Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Aug 1964, p. 14

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'14 «THE OSHAWA Times, Seturdey, August 22, 1964 BIRTHS WHITESIDE -- John and Hazel (nee ennounce the safe ar- Ra J. Kimmerly, Or, G. A. Rundle, > asad of Toronto Sick Children's Hos- 4 it at Sunnybrook Hosoita! st 21, 1964, Thomas J. husbene of _Gwennyth} of. Perer and Paul. Res'- Fureral Home, 4312 te ior service in the ata interment York ale, FRITZLEY, Emma May Entered into rest In Victoria Hospital, London, Ontario on Thursday, August 20, 1964, Emma Forsyth, widow of the LAROCQUE, Paul Edward Suddenly at Toronto on Tuesday, August 18, 1964, Paul Edward Larocque, beloved son of Herman and Audrey Larocque and ear brother of Vaughen, Glen, Cindy, 'and Janet, A private service was held in the Gerrow Funeral Chapel on Thursday, August 20 at 2 p.m. Interment was in Union Cemetery. Kindness beyond Price, yet Within reach of all GERROW FUNERAL HOME 390 KING STRET WEST TELEPHONE 728-6226 _ LOCKE'S FLORISTS Funeral arrangements and floral requirements for all occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 {N MEMORIAM Strike Backlog Pulls Canadian Workers To U.S. Rochester, N.Y. (AP) -- AN 69 electrical contractor said Fri- day that 100 Canadian electri- cians had been brought here to work on construction projects delayed. during a long strike last spring. A union official said he felt the Canadian electricians were not needed. John O'Connell,- president of Rochester chapter of the Na- tional Electrical Contractors Association, said contractors had a "great backlog of work" in the wake of the strike which tasted from May 5 until June He said an additional 50 men can be used on the several projects in the city, but no ef- forts are being made to recruit them. Joseph Sommers, business agent of Local 86, International Brotherhood of Electri- cal Workers, said 15 to 20 extra men could have ended the shortage. _ The shottage is nationwide, mmo RNIN OBITUARIES - FUNERAL SERVICE OF W. A. FERGUSON Funeral service for William A. Ferguson, a former Oshawa resident who died suddenly at Gravenhurst last week, was held Saturday in Brockville. He was The body rested at the Scott Funeral Home, The service was conducted by Rev. Leslie R. Renault of the First Presby- terian church. Interment was in Read's cemetery, South Augusta. Pallbearers were: Edward Hough, Reginald Davis, Elmer Sargent, Howard Sargent, Al- bert Sargent and David Gol- ledge. Mr. Ferguson was a former employee of Duplate Canada Limited at Oshawa. At his death he was serving his 18th year with the Ontario Hydro Electric Power Commission and was living in Gravenhurst. The deceased was born in Brockville, son of the. late Robert Ferguson and Sarah Cooley. He was educated in |Brockville and lived there for }many years. He was a former jemployee of the W. B. Reynolds Coal Company in Brockville. created by the traditional boom in summer construction, he said, Construction electricians are jobless in winter months, noted, At Albany, state dormitory authority officials are desper- ately seeking 50 electricians so 600 state university dormitory units can be completed. A spokesman said he had considered recruiting electri- cians from Canada, but aban- doned the idea because of red tape. Fine Sets Up New Paper Strike Parley he} Mr. Ferguson was a member of the Presbyterian church and !a former member of the Orange \Order. | He is survived by two \brothers and four sisters: David jand James Ferguson; Mrs. Writers Agree At La Presse Paper Strike MONTREAL (CP) -- Agree- ment was reached Friday be- tween the management of La Presse and its 160 journalists on the management rights clause of a new contract, The French-language newspa- per, largest daily in Montreal, has not published since June 3 when its printers, members of the International Typographical Union (CLC), walked off the job. Since then, the dispute be- tween tHe newspaper and the journalists' union has become a major issue. Union spokesmen said the new management rights clause has been accepted by members of the Confederation of National Trade Unions affiliate repre- senting the journalists on the recommendation of their nego- tiating committee, The union agreed to the ma- jor rights sought by manage- ment including those contested in earlier talks. Newspaper men, under the clause, have re- course to conciliation proce- dures if they fee] management has made unfair decisions. The journalists and manage- ment are scheduled to meet again next week to negotiate the newspaper's demand that it have the right to dismiss or Fred G. Read (Eleanor), Mrs. Clair Brown (Sarah), Mrs. John |Murray (Mary) and Miss 'Mar-| jgaret Ferguson, all of Brock-) jville. A number of nieces and Inephews also survive. | | MRS. ANNA C, EWERS The funeral service for Mrs. Anna C. Ewers, who died at Hillsdale Manor, Tuesday, Aug.| 18, in her 89th year, was held at the Gerrow Funeral Chapel, Friday, Aug. 21 at 2 p.m, Rev, C. W. G. Brett, of Knox Pres- byterian Church conducted the service. Interment was in Mount Lawn Cemetery. sanction an employee who does anything "incompatible with the requirements of objective news"| or that may hinder the reputa-| tion or the moral interests of| the employer inside or outside the plant. Management and negotiators for the striking ITU members have not met since June 22. Regina Doctors Probe Suspect BRITISH BRIEFS © Special to The Oshawa Times vidual impressions of the sew Forth Road Bridge form the designs of two special stamps to be issued on September 4 to commemorate the official open- ing of the bridge by the Queen. They will be 3d and 6d stamps. DUMP FOR OLD CARS and Weybridge Council has a plan to rid the area of dumped, derelict cars. For a small fee, payable by the owners, "ola crocks" can now be abandoned on the Walton and Weybridge garbage dump. AMERICAN AID Two teams of American airmen played a game of baseball on Newport, Isle of Wight footba'l ground and helped $2400 for a small bus for physi- cally handicapped children. PROBE FACTORY FIRES investigating two fires at a paint factory in Tooting. fire damaged office; hours later folllowing an explo-| sion, almost totally destroyed the works. MEDAL FOR EDITOR medal of the Institute of Journa- lists to be given since 1947 has been awarded to Laurence Gandar, Daily Mail, for his courageous stand in support of freedom of the press in South Africa. BUSMEN'S CURFEW Bus crews Stamps Feature Bridge Opening PROTEST POND PERIL HORNCHURCH, Essex -- Hornchurch Council has ap- proved plans to prevent chil- dren straying near water-filled gravel pits where two brothers died in June. Fencing is to. be erected at gravel pits adjoining Berwick Pond where the trage- dy occurred. NURSES FROM MALTA ST. ALBANS, Herts--Because of a shortage of nurses in Brit- ain, Mrs. Jane Owens, matron of Harperbury Hospital, has signed on nearly 80 nurses, male and female, on a recruit- ing trip to' Malta, LOSES ON MEALS LONDON -- The House of Commons refreshments rooms lost over $36,000 last year, on a turnover of $628,000. This loss reduces to $19,500 the accumu- lated surplus built up in pre- vious years. NEW TOWN PLAN CORBY, Northants -- Details TOOTING -- Detectives are|of @ $30 million plan to double the size and population of Corby By M. McINTYRE HOOD LONDON -- Two highly indi- WALTON, Surrey -- Walton NEWPORT, Isle of Wight -- to raise War Babies' Discussed LONDON (Reuters) -- Brain- washing and the emotional pro- blems of warborn babies were discussed at a psychiatrists' meeting here Friday. The first Congress on Social Psychiatry was told that brain- washing as practised by Com- munist China in the Korean War was a failure. This view came from Dr. Har- vey Bluestone of the New York City Community Medical Health Centre, He said the technique worked on only 21 out of thousands of Americans captured by the Chi- nese'in the war. Similar tech- niques are used, he said, by psychiatrists in American pris- ons--but the prisoners are vol- unteers. After treatment, 'successful' Of Boat-Se TORONTO (CP) -- A" nine- year-old Burlington, Ont., guri, whose left arm was nearly sev- month ago, is given a good chance of regaining most of the function of the arm by her doc- tors at the Hospital for Sick Children here. Cynthia Tait, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Cameron Tait, has had six operations, including skin grafts, during her month - long stay in hospital' and has re- ceived 14 pints of blood in trans- fusion. Doctors say she will have to undergo many more op- erations before her arm can be declared sound again. Cynthia's ordeal began the night of July 19 outside her par- ent's cottage at the Lake of Bays, 48 miles northeast of Orillia. Under supervision of a babysitter she was playing in her parent's small outboard mo- tor boat, which she had learned Girl Near Recovering Use ered 'in a boating accident ajthe ee. Ce Se athe Ag : ae ' co to run. She stood to i the motor and just the Based tor caught and pitched her water, ec Shgsk aN Si as The running boat circl and ran over the girl in ter, Cynthia was pulled 4 the Pes npn ta her |: anging a strip | half an ich ove the "8 sc The babysi help attracted Dr. Wiliam bus vacationing doctor, Dr. Hunt of St. Catharines, tied off the arteries oe the child's arm arm encased in plaster to keep it ther, Cynthia was bundle into the family car for the high - race to hospital in Toronto, 115 miles away. At the hospital @ team of six surgeons worked for. four hours to sew the arm back together. prisoners have changed their way of thinking and become convinced that their anti-social behavior was wrong, Dr, Blue- stone said, HAVE SEX PROBLEM The congress also was told New Town (pop, 42,000) have the company's|been announced. A new town the second, two|centre on four levels will clude apartments, a shopping area, covered car parks, a bus jsiation and a social centre. |MORE DRUG ADDICTS | LONDON -- The total number of known drug addicts in Brit- ain has increased by more than 100 to 635 in the last year, the figure for the previous year be-' ing 532. This is stated in a The first and LONDON -- The first gold editor of the Rand) Nations. VILLAGE REPRIEVED KENSWORTH -- The minister of housing and development has rejected a development scheme NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE -- in Newcastle-Upon- in-) government report to the United| Tyne have warned the corpora- tion that they will refuse to man -which would have almost that U.S. war babies, now 19 |to 25 years old, have a higher jrate of sex problems, and are jemotionally vulnerable than other generations. John E. Kysar and Misha §. Zaks, professors at the Univer- sity of Illinois, told the congress many of the male war babies are continually striving to prove their strength, daring and sex- ual adequacy. But female war babies were inclined to be "uneasy" with men--and to keep tham at a dis- tance, they said, The scientists based their con- clusions on a study of U.S. col- lege students. VANCOUVER (CP) -- A.call for a great effort by doctors, welfare workers and law en- forcement agencies to track down cases of deliberate child beatings was issued Friday by Dr. H. D. Cotnam, Ontario's head coroner, He told the National Associa- tion of Coroners that the num- ber of child beatings by parents has increased alarmingly until it has become a "major social problem." He said that in Ontario alone in the last year 20 children, most of them babies under the TV'S DEBT DIVIDENDS Coroner Urges. Colleaques Strike At Child Beatinos age of three, have been beaten to death by their parents or older brothers or sisters. "I feel that for each of the 20 proven deaths there are 100° cases of beaten and abused chil- dren," he said. "These cases are not all found in large cities by any means, but are distri- buted widely throughout our. province." m Dr. Cotnam described the» case of an eight - month - old baby in Pembroke who had died in hospital. The parents said the child had been well cared for, but x-rays showed the baby had suffered at least 20 skull fractures. Sleep Sickness REGINA (CP) --No_ further suspected human cases of sleep- ing sickness have been xg gr in Saskatchewan in the last bear tence hours, Dr. F. S. Lawson, acting 7 associate deputy minister of The funeral service for Frank health, said Friday. Stapley, who died at the Belle-| : A ; _| He said no further informa- oo rt it ea eves tion was available on the death was held at the Armstron of a Yorkton-area farmer, Har- Fahecal Chawel-Friday, Au. Mt lold Smith, who died Wednesday Later, the husband admitted "he had repeatedly, over sev- eral weeks, taken the baby from the crib and swung it like a~ baseball bat, striking the head" against a plaster wail," The husband said he did this" because "he was extremely jea- lous of his wife and desired all her attention and resented the child because of the affection the mother bestowed on it." doubled the size of the Chil- terns' "picture postcard" vil- lage of Kensworth. He said the site which it was proposed to jdevelop was an area of great landscape value. WEEK'S TRADING Lethargy Strikes BIRCHAM -- In loving memory of 8 dear wife and mother, Lavra Bircham, who passed away on August 22, 1962. In our hearts, your memory lingers, Sweetly tender, fond and true, There is not a day, dear mother, That we do not think of you. Lovingly remembered by husband Joe, gon Grant, daughter-in-law Julia and} grandchildren. The pallbearers were: John Jeffrey, Maurice Jeffrey, Gary Nesbitt, Peter McLellan, Bert Neil and Larry Norton. buses after 10 p.m. at week- ends because of attacks made on conductors by drunken pas- sengers. BEST CUSTOMER LONDON -- Britain retained her place as Australia's best customer in the financial year ending June 30, receiving ex- ports from Australia te the value: of, over $612 million. |FREAK YIELD Television owes a debt to Irishman Louis May who dis- covered in 1873 that the element selenium could translate light into electric impulses. TORONTO (CP)--Louis Fine, the Ontario labor department's chief conciliation officer, said Friday he has called a meet- ing for Monday of representa- tives of striking printers and Toronto's three daily newspa- pers in another bid to help set- tle their contract dispute He said negotiators for the pa- pers--The Star, The Telegram and The Globe and Mail--and Atlantic Acceptance Cor p. Ltd. , first pfd, 55 cents, Sept. 7, record Aug. 27. Auto Electric Service Co, Ltd., common 6% cents, Sept. 15, record Aug. 25. Biltmore Hats. Lid., Class A 25 cents, common 10 cents, Oct. 15, record Sept. 16. Canadian Wallpaper Manufac- turers Ltd., Class A $1 plus $1 GAME -- In memory of @ dearly loved Dad and grandfather, Charies E. Game, who passed eway August 22, 1960. We fad @ Dad and Grandfather we were proud to own, How much we miss him will never be k nown, Loved dearly in life and living yet, in the hearts of us who will, never forget. --Sadly missed by daughter Marjorie, son- inlaw Russell, grandchildren Peter and) Patsy. I GAME -- In joving memory of our father and grandfather, Charlies E. Game, who passed away August 22, 1960. There Is @ family who misses you the Internaotial Typographical Union meeting. to the (CI£L) agreed Mr. Fine said in a statement: 'I feel sure that both groups will give me their full co-opera-| tion in my efforts to find an area of understanding that will at 2 p.m. Rev. John Morris of St. Andrew's United Church con- ducted the service. Interment was in Oshawa Union Cemetery. The pallbearers were: Clay- ton Bennett, Roy Embury Sr.,/ Roy Embury Jr., Fred ha Ed Kellar, and Verne Stapley. night after he was thought to have contracted sleeping sick-| ness. Tests were being conducted to determine whether the sleeping sickness -- western equine en- cephalitis -- was in fact the cause of death. WARMINSTER, Wiltshire -- Joel Sibley, of Warminster, has grown a freak cucumber plant in his greenhouse. It has borne 28 cucumbers on its main stem, whereas the normal yield is about a dozen. On one knuckle Mart Industrials By GORDON GRANT | Canadian Press Staff Writer | milled ture in industrials Thursday on rumors that the company's nine months earning statement Sept. 14, record Sept. 1. 1, record Sept. 10. Oct. 1, record Sept. 10. extra, Class B $1 plus $1 extra, Dominion Foundries and Steel Ltd., common 124% cents, Oct. Hahn Brass Lid., first pfd. 22% cents, common 15 cents, TIE IN PROPAGANDA CAIRO (AP) -- Eleven Arab states have signed an agree- ment for co-ordination of Arab radio propaganda. They United Arab Republic, Jordan, Syria, Libya, Sudan, Tunisia, Algeria, Lebanon,' Iraq, Yemen are the" make it possible to conclude a collective. agreement." The strike started July 9 when 680 printers walked off the job. Eighteen of them have returned to work. : The papers have. continued to publish with supervisory and non-union personnel doing com- alone there are 17 cucumbers. | Industrial issues CRUISE HALTED around uncertainly on Canadian LONDON -- A steel cablejstock markets this week andithe close the company re- wrapped round her propeller rallies looked tired. warded investor anticipation by stopped the Royal Sovereign's' Meanwhile, base metal stocks!reporting earnings of $2.57 a daily cruise from London tojclimed sharply, boosted by the|share compared with $1.10 a Southend and Margate. Just ove performance of two of the in-/share in the' same period of 1000 passengers were offered) dustry's giants, International/1963. Friday the stock sold off to 28%4, unchanged on the week. And finds. time long since you went, Tears that we shed are in silence And we breathe a sigh of regret. ours, and we remember, and Kuwait. venetian ae (CP)--A party of 48 schoolboys from London, -- Bir=. mingham, Bradford, Glasgow. and Manchester are to make a 18-day tour of Canada. The trip would show a good gain. The ; Jockey Club Ltd., first pfd. stock jumped 1% to $29. Afer i r Series A 15 cents, first pfd. Se- ries B 13% cents, Oct. 15, rec- ord Sept. 30; common 3% cents, Sept. 15, record Aug. 31. Victoria and Grey Trust Co., 2 cents, Sept. 15, record Aug. COMING EVENTS GAME -- in loving memory of a dear) husband 'and father, Charlies Game, who! passed away August 22, 1960. God knows how much | miss you, KINDERGARTEN Never shall your memory fade, ing thoughts shall ever wander the spot where you are laid. Sadly missed by wife Eleanor. HARPER -- In loving memory of my mother, Flossie Harper, who passed away August 22, 1962, Thoughts today, memories forever. --Lovingly remembered by daughter Vada, son-in-law Joe and family. KRANTZ -- In loving memory of 8 r step-father who passed away August 9 }, 1963. Beautiful memories, silently kept, Of a wonderful father, we will never forget, A silent thought, a secret tear Keeps his memory ever dear. =Lovingly remembered by step-daughter) Idella and son-in-law Frank. KRANTZ -- In loving memory of a dear. husband and grandfather, Walter Krantz, who passed away August 23, 1963. 1 have only your memory, dear hus- band, To remember my whole life through, But the sweetness will linger forever As | treasure the image of you. | --Lovingly remembered by wife Ella and granddaughter Darlene. | SHOWKOWY -- In loving memory of a) dear wife, mother and grandmother, Kath- erine Showkowy, who passed away on August 22, 1960. if | had all the world to give, I'd give it, yes, and more; i To hear her voice and see her smile, And greet her at my door. But all | can do, dear mother, Is go and tend your grave, And leave behind tokens of love, To the best mother God ever made. } like to think, when life. is done, «Wherever Heaven may be, That she'll be standing at the door Up there to welcome me. | --Sadly missed and fovingly remembered | By husband Nicholas, sons Peter, Bill and! daughters-in-law Rachel and Grace and grandchildren. MEMORIALS For courteous, qualified mem- oriol consultation, call or see Wm. Greehalgh MOUNT LAWN MEMORIAL DIV, ot the Mount Lawn Office in the ceritre of Oshawa"s green oreo. King St. West. TELEPHONE 723-2633 Office Hours ae MONUMENTS -- MARKERS RIMAR MEMORIALS 152 SIMCOE ST. S. OSHAWA OFFICE EVENINGS 723-1002 728-6627 CARD OF THANKS CHANDLER -- We wish fo express our heartfelt thanks' and appreciation to our many relatives, friends, and neighbors for their pathy and beautiful floral tributes, shown us in the joss of our loving huband and father. _ Special thanks .fo Or. Guselle and Dr. Shaw, nurses and staff on floors 3B and SF at Oshawa General Hospital, Arm- strong. Funeral Home, those who. loaned cars and extra el gion to Reverend for his consoling words. : cas --Mrs, Charles Chandier and -Linds. STEVENS -- We, Mrs. H. ©. Stevens, Audrey and Fred Clement, grandchiidren| Joanne, James and John, wish to express posing room work. ULASSIFIED ADVERTISING (Continued from Page 13) 36--Legal 'Township of Whitby | TENDER FOR EXCAVATION OF MATERIALS Sealed Tenders, clearly mark- ed as to contents will be re- ceived by Mr. M. Robinson, Clerk of the Township of Whitby, Municipal Buildings, Brooklin, Ontario, until: 5:00 p.m., Fridy, September 4, 1964, For the excavation of ap- proximately 26,000 cubic yards of material on the pro- posed extension of Manning Road. Tender forms, plons and fur- ther. information may be ob- tained from the office of the Consulting Engineer at 306 Dundas Street West, Whitby, Ontario. Lowest or ony tender necessorily accepted, N. Wilson, Rood Superintendent. J. G, Goodwin, Reeve. Totten, Ltd., Consulting Engineers. Perkiomen. vst Nee NOTICE TO" CREDITORS AND OTHERS Creditors' and others having cloims against the estate of VERNON ROSS EDWARDS, lote of the City of Oshawa, ore requested to send full porticulars of such claims to the undersigned, on or before the 25th day of September, A.D,, 1964, after which dote the Estote's assets will be distributed _ having regard only to cloims thot have been received. GLADYS EDWARDS, Executrix, not Sims & Assocates our gratitude and appreciation to the many friends, neighbors and relatives for) floral tributes, consolation, and many acts) of kindness shown us in our recent be-| reavement. Special thanks to Rev. Frank} Ward for his consoling words. We also;by anyone, on or after this date, August/ consent. | thank Or. J, 0. Ruddy and the} wish Funere| Home for their ~-- the service, Ger ment of 71 Harmony Rd. N., ' Oshawo 1, GLEN SKEA, will not be responsible for -any debts contracted in my name 21, 1964, without my written (Signed) Glen Skea, 318 Division Street, Oshawa, ; BINGO ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY, AUG. 22 7:30 P.M. 20 Games -- $8 Share. the Wealth ~ 4--$40 Jackpots to go 1--$150 Jackpot to go Cheildren Under 16 Not Admitted BINGO U.A.W.A. HALL SATURDAY, AUG, 22 7:30 'P.M. 20 GAMES $10 A GAME 4 GAMES OF $20, $30 $40, $50 JACKPOTS ONE GAME $150 SHARE THE WEALTH CLASSES ~ FOR BROOKLIN PUBLIC. SCHOOL Starting September 8, 1964 MORNING their money back or a ticket),),. ; for a cruise ea ancther diy. hee ae Falconbridge. "DRY" NO LONGER being "dry" for nearly a year, |tion, auto deliveries and exports villagers of Wild Hill, near|were strong. Hatfield, have a public house} again. The village's only inn, the Woodman, year ago, has been modernized/least resistance is still upward. |and reopened. | | The economic background ap- jpeared favorable for the mar- HATFIELD, Herts -- After|ket as store sales, steel produc- Some analysts in Toronto said |the market is in a period of closed over ajconsolidation and the line of Massey-Ferguson was a fea- All children with birthdoys from August to December (in- clusive) plus the children who will come by bus. AFTERNOON All children with birthdays from January to July (inclu- sive). | Want-Ads Dont' Cost -They Pay 20 REG. GAMES SNOWBALL -- $210 PLUS $10 EACH HORIZONTAL LINE REGULAR JACKPOT -- $100 in 57 Nos. $20 Con. SHARE THE WEALTH | GOOD PARKING NO CHILDR 2--$250 Jackpot RED. BARN KINSMEN KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE ST. WEST TUESDAY 8 O'CLOCK $150 Jackpot -- $20 each line plus $50 Full Card 5 -- $30 Games: 2 --- $259 Jackpots 20 -- $20 Jackpots JACKPOT NOS, 3 EARLY BIRD GAMES -- EXTRA 7:30 BUS. DIRECT Children under 16 net allowed. Monday, BINGO 8:00 P.M. ST. GERTRUDE'S AUDITORIUM 690 KING ST, EAST.AT FAREWELL FREE --- ADMISSION -- FREE ~~" WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO -- MONDAY, AUG. 24th Admission Ticket Gives You Free Chance On Dor Prize 1 -- $150 JACKPOT MUST GO Jackpot Pays Double in 52 Nos. or Less 20 GAMES AT $20 -- 5 SPECIAL GAMES AT $30 REGULAR GAMES PAY DOUBLE IN 17 NOS. OR LESS $100.00 DOOR PRIZE EARLY BIRD GAME AT 7.45 ADMISSION $1.00 -- EXTRA BUSES Children under 16 not admitted. "FREE ADMISSION FREE ------™" -- TOTAL $300 in 65 Nos. $20 Con. EXTRA BUS SERVICE EN, PLEASE Nos. 54 and 59 NORTH OSHAWA BINGO and 52 BUSES -- FROM 4 CORNERS DO YOU HAVE A STORE OFFICE GARAGE WAREHOUSE TO RENT... ? You Will Get Fast ACTION with TIMES Business People 'On the Move" read The Oshawa Times regularly and some of them are frequently searching for places to establish @ new business or re-locate a rapidly expanding business. That Shop, Store, Office, Warehouse, Storage Space or garage Traders Finance A moved to a 1964 peak of 1334 after report- ing increased first - half earn- ings. STEELS WERE EASIER Steels were' mainly easier, but Dosco made a modest gain on rumors that the Quebec gov- ernment will make an offer for all Dosco shares at about $22 a share. The rumors were de- nied, but the stock market tra- ditionally ignores denials on the theory that where. there's smoke there's fire. Motor stocks were quiet with Chrysler making a 1964 high on light trading. Papers were mixed and foodstocks lower. In base metals, Inco reported first-half earnings of $2.40 a share compared with $1.79 in the same 1963 period. It made a modest gain on the week, Fal- conbridge's earnings were $2.28 against $1.39, but it took a small loss. Hudson Bay was the pick of senior-producers with a gain of three points to 69. Labrador was ahead 1% to 34% while Normetal and Rio Algom made smaller gains. In speculative mining issues trading was erratic. Western oils attracted little attention with prices drifting lower. Golds were quiet with fractional lasses going to most issues. INDUSTRIALS DIP On index, industrials dipped -42 to 159.28, western oils 1.34 to 96.33 and the Exchange index .30 to 148.77. Golds were ahead 92 to 134.40 and base metals 1.35 to 67.83. Volume for the}, week was 16,674,139 shares com- pared with 17,558,854 shares traded last week. Dollar value of transaction totalled $46,580,339 against $46,- 996,503 last week. In Montreal, 843,888 indus- trial shares changed hands compared with 664,401 traded in the previous week. Mining shares totalled 10,230,414 shares compared with 5,174,653 shares. A total of 476 issues traded, 129 advanced, 125 declined and 222 were unchanged. On index, industrials were unchanged at 154.8, composite Westeel Products Ltd., 15 cents, Sept. 15, record Aug. 31. includes a 900-mile voy: up the St. Lawrence and s sag at a forest reserve camping OSHAWA TIMES PATTERN M170 SIZES 10-18 - SPIRITED Low pleats animate the spirit- ed skimmer -- a beautiful shape for you to be in when Fall ar- rives. The little turtleneck you have, now sitting idle, can be offered to Paying Prospects with a Fast-Action, Inexpensive Times Classified. An almost new Classification, 22. Stores, Offices, Storage, will enable prospective tenants ond property owners to get in touch easily and quickly, OFFER YOUR VACANCIES NOW | Telephone Times Clas was unchanged at 150.1. Pa- pers were up .4 to 140.3 and banks .1 to 134.1 Utilities were off .3. to 140.4. vestee adds the casual touch de- signer Stella Sloat loves -- it's separate, so. you can wear the neckline plain and simple, too. Pocket flaps (but, no pockets) NET EARNINGS suggest the important, low-waist look above unpressed, inverted pleats, Note the nice back shap- sitied Ads. 723-3492 Husky O# Canada Ltd., six 1964, If cents a share; 1963, $742,000, 10 cents. Canadian British Aluminium 1064, $2,250,000; 1963, $1,060,085. $1,089.00, ing -- a long zipper and con- tinuous darts. Chocse nubby rayon blends, crepe, double-knit cotton or wool. Printed Pattern M170 is avail- able in Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, Size 16 dress requires SKIMMER re 54-inch fabric, vestee % yard, Send ONE DOLLAR for Print- ed Pattern M170 to The Osh- awa' Times, Oshawa, Ontar'o. Ontario residents add 3c sales tax. Please print plainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE. Announcing the premiere edi- Ny PRINTED PATTERN ~ tion of our couture pattern col- _ lection -- 57 of the world's most beautiful designer originals plus ~ 50c FREE COUPON to apply to any One Dollar pattern. Send 50c - now for Couturs Collection . ' Next Week -- Watch for a Prominent Designer Pattern by M4 \Alice Schweitzer.

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