Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jun 1965, p. 19

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STOCK MARKET 100 515 100 2000 TORONTO 11 AM, STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--June 7 Quotations i cents uniess marked $ t-Odd 'ot, xd---Ex-dividend, xr----Bx-| rights, xw--€x-warrants, Net change is) from previous 'd-lot closing sale, Murphy NC Olls Permo Ponder Prairie Oil Spooner Tried Of U Canso Vandoa W Decaita 1000 200 000 75 won $000 945 MINES 200 7 1 1) Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch"ge INDUSTRIALS 675 $12% 12% $34'4 W Stock Acad Agnico All Pitch A Am Moly Ang Rovyn Argosy A Arcadia Bethim Brunswk Bunker Cadamet Camilo Cdn Keeley C Lencourt Candore Captain Casslar Cheskirk Chib-Kay Comb Met Coniao C Rellek Cc Mogul € Morrison Con Nichol C Rambler € Sannorm Cop Corp Cop Fields Coulee Craigmt D'Eldona Denison Dicknsn East Sull F Mar Frncoeur Gaitwin Genex Giant Glacier Goldale Grandroy Gunnar Hastings Headway Heath Hollinger Int Bibis int Helium 1 Kenville tron Bay Iso Je Joliet Jonsmith Joutel Kerr Add K Desmond Lab Min L Dufauit La Luz Leitch Louviet Madsen Maralgo Marchant Martin Matach Mattgm! McAdam Mcintyre Meta Uran Metal Mine Midrim New Ath New Cal N Hoseo New Jason N Kelore N Mylama N Rouyr New Taku Norgold Normetal Norpax Nor Am G North Exp Northeal Northgte Opemiska Pamour Paramaq Patino Pax Int Peerless Pick Crow Pine Point Probe Purdex QMi Quemont Quonto Raglan Reeves Rexspar Rio Algom Rockwin Roman Ryanor Salem Sherritt Silvmaq Siscoe Steep R Texmont Tombill Tormont Tribag U Asbestos Un Butfad UCL Mine Upp Can Urban Q Violam Violam Rte W Malar W Mines Wilco Willrey Zenmae 12% Uran 4 1 10% 4" 74 19% m4 40 64M % 77'4 6% rf] 1" Abitib! Alta Gas Altea Gas w Algoma Alum 44 oF Ang CP 4% Anthes A All Sugar Auto E! Bank Mont Bank NS Bath P Bell Phone Bicks Brazil BA Oj! BC Forest BC Pack B BC Phone BCPh 5% pr BCPh 44 pr Bulolo Cal Pow Can Cem Can Can Can CSL. Cc Brew CBA AW CBA Bw C Dredge 100 C Dredg Rt 3933 Cc imp Bk C 100 C I Gas Ol 190 CIL 7 CPR 1500 C Chemeell 7260 Conduits 390 Con Bide 200 Con Bidg w m0 Con M § 2110 Con Gas aa Coronation 200 Crain RL 25 Cygnus A 100 Dale R Ap 100 Dist Seag 1120 Dom Elect 235 Dotasco 190 Dom Glass 305 Dom Lime 170 Dom Stores 420 Dom Tar 405 Du Pont 72) Exquisite WS Exquite A w 600 Falcon 696 $101'4 Fam Play 45 $267 Fed Farms 100 400 Fed Grain 250 $7 Ford Cda 220$15) 1 FPE-Pion A FPE-Pion pr Frontier Ac Frosst A Gen Bake Gen Dev Gr Weg G Greyhnd Hawker-S Home A Horne Pt HBC Hur Erie Husky Husky Dw Husky B pr Imp Oli Imp Tob Ind Accep Ind Wire Inglis inland Gas Int-City Gas Int Nickel int Util Intor Dis Inter PL int Sit P inv Grp A Jefferson Jeff Bw 5 jar 114 1 «252 745 7 4 4 7 7 475 = 675 15% 15% -- Ve m Mati lit MN + ¥ 320 325 «+18 73 73 1000 400 252 7900 239 2013 26" 450021 Aso 475 790 915% 4700-29" 1000 11% 8000 330 1000-23 500 19 4000 «19 1000 M4 160 $134 $00 s\n 100 274 190 29 20 4 2000 7 500 485 5400 151 3633 4 400 185 1000 6A 5500 35 son 120 1000 27 125 S14% 2000 3 1520. $3914 1100 $25 1 710 R40 475 000 «14 75900 '4 1200 | 42'4 17 $13 100 «14 «13% 1900 35'4 3514 4000 23% 23 250 510 505 200 335 335 2000 " 18'4 1900 8A 84 350. $282 28's Bla + '4 3300 124 118 =120 4550 140 6250 36 A00 186 500 350 00 18 2700 4b 3000 25 700 105 500 +830 9000 56 250 $350 00 $12% 250 $13% 125 475 3000 2514 00 222 0 19 400 227 1900 45 500 10% 450 $12 3600 119 15 $50 500 $134 786 183 #100 «42 500 27 2500 82 150 286 1000 " 2500 (18 2200 26 oO? 500 4? 1000 ° 200 460 1000 18 12850 9% 9000 200 1000 58 2210 885 200 910 200 185 «185 1000 12 12 220 680 880 4000 35% 34 1000 13% 13% 4004 50° 50 210 S$51\% S1% 1250 36 (3 14500 © 21 120 180 | 100 $11% 11% 11% + 4%) 500 10% 10% Wa+ WOOO 215 215 215 +1 100 30 300 300 5000 04 10% 1722 $17% 17% 17% -- Ve! 600 «8) 8) 8! 775 765 770 1000 14 #14 «(14 2000 (20 20 674 00 595 2000 34 34 3900 225 220 500 665 660 1500 146 145 900 119 «119 3000 18 «18 1500 285° 280 200 280 280 9500 70 70 500 18° 18 200 145 (145 1000 «15 1s 9400 415 400 $00 «617% 16 4500 5 § 2025 40 470 1200 37 7 1400 180 (178 190 2% A $70% $42 $27'4 $19% $20" 4 S44 4 $76 $274 560% $13 57% $32% 120 $284 200 $2)'4 TA $644 15 $105- 50 $95 2140 99 $36 $21% 53 $557% 6 $B 50 52 125 980 175 150 3314 + Ve 525 70 475 u" 3 525 710 475 M4 +" 4 4 42' Aw Ve vK ee 194 + 35/2 + 24 $05 a 500 $16% 200 $67 200 47% 1450 $2914 200 $9%m 00 85% 155 $)8% 750 $1) 510 $6 1110 $20 000 330 10 $)3! 218 $67 300 $12% 29" +2% 7 9A" S44 Ve au 4 ae] 5% 18% 116 50 13% 75 41 77 80 286 % % 1§ 4 7 J 12M 12% + 195 685 685 685 +10} 110 $53 53% 53'4 | 132 $53% 53% 3% 23 $18 18 = (15 40 $264 26% 2700 255 250 300 48S. 475 «485 100 810% 10% 10% 100 $16 14m 16% + 1790 $96 (95% 96 210 $33% 39% 33% + | 2300 330 315 30 «+30 40 $901 9014 9014 + M4} 1200 5% S% 5% "e 350 $13 12% 12% = Va} 345 $19 1914 19% 200 «13 13 45s 4 4 500-79 200 $6%4 6% Kelsey Co 250 $164 164 164 LOnt Cem 2125 5% §% 5% L O Cem w 2900 250 2 240 Lakeland w 1000 535 535 $35 Lau F 200 xd 100 $4! 4) 4) Lav Finé3 w 125 675 675 675 Levy A pr 12 $10% 10% 10% Life Inv 250 $10 10 10 LobCo A 676 $9% 9% Iam Ve LobCo B 200 10% 10% Lobinc 7 Loeb M Maclean H 26% 4 + 255 4 24 +10 a 4 460 i" 90 175 SA 480 910 15 ' 6 47 3 " ° + 9 val "oy +8 + Ml t] "| 4} % +5 200 +60 58 885 910 +§ 10 a | 0 129 Je + Ve + 15% 15% 02 W\2 M Leaf Mili Mass-F Molson A 1353 $30% +3 | 1 | | +] 1s 5 22% 22% 3 § 1 1 | | Pow Corp QN Gas Rockowr pr Romfieid Rothman Salada Shel) Can Simpsons Simp Sears Slater Steel Siater A w St Radio St Brock A Steel Can Steinbg Tor-Dom Bk Tor iron A 250 $15 120 $11 200 $16 500 245 3 $254 185 Si" 227 $\7% 25 $280 28a 2175 $202 20% 585 $)5ve 15 300 975 975 250 $19 191% 200 $12 +1 --S 16 2 S +' 470 = 25 7 17% 180 Wate Sales to 1) @.m.: 647,000. FOREIGN TRADING 275 $214 21% 214 1000 170 79 400 142 140 00 835 435 160 260 260 00 670 670 A 170 140 a3s 2460 670 Mosher Kerr-Add Macassa Steep Rock 12 00 $24%4 244 1S 120 315M 15M 300 $169 36M 270 $202 20% 4 $29% 29% 147 $274 27% 5 $53 33 2503120 (115 200 435 5 HITICXNS In Toronto 1) a.m, indutsrials Mass-F $30% 30% lr Met Stores p7z50 $2)% 21% 214 Molson A 3 sao ab Un Gas U Gas Un A pr . Steel Versatood Walk GW Weldwood West ind West In A WCoas! Tr el a 100 120 5 * Brantford Tourney _ To Woodstock Man BRANTFORD (CP) Bil Parkes of Woodstock shot a one- over-par 73 to win the men's in- +1 \|vitation tournament of the en |Brantford Golf and Country 10 Club Saturday He topped a field including 62 golfers with handicaps of five M4 or less Parkes toured the front nine ,, in 36 strokes and came home in ;, "37. He had three birdies on the --1 'round Ang U Dev 30900 Asamera 13300 Bantt 00 Calvert 250¢ Cc €x Gas $00 C High Cr 800 Cdn Sup Oll 225 $2 Cent Dei 400 C West P 1000 Dynamic Gr Plains Gridoit Midcon ak) a) $1) 1465 9 SCORER ree eo ~ BUSHMEN LIVE. The wild bushmen of the Kalahari desert live much the same as they did 15,000 years ago. The natives of the vast game-filled desert that includes most of Bechuana- ,, | bt * hav | ule Mit abruptly almost a year ago. The promoters ran into ren- tal difficulties. But work now is resuming as Trois-Riv- feres begins to feel the Re Que., ished skeleton" 14-storey idents of Trois-Rivieres, are calling the unfin- Place Royale "the since work on the building stopped Willpower To Stop Smoking Heightened By Phone Call TORONTO (CP)--Instead Rev. H. Ward Hill of Tor- picking up a cigarette, pick upjonto's suburban Willowdale Ad- the telephone and dial 633-6484/ventist Church said: "We have in Toronto lreceived so many calls, the The line be|Bell Telephone Co. cannot esti- 189 mate them." But The system was established through April 7.in Toronto and the Ad- Say This is Smokers' Dialjventists feel the to its No, 1. There are three physi-|success is "the complete in-) cal habits which can definitely|formality" of the recorded voice weaken your willpower -- over-jand the non-personal involve- eating, exhaustion and alco-/ment of the listener hol." The program originated in The message will continue|the United States and became} for 90 seconds and provide the|so popular a Chicago woman listener with various methods|telegraphed money to. her to strenghten willpower and to|daughter in Mexico so the) stop smoking. latter could phone the Chicago] Smokers' Dial is an organiza-|/Smokers' Dial and receive as-| tion formed and financed by|sistance | the Seventh - Day Adventists} The Adventists originally used Church and dedicated to helping|a recorded message which told persons trying to break them-|listeners to phone another num-| selves of smoking. ber if they wanted to receive| The scheme originated in 1963)individual help ' 0 probably will if and when you a recorded voice will! get secret with a group + therapy plan} Mr. Hill 'said such messages called The Five-Day Plan to|were discontinued in Toronto Quit Smoking. | By the end of last March,| jorganizers decided that some |persons rejected the idea of a group plan, They decided to in stall a trial Smokers' Dial in Saskatoon and let people re | ceive plan in 90 second recordings The first day the dial plan was in operation the exchange handled more than 7,000 calls Since then Smakers' Dials been established in Tor- Oshawa Pee Wees Defeat Port Hope Oshawa Legion Pee Wees de feated Port Hope boys 9-3, on Sunday afternoon at. Alexandra Park, in their Eastern Ontario |Baseball Association Pee Wee) |League game Taylor pitched the win for Osh jawa giving up a walk and a two onto, Calgary and Oshawa, Ont |bagger to Smith for Port Hope' Adventist organizers were so first run in the first' inning and overwhelmed with the success| then two runs in the fifth onj of their plan they decided to|Singles by Walsh and Downing, | set up the system in every ma with a walk to Lees sandwiched | jor Canadian city by the end)!" between of 1965 Oshawa got to Hendricks for four runs in the first inning when Stapleton drew a walk Harper singled, Rose walked STOCKHOLM (Reuters) --/Taylor was safe on an error, Prince Wilhelm, the younger!Sirko was also safe on an error, brother of King Gustaf Adolf of which scored Taylor Sweden, died Saturday. He was| The homesters added a run in 80. Prince Wilhelm, known asithe third by Rose and four the "author prince," wrote|more in the sixth when Harper, plays, poetry and books on for-| McCabe, Freeman and Shine all eign travel, He also producedicrossed the plate. Rose had a documentary films, 'double in this inning the e PRINCE WILHELM DIES 2nd Prize IN STONE AGE and and. part South Africa are untouched by civilization, (CP Photo from of oy i 1 a wt ota lh ll wt SS ie ie a | | i | * 4 2 To Richardson's | Oshawa Legionnaires dropped 7\a 10-4 decision to Richardson's 7,\Sports of Toronto in their Lea- /\side Junior Baseball League game, here at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium, on Saturday afternoon | 'Rick' Jones, on the pitching mound for Richardson's, was|® just ton good for the homesters,| 7 who had only one good inning, the third, Murray Godrey drew a walk with one out, Ted Lutton singled, Tony Jones walked and} Dave Mitchell clouted a two-|fe bagger. He then scored when| Eric Peterson came through| a single, That was Oshawa's| four-run rally | They picked up a couple of} hits, by Gary Newitt and Rod Williams, to threaten in the ninth but were not able to score again, Lutton had two of Osh awa's seven hits--five shared the remainder, Godfrey was Oshawa's start ing pitcher and was hit hard until relieved in the 7th inning, | when the roof fell in. Richard-| son's got a single in the first on walk to Barry Wilkins and an| out, plus "Duffy"! single. Hits by Jim Ban John Gartley and Z| j| | i od | | U OF T GRAD Joseph Dominik Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dom- inik, 319 Ritson rd will receive his B, Arch. from the University of Toronto School of Architecture June 1 | | | | other | 5 Big Afternoon For New Jockey TORONTO | ja linfield | Lewis' Inatyne, 3 J | | (CP) --\Wayne | two more runs in the third, In|tice jockey from Vancouver, | the fourth, they added one on/had the biggest afternoon of his ja walk to Bob Weiss, a sacrifice |fledgling career Saturday at and then a triple by Wilkins Greenwood Raceway winning "Duffy" Lewis tripled behind/the $ 5 Marine Stakes and Gartley's single and scored him-|the $11,575 Eclipse Stakes jself on an infield out, for two| 'There was little doubt about |more runs and a 6-4 lead, in the| Harris' victory aboard Victorian fifth frame, [Era in the Marine Stakes but In the seventh, four morelthe curly-haired leather popper| a Se ee -- ee benefits of a new bridge spanning the St. Lawrence under construction nearby, and plans for a steel mill in the area (CP Photo) hits and a walk produced four! needed the help of the stewards tors' total, Lewis with three | Eclipse. {Banna Gartley y : |Bannantyne and Gartley with Harris lodged a claim of foul jaw thine , ' . lilo age ge cbe - oe shed second to Brother Leo and | am gol atl avelino Gomez in the 13-16-mile| pitcher. that 'Well to Do had been inter- R 5 jfered with and placed him first | ~| ec ed ord mash In Mike Starko of Edmonton will! have one consolation, however. | preted the idea. One Toronto | woman was shocked when the| JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP)--Bob/set a traci record of 1.57 45, Greenwood took the Sunnehanna| surpassing the old mark by a} "IT thought ord," she said day with a record - breaking,| Victorian Era. a handsome| Hill said he feeis many/four-round total of 269 hunky so' , thousands tr wall a th 1 1-6-mile Marine 5 avelle ie -o-m Mé >} ceived personal assistance from/State graduate fired a four-Un-| distance in 1.43 45 eoatica "When we have personal con-|nehanna Country Club course a ' | tact with the callers, we findjand finished five stroke |_, rhe daily-double of Seek and] | : kes ahead) ming and Wading Butch re-| for the service provided," Defending champion Gary) m ; So, if you want to try to\Cowan of Kitchener finished|°f_ Cassis Miss and Vedas, in| Dial--but don't be surprised ifjday and finished with a 292 to-| Racing now moves from ; | , the line is busy. Greenwood to Woodbine. | more runs to complete the Visi-ito get the decision in the two apiece, were the big hitters) ster his mount, Well to Do, fin least one hit -- excepf- the Eclipse, The stewards agreed | Brother Leo, and his owner because many persons misinter Sunnehanna Game |" finishing. first, Brother Leo} voice answered you were a rec-jamateur golf tournament Sun-| full second, | Mr } i f Vic ark, of. people have re-| The 26-year-old North Texas! s ir tag te the service der-par 66 over the par-70 Sun+| record Mister'Jive set in 1958. | them responsive and gratefuljof Dick Canon who had a 274, turned $10.40 while the quinella| kick the habit, phone Smokers'|tied for 17th. He shot a 69 Sun.|the fifth race, paid $47.40, | | ispree ldingy but £905,000,000 I"Rick" Foley's triple, produced|Harris, an 18-year-old appren-|900,000. This is an increase of £35,000,000 | Wins Golfer Car 19 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, June 7, 1965 Long-Term Result Queried Of British Gambling Craze LONDON (CP)--EKarlier this|sues as a turn of a card or the year a chartered jet from New form of a horse. York touched down in London! Will the leisure time of mah carrying 118 big-time American|Britons soon become one con- gamblers and their wives for ajtinuous bingo session with time two, - week money - spinningjout for the football pools and the occastonal family outing to |the seaside casino as a special treat? These are some of the ques- jHons posed in this year's report by the inter denominational Churches' Council on Gambling, the only organization in Britain that keeps track of Britain's progress from small-time punt- ing to full-time betting. The re- port says About the same time British newspapers briefly reported a now-commonplace story: A 31 year-old mother of three chil dren in. suburban Hornsey pleaded guilty to shoplifting and told the court she regularly lost £15 a week on bingo games Betting is a big multi-million dollar growth industry operating on all levels of British society The capricious lady called) 'The council has no wish to luck has a legion of dedicated|hand out ready - made judg- admirers, some paying their re-| ments. It asks that people take spects behind velvet curtains injseriously the fact that com- London's softly-lit casino gam-|mercialized gambling is on the bling clubs while others offerjincrease and that in a signifi- up their weekly sacrifices in thel cant number of cases its effect functional off-trackiis restricting and debilitating." betting shops and garish bingo halls that are becoming as com-| BET ON HORSES mon as pubs in working-class) The council's figures, which districts are only conservative estimates All told the gambling turnover because bookmakers don't pub- in Britain last year was at least|lish profits, show that some or nearly $3,000,-/£600,000,000 was wagered IJast year on horse racing alone. Greyhound racing took up about £110,000,000, various forms of football betting drew in £130,000-000, bingo had a turn- over of £35,000,000 and other forms of betting made up the rest Any attempt to put the brake on the 1963 figure and about 50 per cent more than theturnover 10 years ago The question worrying many social workers and economists is how long Britain as a whole can afford to continue with its present permissive--some call it enlightened--attitude towards|on this glittering wheel of for- gambling. tune pt ir egw a reinterpre- vs : What are the long-term con-|{ation of the Betting and Gan- sequences for a nation that lay-)!8 Acts of 1960 and 1963 which ishes four per cent of its totaloPened the legal door to cer- expenditure on goods and serv ine forms of organized gam- rp sinriductive: 1a g ices on such unproductive is- The council is not basically opposed to the spirit of the gov- ernment bills, which were de- signed to bring into the open jthe gambling that was already |being done covertly, but it is jagainst certain types of gam- |bling that manage to thrive be- jcause of loopholes in the acts. | For instance, the government jdid not intend to license casino- |type gambling at all but the plush gambling clubs soon |sprang up when someone dis- jcovered the acts were ineffec- jtive against chemin-de-fer and certain types of roulette. As things now stand, after {numerous court cases, the clubs can operate as long as they don't make a profit from the play of the game. But they can charge enormous prices --ag much as £50 -- from each per- son who wants to take part in a 30-minute game, First Buick Ace GRAND BLANC, Mich (AP) -- Archie Dadien be- came the first golfer in the eight - year history of the Buck Open golf tournament to score a hole in one when he aced the 204-yard third hole Saturday. Dadien, 31, won a car from the tournament's sponsors for his effort. The Milwaukee. native, in his second season on the circuit, used a No. 3 wood for his ace. It was the sixth hole in one on the tour this year. Attention District Women ... You Can Win Valuable Prizes! Siheue Ties Annual Cook Book GRAND PRIZE 320. Best selection of recipes from all of those received. Judging for prizes will be done in two categories. Prizes will be awarded for recipes received by o June 7 deadline, and for those by @ June 21 final deadline. A grand prize will be awarded for the best club entry in the two categories, Recipes will be judged on basis of number received, neatness, promptness ond variety in entries, JUNE 7th DEADLINE PRIZES 2nd Prize ... 10.00 Ist Prize oun basee 5.00 SFE PSG ccs seepere ne crer JUNE 21st DEADLINE PRIZES 8.00 3rd Prize 12.00. RULES ibmitted on one side of paper on! Ist Prize ... Recipes m Recines st he s typewritten entries ore preferred The full name of the members with initials ond the nome of the club must be ided with EACH recipe Re di for pes moy be ony hes desserts kie homemaker is proud to prepare for family be aworded for voriety of recipes received Complete cooking or baking instructians ar Entiins must be addve

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