ve 30 $108 108 725 $18% 750 $6% 100 $14 475 $14V2 365 $53 200 $17 m2 $13 90 $6714 1315 $15% -4/§ Fi' 50 25 $40 > 715 $744 100 $29% » * + vl 73% 108 18% 18 Ye 6¥e 14% + Ve 14% -- Va 53 7 3 +2 +% 67a -- Ve 15%4-- % 7 --% 4 + 374 ae --V uarters Annoy Caouette by the authorities of the federal" Parliament,"' said the state- ment, in French, "The Speaker of the House says he will do nothing and that he will leave the choice of of- fices to the Thompson group." It was the second press state- ment issued by 'Mr. Caouette criticizing Speaker Macnaugh- ton. Three weeks ago Mr. Caou- ette accused the Speaker -of "gagging" him when he was not permitted to comment on a nu- clear arms announcement by Prime Minister Pearson. Subsequently, the Speaker al- lowed Mr. Caouette to comment on ministerial statements The issue over offices arose in the Commons at the beginning of Thursday's sitting, when should have three offices like) every cther party leader. Mr. 'Gregoire was cut off by the Speaker who said the issue had been discussed often privat- ely between he and Mr. Caou- ette. to treat leaders of all "groups" on 'the samep basis, but what could he do when there were no extra offices available, except perhaps move out of his own of- fice? : tso informally and had varying success--and lack) Gilles. Gregoire (Creditiste-La-| pointe) argued that his leader) The Speaker said he wanted| some of the Quebec practic claimed the school board met irregularly that its meetings might as well jhave been secret. The board, |claiming bitterly that no one jpaid any attention to it. until taxes went up, 'resigned in a |body. Later, it went back. | Quebec follows the rule gener- jally applied across Canada that interested persons may see mu- nicipal records for a fee, usu- jally nominal, set by the munic- lipality. But some Quebec: coun- jcils get around this by setting a igi fee AR PHOTOSTATS 'Montrgal officials used jto fend off some askers by de- touring requests to the city's executive committee, which might or might not get around to them. The practice was dropped this year. Generally, the survey found that access to official docu- ments was easy. However, the Ottawa separate school board this year refused a group of ratepayers permis- sion to photostat minutes, though allowing them to be copied. The ratepayers threat- SING Citizen protested, but the min-| utes are still being copied by hand The same board for years ex- cluded reporters from parts of its meetings, briefing them later. Late this year. it threw jthe meetings open. Chairman Andrew robertson of the Winnipeg school board says he thinks the board over- does the use of its procedural tbylaw allowing secret hearings on property sales and person- nel MISTAKES HIDDEN "More often than not the) board will go into camera just| to cover up the damned mis-! tal Act does not. So the board) ' Sings. This year, the board de- \In one village, a citizens' group touchy matters, with its -deci- sions rubber - stamped at the open meeting. In effect na committee becomes "a closed- |door board of control or council | cabinet."' [MEETINGS OPENED At Galt, Ont., the board of ed- jucation was resorting to lavish use of the committee - of - the - whole (closed) practice when The Reporter took up the cud- gels. Now meetings are -- ally 100-per-cent open.' Less successful was the Strat. ford Beacon-Heraid in protest- ing its board of education's de- cision two years ago to exclude the press from committee mee:- cided to let the press in pro- vided it used nothing until it was ratified by the board itself The nwspaper is still trying for no-strings access. School trustees at Lethbridge, Alta., go into private session on matters involving school man- agement. Fraser Perry, associ-| ate editor of The Herald, com- ments: "Thy can define al- most anything as @ school man- agement problem." One. managing editor con- fesses that an incompetent porter was responsible for a hospital board decision to bar \the press. But that was several years ago and the presg {s sti!) barred. The editor observes: "T think this is an exampie- at-point which is often over- looked by editors. I don't think re-|knuckles. Policy : THE OSHAWA Ti es Fridey, November 1, 1963 95 CLASSIFIED _ ADVERTISING. (Continued from Page 18) res mand sonably good repo' (Replies from some nhewspa-|~ pers indicate that the individual|!® of trust, to closed meetings.) NO ANNOUNCEMENT There is no particular gional pattern of methods for combatting press ness, One trans-Canada trend is} cn press or public. ani tisfactory and some go beyond|>} their obligations in allowing ac- cess to their proceedings. There are exceptions, : The Hull, Que., commission,|7, closed doors and never an-|----- nounces decisions except for those that must be submitted to ithe city council, Meetings of the commission mation on any business trams-jch 32--Articles For § For Sale coverage of a ea Osnnive Biv it cannot sw rea- A i meeting if it c pply vate a AE ul Sti 2 4 space heater w' ena tar acceptability of reporters OCCa-|Telephone Whitby 668-4984, sionally determines whet herjFour plece ors < : Saeed ¢ they are admitted, on a basis ree gd pees finish, Whitby, Pape (HILO trailer at Traveirite tent relies at re-| Phone 725-4920. 'VACUUM cleaner repairs, inquisitive- Miva gba Parts, 'rou me ines, Rentals, Wallace Vacuum : the habit of calling committee Woh ar ime eer. 'oF meetings and omitting to notify Cali na jure end Appilatces. unlike other bodies there, neverlwe discloses the time and place of ture, o anything you have. ing Post Tr meetings, always meets. behind Seat end 31 ant eirect ace: Be TV TOWERS special 4 fi. aig at Orillia, Ont., are never open|243-249: ¥ DEAL for discount re 2 Name -- lines. wer Cal's new home where, We carry Although police commissions} monrese furniture as a rule get considerable sta-' Lid dealer. Contact our ity, press relations with them|#ypawaitens, adders, tutory protection against public-|avelon Deen He Hall, T-tephone nl. Equi ion the whole appear to be sa-|rentais and suppiles. All infeed, Cook's Office Street Gast, jehmond rae TELEVISION tower speci ture, including all channel anteed 728-678) buy, sell and exchange "ihe Sy Stores, 446 Simcoe ture with all channel antennae be Oshawa TV Supply Ltd. a0 Street, 728-8180. «| BUYING or selling furniture or eppl- ances, Psa Emer, Hampton 263-2294 er Sie, foun Bron and its members refuse infor- aren new end anged. Largest acted. The late J. C. Peters of The Packet and Times, which enjoys "excellent" relations| ca: with other municipal bodies, |th said the police commissioners were "completely indifferent to} public and press and feel no ob- ligation to them." bs tera We. sell eae oe cenit lo Hamilton so Hanne = i pp = Ing. tc. Best Tint be 9! Drayton's East. TYPEW! my ager and > In town, inion Tire store a Bond West BOARDS ATTACKED Some planning boards also' come in for criticism. The As- siniboia, Sask., planning board) recently ejected the press while|75 non - member landowners re- mained present. Mayor John Bellows said it was in accord- ance with "unwritten policy." The appeals ones of the Nashwaaksis, N.B., ning commission Rcd the sion of public housing and rapped editorially wes| over ' the|S7= jes elae-|n0" where. One commission--the commu: nity centre group at Chatham, N.B.--found sec After it had privately gone about buying a park site at con- siderable cost, a landowner ad- vised he would have donated a site in the same district if he a can h tly de- had known about it. ANTIQUE GUN WANTED y . cubic. ft, 'eries, Kelvinator jarred press this year during a a discus. rniure, One recy €XPeNsive.| Electric adding ened io go to court and The| | MONTREAL (CP)--Mr. Jus- |tice Robert LaFleur in Superior Court Thursday upheld the right of the Seafarers' International Union of Canada (Ind.) to picket a ship on which its mem- bers had been dismissed and replaced in Hong Kong by Chi- nese sailors. The judge criticized Canuk Lines Limited, operators of the deep sea dry cargo steamship Canuk Trader, and turned down la company request for a perm- janent injunction against the SIU and its president, Hal C. Banks. | Philippe Casgrain, counsel for the shipowners, served notice of Sales High Low Ab - > chee! 100 $15 15 15 125 $12Ve 12% 12¥%8 $22. 2 $7. 6h $1" 11% Stock Gen Bake GS Wares --% th + Me imp Oi! ind Accep 485 $23% 23% Inland Gas 200 $658 6¥e Int City Gas 100 $8 8 int Bronze 100 $24 24 1 Bronze pr | 25 $28 210 $71% 71% 1156 605 1M int Nickel Int Util intpr Dis infer PL int Sti P Jefferson Jock wis Kelly wts Labatt Lakeland pr Lau Fin Lau Fin 6% Levy 2 pr LobCo A 100 245 1000 510 4600 150 +5 7% 7¥e TH+ % a7 AP md 170 170 «170 7% 7 V7 2» wo $20 $13ve 13%8 13% -- $20% 20% 20% -- % $12% 12% 12% ™% $7% 7% 00 $312 31a Jive-- % 100. $742 72 7+% 675 $25% 25 255% + ve 2330 240 225 240 +20 200 $27 «=. 2694 - 26% +42 10 $1544 15% 16% + Ve 0 $16% 16% lb4-- 4% To «110 300 Maher M Leaf Mili Mass F Mass F 5V2 Molsen A Moore Nie Wires 3 Noranda NO NGas Ocean Cem Oglivie Ont Steel Oshawa A Pac Pete Page Hers Pbina Pow Corp Price Bros QN Gas QN Gas pr Relfman A Revelstoke Rothman Rockwell Royal Bnk Salada Seven Arts Shell Can Sheil | wte Silknit Simpsons Stat Stee! Steel Can Ster Tr Texaco T Fin A Tr Can PL Trane .Mt $202 Ba 2864 + Yo 280 $50V2 502 50 15% 154 -- Ve 38. OB Wa 17% $12%e 12% 12% $13% 13% 13% 100 $20% 20 20+ v% $3730 37% 37% 12Ve 12% + 4 18% 18%/a-- Ve M% 1% 10% 10% fa 362 36V2 ' % 7 104 9 9 +% $7 Ye 45% 45% + Vo $732 73% 73% $11% 1% 11% Todays Toronto Stock Market Listings 11 Net High Low a.m, Ch'ge $11" 11% 11% m7 $15% 15% Piedad Ye 410 «410 «(410 $54V2 54% 54% $16% 15% 16 $10% 10% Wi St0ck Turnbull Sales Westcoast +" Westeel Weston A $00 $21% 21% D gaag Ve io 0 490 OILS 510 18 6 6 65 Si4ve 140 14+ 8 8 8 813%. 13% 134-- % 260 $15Ve 15¥e 15Ve 450 445 450 +10 +5 Gr Pisins HB OIG Meda) N Davies Pamoil Peruy Ol! Provo Gas Quonto Ranger Sarcee Stanwell Teck Corp Triad Oil Union Olt » 47 ao --! 182 20 118 9 48 47 485 45 5 151 Wl 151 $\2% 12% 1% 20 i 47 1000 61 500 152 2 18 500 119 47 wo +3 ae --2 +4 pi W Decaite +2 Akaltcho Am Larder Anacon A Arcd Bw Aumaq Bary Exp! Bethim Bevcon Brunswk Buff Ank Cariboo Cassiar Chimo Coch Will C Discov C Mogul Conwest Cop Corp Cop' Man Craigmt Croinor Deer Horn Denison Dieknsn Dome Evreke F'west 7 Frncoeur Frobex Gaitwin io 200 225 1§73 1000 1500 - 21562 82 14 405 % 1 1 = '10VA 10%2 Wa ve 100 $182 18 nat Fd WY 8% bu-- Va ss 8 88 $10% Uae 106 525 5 $27Va 7 27V2 % 25 +5 +3 13 0 10 2 3 | 11 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge paps 10% 10% + % 800 1g 5 ba 13 $584 nig wat Ba 2% 76 5 ie pa 16Ya 162 16% m2 1% 1 Ss Stock Giant YK Gunnar Hard Rock Hud Bay Hydra Ex Iso Jacobus doutel Jelex Kerr Ade Kopan Leb Min L Dufauilt Lake Ling Lorado Marboy Martime Martin Matigm! Mcintyre McMar McWat Mt Wright Multi M 7 M7 1000 12%2 12% 12% $200 202 197 198 --2 4000 13%2 132 e+ 2000 14 14¥a 14 500 18 618 18 HT no mm 2m 90 2 ot 100 33% 33 Bu 20 410 410 410 --5 0D 9 8 %6 5 795 Northcal Northgate Norsp Aw N Beauc Obaska Opemisks Orchan Pamour Peerless Perron Pros Air Purdex Reeves Rio Algom Rotkwin Salem Sheep Cr Steep R Sud Cont Tombil! Tormont Trans Res Tribag Un Keno Vauze Violam Wiltsey Windfall Wr Harg Yk Bear 500 2% «2% 7000 5 6 795 795 300 300 200 108 108 108 202 20Vs ave Ya 2 2 -- "4 125 125 125 190 190 190 $14 14% 14% 1200 37:37 9 = 1000 292 22 2+ ve 500 135 135 135 --4 +10 +2 2000 1500 1074 3000 2600 106 1500 100 400 1388 150 75 1100 107 Sales to 11 a.m.: 756000. +1 -3 8 8 8 8 8 21 2ie 1% 9 i] ? +5 ~ FOREIGN TRADING BC Forest Ma 922% 22% 2244 -- £8 a -2 Agnico 70 370 30 SITU Can Picket Canuk Lines Ship |=: junhappy with the SIU contract appeal on behalf of his clients REFRIGERA Rises condition. lephone 723-2886. au me British a! and aa oa $40. H, vine, Stapleton, Newton' and, as a result, an interlocu- tory ps hppa in force for more than a year was eutoat- ieally reinstated, The ship's crew was dis- missed in May, 1962, and pick- eting by SIU members began west side. Sub-station, POTATOES -- $1.90 per 75 ib. bag. fy Allan Downes, Pontypool, Ontario. when the Canuk Trader ar-|Pi ternational Longshoremen's As-|ras sociation (CLC) to unload the ship's cargo. The judge said at the time the company's manager indicated|Wint it was unprofitable to operate a deep-sea vessel with a Cana- dian crew under Canadian reg-/. nese sailors were hired for $64|wint a month, payable in Hong Kong funds, The company was under con- tract: at the time to the SIU, rived here July 30, 1962. It was tr followed by a refusal by the' In-|box. LASALLE apples, The apple Isao Delllered anywhere Phone 725348. WINTER tape for sale, store own home or et eK 4 istry. Evidence showed the Chi- 62050, WINTER cabbage; Te cabbage, H eapgsaacpued Telephone p.m. CK your own right trom. the orm. nahin an Pe or ples. Bushel $2.95) Nell buat nm . WINTER potatoes Tor pale, store In"your + gg or at mine, Teleshome Whitby Han Oowns Ferm, Pontypool, hey sole bargaining agents for all unlicensed personel employed 3 sels of Canadian registry. Jus-|'e tice LaFleur ruled the company | eas: had breached its contract by dismissing the men and the SIU| was justified in picketing. 'The judge found the company|- had changed its registry to dif- ferent countries because it was and was "'striving to find ways and means to release itself there from without having to submit to enactments of the In-|-- Investigation Act."' He said an injunction could be granted if the picketing was vicinity ar ae October 728-1463. LOST: 4---Lost and Found on Canuk's deep-sea cargo. ves-|LOST: Siamese cat, male, Rega ee late point blue 'cross crook pllentia. on end rewire Wencann. |. 725-4457, Oshawa store, 24. Reward, Before 3 Cardboard carton of auto dock at 725-1123. eS Lost: Part Terrier puppy, white, male, no collar. Vein Street and aoe North. Telephone 725- dustrial Relations and Disputes) ST: ts gh oe ee haired dog, sand color, answers to beeaicil "Sandy". "No collar, Ti LOST In the Burketon a hound, slim build, crown black and » femal not carried on pedcefully but "the petitioner has failed to reward Telephone 725-8483, present such evidence." 36--Legal Baptist Group Raps School Spending Method 1, , Carl H. alley, 505 Albert Seed, Oshawa, will not be debts cont: responsible rracted in my name, by or after this date, Marian Gora, of 222 R will not. be responsible" for any tracted In my name by anyone, after this date, uses 1, 1963, my written consent. --Marian LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Rev, Gordon Searle of St, Catharines was elected Thursday to suc- ceed Rey. Harold Hindry of Hes- peler, Ont., as president of the 30,000 - member fellowship of Evangelical Baptist Churches in Canada. Stanley Gfaham of Toronto and Rev. Fred Howard of Lon- don were elected vice-presidents at the closing session of the fel- lowship's 10th annual meeting. Other officers elected includd Rey. Norman Pipe, Simcoe; R. G. Buchnr, Kitchener; Rev. Allan Crawford, Oakville; Rev. R. D. Guthrie, Orillia; Rev. W. H. McBain, Sarnia, and Rev. R. E. J. Brackstone, Chatham. The fellowship criticized the Ontario government for dispens-| Aunor CEx Ga 105 Cochwil! mo +0 , Eureke % | Kerr Ade 60 295 Macasse jarate schools which, |should be supporting the regu- ing 'millions of dollars" to sep- it' said, lar public schoo] system. NOTICE 3 TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS: Creditors ond others havi claims against the estate "ALFRED JOSEPH ROC LEAU; late of the City Oshawa, are required to bo particulars of such cloi undersigned, solici ph the Administratrix, on before the 30th day of N ember, , 1963, after wh dete the Estate's ossets be distributed having only to claims that have 'received, ERNEST MARKS, Q, a Solici 17 King St. Oshawe, Onteria, t + } q a aS _-- 4 3 SEBAGO potatoes, a 75 th 4 and carry, from A bers fin