Daily Times-Gazette, 17 Apr 1953, p. 2

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Friday, April 17, 1958 SE EI re + eee---- #2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, oe BIRTHS STONEBRIDGE--Mr. and Mrs. J. Stone- | bridge are happy to announce the ar- rival of their daughter, Sharon Marie. on Wednesday, April 15, at the Oshawa | General Hospital. Mother and baby | doing fine. | YOUNG---Evelyn and Douglas are happy | to announce the arrival of a sister for Allan, at the Oshawa General Hospital, Thursday, April 18, 1953. DEATHS | ACKSON---Suddenly at Oshawa on Wed- gt April 15, 1963, Thomas Richard | Jackson, dearly beloved son of Lillian | and the late William H. Jackson. and brother of Allan, in his 15th year. Funeral from Luke-Mcintosh Funeral Home om Saturday, April 18th, to St George's Church, for service at 3 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. ARKER--Entered into rest suddenly in | PAR family residence, 252 Golf St., Osh- awa, on Wednesday, April 15, 1953, Ernest Parker, beloved husband of Mary Rodgers, in his 73rd year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, | Oshawa, until Saturday noon. Funeral service in St. George's Anglican Church, Saturday, April 18, 2 p.m. Interment | Mount Lawn Cemetery. | | | IN MEMORIAM | loving memory of a dear father, George Heaory | Corby. who passed away April 17, 1949, | From our happy home and circle | God has taken one we loved. He is borne away from sin and sorrow To a nobler rest above. No one knows how much we m None but aching hearts can tell. Lost en earth but found in Heaven. | Jesus doth all. things well. --Sadly missed and ever by wife, Kate, and family. CORBY In husband and v / iss him, remembered JH--In loving memory of a dear gir and father, Owen Keetch, who passed away April 17, 1951. Asleep in God's beautiful garden, Free from all sorrow and pain When our life's journey is ended We know we shall meet him again. wife ~--Ever remembered by and | daughters. KEETCH Keetch, 1951. | He bade no one a last farewell, | _In loving memory of Mr. Owen | who passed away April 17, OSHAWA AND DISTRICT TWO FIRE ALARMS Headquarters firemen made two calls yesterday, one to extinguish | a car fire in a vehicle belonging | to David Banning, 1200 Sommer- | viile Avenue, and the other to look ' after a chimney fire at the home of W. A. Forsythe, 364 Louisa Street. They reported no damage in either case. i AUTO DAMAGED ! There was slight damage $0 the Oshawa vehicle when two cars driven by Paul Lavery of Windsor | and by Robert Connors, King Street East were in collision at the corner of King and Ontario Streets yesterday. MINOR DAMAGE Minor damage was done to both vehicles when cars driven by Rob- ert Cornish, § Central Park Boule- vard and Warren Sadler, 62 Met- calfe Street, collided at the corner of King Street East and Central Park Boulevard yesterday noon. The road was wet at the time, police said, NOT AJAX MAN The Times-Gazette has been re- quested to point out that the Percy Smith named in the court news of | April 13 was not the Percy Smith | who lives on Beatty Avenue, Ajax. Three-year-old Paul MacDon- | ald, Park Lane Drive, Oshawa, is | all eyes as he accepts the owner- USED TRAILER ship certificate for this 20-inch Charged with using a trailer for | _ -- a dwelling, Leo Nadeau, 160 Park Road North, appeared before Mag- istrate F. 8. Ebbs this morning and was fined $10 and costs or 10 days. Constable C. W. Smith gave evidence in the case, Go To Banff This Summer | GET SMALL INCREASE COBOURG--A five-cent raise in pay for municipal employees was authorized by town council when the agreement with the union Coronet television set from Rob- | ert "Bob" Cameron, right, Osh- awa manager for the Coronet | Television Corporation. The set WINS CORONET 20-INCH TELEVISION SET was given as an attendance prige during 'the recent Coronet open- ing ceremonies and was won by | Paul's father, Donald MacDonald, | left. Advt. Army Cadets [Pakistan Parliamen Ousted By Governor NEW DELHI (AP) -- Reliable reports reaching here today said the governor-general of Pakistan among some Moslems in Karachi over the retention of Sir Moham- med Zafrullah Khan as foreign Tells Russia Abolish Cominform NEW DELHI (AP) -- India's vice-president, a former ambassa- i dor to Moscow, proposed Thursday A dramatic description of a battle | night that Russia abolish Soviet against the spruce budworm is con- | communism's international arm-- tained in a booklet issued by In- the Cominform--as a sign of its ternational Paper Company along peaceful intentions. {vi its JSurrent anluial ve Lo Sources close to India's govern- e story, mostly by pic- ment said Prime Minister Nehru's tures with brief texts, concerns an regime thinks such a development | Bre of more than 300 square miles "would be natural and not imposs- |°f, heavily-infested forest in north- ible to hope for" as the culmin. | There, from 1949, the Judworm, ation of the current Communist KROWR 8s the 'scourge of the soft- peace campaign. | Wood forest, Show: an alarming The vice-president, Sarvapalli bi A dd ® Upsalquivy | : | watershed | Radhakrishnan, made his suggest- ! : nary Celestine is { India's ways, His audience in- | 1951, some 2,200 square miles were Gluded Soviet Ambassador K. V. severely attacked. Widespread tree | ® ia \ {mortality on Crown forest inclu- | In an interview today, Radhak-|ded in the limits of New Brunswick | rishnan said scrapping of the Com- | International Paper Company was inform "would greatly reassure the |predicted for 1052. world that they (the Soviets) have no intention of interfering in Te! To combat the threat, the com. m pany organized what is described fairs of other countries. {as the biggest forest-spraying op- The Indian denied that the gov- eration ever attempted in Canada. {ernment has specific reports from | py the fall and winter of its current envoy to Moscow, 1951-52, an airport was built in the K. P. 8. Menon, that Russia is | wilderness, quarters were con- planning the step. structed for 150 men, and 'spray, fuel and equipment were hauled in By FORBES RHUDE' reporte stage of development and spraying proceeded during the next 15 'spinning down threads home." Based on later observa tions, between 998 and cent of the worms were re killed. The booklet concludes: ings between the square miles Brunswick forests this spring, with 80 airplanes operating from six airstrips. BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Forest-Spraying Offsets ~ Spruce Budworm Attack |over frozen roads before the spring Canadian Press Business Editor breakup. Renatly, June 13, entomologists the insects at the proper days. Budworms djed by the billions, on shining silk ison struck as the 100 'The first battle of the budworm was a victory for the forest mana. gers. . the natural forces that start stop a budworm epidemic, but we now know that DDT can be effee- tively sprayed from the air over vast forests and is a powerful weapon.' . We still don't Somprehend Since last year's Spraying, meet- ew Brunswick overnment and representatives of our major paper companies have resulted in formation of a non- profit corporation, Forest Protec- tion, . Ltd. It plans to spray at least 1,500 of infested New Blames Drinking Strike Talks | For'Behaviour Break Off | _ Fifty-year-old Joseph Buczek, 355 | Ritson Road South, was given four | HULL, Que. (CP)--Negotiations months definite ana two months in- in the two-day Gatineau Bus Com- definite when he was convicted on pany strike broke down Thursday | {a charge of committing an inde- and company and union officials cent act. | called off all future meetings until | Appearing before Magistrate F,! one side or the other had some new |S. Hbbs in an in camera session | Proposal to offer. {this morning, Buczek pleaded inno-| R. J. Beaudry, manager of the {cent to the charge and, when ques- strike-bound company, said both {tioned by his counsel Gilbert Mur- parties agreed further meetings doch, stated that he had been drink- | were useless unless someone had Shancenor Adenauer Visits Ottawa UGLAS HOW ress Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's capi tal is looking forward to its first meeting today with a German whose passionate urge for European unity is one of the bright linings in the clouds over Canton (that continent. There is going to be a warm |inimsier iB te Nasimudain Sab ing most of the previous nigpt, at something new to discuss. et. On Feb, roops and police | a hotel beverage room and at a | were called out to put down a dem- | friend's home. wl MegHng scheduled Jor later in phstration against Sue foreign min | Sergt. James Taylor testified The 86 drivers and mechanics roe thon a ee nu that when accused was brought in members of the Arg !gamated As. mayor of Cologne because he or- {vest. Zafrullah A s criticized | OY. ® south end resident, to whose sociation of Street .llectric Rail-| dered Nazi Swastikas torn down | Moh: d Ali. Pakistan' bas- for his failure to I ya viewed nine-year-old daughter and her way and Motor Coach Employees and whose vision of a freely-united [sador to Washington. to form. & gress in the five.yearold. Qistute | Playmate Buczek had exposed him- | (TLC.AFL), walked off the - job Europe is the antithesis of tr Sa or 24 ne Th Ori 8 Libs India o ch year-ol n Fy | self, the middle-aged man was in- | Tuesday midnight when the com- |super-race theories with which Hi. NeW roy men BOL | iT ¥ © state of Kash- | toxicated and had been lodged in pany turned down their request | ler bore Germany to ruin, the hobdoidy yoo pi hi of that | The disturbance in Karachi was |® SN: {for a 10-cent-an-hour increase ret-| There is a tendency here %o re. Nazimuddin had proved himself [followed by riots in Lahore yas The magistrate commended the roactive to Sept. 1. gard his coalition government of "inadequate w grapple with the month when six anti-government complaint for taking the trouble to | Present rate of pay is $1 an hour [the West German Republic as the lay the charge and appearing in for an average 48-hour week. {best hope for integrating that wir- has dismissed the government of Prime Minister Khwaja Nazimud- din. There was no immediate con- firmation from Karachi, where censorship often is imposed. The reports sald Governor-Gen- eral Ghulam Mohammed had asked said good-bye to none. Tne Heavenly gates were opea wide And he gently entered home, We often think of him, The things he used to say and de, We wonder why he had Wo die . t a chance to say good-bye. Without remembered and sadly missed by daughter, Lorraine, and son-in-law, | official welcome for Konrad Ade- {nauer, a remarkably energetic man of 77 who twice was im) |oned by Hitler, was once fi as | (National Union Public Service Employees) was signed by repre- sentatives of the union and the | mayor. General utility workers will {now receive $1.12 an hour and street cleaners $1.08 for a 45 hour | week. Harold. | ADMITTED TO HOSPITAL | S | Charles B. Tyrrell, Orono drug- CARD OF THANK | gist, was admitted to the Bowman- | ville Memorial Hospital this morn- thanks to | \DE 88 a result of an overdose of 1 wish to express my Ae my wallet | Sleeping pills. He was accompan- a eet at Ritson Road d to the hospital by Dr. A. F. One hunder and fifty-six special- ly selected Royal Canadian Army Cadets will enjoy three weeks of camping this summer in the heart of the Rockies at Banff as a re- (ward for high efficiency during their cadet service. Banff National Cadet Camp is opened annually by the Army for approximately 150 boys selected from the 56,000 cadets in 530 cadet corps across Canada. Athletic and | academic standings as well as cadet efficiency are factors in se- Fined for Using blems i ) » i problems facing the gountry demonstrators were killed by police | 0 + to give evidence. lile and turbulent country with the 1anded LIVESTOCK: -- SIX NEW MEMBERS six pipers and drummers who will succeeded Liaquat All Khan, who eign minister and called for action | {from the U.S. and he'll be here OBITUARIES tario stockyards while all cattle | and King Sts. | ie 3 : wh ] H i Oron lecting applicants. Nazimuddin, 58, became premier (fire. Militant Moslem mobs de- | NAS ary Nomontie yt . This a quota will include of Pakistan on Oct. 19, 1951. He manded the resignation of the for-! He WN a 5:30 pa A Six new members are receivi asked to take their instruments | Was assassinated. against the Ahmedya, a minority | TORONTO (CP)--Hogs were 50 tq a welcome at the Ontario County be them. re | There had been dissatisfaction Moslem sect to which he belongs. | cents higher this week at the on- in a Jose A FREDERICK NELSON GANANOQUE -- The funeral of ederick Nelson, a charter mem- of the Col. Russell H. Britton Branch of the Canadian Legion here and often referred to through- out the district as 'Mr, Legion", was held Saturday afternoon from Tompkins funeral home to Christ Church where Ven. Archdeacon N. R. Stout officiated. Mr. Nelson, a resident here for some 47 years, would have been 82 April 23. Burial was in Gananoque Cemetery. Mr. Nelson, who was born in England, was perennial chairman | of the Legion's committee in charge | of poppy-fund campaigns. In July, ! 1951, at ceremonies marking the opening of the Legion's new hall here, fe was singled out by PC leader George A. Drew for special mention. Col. Drew paid high trib- ute to Mr. Nelson's indefatigable efforts on behalf of the Legion gen- erally. Mr. Nelson was predeceased by his wife in 1935. Immediate sur-| vivors include two daughters, Mrs. | Nellie Dailey, Gananoque, and Mrs. Edward Neal, Katrine, Ont., and two sons, Fred Nelson, Oshawa and Herbert J. Nelson, Gananoque. DANIEL EMERY LAWRENCE FRANKFORD -- Daniel Emery Lawrence of Frankford died sud- denly at his home on Tuesday. He was in his 7ist year. Born in Frankford, son of the Iate Mr. and Mrs, Charles Law- rence, he had been a resient of the area all his life. A member of the Anglican Church, Mr. Law- rence, he had been a resident of Pulp Mill for 26 years. ! Surviving is his wife, the form- er Bittle Chard; two daughters, Mrs. Charles Butcher of Frankfod, Mrs. Robert McLeod of Frankford; one son, Ross of Trenton and nine grandchildren and two great grand- children. Three brothers, Fred and Nels of Frankford and Edward of Oshawa, also survive. A sister, Mrs Thomas Sullivan is a resident of Frankford and another sister, Mrs. Louis McPherson is a resident of Trenton, FUNERAL OF MRS. LAYCOE The funeral took place vester- day afternoon of Mrs. Constance May Laycoe who died on Monday in Cshawa General Hospital, The Rev. H. A. Mellow, minister of Nor iyninater Unified Church con- ducted the service at the Arm- strorg Funeral Home and inter- ment was in Pine Hills Cemetery, Tore to. zllbearers were Joe Elliott, Go: Barker. sam Huxter, Bert Shra te, George Jarvis and Miles Stoughton. Fine Youth for Sraell in Theatre Pleading guilty to causing a dis- | turbance in a public place, Roy Horner, '16, of 120 Rosehill Boule- vard, appeared before Magistrate F. 8: Esbs this morning, was con- victed and fined $25 and costs or 10 days. Truman Walters, manager of the * Regent Theatre, told how . the youth had heen apprehended dur- ing the matinee performance on Good Friday, in possession of a bottle of vile smelling liquid, the odor from which like rotten eggs permeated the theatre The bottle, which was labelled "Apple Blossom," was exhibited by Chief Owen D. Friend, who offer- ed the magistrate a sniff, which was hastily deelined. Bgt. J. Tay. lor, who arrested the accused, averred that it smelled terrible.' Evidently the bottle had been pur- chased al & downtown store which specializes In such novelties The magistrate, besides castigal ing the youth for such tomfoolery especially on Good Priday, had harsh words for the store where he got the perfume. He sald, It should be cleaned out, and not al- 0 soll thet stuff." | 2 | Flying Club. They are Bill Sloes, At the camp, three miles from | ia native of Holland, Lyle Hollin- Banff at the foot of towering Cas- ger, Hartvig Pedersen, of Danish cade Mountain, the cadets will en- | crash, descent; Fred Polden, Ron Gainer of Pickering and Ernie MacKenzie. RECEIVE CERTIFICATES Four members of the Ontario County Flying Club are receiving the congratulations of their fellow members on tehir success in re- cent tests. Paul Hermansen and George Roche have won their priv- | ate pilot's certificates while John Porakyo and Joe Gerace have re- ceived their commercial pilot's certificates, CASTING BALLOTS Voting began today in the union hall for standing committees of Local 222 UAW-CIO. Results should be available early next week. CHILLY WEATHER Chilly breezes swept the Oshawa area this morning. At one time during the morning there were flurries of snow. BY-PASS OUTLET It was announced today that the new by-pass highway, across the north of Toronto, will meet High- way 401 just west of the point where the Lansing cut-off meets the highway. The new highway will follow a course south of the Lan- sing cut-off to York Mills. HEARING ADJOURNED David Gibbs, 19, of 639 Brassey Street, pleading not guilty to a careless driving charge before Magistrate F. 8, Ebbs today, heard his case adjorned to May 6. GIVEN REMAND Kenneth Ivey of Toronto, charg- lV ed with failing to come to a full stop, was remanded to May 6. REMAND YOUTHS Howard Kay and Maurice O'Day, two Greenbank youths, charged be- fore Magistrate F. 8. Ebbs this morning with attempted theft, were remanded to May 5. Another charge of wilful damage against Kay was withdrawn at the behest of OPP Constable Gordon Keast of Whitby who was prosecuting the dual case, Driver Killed | At Pontypool LINDSAY -- A one-armed driv- er was killed instantly yesterday when he failed to pull his auto out of a curve of highway 35 near Pontypool, The car swerved off the wet pavement into a ditch and hit a tree. The driver was Howard Hines of Lindsay. Two passengers, Ar- thur Mackin and Jim. Maguire, al- 50 from Lindsay, escaped With minor abrasions and walked from the wrecked auto. Hines died from a fractured neck. He was a Becond World War veteran and is survived hy a wife, {a daughter and two sons. Constable A. Watson of the Bow- manville OPP investigated the fatal Circus Fan Steals Trapeze Spotlight NEW YORK (AP)--The aeria- lists of the circus received unex- pected competition Thursday night from a customer at Madison Square Garden. Celso R. Lorenzo, 38, arose from his front-row second balcony seat in the midst of the show of the Ringling Brothers And Barnum and Bailey circus. He stepped across the guard-rail, seized an overhead wire in the rigging for trapezes and other equipment, and swung out hand over hand for nearly 40 feet Then he fell 50 feet to the arena Lorenzo suffered only possible rib fractures. He was taken to the psychiatric ward at Bellevue hos- pital. joy special cadet training mixed with mountain-resort activities. | The three-week period will in- {clude mountain tours, trail rides, | swimming, fishing, boating and mountain climbing. Military cadet training will occupy about 40 per cent of the time and has been | specially planned to suit the sur- | roundings. | A bivouac camp also will be established on the Cascade River. | | There, companies of cadets will "rough it" for five-day periods while park instructors show them first-hand some of the tricks of bushcraft. The cadets will live in tents during their three-week stay at the camp. | This year's camp will open July {19 and close August 9. | LJ IT'S YOUR MONEY | (Continued from Page 1) pay for an addition to the new | city hall until at least 1970. | Washroom facilities have been installed to meet the needs of 85 people and room has been allowed for space for 42 more. That would allow, from the sanitary angle of the factory act, & city hall staff of 127 and that would mean a gen- eral 50 per cent expansion in staff | (and city population. Oshawa isn't expected to expand to that degree until about 1970. "So Oshawa js getting a new building -- as cheap a bullding and as good a one as possible. {can say truthfully that everything on the job is going along splendid- "For years nothing. was built in this city. It wants everything in the way of new buildings at one time. A city hall is urgently re {quired and for under $500,000 the people are gaing to get one that will be a credit to Oshawa," de- clares Mr. Tonks. Typical of the time he has put in on the job is the struggle he had over he provision of glass for the windows. He favors the plenti- | {ful use of windows and streamlin- | {ed glass fronts but the first es- [timate of the required surrounds ~not counting the glass -- for the city hall was far more than one- third of the total outlay. | "That was utterly ridiculous," | {sald Mr. Tonks. At that time it 'looked as if the scheme would fold (up entirely but he worked steadily 'for two months on plans for new windows and frames. Those eight "weeks saw the cost of that vital part of the building slashed $125, 000 to around $40,000. Mr. Tonks denies rumors that there have been hold-ups dn the 9 job. He asserts that the project is actually well ahead of schedule. With the purse-strings pulled tight he and ' the building committee didn't visualize the structural work being So far advanced by this spring, : "We were lucky in that respect. The winter was mild enough to al- low us to get on with the rein- forced concrete work -- and that |is. a tricky operation." By the end of this year the city | hall should be ready for use. Sub- {contractors are now on the job {and although no tentative date has | been set for the official occupancy {it is nore than likely that the { tabulating of the returns of Osh- awa's next municipal election will take place in Canada's newest and most modernistic city hall, The building isn't likely to form part of the election campaign of the tight-mouthed building com-' | mitteemen. (The third and last of the three articles on the ecivie administra- tion building will appear tomor- Tow). | PORT PERRY BUILDING | Eighteen bullding permits have | been issued in Port Perry so far! this year, 15 of which are for hemes, Eight of the houses will be located on Simcoe Street, Total |oadue of the permits is over 5100, | afternoon, Snow or rain Grain Barge Dritts Helplessly In Blinding Lake Snowstorm SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP) The grain barge Alfred Krupp drifted helplessly for several hours in a snowstorm on Lake Superior Thursday night after her tow line snapped. However, the tug Favorite which set out from here with the United States Coast Guard cutter Mesquite as soon as the Krupp's plight was reported, managed to put a line aboard the barge early today and take her in tow. Members of the Krupp's crew, reported to number between 10 and 14, were described as safe and THE WEATHER TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic weather office in Toronto at 9:30 a. m. Synopsis: Mother Nature con- tinues to pull weather tricks on us in the form of late spring wintry spells, Cold air which would do justice to a winter weaher map has spread southward over all of Canada and the northern half of the United States. Now that a low pressure area is developing over Utah there is a serious threat of precipitation in the form of snow and rain spreading across Illinois, Michigan and into Ontario during Saturday. Hence the outlook is gloomy © for warm sunny Spring weather especially in Southern Ont- ario. Under clear skies tonight temperatures will drop again to around 32 in Southern Ontario and t0 10 to 15 in the north, Thus there {will be extensive ground frost to- night and temperatures will mod- ify only slightly on Saturday. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Saturday: Western Lake Ontario, Niagara regions; Toronto, Hamilton oities: Cloudy with a few sunny periods and a few showers or snowlfurries today. Clear tonight. Saturday sunny becoming cloudy Saturday beginning late Saturday evening. Cold. Winds |northwest 20 today, light tonight, northeast 15 Saturday. Low tonight and high Saurday at Toronto, 8. Catharines and Hamilton 32 and 40. Summary for Saturday: Cold. TORONTO (CP) Observed temperatures bulletin issued at the Toronto public weather office at am Min, Max. Dawson 27 50 Victoria Edmonton .... Regina Winnipeg | Port Arthur .. | White River .. Kapuskasing Sault Ste. Marie North Bay . Yui vs we Sudbury eh. Muskoka airport ... Toronto . Ottawa | Montreal ... Saint John ... Halifax Vivien Leigh Gets Treatment For TB LONDON (AP) -- Actress Vivien Leigh now is being treated for "recurrence of a lung complaint,' her agent has announced. The agent sald she had been moved from a nursing home to"ay home in the country for recuper- ation. Miss Leigh, wife of actor Bir Laurence Olivier, was treated for tuberculosis In 1945, She was flown home from Holly- wood last month after suffering a breakdown while making a I | The barge went adrift while be- ing towed down Lake Superior from the Lakehead by the freighter Mo- hawk Deer, owned by the Beacon- field Steamship Company of Mont- real. As the freighter and the barge headed into the storm, which de- posited more than an inch of snow along the Lake Superior shore, the {line snapped about 9:30 p. m, Before winds that reached 35 miles an hour, the barge drifted near Caribou Island, some 35 miles | northwest of here. Reports this morning from the | réscue tug were that no one aboard {the Krupp was injured and that {the barge suffered no apparent damage. TRAFFIC TOLL Yesterday Accidents 9 Injured [, Killed Year tn Date Accidents Injured Killed PLEASE DRIVE CAREFULLY prices were $1 lower. Calves, sheep | and lambs were unchanged. ! Cattle receipts were 6,939, Choice | Closed Premises | with Prime Minister St. Laurent ton, External Clayton Misenheimer of Cedar Valley, pleading: guilty before Ma- |gistrate F, S. Ebbs this morning to a charge of occupying premises declared closed by the Board of Health was convicted and fined $10 and costs or 10 days. [ A similar charge against Richard | Collins, same address, brought an- other conviction and a similar fine, City solicitor John Hare and MOH Dr, Archie Mackay appeared to press charges. "You'll have to ac something to clear out of there," warned the magistrate, '"Your house is unfit for habitation." TORONTO STOCKS: -- TORONTO (CP)---Prices headed downward in forenoon stock mer- ket trading today. Base metals, industrials and | western oils slipped and golds were |weak. Volume for the first hour | totalled 1,207,000 shares--highest this month. Hudson Bay led the losses in jbase metals, dropping more than Most uraniums slipped and New | Brunswick base metals and North- ern Ontario rare metals traded lower. Banks held firm in industrials but papers, utilities and agrieul- tures weakened. Western oils showed hardly a significant gain. i Senior golds were mixed in int trading but juniors and holding companies traded lower. Pearson and Finance Minister Ab- ® |bott together, with Immigration ; {Minister Harris, a press confer- ence and a special convocation at the University of Ottawa. The feeling here is that the steers $19.50-20.25; choice 21; good heavy $19-20 mediums downward to $18; heifers $19-19.50; plain light steers and heifers $14; choice fed yearl- | ings $20-21.50; mediums $17-19; | Adenauer party will deal large) medium to good stocks $18-20: in ceneralities--more trade, rid plain $15; good cows and bulls qian ace ce of more of the Bulg fanners 88-10; plain light {millions of East German refugees ulls -12.50. | : Calves totalled 1,144 head. Choice |{1c ok Slave relations. tom veal calves $24-26: medium 10'is g keen interest in getting the 800d $18-23; plain 813: stock calves | German view on Buropean develop- do $21.50; grassers $10-13. i Sheep and lambs totalled 226, |focnis, on Russian tactios, on Medium to good feed lambs $25.50- $26.50; spring lambs $35; Lany sheep $10-12; culls dow: to $5. Classified Ads aré sure to pay. good nward | | Phone The Times with yours today. 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