The Oshawa Times, 26 Apr 1961, p. 26

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J a ---- ria Any FRE, a da a ee Rl a 3d Bed ee SE A rrr gigs gy op ig ERC ~~ 26 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdoy, April 26, 1967 Today's Stock M arket Listings on Toronto Net Revolt Leaders 'Broken Men' ALGIERS (AP)--The generals who led Algeria through four Forum. days of tumultuous rebellion Exchange 11 Net Iw a [LJ TORONTO 11 AM. STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--April 26 in cents unless marked 8. xr--Exe # 8 3 Stock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 1 EHH § seit sf 55 +11 + 5 H 3zfguses : He 41] ; » £ g | ih L +1 1+ 8p Srp 328 PT i & ¥ fie a i E Pe gees #3 1} i yoy» gs 5 3 §E¥zg-yeiegle ++ | HEE HHH ] E 8 + i spirit. He puffed at # pipe while conf with aides in the final moments of his four-day rule over this turbulent city. His confereres, Gen. Andre Zeller, Gen. Edmond Jouhaud and Gen. Raoul Salan, appeared glum and sullen. Salan seemed a broken man. Once they had appeared in full control of Algiers, perhaps all Algeria. Suddenly their empire crum- bled. Mobile gendarmes loyal to President de Gaulle sped into Algiers in a well-co-ordinated strike. Armored cars appeared at strategic spots. A jeep con- voy sped to Radio Algiers. At the Hotel Aletti, the gend- armes ran into rebel paratroops. Both sides opened fire. The gendarmes pulled back with three wounded, carrying them into the hotel lobby. The loss of the battle of the Aletti was only temporary. More gendarmes were swarming through the city, An insurgent radio program was in full swing when the gendarmes burst into Radio Al- giers. The surprised announcer looked up and shouted into the 3 g $3gaEszEiEaite HAF EH SUH a tt waiting for word from the surgent generals. . Challe and Salan appeared on the balcony of the big modern Government - General i ¢ bx LL ; F GepueleaBa sleslosEiakudat "a EsenEniedurns " i CREASE ELH EULER Boel EELES E £3 ee 2 1H & g3-ge-se2sferaiaLaiits. ug 8 EH s¥susbpnnylisalivaalisunny SEgEesspns ate eeBEEReENy BBoyfans¥anpulisalit 2 sBegdugFEuEERal = a = ++ >= £38egotey weed 3 2 - & +1 t++] 1+ FREER Re 3 3 § g ® i : $F Ggtezs.setegrseinu nits. ey CHEE EPRI PIPE 8 2spsfariongiossen ge. saasguseinLalifiveuy vy HHH EH 8 HS = i 822s <] * 58 ES gull ® gar +3 +2 - 15 1s 13% 13% + % 0 90 2 H = es egBneruansFariorsine 23 5 Re +1 seeefsala, 1 -- FOF sE8E888utut gE = 115 300 $13% ol SLBBREE Bolsueesssslyadssvsazebepusil g [++ + ++ Srayes » a8 Le ( a funeral home before » 15] gsgadk sxfgelan EnEERaEN, LH Bayys BUTTON, Baby Joanne In the Oshawa General Hospital on Tuesday, - April 25, 1961, Baby Joanne Button, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Donald Button, 116 Westmoreland Avenue (stillbirth), Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery, Oshawa. HAWKSHAW, John 8S. Eunterel into rest in the Gen- eral Hospital on Wednesday, April 26, 1961, John S. Hawkshaw, beloved hus- band of Verna Found Stephens, in his 74th year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with Memor- fal Service in Northminster United Church, Friday, Interment Ebenezer ket will remain open from 2 p.m. until service. Donations to Northminster Or- gan Fund would be appreciated. GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all RA 8-62.6 390 KING STREET WEST 8 ge & ce Br Lig bt Sir: ILL HY HEH clothes, slipped out of the Gov. ernment-General . Building and drove. off. Dressed in combat uniforms, +" Challe, Jouhaud and Salan * paced the ground-floor corridor of the building, With Salan was his wife. They were guarded by four youths in leather jackets © and carrying sub-machine-guns. They paced there for an hour, = in strange isolation amid the noisy chaos of the city. Finally a paratroop captain came up and they exchanged a few words ~mentioning an airplane. gutetsneslzerseinty g ley § pr Ball 5% pr C Oil L wis 3200 800 + 225 $19% 19% 19% z50 $22 2 2 15 12 % 23% $46%4 16% 500 00 Lakeland Laura See LL 47 Siscoe Starratt get $7% TH T% + % $10% 10% 10% -- % 255 255 255 $16% 16% 16% + $13% 13% 13% -- % 107 106% 107 680 200 200 200 +5 250 925% 25% 2514 -- 14 $2614 26% 26% + 1800 $12% 7 25 12% 12% + % 60 200 800 800 17% +1 250 $18% 18% 18% + % 50 30 $50 50 +4 2635 $20% 19% 20% 17% 16% +1 35 905 905 905 +350 pr zl25 $21% 21% 21% $23% 23% 23% -- % 04 100% 104 +1 $54 53% 53% -- % Inspiratn 36% 36 36 LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements and Dom Text 100 1% 1% - 3% 550 $113 Royl Bonk xd 78 $74% 7% Mh --% Int Nickel Irish Cop Jaye Expl +% 500 Ye 325 $71% 71% 71% + W% Zen 130 126 130 6 4000 + 5000 16% 15% 16 -- 3% Sales to 11 a.m.: 659,000. 40 39 39 mac 17% 17% 17% + % WHITBY AND DISTRICT floral requirements for all occasions, Wanted Police, Gets 6 Faber Herbert Bould, 24, of 312 Leslie street, Oshawa, already on suspended sentence for wil ful damage, was Tuesday jailed for six months on another charge of wilful damage. Bould appeared before Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in Whitby police court PC Clifford Pegg of the Whit- by Detachment of the OPP told the court that on April 22 he had been called to a service sta- tion on Simcoe street north, just outside the Oshawa city limits where he found the accused in the custody of two Oshawa City Police officers. 2 said that he was told by the service station manager, Len Wall, that the accused had driven to his service station and had asked him to call police. He said that Wall told the ac- cused to leave but Bould instead drove his car at the side of the building, smashing into oil stor age racks and causing damage to the racks and a pop cooler of $162.50. Wall called police then. Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck told the court that Bould had been placed on suspended sen- tence in January of this year on a wilful damage charge. OSHAWA SHOPPING |Fo a TOR 5 ; in BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT WHITBY CENTRE at oe wo DAY-BY-DAY On Industry A Whitby Chamber of Commerce will set a date for the presenta- tion of the Peter Perry Award at their April meeting which will be held Thursday evening By FORBES RHUDE at King Street Public School. Canadian Press Business Editor Other matters to be discussed The current debate about the will include the proposed shop- future of Canadian manufactur- ing is developing a number of differing schools of thought. One school, for instance, thinks that Canadian products ping mall and a proposed In- dustrial and Agricultural Day in need more effective protection against outside competition--not Whitby this summer, DISMISS CHARGE necessarily higher tariffs, but revised tariffs. Another school A charge of assaulting a friend causing actual bodily, thinks that Canadians shouldn't try to make things which they harm was dismissed by Magis- trate F. S. Ebbs in Whitby police court on Tuesday when the accused denied that he had can buy cheaper elsewhere, but struck the complainant in a should concentrate on speciali- scuffle which occurred at a zation and development of pro- home on the baseline.' Alf Juets in which they have advan Zarach, 40, ol Pieketing Beach, i he had been entering A strong proponent of the said that specialization school is Peter the home of a lady friend, when M. Munk, president of Clairtone Frank Opalka, 42, the com- Sound Corporation Ltd., manu- plainant, who boarded at the facturers in Toronto of stero- same home, lunged at him and phonic high fidelity sets. he shoved him away. 'There's His company started manu- something strange going on facturing in 1958 and in the last there but from the evidence be- four months of 1960 had sales fore me I would not know what totalling $1,203,000, of which more than $200,000 was in the United States. it is," said His Worship as he freed Zarach. GO AFTER CUSTOMERS His philosophy is to go after customers io want gusty = Debate Speed are prepared to pay a high price Dismiss Charge for it, and to go after them in y they live. whatever eouniiy they Jive Magistrate A. S. Mitchell dis- missed a careless driving NET EARNINGS charge against Clarence Mas- ters, 44, of Little Britain, in By THE CANADIAN PRESS Whitby traffic court, Tuesday. Canadian National Corpora-|as well as a few of the other| Constable R. S. Goodwin of tion, year ended Dec. 31: 1960, European sales managers, be-|the Ontario Provincial Police $2,109,372, 83 cents a share; |came so enthusiastic that they|testified he had chased Master's 1059, $1,925,598, 67 cents. immediately decided to draw up|car along Highway 12 at speeds Kerr-Addison Gold Mines Ltd.|plans for distribution of our pro-|up to 85 mph on March 19. 3 mos. ended March 31: 1961, 0S MONUMENT COMPANY SPECIALIZING IN Monuments, Markers, Memorials, Cornerstones, Statutory of all types. R.R. 4, KING ST. E. Ph. RA 8-3111 or RA 8-8876 IN MEMORIAM WALL -- In loving memory of a wonderful husband and Dad, Alfred : Wall, who passed away April 21, 1959, |: What we would give if we ld say "Hello Dad", in the same old way, To hear your voice, see your smile, Outlining his views in a re- cent address, he said: * "Taste is international in solid economic stratas, not national, and it is to this percentage of people with the greatest funds to spend that we must direct our products." Further illustrating his philo- sophy, he recounted a recent ex- perience in Europe in which the sales manager of a large elec- tronic distributing firm as- sessed Clair tone's European possibilities. "The sales manager," said Mr. Munk, "pointed out why he thought a Clairtone sales pro- gram would be a waste of ef- fort in Europe. His main rea- soning was that it was different in appearance, function and de- sign from the high-priced Euro- pean sterophonic machines now sold; its cabinets were not highly polished; they had no metal legs; contained no long or short-wave units, etc. REASON FOR SUCCESS "After he finished I pointed out that just because of the rea- sons mentioned, Clairtone could be a potential success on the European market. If the pro- ducts were exactly like the European, what sense would there be in introducing them? "After outlining my philoso- phy and how it had worked in Canada and the United States, the chairman of the company, --Sadly missed by his family, -- CARD OF THANKS Dr, | I was in the hospital. Thanks everyone, | wa sus ~-Elsie Chumbley, COLWELL -- We wish to thank rela- tives, friends and neighbors for their many acts of kindness expres- sions of sympathy shown us during the f{liness and death of Mrs, Min Colwell, ~The Family STEVENS -- I would like to thank my family, and neighbors, for their cards, flowers and enquiries, dur. IVERNIA' FREED BY TUGBOATS mud shortly after it had left dock, bound for Montreal, Can- ada, There are 455 passen- gers aboard. --(AP Wirephoto via from London) Southampton, England, today. Sixty-mile-an-hour winds had blown the liner hard in the Tugs strain to free 21,717- ton Cunard liner Ivernia aground on mudbank off CLC Need Miners Union President Says SUDBURY (CP)~--The Cana- the conditions that might be im-|ber of the Ontario legislature dian Labor Congress needs the|posed by CLC and he knew it for Sudbury, in his address to International Union of Mine, | could meet all congress re-/the convention, said the three Mill and Smelter Workers quirements. levels of government in Canada 35--Legol (Ind) more than the union|WARNS DELEGATES overlap and there is need for radio the road was snow covered and the visibility was poor when he stopped Masters' vehicle at the 12th Concession of Reach Town- ship. Mrs. Masters, a passenger, stated they were going at about 65 mph because "I sure don't like to ride fast." She also said visibility was good and the road was dry. Mr. Masters and another pas- senger in the car said that they were travelling at about 60-85 mph and that the road was clear. mand from the floor for a divi- sion of resolutions in the report of the rules and order com- mittee. Chairman Mike Solski called the master-at-arms to guard the floor microph when President Don Gillis of Local 598 asked if he was refusing to conduct the meeting d at- ically. Mr. Solski denied the request for a division in resolutions and said such division could be made only when the committee recommended it. He was sup- will Group, Chi also WA Westmount United Church. A nks to Dr. Butts and Dr. Mrs. H. C. Stevens ADVERTISING CLASSIFIED «Continued from Page 25) special tha Ruddy. - ducts. Constable Goodwin said that needs the congress, Ken Smith, redistribution of powers. NOTICE national president of the union, told delegates at a district 2 convention here Tuesday. | He said the main reason why| Mine-Mill should join the Con-| THE BOARD OF TRUS- TEES OF THE ROMAN CATHOLIC SEPARATE SCHOOLS FOR THE . CITY OF OSHAWA 357 SIMCOE ST. S. OSHAWA, ONT. TAKE NOTICE THAT the above-mentioned Board of Trustees on the 11th doy of April, 1961, passed By-law Number 19 to authorize the borrowing of money by the issue ond sale of Debentures of the said Board of Trustees in the principal amount of $120,000.00. 1. The purpose for which the money is to be borrowed is for constructing and equipping a six-room addition to St. Christopher's School, in the City of Oshawa. 2. The amount to be borrowed is $120,000.00 on the security of the said De- bentures, which shall be a charge upon the schoolhouse property ond premises ond any other real and personal property vested in the said Board of Trustees and upon the separate school rates. « 3 The Debentures ore to be dated the 5th day of March, 1961, are to be in the denomination of not less thon $100.00 each, ond are to bear interest aot the rate of 6% % per annum payable annually on the 15th day of March in each year ond are to be repayable in varying instalments of prin- cipal on the 15th doy of March in the years 1962 to 1981, both inclusive, the oggregote omount of principal and interest pay able in each year of the cure rency of the Debentures being approximately equal. FRANK E. INE, «Bus/Adm. ond . gress is because some congress| members need support against the present CLC leadership but expressed surprise that so! much concern had been shown| at the convention regarding membership. Most important section of the| officers' report dealt with the| present economic situation in| Canada and the effect on the| nickel market of the opening of the International Nickel Com- pany plant at Thompson, Man. The report said operations at Port Colborne and Sudbury are compared with the Thompson| operation. SEE CUTBACKS The report concluded that| Inco has every reason to-favor| Thompson over Sudbury and| Port Colborne and that as pro-| duction catches up on demand, | cutbacks will be made at Sud-! bury and Port Colborne. The report also forecast that| the number of workers needed by the company would gradu- ally decline and that the com- pany will increase each man's output as much and as fast as it can. . This is the realistic outlook, said the report, which must shape the union's bargaining approach when negotiations be- gin in October or November. The present three-year contract with Inco terminates at the end of this year. Mr. Smith said the national board following last year's ref- erendum had said that Mine- Mill was prepared to join the CLC "with the union intact." On these conditions he said the union was prepared to accept He warned delegates that membership in the CLC does not mean unlimited funds for strikes. The CLC, he said, has no funds for strike purposes but |it does make appeals to affili- ates, PREPARED TO FIGHT Mr. Smith belittled the at- tempts of the United Steelwork- ers of America (CLC) to make inroads in the membership of Mine-Mill. Despite defectors, he said the union today "stands strong and prepared to fight if necessary." Elmer Sopha, Liberal mem- As an example of lack of clear division of authority be- tween the governments, he pointed out the provincial gov- ernment is concerned with emergency measures, which, he said, are a matter for the fed- eral government. He also criticized the provin- cial sales tax, whose only vir- tue, 'ie said, is that it raises more money than any other tax, but, on the other hand, penal- ized the poor for their poverty. Trouble at the convention ported by a show of hands. It appeared Local 598 was less concerned over the resolu- tions than over the fact that it might be similarly outvoted on all issues at the convention. In a roll call vote, Local 598's 20 delegates would have had 100 of the 149 total votes. In standing vote the big local could be defeated by the 39 dele- groups. istarted when there was a de- French Papers comparatively high cost when | QUEBEC (CP) -- L'Associa- tion des Quotidiens de Langue Francaise (the Association of French-Language Dailies) said in a brief presented to Premier Jean Lesage Tuesday it wishes to be recognized as the body which speaks in behalf of French - Language daily news- papers in Canada. Members of the association are Quebec Le Soleil, Quebec L'Evenement - Journal, Quebec L'Action Catholique, Trois-Rivi- eres Le Nouvelliste, Ottawa Le Droit, Chicoutimi Le Progres du Saguenay, Granby La Voix de I'Est, Sherbrooke La Tri- bune and Moncton, N.B., L'Ev- angeline. 0 None of the French-language dailies published in Montreal is a member. The provincial government legislates in the field of rela- tions between enterprises and their personnel. The association asked that it be forewarned of any request 'Seek Recognition which might concern the rela- tions between the newspapers and newspaper men so that it could express views before any decisions are made. "It is desirable that the as- sociation take part in all under- takings which concern the train- ing of newspaper men, their status, their recognition as a profession or corporation, the evaluation of their compet Bomarc Gear Arrives Here OTTAWA (CP) -- Launching equipment for the Bomarc anti- aircraft missile now is being in- stalled at the Canadian sites at North Bay, Ont.,, and La Ma- caza, Que. informed sources said Tuesday. The North Bay base is ex- pected to be operational abou: November and the La Macaza base about six to eight weeks later. The main question, however, ~whether it will carry a nu- clear warhead -- has not yet been answered by the govern- ment. It probably won't be un- til this fall. and, in a general way, all that concerns or touches on relations between newspapers and news- paper men. "It is only on these conditions that proper operation and free- dom of the press can be en- sured." The brief was presented to Mr. Lesage behind closed doors. The text was released to the press before it was presented. Paul Desruisseaux, publisher of Sherbrooke La Tribune and president of the association, was Bhe spokesman for the delega- NEW NATO POST secretary-general of the North probably will not be chosen un- til the NATO meeting in Oslo, May 8-10. The man most fre- quently mentioned as Paul Henri Spaak's successor is Dirk sentative ISLAMIC VIEW CAIRO (AP) -- Sheikh Mah- moud Shaltout, rector of Egypt's 1,000 - year - old Azhar pe gates representing smaller in connection with the Bomare| PARIS (AP)--A foreign min- istry spokesman says the new Atlantic Treaty Organization U. Stikker, Dutch NATO repre-| $1,298,533, 27.4 cents a share; 1960, $1,322,803, 28 cents. Viau Ltd., year ended Dec. 31: 1960, $308,084, $1.32 a share; 1959, $332,426, $1.43. MARKET PRICES TORONTO (CP) -- Potato prices today: P.E.I. 75-1b bags,| & off truck 2.10-2.15, to trade 2.50; | N.B. 1.75, to trade 2-2.25. PEI 50-lb. bags 1.30, 1.25-1.35. P.E.L 10-Ib. bags, .31, to trade 3 40; N.B. 27, to trade .30-32. TORONTO (CP) -- Wholesale fruit and vegetable prices at 9:40 a.m.: Apples, McIntosh $3.50-4.25 bus., controlled McIn- tosh 5.25-5.50, Delicious 3.50-5, B.C. Delicious 7, B.C. Winesap 5.50-5.75, Spies 4.75-5, Russet ; 4.50; beans, green 4.50-5 ham- per; new beets 50-Ib. bag 3-3.25; broccoli 2.90-3 case; cabbage, new 2.85-3, new red 3.25-3.50; carrots unwashed 2.15-2.25 bus., washed 2.50; cauliflower 12s 450; celery, California 3.254 case, Florida 3.25-3.75; cranber- ries 4 carton; queen cucumbers 24s 2.25-2.50, king 2.75-3; leeks 11-qt. basket 2.25; lettuce 30s 2.50-2.50, 24s 3.15-3.25, mush- rooms 5-Ib. basket 2.25-2.35; on- ions, Chile Spanish 50-1b. bag 390-4, Canadian 1.65-1-75; pears, American 7-7.50; parsnips, un- washed 1-1,25 bus., washed 1.50- 1.75; spinach, cello 10s 1.65- 1.75; rhubarb Ne. 1 2.35-2.50, No. 2 1.25-1.50; tomatoes, cello 1.75-1.85; turnips, unwaxed 1- to] | trade 1.60; N.B. 1.15, to trade, 1.25, waxed 1.351.50; pineap- ples, Cuban 12s -3; canta- loupe 9.50-10.50. { University, says man's conquest of space is in accord with the teaching of Islam. Referring to the space flight of Soviet Maj. Yuri Gagarin, the rector said, "l would not mind making a trip to the moon myself." MINERS MEET AT SUDBURY Don Gillis, president of the Sudbury local of the Interna- tional Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind), says the most important business of the union's three-day con- vention, now going on at Sud- bury, is to get the union af- filiated with the Canadian ULa- bor Congress. Some of the delegates are: (left to right) Ken Smith, national president; Mike Solski, district No. 2 president; John Clark, interna- tional president; and Don Gillis. The union has never been a member of the CLC and was put out of the old Canadian Cyngress of Labor on the ground of Communist domination. {

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