The Oshawa Times, 5 Oct 1961, p. 22

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22 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, October 5, 1961 BIRTHS = Joo and Gloria ALWARD 0 announce the arrival of a baby brother for Joey, Terry and Dale on Saturday, September 30, 1961, welghing 08- wish Today's Stock Ma 11 AM. STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--Oct. § « in cents unless markel 7 Ibs. 10 ozs., at New are Mr. and Mrs, J. Owens Sr., of 76 Elgin Street West, Oshawa. rate is only $1.50 DEATHS BAILEY, Lily Laurene On Tuesday, October 2, 1961, at her Frederick Bailey, in her 70th year. Dear mother of Dimney (Mrs. A. H. Boot) of RR 2, Puslinch, Dalmain of Bowmanville. Sister of D. K. Card and Russel of Lake St. Peter, Nelson and Rex of Detroit, Michigan, Verna (Mrs. James Bailey) of RR 2, Puslinch, Win. nifred (Mrs. Wilfred Campbell) of Lake, St. Peter, Ethel (Mrs. Frank Wasmund) of Bancroft, Edith (Mrs, 8. Carr) of Windsor and Eva (Mrs. Albert Cars. well) of Oshawa. Resting at the Coutts Funeral Home, 9 : Andrew's Street, Galt, where service will be held on Thursday, October 5 at 2 p.m. Inter- ment Memory Garden, Breslau, On- tario, MARK, Alton Bruce Suddenly at his home, Scugog Island, on Thursday, October 5, 1961, Alton Bruce Mark, beloved husband of Blanche Schell, Marlene (Mrs. and dear father of Robert Bruce) of Co- bourg and Gayle (Mrs. James Mec- Quinn) of Scugog, in his 62nd year. Resting at the chapel of McDermott. Panabaker, Port Perry, for service on Saturday at 2 p.m, Interment Pine Grove Cemetery. SHEFFIELD, Harold L. In the Oshawa General Hospital on Wed- nesday, October 4, 1961, Harold L. Sheffield, beloved husband of Mabel Cross and dear father of Helen (Mrs. H. L. Stevenson) of Ancaster, in his 74th year, Mr, Sheffield is resting at the Mcintosh - Anderson Funeral How», 152 King Street East, for service in the chapel on Friday, October 6, at 4 p.m. Interment will follow on Saturday, Oc- tober 7, in the United Church Ceme- tery, Athens, Ontario. (The family will receive ther friends at the funera] home Thursday and Friday evenings.) WILLIS, Myrile M. McReynolds At St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, on M. lot, xd--Ex-dividend, rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net from previous day's close.) INDUSTRIALS Sales Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge AltaGas w 2525 Anthes A 50 Atlas Steel 75 Bank Mont = 957 $32% 32% 32% -- $123 12% 12% -- $28 z15 Collieries Curt W Dredge Frbks ks A AAA ACANAANNA C Husky C Husky w C Ind Gas C Imp Bk C 280 CIiL 100 C Mare Cdn Oil CPR Cdn Pet pr C Silica Con Bldg pr 100 Con Bldg wt 100 25 Con Gas 3739 $20 19% 20 Con Gas B 25 $107% 107% 1075 + Corby vt 100 $18% 18% 18% Coronation 650 $243 24% 24% + Net Sales High iw a.m. Ch'ge s. xr--Exe change is Kelly wts Kelvinator Labatt Lakeland LOnt Cem LO Cem pr z15 Laurent A 500 $12% 250 250 MB 400 M Leaf Mill 200 Mass-F 2690 Mass-F 5% Met Stores Mex LP Mil-West 29 Page-Hers PC Jewel Phantom Pow Corp Pres Elect » Y% 35 11% 12% + % $15% 15% 15% -- % 13%c 1314 13% Sales 1% 38828308 Helv sBEES $14% 14% 1% Vendomat Villcan Wainwr 400 Walk GW 885 rket Listings on Toro Stocks Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge High Liw a.m, Ch'ge 14% -- % 11% Camp C N In Webb K xd 200 300 WCoast Tr 250 W C Brew Weston A 240 Weston B 250 West A wis 264 Wood J A 125 Curb Anglo-Nfld 275 Asbestos C Bronze xd z10 CG Inv C Paper D Glass Int Pap Lib Ine Ogilvie Price Br 250 +3 Asamera CS Pete Cdn Dev C Ex Gas Cent Del C Dragon C Mic Mac C West P Dev-Pal Dome Pete Fargo Gr Plains Home B 275 9: HBOIG 1228 Long Point 2200 000 210 206 206 +1 $I% 11% 11% + % 33% 33 3 1 200 §: 29 13% 50% 157 14% --1 19% + 3% 29% -- 25% + Y% 31 8% -- Yo 56 1 25 $3: Cassiar xd Cent Pore z10 $2 Chib 11 Net Mu 1 9 8 8 8 9 9 9 3% 31% 3K ----W 5:8" 8 174 174 114 +4 9 8 9 +4 750 740 750 +10 9 9 9 +% 5% 5% S% 28 23 $12% 12% 12% 9% 8% 9 40 40 i 9% 9% 9% 215 211 215 41% 41% il% + % 15000 1115 14520 C Morrison 4170 C Mosher Delhi Pac Denison Dicknsn Frobisher Geco Mines Giant YK GF Mining Grandroy Grandue Gunnar Hasting Headway Hud Bay Int Nickel Irish Cop Iso Joburke Jonsmith Lab Min L Dfault Langis Latin Am Lorado 295 295 148 14% 14% 40 940 14% 14% 14% + % 31 31 31 +1 32 131 132 11% 11% 1% 950 500 --10 +H Rio Roc nto Exchang 11 Net Stock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 133 138 -3 ° Eh + = = 882358800 8 g + = Rup rhe Ryanor San Ant She She: Sil ep Cr rritt Miller Steep R Taurcan Ter: Titory Timbill Tra ns Res Tribag Un Keno Upp Can Ventures Vespar Wer wil Wi 9 9 9 Yk $25% 25% 25% 510 525 + © 52 352 Bul 500 8 48 65700 227 215 216 Sales fo 11 am.: ner tsey Harg Bear Zulapa urb olo 610 610 1,190,000. Tuesday, October 3, 1961, Myrtle McReynolds, 911 Logan Avenue, To. ronto, beloved wife of the late William W. Willis, in her 72nd year. Resting at the Trull Funeral Chapel, 1111 Dan- forth Avenue, Toronto, from Thursday noon until Friday morning, then at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville, for service on Saturday at 11 a.m. Inter ment Bowmanville Cemetery. Arrange ments by Morris Funeral Chapel, Bow manville. Phone MA 3-5480. CARNATION FLOWER SHOP 55 KING STREET WEST, BOWMANVILLE Flowers for every occasion. Floral tributes, from 3.75 Hospital arrangements 1.75 ond up. Daily fresh flowers from our own greenhouse. Free delivery in Oshawa and Bowmanville. Satisfaction guaranteed. Phone collect MA 3-7141; after hours MA 3-2944, GERROW 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 occasior.s. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 GIDEON Bibles are a continuing me- morial. For placement contact funeral director or phone 725-2327 IN MEMORIAM CLIFF -- In loving memory of my mother, Harriet Jane Cliff who passed away October 5, 1959, This month comes with deep regret, | It brings back a day we shall never! forget; | You fell asleep without good-bye, | But memories will never die. | --Ever remembered by son Louis,| daughter-in-law Leona and family. CARD OF THANKS | BLOW -- --I wish to thank nurses and | staff of Oshawa and Toronto General Hospitals, specialist Dr. Morley; many tharks to Dr. Shaw for his special at. tention and care for my speedy re- covery. To my friends and relations for the lovely gifts, flowers and "get- well" cards. Again I say thank you. ~Mrs. Morley Blow. | Polish Seaman To Stay Here OTTAWA (CP) --A Polish seaman who jumped the liner Batory in Montreal last month will be allowed to remain in Canada for at least one year, despite a deportation order against him for illegal entry. Immigration Minister Ellen Fairclough announced Wednes- «day that she has deferred ac. tion on the deportation order and issued a permit for Fran- ~cixz Tobiasz, 25 to stay in Can. .ada, where he wants to become «a citizen. - He said he had refused to join the Communist party of Poland, 'and that conditions in his home- land were oppressive. Canadian law does not pro- vide for political asylum, but ministerial permits may te granted to give a refugee time to go through the proper pro- «cedures for entry. UN FELLOWSHIP + CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -- Jor the eighth year the Cana- .dian Federation of Business and «Professional Women's Clubs is "granting a $500 United Nations Fellowship to one of its mem- «bers. Application can be ob- tained from Helen Yeo here and the person selected be- comes an observer at the Satus of Women Commission or the | mote : Hd FOR GOODWILL AND CURIOSITY Three young university stu- dents arrived in Ottawa last night' after travelling 110,000 miles and to 41 countries. They say they want to pro- international goodwill and to satisfy their own cu- riosity as to how the other half of the world lives. They started their tour in 1958 but took a year off to earn enough money to continue the trip. From left to right are Theo- dere Reher, 24, and Hartmut Schierke, 24, both of Hamm, Westphalia, Germany, and Kurt Kirkvald, 27, of Copen- hagen. --(CP Wirephoto) Student Called Namby-Pamby WATERLOO (CP) -- Gary Brown, 22, a fourth-year univer- sity student here, was branded a '"namby-pamby'"' by Magis- trade James Kirkpatrick Wed- nesday for objecting, on aesthe tic grounds, to a policeman chalking his car tires. The student pleaded not guilty to overparking on a street and objected strenuously to the "ugly" chalk marks made by police. The case was adjourned two weeks. He also said he was unable to see the one-hour limit on the street sign because of the posi- tion in which the sign was placed. Magistrate Kirkpatrick told the student he was attempting to| fight an unworthy cause and at the same time trying to estab- lish disorder. He branded the youth a "namby-pamby"' for ob- jecting to the chalk marks not on legal or moral grounds but because the marks looked ugly. The magistrate said he dis- liked to "send you out of here with a victory in view of your attitude" but admitted the youth was entitled to a dismissal if the sign was not properly posted. Kickback Charge Inquiry Ordered TORONTO (CP)--Mayor Na- than Phillips Wednesday or- dered an inquiry into charges that workmen on a city con-| tract were forced under threats of dismissal to pay "kickbacks" on their wages to their em- ployer. Edgar Smith, fair wage offi- cer, told a board of control meeting eight employees of Withrow Paving Company were involved. He said three had signed sworn declarations that during their first two weeks on the job they were paid $1.40 an hour although their pay envel- Human 4Rights Commission in New York. INTERPRETING THE NEWS Faith In By CARMAN CUMMING dozens of opponents of President accentuate the growing rift in Ghana's relations with Britain and the United States. The arrests eliminate from the disturbed Ghanaian political scene a number of Nkrumah's most able opponents, including Dr. Joseph Danquah, opposition candidate in last year's presi- dential elections who charged earlier this year that Nkrumah was "allowing the East to turn Ghana into a Communist camp." British Losing BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT HALIFAX (CP)--In the most dramatic session of its three- day annual meeting the Cana- dian Chamber of Commerce Wednesday directed its board of directors to consider this morn- ing what attitude the chamber should take in regard to the ex- propriation by the British Col- umbia government of the B.C. Electric Company. * This was the solution to a warm debate in which a large number of delegates wanted an immediate declaration; others felt a resolution presented on the matter should be improved in its wording and wanted it sent to the executive council for what might have been a more indef- inite referral; and still others felt the matter was already ade- quately covered in chamber pol- icy statements. Highlight was a plea by H. Gordon Love of Calgary, former chamber president, that the or- ganization "stop straddling the fence." QUESTION MANNER The right of the British Col- urabia government to expropri- ate was not questioned, but rather the manner of doing so. Manuel Zive of Halifax got permission to introduce the sub- ject as "new business' near the end of the chamber's closing policy session--a situation that requires assent of two-thirds of delegates voting in order to have a matter discussed. Mr. Zive then presented a resolution saying "a provincial government" had recently ex- propriated a privately - owned public utility without adequately Stop Straddling Chamber Urged demonstrating that the public would thereby be better served; that such action could seriously jeopardize the confidence of in- vestors in Canadian industry; and that the chamber deplored such action. E. L. Harrison of Vancouver| said the "excuse" had been) used in British Columbia that a federal income tax had to be paid by a private company, while a publicly - owned com- pany is exempt. He wouldn't op- pose the resolution but he thought one respecting taxation would be more pertinent. Leonard Hynes of Montreal referred delegates to already- expressed chamber policy that "opposes the exercise of power cither by government or its del- egates without safeguards of the liberty of the individual and the freedom of Canadian institu- tions;" and which adds that "the right of the citizen to ap- peal to the courts is a funda- mental concept of democracy." Mr. Hynes added that public- owned and operated power util- ities are not new, but he was concerned with the manner of the B.C. expropriation without right of appeal to the courts. Mr. Love said the question was at "the very core of free enterprise . "it's time we got our word in and stopped straddling the fence. We should have the guts to pass this right here now like men." The motion to refer the resolu- tion to the executive council was defeated on a close vote and was sent to the board of direc- tors "for action tomorrow morn- ing." Moss Park Called Comedy Of Errors HAMILTON (CP) David Mansur, former president of Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation, described Tor- onto's $5,000,000 Moss Park re- development project Wednesday night as the greatest comedy of errors that ever happened. Mr. Mansur, now a Toronto consultant, told the Urban De- velopment Institute of Ontario the downtown Toronto site has cost three levels of government between $400,000 and $500,000 an acre. And now they don't know what to do with it, he added. In Toronto, Phillips disagreed. "We have what we wanted," he said in an interview, "and the Moss Park project is on its way." Other members of the board of control were not so sure. Controller William Allen said that from the start he was luke- warm to placing housing in an area that was basically com. mercial and light industrial in character. TORONTO (CP)~The stock market reversed Tuesday's fall- ing trend and rose in heavy trading on the heels of renewed interest in speculative mines Wednesday. Lorado was the big winner with a gain of 21 cents on a volume of more than 200,000 shares. Lake Dufault seemingly bounced back from a poor assay report to rise 30 cents to $5.05, with a volume of more than 111,- 000 shares. DIVIDENDS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Dominion Steel and Coal Cor- poration Ltd., common 10 cents, Nov. 1, record Oct. 16. M. Loeb Lid., 10 cents, Oct. 27, record Oct. 13. Peoples Credit Jewllers Ltd., common 15 cents, Nov. 15, re- cord Oct. 31. Silverwood Dairies Ltd., Class A 15 cents, Class B 15 cents, Jan. 2, 1962, record Nov. 30. Market Boosted In Heavy Trade The industrial list was sparked by widespread frac- tional advances in foods, steels and utilities. In foods, Oshawa Wholesale A advanced 134 to 30 after touching a new high of 31 at one point. Among utilities, International Utilities bucked the trend and fell 1. Empire Life posted the day's biggest individual gain--$20-- to a new high of $160. Imperial Life, which jumped $24 Tuesday, was off $2 to $153. On index, industrials rose 1.75 to 597.02, base metals .25 to 199.59 and western oils .15 to 97.77. Golds fell 48 to 87.21. Volume was 3,155,000 shares compared with 4,107,000 Tues- day. The senior base metals mar- ket was strong. Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting led the pack higher with a gain of 114. Gold trading was light with Dome off 3. Western oil trading was weak. THE WOMEN ROBERT TAYLOR DENISE DARCEL HOPE JOHN EMERSON - MCINTIRE aimee Mayor Nathan b ADULT ENTERTAINMENT senry A EUTERPE PRODUCTION X : DOLORES HART + GEORGE HAMILTON Now thru Saturday! ALL COLOR SHOW! BOX-OFFICE OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS AT 7:20 LAST COMPLETE SHOW 9:00 MAUREEN O'HARA & BRIAN KEITH THE DEADLY COMPANIONS PANAVISION PATHE CULOR = Gln = win JOHANNA 48 Suring von K0c2u * ZA ZGA GABOR * | Sid pete The hilarious inside OF WHAT GOES ON WHEN 8CHOOL LETS OUT.., YVETTE MIMIEUX + JIM HUTTON - BARBARA NICHOLS - PAULA PRI wo FRANK GORSHIN sot wossessy CONNIE FRANCIS ALL NEWT TN GoLoRi 12' #x:4MARIO LANZA 5 § FOR THE FIRST TIME} Tedwirome®. story on those rip roaring Spring Vacations! Hear CONNIE FRANCIS eing 2 new hit songs (FTI sone v ond BILTMORE y 1] Ghana There also was an angry Bri- Canadian Press Staff Writer (ish reaction to unsupported | The imprisonment in Ghana of charges in the Ghanaian press! {that Britain had somehow been {Kwame Nkrumah is bound to|inyolved in the death of United | Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold. The Ghanaian |government disassociated itself from these accusations. The ill feeling has led to a peace-making visit to Accra by Commonwealth Relations Secre- tary Duncan Sandys and to talk {that the Queen's planned visit to Ghana next month should be | postponed. The trend of Ghanaian policy also could have a bearing on {the final United States decision KING ST. EAST TV CLEARANCE Budget Terms--Al Makes--All Sizes B| CHERNEY'S 728-1641 & Guaranteed HOLIDAY MIDNITE SHOW THIS SUNDAY! OSHAWA The accusations against the|on aid to the giant Volta River detainees--that they plotted the project. Nkrumah is pressing assassination of Nkrumah and|washington for a decision by engaged in other subversive ac-/oct, 13, but President Kennedy ivities -- cannot be evaluated|pag ordered another look at cer- yet. : |tain features of the project. But it is at least regrettable] Nkrumah's viewpoint on the that the arrests were. made arrests is indicated by a state- without specific charges under|ment he once made that "even a preventive detention act that|a system based on social justice permits internment of "politicaljand a democratic constitution undesirables" for up to five/may need backing up, during years without trial. [the period following independ- The government has not dis-| ence, by emergency measures of closed how many persons now|a statement by Danquah that are held under the law, but the|"the government are aware of number is estimated at from 300 the resentment against them. to 370. [That is why they are arresting and detaining opponents . . . but BRITISH CRITICISM at a(the spark will come that will time when Britain already is kindle the flames which will mide J 2 them." showing some disillusionment | €0NSume with developments in the show. NET EARNINGS try it once considered the show By THE CANADIAN PRESS piece of its colonial policy. The British press has been un- Canadian International Power Co. Ltd.,6 mos. ended June 30: happy with Nkrumah's actions 1960, $4,684,688, $1.74 a share; cabinet, firing Britons from two top posts and removing British officers from the command of opes showed $1.65 an hour. EIA! TVON-HEDISOW RSE CINEMAS COPE Colo Fla Rl HUGH atstar MARLOWE i. WE in weeding moderates from his 1060, $4,752,751, $1.77. troops. of Hits ADULT ENTERTAINMENT Walter Slezak TECHNICOLOR® FEATURE TIMES 1:30 - 3:25 « 5:28 RR T 7:25 -- COMPLETE SHOw 9:15

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