Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jul 1966, p. 13

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_ ea ee aw PO ae pe me en a a oat LS a A a ae DEAD RESNT eee eee ee MARKET " TORONTO iis A STOCKS Distributed ce 'Toronto Stock &: wily 'Quotations in cents uniess marked $. E~ Odd toi, KEM iE iE i rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is! from previous board-lot closing sale. 10:40 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge MA UWA Wa a 120 120 120 TODAY Donr Line Hayes Sti Horne Pit Home A Home Husky Oi! inland Gas 1BM i Int Nickel int Util int Util pr intpr Pipe intpr Steel Inv Grp A TL Ind Jefferson 88 W% 65 265 Me 39Ms 2 13% 16% 550 20% 25 0% 10% 0 » Th -- Ye Ws 16 * "a +" +% NO BUILDING PERMITS FOR PAST YEAR Sales Boost Bid | "STORONTO (CP)--After a dis-!arge inventories of 1966 cars.) appointing spring buying sea- , ; " son, Canadian auto manufactur-| onto dealers said that with these!Season discounts, prices have|three or four years, 1990 oe gh, eg eon 2 el OLE ED POPP Ce Hie HOPE Vi EA He OS ers have startea saies incentive! programs to help dealers sell THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, July 19, 1966 13. programs, plus usual end-of-|dropped to the lowest point in In a series of interviews, Tor- LLL AL DELLE ETE IE A RA: I N,N fe, By MYRON Kk. MYERS LONDON (AP) -- Most cities |spend a good deal, of time seek- Lonaon has A New Asks Firms To "Move Out' | The boom and bright lights of |London brought thousands of people from all over the king-| Twist families have moved to these towns and another 200 firms 'are in the pipéline." * + 4 ing new industries and invest-|dom, swamping public .transpor-| * H. K. Haskael of the council's 265 Ms 13% 164 + Vs 55% 20% + Ye a& \ + Ye + Me +\% +% --V 7¥ 10% -- "e ment. London is doing its ut- most to talk companies into leaving. The Greater Landon Council) to} has persuaded 280 firms jmove outside the city, offering | thesubsidized sites elsewhere, and, in many cases , buying their existing property. In the last three years, the government - sponsored Loca- tion of Offices bureau has talked 258 firms -tnto building offices outside London and often tation and housing. | "Since 1951, 200,000 office jobs have been created in London," a spokesman for Britain's ooard of trade said, "And today 16,- 000,000. trips are made daily within or in and out of the) city." British governments long have discouraged new building in London's centre. In August, 1965, the Labor government de- cided to get tough and croduced} new rules for granting building inustrial service says: i] "We provide building sites and employee housing in the} new locations. The towns' ex- penses are partly met.by a subsidy from the central gov ernment, | "Firms move out because/ land is cheaper outside the city, | and often we buy their property | ofrni the city. The land is used | public housing." | "We need to move 1,000,000 | WEST DURHAM ADVISORY BOARD CENTRAL-ONTARIO. TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION . ww seu al T. K. Creighton, Q.C., Chairman of the Board of Directors of Central Ontario Trust & Savings Cor- poration, Head Office, Oshawa; is pleased to. announce the formation of the West Durham Advisory Board to guide the development and growth of the Company's Bowmanville Office on a regional basis, Members of the Board are: -- Jockey C Kelly DA Kelsey Co Labatt LOnt Cem Lakeland Laura Sec Lau Fin Lau F 2.00 Lav F 63w Levy Ye 1 "e Life invest Lob Co A Lob Co B Maciarn A MB Ltd Magna €! M Lf Mills Mass-F er MGFM Moore Morse A Morse B Morse pr Nt Contain Niag Struc Noranda Nor Ctl G Ocean Cm Pac Pete Pow Corp Prem iron Price Bros QN Gas Rank Org Reveistk Revenue p Royal Bnk Salada Sheil Can Sheli inv p Sheil Inv w Silverwd A Simpsons Slater Stl Southam ST Radio Steel Can Suptest od Thom N P Tor Dm Bk Tor tron W Traders A Transair Tr Can PL Tr Can Pi p TrCanP W Trans Mt Trans PPL Tru-Wall Tw C Gas UnAce 2p Un Carbid Un Gas UGas A pr U_ Sections Wainwr Walk GW. Weldwod Well Fin A West ind Westeei W Pacific people out by 1981 just to keep! the population where it is now," said a council planner, 5 'outside southeast England Although London's skyline boasts some impressive new buildings, it has been almost impossible for the last year to *' get a permit to build more. Behind the program to move people out is the fear that in- wicreasing congestion will push London's hard - pressed public y% services to the breaking-point. " HAD AMBITIOUS PLAN » Three hundred yeatrs ago, the "architect Sir Christopher Wren drew up a plan to make London a city of broad, tree-lined boule- vards. But the plan was scrapped, and much of London grew instead with narrow streets crowded closely by of- fices and factories. More recently, a post-war of- fice building boom sent up sky- scrapers to tower above the historic castles and cathedrals. Low Burley Mart Prices Spark Big Tabacco Feud CHATHAM (CP) -- Tobacco growers and the men who try to sell the crops split Monday over reasons for low prices in the burley market. At the annual meeting of the Ontario Burley Tobacco Mar- keting Association, Henry De Brouwer of Blenheim initiated the attack on prices by saying he is convinced the association is not doing much of a job in obtaining maximum returns for growers. "For 45 cents a pound in 1965, |I don't think we need a market- |ing board. If that is all they can do for us, we can do better for ourselves," George from Muikirk, permits. Since then, the board of trade} has allowed almost no construc- ak en" tion in the centreal area (a 15-| B S | mile radius from Charing Cross! | railway station) and little in the U INESS BRIEFS | rest of the urban area (a 40- By THE CANADIAN PRESS WILLIAM REID, Orono Former proprietor of Glen-Rae Dairy mile radius from Charing PROPOSE SETTLEMENT VICE-CHAIRMAN Dairy Form; Member, Bowman Cross). ' tae 5 and sis > STIFF A settlement in the litigation|ville public Utilities Commission; Form.|Well-known Former, Horseman and|secretary-Treasurer, Tom & Sons Limit RULES ARE STIFF _ that has plagued Nipigon Mines|er Darlington County Councillor; Form-|Breeder of Aberdeen Angus Cattle;led, Newcastle; Past President, New-|Mutual Fire Insurance Co., r, To qualify for a building per- Tid. for almost : ill b er Deputy Reeve and Bowmanville Town |Director, Durham Beef Association and|castle Lions Club and Member, Durham|Bowmanville Committee of Adjustment i the abblicast mst show ie, a a year wi €!Councillor and Past Master, Jerusalem|Member of the Odd Fellows Lodge. |County High School Board, and Past President, Bowmanville Lions mit, pplica shod presented to shareholders for |Mosonic Lodge. ! Club. proof that his ae a not approval at a special meeting be carried on elsew ere, there July 25. The litigation, involv-| is no alternative site, and the ing five lawsuits, resulted from rage is essential to the pub- efforts of a shareholder group | Ac. good... SY ton 'il headed by David W. Smith of} The Greater ae cote Calgary to gain control and which governs London's urban) eject a new board of directors area, signed agreements 14 4) }. 6 place the board now years ago to encourage indus-'pesdeq py ® .H. Jowsey | tries to move to 21 towns }o- ' 5 as | cated 40 to 100 miles outside the EXTENDS DATE | city. e Northern and Central Gas Co. So far 280 firms taking. 50,000 rq. has extended the expiry date of its share-for-share take- over bid for Canadian Industrial Gas and Oil Ltd. to Aug, 15 from July 15. E. C. Bovey, Northern president, said North- ern had received 4,027,835 CIGO shares by July 15, equal to al- most 80 per cent of the Calgary company's outstanding stock. C Rambler Copreorp Cop Fieids Cowich Craigmt Cstland Crowpat D'Eldona Denison Dicknsn Discovry Dome Dunraine Dunrain rt East Suil F'west T Frobex Genex Gnt Masct Giant Yk Goldrim Granduc ROSS STEVENS, Bowmanville CHAIRMAN N. BYRON VANSTONE, Bowmanville Proprietor, Vanstone Flour & Feed Mill; President, Onfario Flour Millers Asso- ciation, Director, Canadian . Millers R. MURRAY PATERSON Hy sodipieeed Newcastle 232 23'4 1 y es 17% 17% 35% 35% 6% " +M% 53¥e 8 3¥2 + 13¥e 13% Ww 11% 11% 11% 11% 37a 35 60 60 $ll% 11% l4-- 300 225 225 225 +4 48 48 AB 3% 3% 130%4-- 27% 12% 43 15 23% -- Ve 4'a + Va Kirk Twns Lab Min L Oufauit Lakehead Osu La Lur Langis Latin AM Leitch LL Lac Madsen Man Bar Marchant Marcon Maybrun Mcintyre Mentor Midrim Mt Wright Multi-Mi Neonex w N Harri N Hosco N Mylama N Que Ragl Nick Rim A. ALLAN H. STRIKE, Bowmanville Barrister, Partner in the Law Office of Strike & Strike; Municipal Solicitor for the' Town of Bowmanville ond Darling- Well-known Darlington Township Bar-|ton Township; Member and Past Direc-|Manager, Bowmonville Office, Central rister practising in Orono; Solicitor forjtor of the Bowmanville Rotary Club|Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation, the Clark Township Area Schoo! Board.!and Member and former Chairman of the Durham County High Schoo! Board. | said the blame for should go to {Tobacco Co., the low prices the growers "You are producing an awful lot of very common tobacco." Ontario burley growers get W. KAY LYCETT, Orono | WILLIAM TAYLOR, Bowmanville SECRETARY 10% MONKEY DRAWS--CROWD RAJKOT (AP)--A funeral for a monkey drew thousands of In- dian. villagers here. Electro-| ' i hie Pista cuted when it touched a live more for their product than pro- wire. the animal lived near.e Hpenghae Rhodesia, Japan, temple dedicated to Hanuman, China and Greece, he said. The the Hindu monkey god. only exception is the United) States where production is sup- ported by government - set prices, DIVIDENDS _ By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada and Dominion Sugar Co. Ltd., 30 cents, Sept. 1, rec- ord Aug. 10 Canadian Hydrocarbons Ltd., series A pfd, 27% cents: Com-| mon 25 cents, both Sept. 30 record Sept. 16. Ford Motor Co. U.S., com- mon 60 cents United States, | Sept..1, record July 28. | Mexican Light and Power Co, 6 33% 160 $16% 16% 164 $9% 9% 9% 350 350 «6350 $14 11% 1% 305 305 305 $24.2 242 24\2 S11% 11% 1% $51% 51% 51% $5 5 5 210 210 210 +5 $29'2 22 W\2-- Ve $92 9%2 9% $5 5 5 255 255 255 $23.%4 23% 23% sie 68 (OB 8000 100 $100 100% 1000 3500 84 4000 7000 1700 400 1250 2000 5000 900 2400 1000 inst 200 100 a Sales to 11:00. a.m Clairtone Wowright Coch will Granduc Gunnar Malartic $10% 10% 10% 300 172 «172 «(172 4a 144 14a Sll%e 11% 11% 520 520 520 $63 6363 $244 24a 24¥o Preston 950 $16% 16 16a + Ve Probe M 2000 28%, 28% 282 --- 2 Purdex 3000 12 «12-122: + Pyramid 125 $11% 11% 11% 290 290 290 3. 4 50-49% 50 20 $1). " 185 185 185 + $27% 27% 27a + Rio 5.80 Pr 215 $99 98% 9 + Rio Alg ¢ w 225 $15%@ 152 15% Rckwn 199 131 126 130 s Roman 3786 $16Ve 15% 16 "2° +» Man Lives $25 525 5 Satellite 9500 m% Sherritt 500 52! Silvrfids 320 31S 320 +10 Silvmq 6 4 45 +1 Stanrck 198 wi --4 Steep R 585 - 2842 -- a Sud Cont 104 Phillips, a grower said 1965 burley prices were ridiculous when flue - cured tobacco growers were getting 66 cents a pound for their crop. Association Chairman Irvine Ford of Highgate said the 1965 }crop yielded a gross average re- |turn of $931.22 an acre, highest itid., pfd. 50 cents, Aug. 1, rec- yield in association history lord July 22; pfd. 25 cents, Nov. | The basis problem with the in- 1, record Oct. 18; pfd. 25 cents, | jdustry is that Ontario growers|Feb. 1, 1967, record Jan, 18,| jare not producing a useful type 1967: pfd. 25 cents, May 1, 1967, tobacco. record April 18, 1967 "They are growing a type of barley that won't burn and no one chews it anymore." S. B. Lassiter of Chatham, a representative of British Leaf PRODUCE TORONTO (CP) -- Wholesale jto retail carton eggs average weighted prices quoted by the department of agriculture as of July 18: A large 56.9; A me- dium 45.3; A small 34.0 Eggs: Wholesale price jcountry stations fibre cases quoted by the Toronto board o! trade from wholesale egg deal ers: Extra-large 55-56; large 53-! 55; medium 38-39; small 25-27; B 37-38; C 33-34 Butter Prices: stabilization board carlots: buying 40 buying 39 score 58; BONDS TORONTO (CP) -- Long-term Canada and provincial bonds moved up % on the Canadian bond market Monday. The 44-per-cent Government of Canada issue due Sept. 1 1983, closed at $8644 bid and $86% asked In the provincial market, the Ontario Hydro six-per-cent 1988 issue was at $99%% bid and $99\% asked Short - term Canada were unchanged in quiet ing. Day-to-day money ahead \% to 5% per cent. 'oO i) --5$)| Pine Point 7230 Placer 225 35 Renabie 9 Rio Algom 2154 a 1700 9000 700 500 4000 7100 25 500 1500 233 300 500 2300 2300 OMAHA, Neb. (AP)--A rare }_| OPeration has proved responses from the brain are "quite dif- |ferent in the adult". than had | heen believed, and may lead to }the rewriting of medical his- tory. A 47-year-old Omaha, man, |half. of his cerebrum removed, \has gained a chance to live a relatively normal life. More than seven months after | the surgery, Dr. Aaron Smith of : jthe University of Nebraska col- lege of medicine said the pa- tient proved some of the "rigid */and traditional concepts in text- books are wrong." (The cerebrum proper, the front |brain mass.) The case was revealed by the Omaha World - Herald in a copyright story Last Dec. 7, a patient under- went four hours of surgery dur- ing which the entire left half of his cerebrum was removed because of a malignant tumor Identity of the patient has been withheld, but doctors gave him the alias "Ernest Coe." Dr. Smith said the left cere- brum traditionally has been con- sidered the dominant hemis- phere in almost all right-handed persons and more than half of those who are left-handed. CONTROLLED SPEECH It was generally thought the , left hemisphere controlled not only speech and verbal com- prehension, but visual color dis- crimination, purposeful move- ment of both right and left arms and the ability to accomplish certain higher intellectual tasks | Dr. Smith said tests following | surgery show Coe can perform *imany functions traditionally thought impossible. after remo- val of the dominant left hemis- . phere Immediately following surg- ery, Coe still had the ability to | speak spontaneously. Ten weeks later he asked his first ques- tions. He continues to show post - operstive improvement. The patient's ability to write | 2, remains impaired. He can print his name and those of his fam- ily and. occasionally descrip- tions of pictures shown him His comprehension has shown |] marked improvement and _his/|} color perception is improving. Texore Tombill Tribag U_ Buffadn Un Keno Upp Can Wilco Yukon € Zulapa 20 OILS, GAS Am Leduc 3500 22% 22 Banff 2825 $14%4 14\2 Calvert 700 3% 1% CS Pete 100 234 234 C Dehi 251 (251 Cc Ex Gas 370 «370 C Homestd 235 235 Cent Del $10% 10% Chieftan D Cc West P Dome Pete Dynamic French Pt Gt COilsds We've added some new horses to our corral. the brain of the is part Agricultural | tenderabl score 59; Selling 59. WALLY. GALES Representing AMERICAN GROWTH FUND LTD. FINANCIAL PLANNING THROUGH MUTUAL FUNDS featuring AMERICAN GROWTH FUND 67 King St. E OSHAWA; ONTARIO PHONE 723-8801 "We will be happy to Provo Gas Scurry Rn Spooner Triad Olt Union Oj} U_=Cahso Wespac 500 WwW Decalta 100 INDUSTRIALS 1000 $10% 107% 10% 4+ BIS ais » 'nine They offer you a powerful advantage. Alta Gas w Algoma St Alcan Alcan pr Anthes A Argus C pr Asbestos Atl Sugar Atl Sug A Bank Mil Bank N $ Bathurst Bell Phne Bow Viy w Brazilian BA Oi! BC Phone BCPh 1956 CAE Ind C Packrs A C Packrs B Cdn Brew C Brew Ap cB Al Aw cB AIBw 7 When it comes to hauling your freight, we're not talking about old Dobbin. That's a lot of horses. And they're for hire. They gallop your freight to the next city, the next province, or clear across the country any time of day or night. Like old Dobbin, they're working horses. But unlike old Dobbin, they don't get tired at the end of the day. You see, we're a company of people serving you. So we do our best to ship your goods as quickly and efficiently as possible. 17$ $27% 27% 725 $13 n 7180 $24\4 24 MA 2 2 22 200 The horses we're talking about are the horses you find in our diesel locomouves. We mean hard-driving horsepower. And plenty of it. If you add up all the horsepower in all our diesel iocomotives, you get a figure of a million and a half. bonds trad-| was 29a We figure that makes good horse sense, ( : iz (7 17 Serving you in so many ways. serve you" And to make sure our horses speed your freight where you want it to go, we spur them on with the latest in handling techniques and communi- ~ cations. And to meet the stepped-up demands of shippers, we're adding 96,000 more this year; 99,000 more early next year. OPPORTUNITY Affiliate of one of Big 3 in a prestige industry, over 100 offices in U.S.A., 20 years in business, now expanding in Canada. We are offering to am- bitious men wanting to be in business for them- selves locally an unlimited future REQUIREMENTS: CPR pr Cdn Tire A C Westing Chemcelt Chem 175 p Clairtone Cominco Columbi p Con Paper Management Ability, Financial Stability, Complete Training This is not a difficult business. Your office earn- | ings can exceed $40,000.00, Investment required $12,000.00. Box D71366, Oshawa Al €XxP067 CANADIAN PACIFIC COMINCO PAVILION wonrms rt eo Coronatn Crush Int Cygnus A Cygnus B Cygnus pr Dist! Seag D Electro Time: | replies answered REE roesntae ve

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