STOCK MARKET | TORONTO 11 A.M. STOCKS The Canadian Pi By ress toronto Stock Exchange--March 29 Quotations in cents unless marked $, z~--Odd lot, xd--Ex-dividend, xr----Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is from previous board-lot closing sale, INDUSTRIALS 1 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 955 $12'4 12% 12% 100 415° 415 415 weld 100 $24% 244 QdVe me Va ao 1% 12% 9% 9% n 9 $29%e 29% 29% 6% 6% ws 1 $27 $20% $534 Stock Abitibi Ackind Ackind pr Alta Gas Alta Gas w Alg Cen Aigoma Alumini Analog pings | w 1000 Ang CP 4% 725 Ar 300 Arg 8 pr 50 Atlan Acc Atl r Bank Mont Bath PA Bell Phone Bicks +% ™ 20% 2 13% 7% -- Ve 204 -- Ye Brockville Burns Cal Pow 21 Can Bread 13% 5 +h 24Va 1 +h 1570 + Va % 50 24% 8) 15% 9% 46% 46% -- Va 440 440 15 1% 11% 62¥2 62142 --1% 7\'4 71% + Va 12% 12% 2% 2% 64 «64 WA Wa 4l Cc imp BkC xd 50 $714 C ind Gas 75 $12% cit 50 $26 CPR 1611 $64 Cdn Pet 250 $144 Cc util 220 $41 C ind Gas 720 $12% Cap Bidg Chemcell Chrysler Clairtone Col Cell Con Bidg pr Con M § Con Paper Con Gas B Corby B Coronation C Savings rts Crain RL Crown Tr Crush Int Cygnus A Dale-Ross Dist Seag --\% 19% 6% 10% 8% 43% AASy 150 $10% 300 $8% 825 $43% 555 $44% 10 $105%4 1 225 $21 300 500 100 oe #2 +2%% 16% 16% 16% 16Ve 20 220 "uu 300. 305 $13% 13% 13% $17% 17% 17%e-- Ve $67% 67% 67% $13% 13% 13e--% 750 750 750 $53% 53% 53% Hayes Sti Holt Ren Home A Home B Horne Pf HBC HB Ol G Hur Erie Husky Husky D w Husky B pr imp Life Imp Ol! 97Va 97% 390 390 390 $10% 10% 10%-- % Int Nickel Int Util Intpr Dis Inter $94 $32 350 $924 bid 2 9 1) Net, Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 390 390 390 +5 $12% 124 12% 9° 8 $13% 19% .134-- Ve 64 6+ Ve 120 Stock Int St P Inv Gro A Labatt yateed LOnt Cem Net Sales High Low a.m, Ch'ge 206 230 (230 600 262 261 28) 2000 62 th bt+Ia MINES 1000 28% 282 i2--- Va 100 625 +10 600 --2 Stock Triad Ol W Decaita Yen Can Accra Advocate Agnico Bowes' Hour Is Recalled about 30 years ago that Major|inal Amateur Hour, with Ted| Many of us had forgotten that) film ie} local radio program on New/legitimate tel York City's 'WHN, became a|the old Bowes radio show, Thursday night network pro-|day, the Mack show devoted its gram -- and promptly turned|time to an anniversary salute|the gong into a national rage. to the time - honored entertain- CBS's Sunday afternoon Orig-|ment form, Sun-|hopefuls whose berry je © tech their ambitions, r, the disappeared as the|"@dio debut By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -- It was the host's chair, is the|Major Bowes presided over ajcontestants whose show biz car- Bowes' Amateur Hour, just a/Mack in tne sorision nil of|gong that dispatched youngleers were nipped in the bud.| Mondéy, Mewh 29, 1965 90 There was also a record of the quality of the acts improved,|Four, one of whose members, Bits from elderly newsreel|/Frank Sinatra, showed us a few hapless|pastures. There were also rec- ert Merrill, merece a ca ye at yom THE OSHAWA TIMES, of The Hoboken|ords of others, including a child singer named Teresa Brewer went on to other|and a fine baritone called Rob- All Pitch A Am Moly 5300 Ang Rovyn , Ansii 1 1 +4 +1 Ss +5 $17% 17% 17%-- Ve 25 12% -- Ve} 26% 4 | 384% -- Vo Ne + Yel Wh + Ms! 164 16% | 42% 43Ye + Ve! non j 146 146 = 6 6 = 0 +N 10% -- Ve 9 +% W--k' 190 +10 81% + 4! Nor Phonexd 200 Ocean Cem 225 Ogilvie x55 Oshawa A 25 $38% Pac Pete 650 Pembina 540 Pow Corp 225 Price Bros 405 QN Gas 389 QN Gas pr 18 $146 QN Gas 59w 200 7 Reichhold 225 $30 «WO Revelstoke 510% 10% Robertson s9 OW Rolland A $s VW Romfieid 190 Royal Bank 8i4 Russel H Salada Sayvette Seven Arts Shell Can Silverwd A Simpsons Slater Steel Slat Aw St Pav Steel Can Steinbg A 300 100 100 190 581% $15 $13% 24) 100 1850 750 350 225 $142 lhe lhat+ Ve 195 $17% 17% 17% 100 $15 6 bi 418 $8) 27% 27am Va} 815 $14% 144 l4la-- Ve) 1150 915 910 910° --I5 180 $12% 12% 12%-- % $20 $31 30% 31 +% 160 $452 454 45% + Ve Suptest ord 225 $19% 19% Tex Packxd 100 $9%4 9% Tor-Dom Bk 225 $674 67 T Fin aA 515 $14% 14% Transair 400 255 255 Tr Can PL 341 $37 37 Trans-Mt 250 $20% Trans PPL 1475 $10% Turnbull Apr 100 $21% Un Carbide Un Gas Un Steel Un Acc rts Walk GW Weldwood West ind West Ind A Westcoast $6 $15" $16% Ss 15 | 13% 13% + Ye] 350 350 | 10% 21% 29 26%e 267 500 ns 23 0 6 60 325 $39% 394 394-- ve 225 $13 «13° «(13 | 800 160 160 160 +5 310 310 310 15% i" 16% 21% Westeei W Pacific Weston A Weston B West A wis 12% + Ve 28 544 Set 130 16 Zenith 45 375 430 «430 4) 57 57 440 415 | 62 8 | 0 | 00 295 «295 «295. $18%4 18% 18% 375 +15 --) -1 +30 +2 +1 +5 --\% Alminex Cdn Sup Oil | C Dragon Dome Pete Fargo . Gr Plains $13% 13 Midcon 00 52 52 Murphy NCO wis Pero Place Provo Gas 7483 260 Scurry Rain 2098 $25 23 23 23 $18% 18% 18% + % 295 25 «295 3 52 ---% +10 + +2 258 +2 24% +1 Faces Charge Of Propaganda HONG KONG (AP) -- A Chi- nese artist has been arrested On charges of sneaking anti- Communist propaganda into one of his paintings, the Hong Kong paper Sing Tao said Sun- day. Quoting a recent visitor to Peking, the paper said artist Li Tse-huo was ordered ar- rested by the public security ministry after officials took a second look at one of his pic- tures which had won wide ac- claim. The picture, Chase: I Pursue, portrayed a group of cheerful young men and women carrying harvested crops in from the fields. Hailed as outstanding, the picture ap- peared in color on the back titled You On closer inspection, how- ever, the picture was found to contain quite a different mess- age than that first acclaimed by the Communist heirarchy, the paper said. "A middle grade functionary of the ministry of public secur- ity in Peking discovered in the heaps of weeds and stems, strokes that could be construed to resemble Chinese characters which read: "*Kill Communist party. Long live Chiang Kai-shek', "The functionary also de- tected two blotches of paint which looked like the corpses of Mao Tse-tung and Lenin." Sing Tao said one story cir- culating in Peking is that Li's cover of the propaganda maga- zine China Youth. girl friend betrayed him to the} 3rd. Canadian Unit Arrives In Cyprus By PETER BUCKLEY NICOSIA. (CP) -- The third batch of Canadian troops to see duty in Cyprus has begun to take over in most of the poten- tial trouble spots scattered over the northern part of the Medi- terranean island. An advance party of 150 men arrived in Nicosia at week's end' and immediately began scattering into the Kyrenia Mountains, 15 miles north of here, and along the adjacent » northern coast to pick up du- ties as peace-keepers, media- tors and administrators with the United Nations force in Cy- prus. R From now until April 10, tur- bine - propeller - driven RCAF Yukon aircraft will be arriving at the rate of one every two days with as many as 125 men each until all 700 men of the Ist Battalion Queen's Own Rifles of Canada have been transported here from Victoria along with 95 members of the reconnaissance squadron of the Royal Canadian Dragoons from Camp Gagetown, N.B. The sare aircraft will carry back to Canada men who have ' been doing the peace - keeping duties here for the last six months -- members of the Ist Battalion, Canadian Guards from Picton, Ont., and of Lord Strathcona's Horse (Royal Canadians) from Calgary. ROTAT HQ STAFF At the same time 130 mem-jerupted before 'Christmas, 1963,| confrontation," bers of the Canadian contingent headquarters staff from various {functionary. : regiments and military services are being rotated. And later in April, replacements will arrive for 175 men who-make up the headquarters staff for the Nico- sia zone--men who handle ad- ministrative duties for the UN personnel in the widespread areas covered by the various UN forces around this capital. By the end of April, the en- tire 1,100-man Canadian force will have been changed, One of the first men rotated was Col, William Watson of Ot- tawa, commander of the Cana- dian contingent in Cyprus. His rplacement, Col. Henri Tellier of Montreal and Quebec, as- sumed command last Wednes- day and saw Watson off on a Yukon that left Friday for Can- ada. The advance party which ar- rived Thursday and Friday com- prised company commanders and other officers. and men from the Canadian Guards and Dragoons under Lt.-Col. C. L. Kirby and Maj. I. J. Cassel- man, respectively. There were also a few army specialists in such fields as radio, medicine and other support capacities. BLOODY STRIFE The current rotation comes slightly more than a year after the first Canadians landed 'by air and sea as the first mem- bers of the UN force recruited from a half - dozen countries in and effort to end the bloody civil strife between the Greek- and Turkish - -Cypriots which jand threatened not only to en- jgulf the entire island but also| | Deer Horn Cc Cc Callinan C Halli C Mogul C Morrison Con Negus C Rambler Conwest Cop Corp Craigmt Croinor Daering D'Aragon 5 7 65 14 $26 530 305 $394 10 195 D'Eldona Denison Dicknsn Discovery Dome Duvan East Mal East Sull 640 «625 F Mar 475 475 Fracoeur 13% 13 Gaitwin 5 5 Genex ee ee Giant YK $15% 15% 15% - Glacier 2000 +=+15 5 5 Glenn Exp 17000 Gortdrum 5600 Grendroy 5000 1000 Gulf L Hastings 1000 400 Hollinger. 105 $31% 31% 31% Hud Bay 50 $754 75' 752 trish Cop : , Se SAO d 199 «(199 Iron Bay 375 «(375 Iso Joliet 382 38a 38/2 Jonsmith 6% M % Jovtel 00 120 «120 «+120 K Anacon 00 390 «385 6385 Dufauit $15 14% 15 La Luz 500 $124 12% 12\4 Leitch 440 440 «(440 Lorado 166 «(165 Madsen 215 210 Marchant 197 «(197 Marcon Matech Mattgmi Maybrun McAdem McWat Midrim Muilti-M Nat Expl New Cal N Goldvue 9% 3 10 190 13 ibd ae 2 = Brocua-- + SS 9444444424 wo 335 335 «335 19%, 194 194 10 9 7) v7 16% l6a-- ¥ Norlartic Norlex Normetal Norpax Northcat Northgte Obaska Opemiska Paramaq Pato Pax Int Pce Expl Placre 23 23 23 $272. 27a 27% Preston 760 760 760 18 i$ 8 2% 12 2 4 W NA We Wat a) $l4ve 14a l4e+ Ve 67 67 67 720 720 «720 25 Wa 136 170 W +3 +30 Satellite Sheep Cr Sherritt Silverfield Silvmaq Sil Miller Sil Stand Stanrck Steep R Sullivan Teck Corp West Mines Willroy Winch Zulapa 300 162 162 1000 9 9 9 = 1500 34 32a Wa Va Volume to 11 @.m. 1,212,000, | FOREIGN TRADING 100 $13 3 190 874 % ""4+% 100 420 420 420 +5 200 325 325 325 +15 Abitibi Bololo Agnico Siscoe 3 --% bring about an armed clash be- tween Greece and Turkey, al- lies in NATO, The first troops -- members | of Quebec's' Royal 22nd Regi- ment and Gagetown's Dragoons --set the pattern of preventing a fullscale conflict, patiently ne- gotiating local difficulties and attempting to establish an at- mosphere of normalcy which has been followed by their replace. ments, the Canadian Guards and Lord Strathcona's Horse As were their predecessors the Queen's Own and the Dra goons are posted here for up to) six months. The length of the stay depends on whether the UN mandate in Cyprus is re newed as it must be every three months. 2 | Although open clashes be-| tween Greek- and Turkish-Cy-| priot armed camps have been rare in recent months, the pos-/ sibility of trouble on a major scale is never far away. The new Canadian troops on duty here will require the same large quantities of patience, firmness and understanding as their pre- decessors to deal with the situa- tion successfully. A recent .report of UN Sec-! retary - General U Thant to the UN General Assembly summed) up. the quandary facing the UN on Cyprus in a single, dry sen-) tence, He said: "Even though there is no shooting, the situation is essen-| tially one of hostile military In between the hostile forces} will be the Canadians, | EATON'S says: Look Your Best For Easter "Spring Is A Blouse That Is Soft and Sweet" Blouses take an ultra feminine swing this Spring ... Soft textures and subtle tones are in! 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