Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 May 1963, p. 24

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» essfully stalled divorce bills, - HOVERCRAFT SKIMS OVER WATER 'The SRN-2 Hovercraft ts shown: here skimming the water during a trial run off the coast of England. The British-built craft, riding a huge fans, travels inches above the surface at speeds up to 80 knots. The craft, ca- over cushion of air created by four pable of carrying 66° passen- gers, is to be demonstrated jened to dissolve the Ontario | |Flue-Cured Tobacco Growers' Board if it does not approvelarer pressure from a number | |ham Centre told a district elec- 'Ontario Farm Products 'Marketing Board has threat- the transfer of acreage quotas between farms this year, a to- bacco board director said Tues- day night, as farmere run our own bust- consequences," , he a he meeting © atten : ported the rekucce Wart? stand in a show of hands, ge NE previously taken the stand that Lap ona shag Ont, (CP) --|the tobacco board would have to Sprau said. or they must take the of the 150 growers The government board stop sych transfers in order to protect its acreage control, Mr. "But it seems. that Toronto, of minority groups, is asking us to rescind the ruling again--for this year anyway." it4., had/3.™mos. ended March 31: 1963, $1: 1962, $2,811,077, 18 cents a share; 1962, $2,602,402, 18 cents. Jefferson Lake Petrochemica{ of Canada Ltd., 3 mos. ended March 31: 1963, $275,760; 1962, 59,196. : Great Lakes Paper Co. $744,660, 21 cents a share; 1962, $642,449, 18 cnts. Moore Corporation Ltd., mos. ended March 31; 1963, $3,- 562,917, 53 cents a share; 1962, $,288,347, 49 cents. ¢ Sun Reflectio John Sprau Jr. of RR 1, Wind- grow- NET EARNINGS May Detec he was re-elected a board director, the govern- ment board has informed the tobacco board it may be dis- solved and a committee ap- pointed to "run this industry" if acreage transfers are not ap- proved, "But the tobacco board has stood firm and is awaiting the decision of the (government) board whether it will remove this " Mr, Sprau said. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bathnrst Power and Paper Co, Ltd,, 3 mos, ended March 31: 1963, $308,000; 1962, $344,000 Dome Mines Ltd., 3 mos, ended March 31: 1963, $528,135, 27 cents a share; 1962, $506,483, % cents. ul Domnion Time TAd,, year: ended Dec, 31: 1962, $356,296; 1961, $242,225. Dominion Tar and Chemical linvestigated by the defence de- Red Missiles OTTAWA (CP)--The use of reflected sunlight as a means to detect the approach of inter. continental ballistic missiles launched from Russia is being partment, officials said Tues- jay. They indicated there has been some measure of success with Co. Ltd., 3 mos, ended March the experiments, which were to 3G sile would have been cmt cess was @ in| ' by sunlight in mid-course over the polar regions, Sunlight reflected by the mis. netic radia' the Canadian experiments is to develop a device which could detect this radiation, RAIN WAS YELLOW | BELGRADE (AP) -- Yellow rain fell on Zagrem and other coastal areas of Croatia re- cently, The drops apparently were tinged by an air layer from the Sahara that carried dust across the Mediterranean. ion, The object of| Miss Stevens was quoted Ta : day as saying the Gast ented her to leak the story to | press, Ae "The stand is this; Either we shortly on the St. Lawrence River. --(CP Wirephoto from British Information Services) NDP Divorce Blockade Plans To Force Issue OTTAWA (CP) -- The engin-;ing divorces to residents of Que. blocs ranging up to 100 or more eers of the New Democratic di- vorce blockade in Parliament) gay they won't give it up with- out. elther a royal commission on parliamentary divorce or ~ designation of a court to handle divorces of Quebec. and New- foundiand residents, Arnold Peters, MP for Timis- kaming, said Tuesday neither he nor Frank Howard, MP for Skeena, woul be willing to pave the way for a four-party - agreement that would permit . rapid passage of a backlog of some 700 divorce bills. _ It ts understood negotiations with this end in view have been under considération within the Liberal government, To date no approach has been made to either Mr, Peters or Mr. How- ard. . In the last Parliament and in several sessions of previous Parliaments, the two New Dem- ocrats, with assistance from some of their colleagues, suc- Their aim is to remove from bec and Newfoundland, the only provinces without divorce courts. Mr. Peters said he has fought and won two elections on a plat- form of continuing the blockade until a royal commission inves- tigates divorce or until a court is designated to handle divorce bills which now come before Parliament. "T believe thie problem. has to be faced and a government that will not face it is going to look ridiculous," he said in an interview. "T believe I have a mandate from my riding for this pur. pose," he added, referring continuation of the blockade. The device used by the New Democratic MPs involves dis- cussing each divorce bill separ- ately in detail, This slows their née relatively little or no de- te. Senate sources estimate there will be about 1,000 awaiting ac. tion within a few weeks of the opening of the new Parliament May 16, The bills are examined by the Senate divorce commit- tee which recommends for or against their approval. They then must pass both the Senate and the Commons before they become law. Mr, Peters said that in the light of the decision by him and Mr. Howard to continue the blockade, the Liberal govern-) ment "'has the choice of apply- ng closure (to limit debate) in one form or another," or of ac- ceding to their demands for a royal ion or a divorce court. passage to a handful in the lim. ited time the Commons devotes' to such measures under present house rules. | PASSED BY HUNDREDS | Previously, divorce bills were, Parliament the task of grant. passed by unanimous consent in! BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Winter Pipeline Buildin EDMONTON (CP) --Fast- mo crews have ripped th 140 miles of Timberland and frozen muskeg building a pipeline officials say might have cost 50 per cent more to build in summer. | The line is the largest chunk! of a two-part $15,000,000 project) to gather natural gas from 950) wells in the Swan Hills, Ver-) ginia Hills and Judy Creek) fields 110 miles northwest of} Edmonton, | Construction, begun Jan. 19,| was completed in mid-April A processing plant, second part of the project,~fs being, built from prefabricated mater-! j ials hauled during the winter. to, the junction of the trunk lines. The project, scheduled for completion Sept. 1, will handle 40,000,000 cubic feet of gas a day. Reserves in the fields are estimated at 700,000,000 cubic feet. Winter construction included not only the gathering line but also parts of a line to carry liq- uid hydrocarbons 115 miles from the processing plant to Edmonton and a@ section of a $4,000,000 pipeline to bring the natural gas residue to Edmon- ton consumers. Imperial Oi) Ltd., as operator of the producer-owned gas con-} servation project, supervised construction. COMPANIES SHARE COSTS Imperial, along with British; Canada Malting was among {erm completes the 19 + man cent pfd. 27 cents, June 1, rec. Cheaper tested ahead of the ditching, then lowered in 2,000-foot sec! tions into the ditch and back.) filled immediately. Pipe ranges) from three to 24 inches in di- ameter. HELD BY WEIGHTS Frozen ground made construc tion easy through large areas of| muskeg. Concrete river weights, | precast in Edmonton, were in-} stalled to hold pipe in ditches| dug through these areas. | Without weights, the natural| buoyncy of the pipe would pop) Canadian Press Names Officers For This Year TORONTO (CP)--A-F. Mer- cler of Quebec Le Soleil was re- electéd president of The Cana- dian Press by his fellow direc- tors Tuesday. John E. Motz of the Kitche- ner-Wateroo Record was re- elected honorary president; Stu. art Keate, Victoria Times, first) vice-president; and St. Clair Balfour, Winnipeg Tribune, sec- ond vice-president. + Officers were chosen by the) board after the annual meeting! of members at which newspa- per executives and editors from across Canada discussed affairs of the association, the news partnership through which the country's dailies exchange the) news of their areas and receive|heen in Canada, but had a good world news coverage. Mr. Mer.) cier reported on the co-opera- tive's operating position and Gillis Purcell, general manager, it to the surface. Weights of|0n details of the news service. 2,800 pounds each had to be} clamped at 10-foot intervals on| nine directors Tuesday for two-/Same texture and color. Gloves 11 miles of 24-inch pipe. The Swan Hills and Judy Creek fields, discovered six years ago, are among the top 10 producing areas in the province. Firm Climb For Tuesday Stock Market | TORONTO (CP)--The stock) British Columbia: Stuart! ;market moved firmly ahead jamid light trading Tuesday. | No single group appeared re- {sponsible for the main list climb jas fractional gains showed in Tribune, appointed by the board) May 31, record May 15; four | most, | The annual meeting elected {year terms, By regions they are; |. Atlantic; J. R, H, |New Glasgow News. | French-Language: A.-F. Mer. ;cier, Quebec Le Soleil. Quebec: Walter O'Hearn, ; Montreal Star. | Ontario: I. H, Macdonald, ;Cornwall Standard . Free- jholder; Beland Honderich, Tor- j onto Star; R. A. Graybiel, Wind. jsor Star | Prairie: St. Clair McCabe, | Moose Jaw Times-Herald and ; Basil Dean, Edmonton Journa! Sutherland, |Keate, Victoria Times. Nine directors elected last }year continue in office. Paul |Desruisseaux, Shefbrooke La /Monday to fill an unexpired American Oi] Co., Ltd, and) the leaders with a rise of 2%,) 908". Pan American Petroleum Corp.,;and Interprovincial Pipe Line, owns 95 per cent of the instalia- tion. Eleven companies share lrose a point to 8244 Strength also came from Al- Windsor Star costs in proportion with the size berta Gas, Consolidated Paper, | of their operations. Winter problems of snow, sub- zero temperatures and frozen ground were less troublesome than summer construction prob- lems of impassable muskeg, heavy rain and poor access roads. Well-maintained winter roads provided easy access to the re- mote area for trucks hauling|'Yamsactions during the session, pipe and supflies Clearing work began in mid.| Yolved were in Canadian Hydro-! December. Indians hired to help open a trail through heavy forests of spruce, pine and tam- arack brought along their fam ilies and set up housekeeping In|to 635.83, golds .03 to 87.22 and) tents on the right-of-way Brush was burned oui bu mu of the timber was ac- quired by small logging firms Ditching was done with ma- chines after the frozen ground equipped with a tooth Pipeline was built, welded and huge | Algoma Steel, International Util. jities, CPR and Great Lakes | Power, ali ahead in a %4-to-44 range. On the downside, U.S. Ford). Galbraith, advertising direc. slipped 144, Bank of Nova Sco ia dropped and Canadian Tire dipped 4. | Among séveral special - sized the largest number of shares j carbons. The transaction in- volved 15,000 shares at $17.50 a | share ; } On index, -induStrials rose 1.98 base metals 89 to 212.10. West- ern ous sipped 1.29 to 121.86 Final volume was 2,921,000 shares compared with :3,436,000 Monday : International Nickel and Nor-| William Hunter, local advertis-/Canadian was ripped by a large bulldozer anda topped base metals lead ing manager and William Viv./representing 42 'vaneed 4. Denison rose & Man Retires WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Floyd tor of the Windsor Star, retired Tuesday after 42 years of sery- ice with newspapers in Canada He joined the staff of The Star in 1943, Mr. Galbraith first eatered ithe newspaper field on the staff of the old Toronto News. He subsequently worked at; the Re gina Post, Saskatoon Star-Phoe. nix and the Winnipeg Free | Press. He was made director of ad- |vertising at The Star following {consolidation of the various de. partments and has held that po sition since 1955 The Star said Tuesday that 'spective positions Shirt Designs For Canada By Dior By JANET KASK MONTREAL (CP) -- Elegant shirts for men and women de- signed with Canadians in mind by the House of Dior were shown to the press Tuesday at a reception and fashion show. The shirts are manufactured by the John Forsyth Company Limited of Kitchener, Male models ambi across the runway in the neWest look in men's casual shirts in pure silks, cashmere and wool--and ranging in price from $10.95 to $55.00. outside the trousers, One was in basket-weave pure cashmere in natural camel shade, trimmed with gold-covered but- tons. Dior is the only fashion house showing a cashmere shirt. A pure wool shirt was in a heather and chocolate - cedar mixture with suede covered but tons and trim, and another in pure silk two-tone brown and blue check had covered cube buttons, MADE OF SILK Shirts for the ladies were in pure silk and ranged from ab- stract, avant-garde designs to demure stripes. A beige silk long-sleeved blouse was worn under a weskit and knicker set in brown suede. Some of the silks were hand screen printed. One, worn with an at-home hos- tess skirt in fuchsia pink was white silk with a long-stemmed rose matching the skirt color appliqued diagonally across the front, » An after-ski duet came in gay 16th century shades of velvet-- bright apricot for the lady's jacket shirt and burgundy red for the man. Both were worn outside ski pants. Sancho Fernando Sanchea, who designed some of the num- bers shown said he had never idea of the popularity of the "casual" life of North Ameri- cans, An expert on accessories, the designer said bags and shoes were better matched--in the jShould be an immediate com- iplement to the costume worn-- jbut he didn't like them in col- jors which were "too striking," | Handbags, he said, should be jprimarily useful, "Women don't jhave to carry an enormous \trunk!"" ; | | DIVIDENDS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Algonquin Building Credits Ltd., common 20 cents, June 17; jrecord June 5. British American Bank Note |Co, Ltd., 50 cents, June 15, rec- jord June 1. |. Canadian Western Natural | Gas Co, Ltd,, common 20 cents, ;per cent pid. 20 cents, 514 per ord May 15, All men's shirts were worn| | Campbell Red Lakes Mines hua. 10 cents, July 29, record) June 26. } Hendershot Paper Products Lid., six per cent pfd. $1.50 June 26, record June 12. Sigma Mines (Quebec) Ltd.,| 15 cents, July 29, record June! | Trader Finance Corp. Lid,,! jclass A common 20 cents: class} B common 20 cents; ' 414 per} cent pid. $1.12l4: five percent) pfd. 50 cents, July 2, record! June 7, | George Weston Ltd., class A! 0 centeclass B 10 cents, July} 1, record June 11 | Foundation Company of Can-| jada Itd., 124 cents, July 19,} record June 1 eee | } HONORED AGAIN HALIFAX (CP) -- Rear-Ad- miral P, D, Budge, former chief} of naval. personnel, has been} awarded the third clasp to his! Forces Decorat on, | years service steelers, each rising %%, and Geco, eash, national'advertising man- Only other navy man to. receive} Labrador and Rio Algom ali ad. ager, would continue in their re-\the third ic. clasp was Lt.-Cdr,| H. R. Davis, now retired i wages, bitter cold, long months Would you have In answer to a 26-word advertisement published in The Times (London, Eng.), five thousand men and three women volunteered for the British Ant- arctic expedition in 1908. From these, Ernest Shackleton chose 27 men for the venture that reached within 97 miles of the South Pole and won him a knighthood." He said: "It seemed as though all the men in Great Britain were determined to accompany me, the response was so overwhelming." EN WANTED for Hazardous ourney. Small of complete dark- ness, constant danger, safe return doubtful. Honor and recognition in case of success -- Ernest Shackleton. gone? Aten of the Canad Published by Oshowe Times, @ b . Ansociation Daily Newepepar P. AN INPORMED PUBLIC IS THE BEST GUARANTEES OF FREEDOM In those days, the newspaper was the only lind between strangers. It is the same today. People learn from their daily newspaper of world events-- events that might change their lives. Today, the daily paper plays an even more impor- tant part in your daily life. Only there can you find complete news of the world, of Canada and of your own community--and what's behind the news. These reports are more important today than ever before. Keep abreast of all the news every day... in your daily newspaper.

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