The Oshawa Times, 4 Jul 1961, p. 16

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10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, YTusstey, Juy , Tve1 SEAWRIGHT, Mary Ellen red into rest at Scarboro General Hospital on Sunday, July 2, 1961, Mary wife of the ering. Funeral service in the chapel 'on Wednesday, July 5, at 3 p.m. Interment Erskine Cemetery. WALDRON, James Arthur Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital on Monday, July 3, 1961, James Arthur Wald, ed son of (Vera) of Oshawa, 3 (Helen) of Bermuda, in his 57th year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with memorial service in the chapel, on Thursaay, July 6, at n y. Today's TORONTO 11 AM. STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--July 4 from previous day's close.) INDUSTRIALS 4 38guthE a it E33 PE gi 8 we oS =F 228 Sgegase iy gaB8E Beat ges > g 2 § (Quotations in cents unless marked §. 3---0dd lot, xd -- Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is Stock M Exquisite = pr Fleet Mig 500 Fleetwood 73 *5 180 216 zy5 100 100 100 -_ en E88a gagat HE gruel. B8sasy aedusyasias &%a 22s8aabelugEg BRLEE = Ni Sales High Low s.m. CW # Zgesy i «8. 88 arket Listings o et ' (Ld | ++ +1! FER r 8 wR Both spas? : g>>8 EE : ves HH [1] 3 Siugebifeisndss od 1] dl E Bg g > i + FF 99208 03 ou Hy Rr "2ut 23m. g $75% 75% 75% + 10% 10% 18% Acad Uran Advocate 11% Agnico Stock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 27% 27% T% + HK 1% 11% ' 20% 20% -- % New Bid Nickel MS Nor-Acme Noranda n Toronto yy SR 7 un High Low a.m, Ch'ge 5 5s CER Sg Lb + Ld LLB PULLS LH 3 - $5. sEdebsusibaennyaff a i E+ + Exchange £ | Ez i "5% LL TT TH HOTT SE u3usluiseusis, H 8 sofa BRERA EEI En tunRunenE so 2 EEE E 5p fa ER ECERE Eu ue usennls § gst §ifspasiiise $ 5 § ++ he - 3 + - st & ELE PCH ET LEE Bas SEEysdsiinsyacangysioasuisiye Yonnaloay. BEguds EE ++ ae F- Ss goed slusseisah sini ssll HHH $48% 46% 48% CE MILAN (AP)--A Milan art ex- pert claimed Monday he has found a painting by the Renais- snace master Guercino, chased for less than $640 by two Milan brothers but worth 100 times that amount. The painting ~--showing St. Peter with the sacred keys--was bought two years ago by Emilio and Gi- ovanni Mariani. Bonardi attrib- uted it to Giovanni Francesco Barbieri, known as Guercino, who lived between 1591 and 1666. pur- 2 pm. GERRCW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all 728-6226 390 KING STREET WEST LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements and floral requirements for all occasions, OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 OSHAWA MONUMENT COMPANY SPECIALIZING IN Monuments, Markers, Memorials, Cornerstones, Statuary of all types. R.R. 4, KING ST. E. Ph. 728-3111 or 728-8876 | GIDEON Bibles are a continuing me. | morial. For placement contact funeral director or phone 5-232. IN MEMORIAM MIKICEL--In loving memory of a dear wife and mother Nelly Mikicel who passed away July 2nd, 1957. Years of striving, little of play. Loving, giving the whole of the way; A cherished smile, a heart of To fhe deavest mother the world could old, Happy memories, fond and true, From us who thought the world of you. ~Lovingly remembered and sadly missed by the family. TERWILLEGAR-In loving memory of a dear wife and mother, Lillian Ter- willegar, who passed away July 4, 1954, --Always remembered by the family, #ld; | published in the interests of NET EARNINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian Converters' Co. Ltd. Jar ended Dec. 31: 1960, $23, ; 1959, $21,829. John Labatt Ltd., year ended April 30: 1961, $3,880,352, $2.70 a share; 1960, $3,768,295, $2.63. NEWS BRIEFS PRESERVE CARS BEAULIEU, England (CP)-- Enthusiasts bidding for antique autos in a sale at Lord Mon- tagu's motor museum were asked not to export any of the oldest to the United States. The 21 vehicles sold grossed £11,- 175. ROYAL TOKEN STRATHFIELD SAYE, Eng- the Queen by the Duke of Well- ington on his Hampshire estate is a small silk tricolor flag with gold edging. A replica of French standards captured at Waterloo by the Duke's ancestor, it is presented: each year on the an- niversary of the battle. COURSE CHANGES OAKWOOD PARK, England (CP)--After 50 years, the Maid- stone golf club is losing its course in this Kent community. It has been taken over for con- struction of a school, building to start in the next two or three years. WORK IN QUIET MONT-JOLI, Que. (CP) -- Starting next September prim- ary school e¥ildren here will do their homework at school. At the request of parents, who said homework sessions are inter- rupted by television, radio and telephone calls, the school com- mission ruled that homework could be done at school between 4:30 and 6 p.m. EXPERTS IMPRESSED ATIKOKAN, Ont. (CP)--Two Canadian mining experts who toured Russia and Yugoslavia returned to say they were con- siderably impressed by the tre- mendous amount of construction under way in the two countries. They are Walter Bannister and K. L. McRorie, officials of the Steep Rock Iron Mines here. METRIC SYSTEM STE. Foy, Que. (CP) -- The Chamber of Commerce here has suggested the community adopt the metric system of measure- ment. "The superiority and ra- tionality of this system is uni- versally recognized," it says. "It would be good for business petween'North America and Eu- » ope. BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT | 'V ® . 4 . By FORBES RHUDE dian Press Busi Editor Wives have pretty well estab- lished that if a business conven- tion is being held they have a right to go along. One by one most of the former all-male bastions have fallen and, except for a disgruntled voice here and there, everyone, including the wives, seems to be happy about it. An Alberta cabinet minister a few years ago paid them per- haps the nicest compliment when he said to the mixed dinner of a national convention: "Why is that only the men with pretty wives bring them to conventions?" HABIT SPREADING The business convention situ- ation having been taken care of, the matter now is moving into the taxpayers' field and is cur- rently being taken up by The Municipal World, a publication which, in its own words, "is C good muni ci pal government, good roads, education and com- munity health." In an editorial entitled "Do you take this woman?" it says: "Since programs for most mu- nicipal conventions make some provision for the ladies, either by way of atetndance at meet- ings, or tours, or annual dinners --we think the time has come Wives Go With Firemen ficial, is authorized to attend a convention at the expense of the municipality, that authoriza- tion should cover the reasonable travel and hotel expense of the wife of the delegate as well. "It is a fact well recognized by the management of at least one of the larger convention ho- tels that the presence of wives of delegates generally makes for a better convention, better manners and better behaviour." NEED LEGISLATION Referring to the fact that the matter is not now taken care of by legislation, the publication adds: "This omission should be rem- edied so that conventions will be better; wives will have a bet- ter acquaintance with their hus- bands' interests and friends; and husbands will be better able to say what they once promised to do at the altar when they said 'I do' in re- sponse to the question "Do you take this woman?" In Japan, where traditionally women are supposed to have a more subservient position than their Western sisters would ac- cept, at least one Japanese firm has gone further than Ca- nadian firms are likely to go. It not only pays a wife's ex- penses to accompany her hus- band on a business trip but, if the husband doesn't behave well on the trip, the wife may have openly to accept the idea that when a councillor, board or commission member, or any of- his salary sent direct to her for six months. Britain's LONDON (CP) --- The Daily Herald says Canada, as senior member, will move to assume leadership of the Comm on- wealth the minute Britain joins Castro Team Wants All he, SOUR I TJ 'BAULIVE alae MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Cuban Premier Fidel Castro's 10-man prisoner negotiating team asked Monday that it be given all mail, presumably largely cash donations, sent to the now-dis- banded Tractors-for - Freedom Committee. More thar 60,000 pieces of mail sent to the committee is being held at the Detroit post office. None was ever opened by the committee, composed of Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. Dr. Milton Eisenhower and Walter Reuter, head of the United Auto Workers. The committee was organized to negotiate on Castro's offer to exchange prisoners captured in the abortive rebel invasion of Cuba last April for United States tractors. The private U.S. citizens' group was disbanded when negotiations with Castro broke down. The mail presumably con- tains cash donations sent to the committee to help pay for the | tractors. Gustavo Garcia Montes, pris- oner spokesman, said, "this money was sent by freedom- loving American people, per- sons who understand our plight. We feel that since the commit- tee has disbanded these dona- tions should now be given to us." Garcia Montes said his group is still working on formation of a new tractors committee. John J. Hooker Jr., executive secretary of the disbanded com- mittee, said at his home in Nashville, Tenn., a decision on disposition of the mail would have to come from the former committee members. | "There also will be the legal question of whether the com- mittee has the authority to hand its mail to th® Cuban prison- ers," Hooker said. Canada To Take Role? the European Economic Com- munity. The pro - L a b o r newspaper says in a dispatch from its Tor- onto correspondent the "shock proposal" will be put to Com- monwealth Relations Secretary Duncan Sandys when he arrives in Ottawa next week. The decision is based on Ot- tawa's belief that there is little hope of Britain being able to negotiate its entry on its own tee of imperial preference, The Herald adds. Prime Minister Diefenbaker feels that the loss of this tradi- tional trading base will put the Commonwealth in jeopardy, the paper says. And he plans to move quickly to strengthen ex- isting alliances, particularly trade and economic pacts. It says also that Trade Minis- ter George Hees is off to the Pacific this month to do spade- work for a Pacific trade pact Zealand. MARKET PRICES TORONTO (CP) -- Wholesale fruit and vegetable prices to- day: Apples, controlled Mcln- tosh $6.75-7 bus., B.C. Winesap 5.75-6; Spies 6-6.50; asparagus 11 qt. basket, loose 2.25-2.50; bunched 2.75-3.25; beans, Cana- dian 11 qt., 2.50; new beets 12s, 3; bunched 12s .65-.75, broccoli 1.50-1.75, 11 qt. cabbage Cana- dian 2-2.25; carrots, Texas 50-1b. bag 3.25-3.50, California 48s 6- 6.25; cauliflower, Canadian 16s] 20s 1.25-1.75; celery, Canadian] 3.25-3.75 case; cucumbers, field| 1.25-1.50 11 qt.; lettuce, 1.25- 1.50 bus., rhubarb 12s .60-.75, tomatoes, cello 3, No. 1 hot house 10-lb. carton 3-4, canta-| loupe 8.50 - 9.50; strawberries, Canadian quarts .20-.30. | TORONTO (CP) Potato prices today: P.E.I. 75 Ib. bags off truck $2.25-2.50, to trade 2.50- 2.75; Virginia mew 4.25 off truck, to trade 4.25-4.75. for Canada, Australia and New | blic More Conscious Of School Costs LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- With rising education costs, the gen- eral public is becoming more conscious of the money spent on schools and are expecting more efficiency from caretaking and maintenance staffs, Reginald H. Smith, business administrator and secretary treasurer of the Sault Ste. Marie board of edu- cation, said Monday. Mr. Smith, chairman of the 13th annual school for caretak- ers and maintenance workshop, was speaking to 300 school cus- todial employees from across Ontario attending the two-day session. "Caretaking and maintenance jobs used to be considered plums and old age pension po- sitions," he said. 'We know this is not the case now and let us Drought Cripples Crop Insurance WINNIPEG (CP)--The worst Prairie drought in years ap- pears ready to set Canada's first government crop insur- ance plan back on its heels without delivering a knockout punch. Manitoba Agriculture Minister George Hutton said Monday the provincial crop insurance plan will stay alive, but more fed- eral aid would be welcome. The Manitoba crop insurance plan first took effect in 1960, with farmers insured against hail, drought, flood, excessive rainfall, frost, wind, rust, dis- hope we never let the situation revert to former days." ease or pests. Crops now cov- ered are wheat, oats, barley, flax and sugar beets. In 1960, when more than 2,500 farmers bought coverage in test areas for 332,000 acres of crops, the plan had a liability--the to- tal amount it could be required to pay out to farmers--of $4,- 100,000. Claims amounted to $92,000 and the surplus of pre- miums paid over indemnities was about $165,000. This is a small surplus for a plan which, now expanded, has liabilities of $6,500,000 with the possibility of a total crop loss in some areas. With federal contributions, to- tal reserves of the plan are just about $233,000. Man Arranges To Give Up In Bribe Case TORONTO (CP) -- A man wanted in connection with at- tempts to bribe a juror has ar- ranged with police to give him- self up in a lawyer's office Wednesday. Attorney-General Roberts or- dered a warrant issued for the man, whose name police have not released, after an investiga- tion that followed the acquittal of three men on bribery charges. A member of the jury that acquitted former provincial po- lice Constable Robert Wright and gamblers Joseph McDer- mott and Vincent Feleey of con- spiring to bribe another con- stable said he had been ap- proached during the trial. He said he was asked what unhampered by a Supreme prohibits their use on Sundays. Metropolitan Toronto police is- sued warnings to operators Sun- day but didn't issue the expected summonses. London police in- spector Walter Johnson said in- formation about laundries which operated there on Sunday will be sent to the Ontario attorney- general's office in Toronto. British C o1u m bia laundries stayed open on the advice Attorney - Genral Bonner. on until some statement was made. "If we do change our policy, there will be a general an- nouncement so nobody will be taken by surprise," he added. Saskatchewan operators were also assured last week that they would not be prosecuted if there was no attendant present and Regina coin-operated laundries remained open Sunday. People in Ottawa, Winnipeg, Saskatoon and Edmonton also were able to do their "Monday" wash in laundries which re- mained open Sunday. Halifax businesses were open but owners had opposite points of view. On whether they should operate. In Windsor, police Chief Carl Farrow said Monday he will seek a directive from the At- torney-general before proceed- ing against 19 coin operated laundries which remained open Sunday. WILL PROSECUTE However, Ottawa Police Chief Reg Axcell said that charges will be laid against six coin PARTRIDGE GAIN LONDON (CP)--A partridge count conducted by the Game Research Association in Eng- land has reported a 40-per-cent increase over last year. he would do if he were offered $20,000 to press for an acquittal. The Crown also intends to ap- peal the verdict. told operators last week to carry the Washers Defy Supreme Court laundries which remained open Court of Canada ruling which also young working couples who can't make it any other day," Mr. Holt said. He said a survey two years ago indicated coin-operated rated laundries were the "number one' need of tour- ists. Monday Mart Closes Ahead TORONTO (CP)~--The stock market finished ahead Mon after a day of fluctuation extremely light trading. Volume was 1,233,000 shares, the lowest turnover since Nov. 29, 1960, compared with 1,660, 000 Friday. On index industrials were up 12 at 589.25 and western oils 15 at 95.59. Golds fell 47 to 82.48 and base metals .50 to 198.64. Gains were scattered over the industrial board with no one group leading the way up. Among pipelines, Interprovin. cial was up 1. Papers were generally mixed on the day. Consolidated and Great Lakes were up and Crown Zellerbach dropped 4% to 54 on a volume of 125 shares. Base metals were quiet as Consolidated Mining and Smelt- ing, Hudson Bay, Falconbridge, Steep Rock and Denison had losses ranging from 14 to 1%. International Nickel, Noranda and Ventures gained appreci- ably. Gold trading was singularly dull, Mcintyre Porcupine and Giant Yellowknife fell 3; and 3, while Hollinger advanced %4. In light western oil trading, Hudson's Bay, Dome and Cen- tral Del Rio all rose, e losses went to Home A and B and Pacific Petroleum. Ld Build your bank balance... Build your peace of mind Unexpected expenses do happen. Things like dentist bills, doctor bills, car repairs and dozens of others. Often these expenses must be met immediately. Without an adequate bank balance... well, many a good AUTO TREASURE DARTMOUTH, N.S. (CP)--A 1909 Hupmobile, one of the first cars to travel the streets of this community, has just been pur: chased by a collector of antique cars from Lewisville, N.B. man feels a small flush of panic. You can avoid this. Make sure you always have at least two months' salary in the bank. Deposit regularly. Watch the balance build. Enjoy that new feeling of security... the peace of mind that comes with money in the bank. Money in the bank has other advantages too. You pay bills easily, and on time. You capitalize on hydro and other utility discounts. You avoid charge account service fees. You take advantage of special sales. You establish credit for intelligent borrowing. But these are extra benefits. More than anything else, money in the bank protects you from the unexpected. Build your bank balance and build your peace of mind. Start building next payday. 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