CANADIAN REPORTER TOURS AFRICA Canadian Press staff writ- er Joe McSween recently completed a 10-nation tour of former British possessions in Africa. His latest series on the problems of Africa deals with South Africa where in addition to racial ret @ 4. URCE Sania . NOEL, NS (CP)=Notorious} pirate Captain Kidd, according to legend, played Santa Claus! here once. And this, perhaps the only act of charity in his infamous life, was completely ignored. The incident is supposed to have happened in the 18th cen- tury when the pirate anchored off nearby Sloop Rock to get a new mast for his disabled ves- sel. Noel residents helped tind a new mast and install it, not be- cause they approved of pirates, but because it seemed the prudent thing to de. And to make this plain they refused payment. Kidd, however, either his feelings hurt by the villagers' refusal, or as a boast for his ill-gotten: wealth, cast several silver bars overboard and sailed away. Still Noel remained aloof and, according to the legend, no one would touch the silver. It could be seen at every low tide. When someone did decide to gather it in, it had disappeared. While the Captain Kidd legend has remained relatively un- changed over the years, legends of how the community of 250 got its yuletide name obscure the true source. Some say it was so named because a group of Irish set- tlers stepped onto the shore from Cobequid Bay on Christ- mas day, 1762. Others believe it was named Noel for some- thing that happened here on Christmas. Still others, and these are probably rigin;-cay it was named after early Acadian settlers because Noel was a) common French name, | CHAPS IN LEAD FOR LESS TIME LONDON (Reuters)-- British women are more than twice as likely as men to reach the age of 85, but men outnumber them by nearly 2,000,000 in Britain's trouble there is a bilingual- bicultural problem siniilar to Canada's. (CP Photo) Big CBC News Service Was Born 25 Years Ago TORONTO (CP)--The other evening, Dan McArthur, a re- tired CBC executive, was watch- ing Bonanza in Ottawa with a granddaughter. 'Ben Cart- wright," he mused, "'that's| Lorne Greene, used to work with me years ago." | "Grandpa," she said without) looking up, "'you're lying." | It wasn't surprising, because} a generation has grown up and another one come along since the current patriarch of TV's Ponderosa was the voice of the CBC's national. news. The pe-!} riod just about spans the life) of the CBC news service, which) Mr. McArthur organized and| which is observing the 25th an-| niversary of its official birth) Jan. 1, 1941. | lof course--news has become a big operation with the CBC in its two mediums. Editorial per- sonnel has jumped from about 30 to 200. But the origins of news on the CBC go back beyond that quar- ter - century mark. When na- tional broadcasting started in 1933, the then Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission had no news facilities. The Cana- dian Press, the national news co-operative of the daily news- papers, first filled this gap by providing without charge a sum- mary of the day's major events. WAS FIRST VOICE Charles Jennings was the first to become familiar to Canadians as the voice reading the news Since that start with a hand-jover the national network. He ful of faceless men--radio only,/now is vice-president and gen- OSHAWA TIMES PATTERNS siete si population of 54,000,000. The central statistical of- fice estimates in a report published today that by the year 2000, the United King- dom will have a population of 74,000,000, but the sex disparity will be down to 250,000 surplus ineii. eral of regional broadcasting. Lorne Greene became the voice lof the CBC news during the} war, and when he joined -the| jarmy in 1942 Earl Cameron itook over and still holds the key national slot on TV. Behind and around these read- ers, things developed slowly. U.K. Vandalism Becomes Serious LONDON (AP)--Vandalism of public telephones has become so When the CRBC was succeeded in 1936 by the CBC, Canadian Press continued its policy of providing free news bulletins as a public service. The only type of news coverage undertaken by the broadcasting agency was in the field of on-the-spot descrip- tion, such as J. Frank Willis's memorable marathon at the pit |mouth in the 1936 mine cave-in |at Moose River, N.S., and cov- erage of the royal tour of 1939. By the fall of 1940, with the jwar intensifying, the CBC de- \cided to set up its own news service with writing staffs and newsrooms. CP agreed to lay down its full service in the news- rooms, still without charge--an arrangement that continued un- til contracts involving fees were negotiated by the end. of 1942. i British United Press agreed to la similar. arrangement. Dan McArthur was chief edi- tor and midwife of the new service, ushering it to the air on New Year's Day, 1941. Wil- liam H. Hogg, who had written CP news bulletins for the CBC, joined the corporation, later |succeeded Mr. McArthur, and now heads news and public af- fairs. Marcel Ouimet, who or- ganized the French - language service out of Montreal, later became a war correspondent and now is general manager of French network broadcasting. PLEDGES OBJECTIVITY The first newscast was serious in Britain that public safety is theatened. Any person in difficulty can call for police, or for. firemen, or for an ambulance by dialing 999 in a public telephone booth. The caller does not have to de- posit money. Many telephone booths carry this sign: "It is regretted that this kiosk is temporarily out of use due to damage by vandals." In London, 10,000 public tele- phone call boxes were sabotaged in the first nine months of 1965. People involved in accidents or those who want to report thefts at night often have to ask strangers to use their tele- phones. Householders are under- standably reluctant to open the front door to strangers during late hours. Many booihs are iocated ip sparsely populated areas. Valua- ble equipment has been stripped from the telephone boxes and there is a shortage of spare parts. Hall's Clock Almost Reliable MOOSE JAW, Sask. (CP)-- Local residents. who've been turning up for work five min- utes early can blame the wind, the weather and the birds. The city hall clock can be set "so that it's on time up to the THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdoy, January 3, 1966 33 Distributed -by.-£R Toronto Stock Exchange--Jan. 5 Quotations in cents unless marked $. z lot, xd--Ex-dividend, . xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is from previous board-lot closing sale, INDUSTRIALS 10:40 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge $13% 13 #13 --% 5 $38% 38% 38% $11% 11% 11% $10) 610 COW 600 600 600 + 2 $6544 65 (65a + 2 $34 340 34 Me $422 42a $242 242 + Ve $12% 12% $242 24a $22Va 224 $6494 6434 -- Va) Bank NS $75% 75% -- Ve Bell Phone 359% 59% + Me Bow Val w 625 5 625 Brazil 39% 9 e+ Ve $65 65s -- % $46M% 46Ve --1¥e $29 29'2 $2294 22% $37%4 37% -- Ve $125 12% 46% + Ve a4 26% Stock Abitibi Alta Gas Alta Gasw Alum 44 p Anthes A Arg C Ppr Asbestos C Atl Sug A Bank Mont 6694 | 12% + Ve 19% -- e+ Ve 65% -- a WA-- 2. +1 wm =] Chem 175p Chrysler Codville D $5' Col Cell $74 Col Cell pr $25 MS $49%4 $41 $16 105. 105 320 305 $2 09 2" $604 60% 60% 390 «390 «390 $544 5 5% $29e 39% We + Ve $272 272 27% $16 16 %6 +% $27% 27% 27% $984 98% 9814 Dom Lime 200 200 200 Doni Store $24% 24% 24% far $19% 18% 94+ % Domtar p $21 21 21 +% Dom Text $33% 33% 334--% Du Pont $43 4% 43 +% Falcon 1959 $110 10912110 + % Fed Grain 600 $74 % h%4--V Fleet Mfg 5300 71 70 11 + 3 Ford Cda 10$149 149) (149 | FPE-Pion 100 $18Ve 18% 18% + VY GP Mig A 25 $35 «635. 35 | GS Wares 230 $10% 10% 10% | G Bahama 300 260 260 260 -- §/ GL Paper 650 $224 22%e 22+ Ve Greyhnd 730 $12%4 12% 12% Guar Tr 210 $12% 12% 12% | Hard Carp 100 $362 364 362+ 2 Hard CrpA 460 $33% 33% 332 Hawker S$ 475 $6% 6% Hayes Sti 425 5a + Ve Horne Pt 500 Home A 330 z105 100 450 Husky Bpr 30 HBC 100 $5914 Dofasco p HB ONG Imp Oi! Ind Accep ind Wire Inglis int-Cty @ Int Nickel Int Util intl Util p Intpr PL int Stl P Inv Grp A James Sti Jefferson Jeff Bw Jockey C LOnt Cem 4 + Ve Laura Sec ae oe Lav Fin 12% Lav F2.00 30 30 Lav F1.25 2 «620 305 305 + 8 6 1% 16% 16\4-- ve 2% 264+ 6 46 +% 33% 33% --- Ve 315 315 + 10 1% «1 18% + M% 994 +12 0 x 33% 85\4--1 6a + Va am Ve W% 274 + Ve 9% + 5 15¥e 1544+ % 1% 1W%4--% 832 83% vw 14% 14% 8 8% 53% 55 +1% A 9 Dat ve 304 30% U% 34% + ieee 5% +% 5th + Ve 27% 27% + % $12" 11% 124+ % 600 600 «600 485 485 485 + 10 $154 15% 15-- % $10% 10% 10% $12% 12% 12%--VY 45 1 165 $15 327% Peel Eldr Pembina Pow Corp Prouild P 65 QN Gas $14 14 QN Gs 63w 725 725 Rapid Grp 330 «330 Revenue pr $22 (22 Rois sti iy Rothman $24% 24 Royal Bk Te 7S Vs Stl Cem A $35 35 635) +1% Salada , $11% 11% Whe V Select Les 145 (145 «(145 Seven Arts $21% 21% 214--% Shell Can 319% 19% 19%-- Ve Shell | pr $25%4 254 25% Shell tw 660° 660 660 Shopper Ct 475 475 475 Simpsons $28% 28% 28% Slater Stl $142 14% 14% + Slater Aw 400 885 880 880 $40. 40 40 4+% $14 144 a+ 200 $1934 19% 19% $26% 26%e 26% + % $532 53) S3a+ % $16Ve 16% 16%e--~ Ve $66 $12 $38% $18% Trans PPL $108 Un Carbid 0 $28 288 Un Gas $31% 2% 31%--% MA Acme Gas 500 Advocate Akaitcho All Pitch AAm Moly Ang Ruyn Ang U Dev Ansil Area Armore A Arcadia Argosy Atl C Cop Bankfield 7300 1700 1000 Bralorne Brunswk Bunker H Cadamet Camflo Camp Chib Cc Tung C Faraday Cdn Keely C Lencourt Captain Chester Chib Kay Chib M Chimo Coch Will Coin Lake Comb Met Coniagas Coniaur Conigo Con-Key Con Shaw Cc Bellek Cc. Halll Cc Marcus Cc Mogul ¢ Morrisn Con Nichol Cc: Rambler Conwest Cop Corp Cop Fields Cop Man Courvan Craigmt Cstland Croinor Daering D'Aragon Deer Horn D'Eldona Denison Dicknsn Discovry Donaida Dunraine Duvan East Sull F Mar Frncoeur Frobex Genex Giant Yk Glenn Exp Goldray Goldrim Granisle Granduc Grandroy Green Pnt Gulf L Gunnar Hastings Headway Heath Hollinger Huds Bay Int Bibis T Irish Cop iron Bay Ed Exp Kelly Dsd K Anacon K Anacn f 4464 Kilembe 900 Lab Min 230 & Dufavit 1925 Lakehead 7 La Luz 201 Langis 1000 Latin AM 2000 Leitch 400 Louvicrt Madsen Man Bar Marcon Martin Matach Mattgm! Maybrun McIntyre Mc Adam McWat Mentor Merril! Meta Uran Min-Ore Pine Point Placer Preston Probe M Purdex Que Man Q Mattgmi Quemont Quonto Radiore Ragian Rayrock Rio Algom Roman Ryanor Salem San Ant Sarimeo Satel Sherritt Silvmaq Sil Miller Starratt Steep R RKET 20% 20% 0% ++ 21 ++I --w TY Naw & 12% 13 1%" Pligg Wa +24 % 9% % x 54 29 +9 45 405 #5 + § --_ 16% 16% "a 8 2B 204 20% 204 --I'2 68 66H 156 (154 186 + 2 455 450 450 -~ 10 45% 44 shh + Va 1 10 vu 22% 224 Nia+ Ve i 61 «6 5) 48 OS o 26 & 410 410 410 + 5 1 238 «230 «(235 785 785 785 % 136 13% 13% 134+% 224 20 Ya --d7 $12% 12% 124+ $36%4 364 36% 480 470 480 265 262 262 3 2 8 ry er ee ee 12% 4. Wa + 910 895 900 +10 480 480, 480 13.42 12 | 88 86 87 C+ 2 45V2 dda 4514 $13% 139% 13%+ 16 15% ia-- +1 +% 5 4 a + nw + 12 a $26% 26% $79 78 200 «197 -- 73 2 2m 6 230 230 + 3 2 2. +1 % 3% +2 8% 8 tA+ Ws Wh Wh-- 105 96 105 + 10 + 10 32 90 2 24 4 24 +12 26a 26% 264 4 4 4 2% 21 + 4% UWh--le 849 +% 495 480 495 + UA 4h Uh 47.) 6? 67 13% 13% 13% 3 «35 «3ST 30 6875 «880 0+ 10 214 WA NA+ % 4 13% 3%--% 25 10 73a Tia 25%e 25% + Ve 1% 11% 42 42 3% liA+ 26 W':t+h 2 22 --1 n N+ 9 9 3 60 8 = 2 223: 221 221 -- 1 18 (114: «118 } 319% 19% 19% 785 780 780 "2 2 48 20' Ve 20 20 192 19% 94A+1% 26. 26 26 8B 40 4 +32 625 610 625 + 10 4 OATYa ATV + Va yee Se 5 498 SIMCOE ST. S. at GLAZIER MID-WINTER | SALE STARTS THURS. 9 A.M. LADIES' COATS | Ladies' Winter Coats mostly with fur trim collars. Values to 39.98 SALE 19.99 Values to 49.98 SALE 24.99 Values to 59.98 SALE ZBO. QO Values to 99.50 SALE 5O.OQ CHILDREN'S COATS, COAT SETS, SKI JACKETS and SNOW SUITS FOR BOYS AND cirnts 1 \/> OFF LADIES' DRESSES All this season's styles and fabrics. All sizes in the lot, also half sizes. VALUES TO 15.98 SALE 6.99 VALUES TO 17.98 SALE B@. GO VALUES TO 19.98 SALE YQ VALUES TO 29.99 SALEF AL QO tadies' CAR COATS All wool poodle cloth with orion pile lining. For sport or casual wear. Knee length Reg. 24.98, SALE PRICE. 9.99 GIRLS' and BOYS' SKI JACKETS Most with hood, some with orlon pile. Sizes 2 to 6x, 7 to 14 - broken ranges and sizes, 6.99 ---------- A Value to 14.98 Sale Price WEEKEND SPECIALS Check These Bargain Specials @ Men's Leather Shoes Broken ranges and styles. Most sizes in the lot. Values to 15.98. SALE @ GIRLS DRESSES Clearing better lines, All Sizes. Values to 7.98 OUR eee ey en a Versafd 430 430 40 + 25 Walk GW $362 36% 364+ Weldwod $10% 10% 10% West Ind 250 250 250 West IndA 455 455 455 Westcost $21% 21% 21%4-- % Westeei $20 2 2 Weston B 100 $22 22 2 +% 5 5 ud' Cont ie git ny ul 'on' 254 26 5 Texmont im i @ MEN'S SUITS exmon! tier = 2. Clearing better suits, mostly one of a kind. All high quality merch- 20 Tribag 256 ee andise. Most sizes in the lot. launched by Gladstone Murray, | minute for three months," says then CBC general manager, who|Bill Fordham, who looks after said that "the same qualities of it. But he recently found it run- dependability, impartiality and|ning five minutes fast. . Jobjective treatment that have| The clock, made in England @ Girls' Housecoais Mostly quilted, all washable. Sizes 3 to 6x. SALE ios cca e ewe bake ee Trin Chib Tundra 82 PERSONALIZED By ANNE ADAMS Embroider your initials in contrast color -- it's easy, looks so smart:on a briskly styled casual. Choose drip-dry Dacron checks, pastel cotton. Printed Pattern 4500: Half Sizes 1414, 1614, 1814, 2044, 2214, 244%. Size 1644 takes 3% yards 45-in. Transfer included. FIFTY CENTS (50c) in coins (no stamps please) for each pattern. Ontario residents add 2c sales tax. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER Send order to ANNE ADAMS, care of The Oshawa Times, Pat- tern Dept., 60 Front Street West, Toronto 1, Ontario BE ALERT to What's New! Send for excitement - packed! Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. 350 school glamor styles. Plus coupon for design views career, GAY PATCHWORK By ALICE BROOKS | colorful! Delight the family with these gay aprons. Create variety with easy patchwork of vivid remnants, scraps for applique. Pattern 7263: printed patterns; tratisfer for three. aprons. THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (coins) for each pattern (no stamps, | please) to Alice Brooks, care of The Oshawa Times, Needlecraft Dept., 60 Front treet West, To- ronto 1, Ontario. Ontario resi- dents add ic sales tax. Print jplainly PATTERN NUMBER, NAME, ADDRESS. GIANT 1966 Needlecraft Cat- alog:stars knit, crochet -- many more needlecraft designs. Three free patterns printed in catalog end | 25c. NEW! 12 Collectors' Quilt Patterns for you in color, with quilting motifs. Finest patterns ever collected from famous mu- f"c 'or ne Mu Deluxe seums seum Quilt Book No. 2 snen?' Make everyday living more} |characterized The Canadian | about 1900, was installed here |Press are to be maintained." [in 1913. 21 stopped only once "He knew there might be | Since then, when the spring for pressures, and there were," |'%€ 200-pound pendulum broke. Mr. McArthur said recently.| 0%, yes, it's a reliable "Not everyone believed that |°l0ck," says Mr. Fordham, As long as the wind doesn't such pressures would be re- : sisted, and even before our bul-|™ove the hands and the birds |don't sit on them." letins went on the air, one news- a an editorial refer- ae 4 ence to CBC News Service as|local and regional reporters the Eeleetis creature of the| across ven page es staffs in }present government.' |Such spots as the Giiawa press "But by 1944, when a parlia-| gallery, overseas Semmes and jmentary committee on broad-|actionareas around the world. \casting dealt with the CBC news|There has been a rising em- operation, spokesmen for the|Phasis on news as a major pro- Liberals, Conservatives and|gram element in both radio and |CCF--Hon. Paul Martin, John|TV, from major documentaries |Diefenbaker and M. J. Coldwell|to live coverage of spot news. Wsitn 6 pr 10$106 106 106 West A wt 465 $12\%4 124 12% Woodwd A 25 $25V2 25a 25\4 US. Losses In Viet, '65 Jump 1000% WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. battle deaths in the Viet Nam war shot up by nearly 1,000 per cent last year over 1964, defence department figures showed to- --all put themselves on record; CBC News now provides 15| jas believing that the CBC News|per cent or more of all radio} |was doing a fair and impartial! broadcasting time on its stations} jjob of handling Canadian politi-|and seven to eight per cent of cal news and that its freedom|TV network time. There are jfrom po litical interference| four national network programs should be jealously guarded.' |a day on English TV and three From the start, the CBC's'on French TV, 15 national net- newscasts, at peak listening pe-|work newscasts in English and riods during the day and even-/20 on the French network, the ing, consisted largely of re-|latter having at least one an writes of agency copy. The or-|hour during its operating hours. ganization did not have a full| Another four go to the far north staff of war correspondents un-|on radio. Local and regional! til the spring of 1943, though|news broadcasts bring the total |Bob Bowman graphically re-jup to 150 daily for radio and ported the Dieppe landing of /50 for TV. Canadian troops in 1942. | At the start, there were news- = ace rooms in Toronto, Montreal, | REPORTING GROWS Halifax, Winnipeg and Vancou- With the years, the basic re-|ver. Now there are 15 at major free pattern -- choose it from) Quilt Book No, 1 --'sixteen com-/ write function has been growth | production points, plus five one- Catalog. 50c. |plete patterns, 60c, lof a first-hand reporting arm--lor two-man bureaus, | day. A total of 1,365 American servicemen were killed in com- bat in 1965. The year before, the U.S, death toll in combat totalled 146 men. The sharp rise. in battle deaths roughly kept pace with the increase in U.S, forces in Viet Nam and with the deeper involvement of the United States in the ground and air fighting. ' At the end of 1965, there were 181,392 American servicemen stationed in the country com- pared with 23,000 at the end of 1964 when the United States still was carrving. on mainly an ad- efor! The army bore the brunt of the U.S. battle deaths in 1965--| 808 soldiers, fell, | visoryv U_Buffadn UCL Mine Utd Porc Upp Can Urban Q Violam West Mine W Surf | Wilco Willroy Windfall Win-Eld Yk Bear Young HG Yukeno Yukon € Zenmac Zulapa All Rox Alminex Am Ledue Banff Calvert %e 11 00 145 145 Mill City N_ Davies NC Oils Permo Petrol Place G Provo Gas Spooner Triad Ol Union Olt U Canso Un Reef P Wsburne W Decaite W Decitw Sales to 11:00 a.m.: FOREIGN TRADING Bulolo 200 Falcon Agnico 100 Bratorne Gridoll AAs AAD 1000 z59$110 110 95 00. 141 60 60 26Ve 24Va 24Va 15Va 15¥2 Wat Va 151 1 9 28 420 580 13 55 192 2B 25 Ww 6 6 4 %% % Mth 7% «(75 + @ "uM 26 | 25% 26 28) 281 281 +235 29a 28%e 28¥a--IV2 6 4 16 $19% 195% 19% + Ve $11 (10% ol 103-103 143 86 9 88 28 45 440 440 om 10 25a 25Ve 258 71 70 2670 160 160 160 + 2 234 234 234 -- 3 37 35% A--Ie 240 238 2 $23% 23% 234+ V 3 38S = 385 27% 1,926,000, $94 9" 130 130 100 405 405 95 Values to 69.98. SALE.. @ 'LADIES' SKIRTS Most all wool, some corduroy. Values 8.98 to 12.98 Sizes 4 gS s 8 to 20. SALE PRICE .. SIZES 8 TO 14.......SALE 2.99 @ LADIES' SLIMS Clearing ends of lines; values to 9.98 - most sizes SALE PRICE DOLLAR TABLE Clearing many lines of broken sizes and ranges. Men's shirts, Boy's orlon sweaters, children's pants, ladies' pyja- mas, ladies' hand bags and many many more items. ONE PRICE SAVINGS UP TO 50% son MORE OPEN THURS. AND FRI. NIGHTS TO 9 P.M. OPEN ALL DAY WED. 1926