The Oshawa Times, 4 Jan 1960, p. 7

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TODAY'S TORONTO STOCKS By The Canl aPress Toronto Stock Exchange--Jan. 4 (Quotations in cents unless marked $. Odd lot, xd -- Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants.) Stock Steel Can T Fin A Tr Can PL Trans-Mt Un Steel Un Telef Walk GW 315 375 1220 600 230 74330 200 Sales High Low 11 a.m. Chg INDUSTRIALS 1050 $40 39% 40 100 10% 28% Stock Abitibi Acad-Atl Alta Gas Algoma Alumini Analog Analog wis Argus Atlas Steel Bank Mont Bank NS 85 Beav Lumber 125 Bell Phone 1199 Biltmore pr 10% 28% $10% $28% $40% $33% 39% 400 995 1165 2008 100 300 25 $35 35 1255 $27% 95 $55 $71 24 FEFEEF Cree wis 58 Dev-Pal Dome Pete Deymamic Eastwd A Home Oil A H BOI G Majtrans Medal AM con 1000 Mill City 3000 N Concord 2000 NC Oils Okalta Pac Pete Pe mo pr Cdn Pet pr Cockshutt F OEEE F 545 4000 18 2530 100 420 30 150 Dist Seag D Bridge Dom Elect D Fndry D Magnes Dom Stores Phillips i 1000 Prove Gas Royalite Royalite pr Sapphir Sarcee Spooner Stanwell Sub Oil riad Of! Un Oils Wespac Wsburne 1000 W Cdn OG 1500 W Cdn OG wi 200 Westates 200 W Decalta W Naco GN Gas Hendshot pr Hi-Tower 5600 13100 7200 500 LobCo .A wt MacMill B M Sug pr Mass-F Mass-F Mex LP Moore Nat Drug North Star Ansi) Arcad wis A Arcadia Aumaque 3 Barnat Base Metals Belcher 5 Bibis Black Bay Bouzan Bralorne Buff Ank 15610 St Maurice 8100 Shawin 225 Simpsons 265 St Radio Std Wire $32% 32% $13% 13% 380 380 5 200 Coniagas or Sales High Low 11 $871 $37% $26 $11% 295 $38 Net a.m. Ch'ge 7% + % 37 25% 113% 8% 285 Stock 87 37 25% + % + % $8% +10 3B +H 12% C Mogu 270 LJ c Con Negu Con Sud Conwest Cop Corp Coprand Coulee ¢ Crowpat Deer Hérn Duvan East Mal East Sull Elder El Sol Falcon Fatima Frobisher Geco Min Gnt Masc! Giant YK Glacier GF Uran Grandue Greyhk Gunnar, Gunnar wis Har-Min H of Lak Headway, Hollinger Hoyle Hud Bay Hydra Int Nickel Irish Cop Iron Bay Iso Jacobus Jaye E Kerr / Kilembe Labrador Lake Cin L Dufault Langis L Shore Lorado Macassa MacLeod Nipissing Noranda Norbeau netal Patino wits Pato Peerless Pick Crow Po Pr D Que Cop Que Lith Q Metal Rainville Realm Rockwin San Ant Sterritt Siscoe lage # ada"s position in the five years, |ing Canada and other countries|d LONDON SYNAGOGUE SMEARED, A passerby views Nazi swas- tikas and. painted sign 'Juden Raus' (Jews, get out!) white. washed on a synagogue in Lon- don's Notting Hill section early today. It is the same area where anti-Negro race riots occurred last year. The anti- jewish incident parallelled simi- lar anti-Semitic acts throughout | Germany this week. --AP Wirephoto Old Bavarian City Anti-Red Centre By JOHN FIEHN [for agents spying on behalf of the = {United States intelligence. MUNICH, West Germany (AP)! goviet counter - agents are in Munich, once the symbol of ap- the city, too, spying on spies and peasement, has become a symbol refygees and, Do, have of clandestine resistance to anti- no doubt, picking off the leaders Communists in Iron Curtain of the underground movements as its fun - loving surface mow. aud _inen, Occasionally Rie ad Banani Giy oF Beer UMerspy is exposed, halls and art galleries seethes with cloak and dagger intrigue as headquarters of spies, coun- terspies and anti Communist underground movements. "Munich," says a high Western intelligence official, "is like the|of tense secrecy. Men rarely talk periscope of a giant submarine about themselves or their work. packed with agents" y the Iron Curtain -- and eyeing tioned. One refugee leader em- each other with suspicion. ployed six aliases and lived in six At least three unexplained apartments. deaths in the past five years, in- There are 21,000 registered ref cluding that of the legendary ugees in Munich. They are Ukrainian freedom fighter Stepan|grouped im 110 organizations. Bandera, are attributed by police They are united in the fight to the silent underground war against communism. But there between East and West. are bitter political and ethnic dif Tight - lipped men, usually in ferences between the Allies. groups of three to five, carrying There are Russians who want arms and propaganda, are frei; re-establish the Czarist regime. quently slipping out of the city on others strive for a Russian re- secret missions into their -Red- public and yet another group has ruled homelands. strong socialist ideals while still UNTOLD PUBLICATIONS being violently anti-Soviet. They return -- if they do--with = The same applies to the Poles, information that is processed and Czechs, Slovaks, Romanians, fed into untold number of publi- Hungarians, Bulgarians, Alban: cations that are sold around the lans and the Yugoslavs, subdi- world and help finance the refu. vided into Serbs, Croats and Slo- gees' underground activities venes. The Communist countries claim Neatly all the 110 refugee Munich is the recruiting centre groups headquartered in Munich 5 "We turn them over to German police," says a Russian refugee. German police, who haven't re- ceived many of them, are in- clined to doubt it. peering over No one wants his name men-| are reported to have contacts with their countrymen on the other side of the Iron Curtain. Some will talk about it privately. Most won't, There's too much at stake. HUNGARIANS ACTIVE The organization of Russian Solidarists (NTS) is one of the few which will admit smuggling men through the Iron Curtain. In- siders say Hungarian refugees are the most active in keeping up contacts in their homeland. The actual dispatch of agents into Communist countries is nec- essarily one of the best-kept sec- rets of the silent war. Parachuting them in from air- planes is said on good authority to have ceased some time ago, largely due to the greater vigil- ance of the Red air forces and their improved radar spotting de- vices. Land routes now are the only underground link between the free and Communist worlds--and Underground Muflich is a world? even these channels have become) tighter and more dangerous. The cofrespondent = talked to several refugees who walked all the way from Munich to destina- tions behind the Iron Curtain and later returned "We walked 47 days, hiking by night and sleeping in secret hide- outs by day," said one Ukrainian. He said he has made the trip across Czechoslovakia to the Ukraine three times, most re- cently in 1957. Coniaurum C Callinan Con M and Morrison B.C. Students Get Help Financially VANCOUVER (CP)--More than one-quarter of all the students at the University of British Colum- bia get financial help from the university or the government, the university board of governors save. The 1958-59 session alone saw 3,381 awards made of a total of $067,379, a press release says. Some students receive money from more than one source. Money from the university comes mainly from four sources: special or named bursaries; fel- lowships, scholarships and prizes; awards from revolving loan funds, and government bpr- saries and loans. Dean Walter Gage, chairman of the universiiy's awards com- mittee, said 764 students got a total of $115,025 from bursaries. The bulk -- more than $75,000-- was donated by individuals, serv- ice clubs and business firms. Fellowships and other prizes went to 804 students and were worth $218,110, mainly for scho-| lastic achievement. Some 1,200| studenis took out loans totalling $325,025 which they must repay. The provincial and federal gov- ernments contributed money that provided $209,220 in loans and bursaries to 591 students. Sales High Low 11 5 ad t es | B ARBARA AND BERNARD BRADEN With total assistance exceeding | CANADIAN COUPLE THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, January 4, 1960 J Canadian Minerals Up OTTAWA (CP) Canada'shelped push returns down te f iminerals industry recorded a{$149,213,000 from $155,334,000, solid 13.7 - per - cent gain during| Value of non-metallic minerals 1959 in value of production, with increased to a total $176,230,000 output rising to a record $2,389, from $150,355,000. 11683,000, the bureau of statistics] Value of 1959 mineral produc: b [reported today. {tion by provinces, with 1958 The bureau's preliminary esi. Values in brackets: mate showed that the rise--from Ontario $962,757,000 ($789,602, $2,100,739,000 in 1958 -- was due|000); Quebec $432,820,000 ($365, mainly to major gains in nickel, 706,000); Alberta $378,143. copper, iron ore, uranium and|000 ($345,939,000); Saskatchewan petroleum. $213,744,000 ($209,941,000); British Gold, lead, zinc and coal Columbia $157,281,000 ($151,149,- showed a downward trent, ec pe ogdiznd sa though higher prices for zine re-| pe o0s™" 660 TIRE); Aiba sulted in higher over-all returns. | g=e'067 000 ($57.218,000): New | There were gains in mineral Brunswick $18,391,000 ($16,276, returns in all provinces but Nova 000); Northwest Territories $24, Scotia, where the coal industry's; 267 000 ($24,895,000); Yukon $12,- uathetise Lg continued. li ($12,311,000). rgest gain was in Ontario, ing mines : with tefurns rising to $062.757,000 ue Of leading minerals --equal to 40.3 per cent of the 1959 1038 national total compared with 37.5 : |uranium $324,550,000 $279,538,000 Per cept. in 1958. nickel 257,173,000 194,142,000 URANIUM LEADS copper 233,296,000 174,431,000 The uranium 186,207,000 126,131,000 industry con.|iron ore f [tinued its leading position, 801d 149,213,000 155,334,000 96,563,000 92,501,000 though . markets after 1963 are Z'1C uncertain. Production rose to 30,- lead 39,574,000 42,414,000 994,000 pounds from 26,805,000|silver 28,382,000 27,053,000 and returns climbed to $324,550,- Platinum 10,952,000 9,481,000 000 from $279,538,000. |remelt iron 7,587,000 312000 ,308, $900,000, however, Dean Gage |said there is still not enough money available. Each of the 10, 000 UBC students must raise about $1,200 a year to pay for ex- ipenses. Bathurst Unit Destroyed By Fire BATHURST, N.B. (CP) -- Fire] [ONDON (CP) Bernard Saturday night destroyed the|praden is like the comedian who Bathurst Power and Paper Com: wants to play Hamlet. pany's main pulp-making unit.| He'd like to do subtle, serious Company officials said no esti-/shows. Admirers assert he sel- |mate of damage would be made|dom gets a chance. until today. | Show business folk say: "That The giant storage bin for Braden! He could be a great wood chips was completely actor." burned. It is situated on top of This conflict between could-be a 150-foot concrete elevator shaftiand real has colored his 10-year which conveyed the chips to pulpistay in Britain. making machinery in the lower| It may help to explain why the portion. parson's son from Vancouver is Firemen were able to keep the|less in the public eye these days fire from spreading to, the com-|compared with an earlier period pany offices. One paper-making when he and his actress wife, machine is expected to be/Barbara Kelly, formed one stopped for three or four days Britain's best-known teams. {because of a shortage of pulp. | : | i |GOOD ROLES FEWER { The fm employs about 1,300 Thev had their own radio show, appeared in west end plays, dined, in the best restaurants, [lived comfortably with their {three teen-aged children in a 15- room house on the Thames at nearby Shepperton. Ask any. Englishman to name Canadian personality and raden would leap to mind. Now Bernie and Barbara are on what they cheerfully call a "failure kick". They still make . Y plenty of money and their apart- ment in Knightsbridge is fashion- OTTAWA (CP)--The Canadian from 'low wage standard" coun- rh 5 ' .abor Congress, in a reply to tries. Li But fig *ave Notices and the CCF MP Harold Winch, says| The CLC memo says that those| Braden takes it philosophically Canada's labor costs im manu-lwho compare Canadian labor|Accustomed to the sibilant stage facturing are lower than in the wages with those in Japan and|whispers of show business, the United Kingdom, United States eisewhere take no account of la- superheated world in which oF Japan despiie the handicaps ibor productivity. everybody -- but evervbody, dah- of a smaller domestic market. | i 8 , . It says general labor costs in| BASED ON U.S. STUDY [ing as just landed the pari of Canada were below those of 10| Thus the memo looks at Cana-has no bitterness. major trading countries in 1950, dian wages as a proportion of and below those of eight--includ-|output. It is based largely on a A ing the U.K., West Germany, study prepared by two U.S. la-| U.S., Japan and France--in 1955. |bor department economists, pub- There was little change in Can- lished last September and cover- For Ac By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer a |B MYTH "As a matter of fact, the so- |called 'failure kick' is largely a myth, and certainly a matter of egree. says a CLC memorandum, "and| with large exports to the U.S. | 'Tve been going trong) Shr there is no reason to believe that, These countries are also listed| diaries or He B5t yout an bo {later figures if available would|by the Canadian bureau of statis- less work than in any other show any significant change." tics as leading buyers of Cana- year nor have we earned less The CLC memorandum, pre- diaz goods, and nine are at the|money : 4 pared for circulation among con-|top of the list. | "It's been a question of work gress staff, does not name Mr., The CLC expresses labor In-{impinging less on the public, not Winch. But it is understood that come, averaged among each Ca- ed interest to the press, it was written to help counter nadian as a percentage ratio of|and of course not all of a quali what labor regards as a damag-\the per capita gross national{we would want publicized an; ing statement by him. production, It finds Canada has|Way." | The CCF, Commons members favorable ratio compared with If there is any decline in popu- ior Vastouves East, on oe Te others. {laritv, it may result from the cent return from a wor! rip, | : "changing climate" of British said Canadian labor and business ars, in 199 SaipuL io Canada|, SociE0TE must go easy in demands for|," Fi Bher an in thel "guer pate maison and silver- {wages and profits if Canada is AAA test Germany, sides of beef in a Fleet Street | y 4 » High Fame £|of picking Canadians or Ameri- Production of nickel, the coun. cobalt 5,927,000 try's No. 2 mineral, soared to Non-metallics 370,246,000 pounds from 279,117, asbestos $106,592,000 02.37.90 000 000, with returns rising to $257,- salt 17,462 14,990 173,000 from $194,142,000. gypsum 5,189 Increases in both tonnage and titanium price of copper pushed the value dioxide to $233,296,000 from $174,431,000. peat moss Iron ore shipments of 24,477,000 Pyrite tons--up from 15,726,000 tons in quartz 1958--brought returns to a rec-| ord $186,207,000. Among mineral fuels, oil and jrestaurant, |natural gas production was well (the theme. | 1 Per |ahead of 1958. You know, they used to say! Coal shipments slumped to 10,- 8% per cent of the population de- 597 000 tons from 11,687,000. {cided what people would see in| el |this country. Then commercial GOLD OUTPUT SLIPS | cement television came along and busted] Gold output slipped to 4,444,800 stone 51,167,000 things. wide open. Now money is|ounces from 4,571,300. Lower clay products the deciding factor and money prices, due to the high exchange 45,186,000 follows the mass appeal. |rate in terms of U.S. funds, lime 19,707,000 "If I've got a minority feeling in an era of mass appeal, that's just tough luck." Bernard and Barbara are hand- icapped also by a trend against North American players. The post-war invasion has reached {the point of diminishing returns; British managements are wary gd [SER tors Braden warmed to petroleum 88 8338 2s coal natural gas 0,099,000 32,058,000 Structural Material |sand, gravel | cans when natve actors are out lof work. { In January, Braden flies to his lold hometown of Vancouver for television talks, but it looks as though the family is firmly root- ed in Britain. Barbara's mother came from Manchester, and the actress was brought up on Lon- don Bridge is Falling Down, Oranges and Lemons, and Winnie {the Pooh. She likés it here. Bernie suffers from what some lcall "transatlantic splits". He feels a two-way tug. "I feel sort of caught in be- [tween Britain and North America," he savs. "I like a lot of things over here, but it stag- gers me sometimes when I think of the following there. is- in this country for some of the best things in America -- the writings of J. D. Salinger, for instance." Braden is also a fan of Salin- ger, author of the oft - quoted Catcher in the Rye whose central figure is the original crazy {mixed-up kid, Holden Caulfield. CONFUSED PUBLIC As for people insisting that he could be a great actor, if he only had the chance, Braden shrugs and says he has starred in five west end plays, at least two of which were "deadly serious". | "The fact that my primary im- pact was made as a comedian seems to make people forget that I'm an actor, and every time I appear as an actor I am 'dis- covered' by people who discover- ed me as such in another play several years earlier. "It is obvious that in jumping around. from comedv to drama, from brain trusts to sports shows and back again, I've thotoughly confused the British public, but I'm afraid that's the vay I work and I don't really propose to do anything about it." How much Fy os $100,000.00 ..« you cone by heit New Yoor 7 That's right -- yor $100,000.00. For, believe it or not, you'll likely earn more than that during your working years. Question is: how much will you keep? Right now is the time to resolve to keep a larger part of what you earn throughout this new year. And the place to keep it is in 2 B of M Savings Account. Make saving every pay-day your No. 1 New Year's to avoid pricing herself out of ex. |pines, Norway, Sweden, | | witzer- | | port markets, land, UX. and U.S. I "CERTAIN CIRCLES" | The Canadian ratio rose from "There are certain circles ini68 in 1950 to 71.1 in 1955, but this country," the congress still was lower than eight of the |memo says, "which continually countries. | propagate the idea that Cana-| The Japanese Embassy state-| dians are pricing themselves oul ment said a comparison of of foreign markets, and thatmoney wages in Japan with wages are to a large extent re-iother countries does not give a { sponsible. : : true picture of "real wages'-- { This was being accepted bY the actual living standards of more and more persons as an in-| Jananese workers, disputable fact despite the lack of any "authentic evidence." The memo is in line with a re- cent statement by congress Pres- ident Claude Jodoin, who hit at F. RICHARD 136 SIMCOE N. And Glasses Though an American dollar could be exchanged for 360 yen, the yen bought nearly twice as many goods in Tokyo as did the dollar in New York. The Examination of eyes Fitting of Contact Lenses Children's Visual Training For Appointment Please Call RA 3-4191 EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT resolution this year. The B of M can't help you resolve to stop eating between meals or get you to work on time, but it can help you save. 'Why not start your account tomorrow at "MY BANK" -- it's a good place to accumulate 2 portion of the vast sum you will earn during your working years. It takes just one dollar -- and three minutes -- to open your B of M Savings Account. BLACK, O.D. AT COLBORNE «0% ay . . La . |the idea that labor should '"'hold| the line." He said that in 1960, Here's a workers "will doubtless continue to seek a fair share" of Canada's prosperity. | As well, the congress memo jibes--in one way--with a press release issued by the Japanese Embassy here. This argues that it is misleading and unrealistic | to compare Japanese wage rates with wages in Western countries. | The purposes of the labor con-| gress and Japanese Embassy, | however, are different, ob The embassy statement, based on a booklet prepared by the Japanese foreign ministry, is in reply to those who seek restric. tive measures against imports GET THE BEST | For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 926'2 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 See... uvy/ an * Exclusive agents for Beau Valley: HOWE AND MILLEN | | | | KASSINGER. CONSTRUCTION LIMITED FOR THE SPRING BUILDING OF YOUR DREAM HOME SCHOFIELD INSURANCE ASSOCIATES resolution. keeper ... Ask at your neighbour hood B of M branch for a copy of our booklet "Blue-Print foe Successful Personal and Family Financing", It will show you how to make up 2 workable budget that will keep your New Year's resolution intact. BLUE-PRINT for Sorconstol Porsoned . + « Now! wd bony Booncoy PY 10 2 MILLION CARAOIANS hd . BANK oF MONTREAL Canadas Firat Bank RISTOW AND OLSEN | WORKING WITH CANADIANS IN EVERY WALK OF LIFE SINCE 1817 RE

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