LEE RPE EGO AO BE EL OTT HE EGS De hee ee ee ee eee ee ee NCAT EG CHIP CY . SOV Gao re FOREET SY PF ORGY EEG HET dedtakcedbededs SES REE Eee FH 6 A A ea be TODAY TORONTO 10:40 A.M. STOCKS SE ag by from previ 10:40 Net Stock Sales High Low a.m, Ch'ge Acad Uran Acme Gas iff way i if ai a 3 32 gig g*35 Sherritt Sigma Si) Eureka Yukon ¢ Zenmac Ps obésburst-2 sbSs8zest=2 +1 -- Poole Net change board-iot closing sale. 1000 1000 3000 aa pA 440 640 10 "Me We 10% 00 275 «275 «275 1000 12%a 12% 1% % 25600 305 + 11000 17000 80 «679 200 190 190 190 Zz a 642 ae 4¥a Kj ee 350 350 23 35 (135 ws "a a 20 o #9 325 320 3: 1544 15% 95 195 Wee 18 2 «(18% 2 $13% 13% Pe m5 "w oY ws % 100 42 380 5% $20 100 $67% 67% 67% + % 500 7 7 7 100 240 240 +14 210 "" 8% a 32 32 sho seo 580 + 8 § gease8s a FS g bEett sti ty ¢ 44 SaecB=2 88s Bs28 8 3833 82.823 $56. 290 reen Prt 500 34 34 34 +2 Hard Rock 1020 10% Wie 0W%--% Hasth 900 163 «163 7% 19% 7 21 131 2% is us 300 338 2 0 & 675 F -- ae s = FS = s > anus 8 syst S32 131% '1000 % wi 1% 1 11 ye! st sm 2% 500 $97%e 97% 4 112 Hah 14% 4 1% Vv 1 4000 32 400 440 120 305 7% 520 21 bd J 261 700 (53 300 100 «100 1000 272 2% vn iN ul 13% 13% 4 45 6" i 440 OILS, GAS Aiminex Fargo Gr Pains we 415 415 415 +5) 5000 232 3 100 270 270 1000 (27 $12% 12% 5 25 250 430 260 «260 id $23% 23 2 $114 10% 11% + "ence ean be achieved by 40 875 was az a 250 «(250 425 430 ciL Cc Marconi C Petrofin Caribben | oe ir Codville A Columbia Cominco Con P. Cons Gs Con Gas A Cosmos - Crain RL Crestbrk Crush intl ig 4a ct, " 3 P 0 25 ¥ 3% WS --2 Bw mh Wat | 3 SHG Va is we +% "a +2 ---Ss 1% -- Va oo +2 Intpr Steel inv Group inv Grp A yan Sti lerson Tat 9% + Jeffersn w a --% "I +1 gd +1% ~~" 12 +% +8 +t4++ +1441 Pac Pete w Pembine 144444] FeV ee~-es wes-- -g-g" Royal Bnk Royalite p Russell H = + t+ ~> ee Races +1+ se 134-- Ve Na+ ve ee +1 -1 +5 22%4 + Ve "hey ++" a wt "teu ~~ Youers 1M _ } tit, +5 Sales to 1 Fo! +6 -3 Siscoe 1 4) Unt Keno .. 25 #0 810 + ag hell inv w 1 se ie 200 455 455 3 = 3 | i++ es ss¢ = z gésubs seseedys fale sees &y3¢ o83 es ry o gee + ES $8 % en * FE 3= - = = : = ~ = 99a Wia-- Va 1% i ate ages Sy-3 45 1% Wat M% i 2844 + 19% aoe 180 , " = guage Ve 80 9 S16% 16% 16% + $264 364 36% * % $31 % 1 Seisbe= ENE Ese 10 6 63 6 +2 ant $132 rid i" 23 + ae + ah + Ve 10% + Ve 57 200 Hy a BA oe pe '" * $a EA 400 10% 20 = ti, * bed "4 1% 4 the 4 Bs + Ys) 52 4 ihe +% Ve 20% + Ve 792 a%+ % 4 + * a 4 $5544 $52 HH $139 $20% '| interest and skills of some of = ¥:| graduated with a degree in min- BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT By TOM CARNEY VANCO! R (CP)--A small but significant trek is on--a trek which is a little brain drain of its own. It's a brain drain to, not from, "| British Columbia, Canada's mountainous and most western province which is attracting the | the woru's most mintag Ten. Yu Shing Chit, 33, of Western Mines Ltd., is one example. He ing engineering from the Uni- | versity of Peking in 1961 anda came to B.C. only_a year age. And there are many others) who now call B.C. their home,| | including: ' British Columbia Lures. Skilled Mining Engineers. Professor Charles Emery, a skilled researcher and adminis- trator who left his position at Queens University in 1965 to head the new department of mining engineering at the Uni- ae 4 of B.C. in McLoughlin, trained in Gret Britain as a mining engi- neer, came to Canada 10 years a-c and new warke far an ex o Shs ploration a and development com- pany in B.C.'s Okanagan Val- ley. Russ Vogan, a young geologist who graguaicu iid ucsus University in 1962 and spent four years searching for petroleum under the Alberta prairie be- fore joining Brenda Mines Ltd. KITCHENER (CP) -- Magis- +% %| trate J. R. H, Kirkpatrick Wed- 9% '+ | 40 0 916% 16% 10% 800 "+1 130 ain Iie 1a + 200 125 125. 125 ae $7 3% A 9 +% 70 $41" dis i" 200 27% 27% 10% 10% 10% MS $4 21% 24 +% 500 185 its 8 630 $227% 227% 2 $3 "A + * $14. 4 $164 16% len + %| 30 330 330 +5 376% $l6% 1 $25¥2 $2 «(12 $214 $10) = 10 $13% $30% $23 $104 a0 200 S74 9% so) 10 $13 (12% 13 Pig ds pil 00 2 a 'ae i. ' an 2 re % 64% 4% + a0 $224 224 22a 200 $i3¥e 134 13% 600 20% + Ve 0% 22% 's Ove 10ve+ % 310 310. +0 %+ Ve 10 +% +% 0 +% + 5 |of a point with the Government 300 2125 $20% 19 100 305 305 $3 827% 2B + z10 $15) 14% 15 300 $1014 ben 0% Va 20% ve $20% 20 20 354% bee 54% + on 1010 $34 33% 33% + 4 440 $104 Ye 10% 100 135 135 «(135 500 445 445 445 1650 $28 pit 2. + %) 125 $46% rae Oo HO 710 710 10 260 $16 Se 15% 109 270 270 270 +20 25 $994 391% 225 921% 2174 2% 00 $1034 10% 10% + 1% Sot 400." 400" 400." +20 275 $19% 192 19% + % 220 $16% 16% 16% 2500 300 300 300 1058 $27 26% 2684 + 100 $23% 23% Wie+ % 100 390 390 390 +5 60 $16 «166 130 $17% Pig Pld 730 700 160 $23% a He T am.: n. - 908,000. 1230 +25 REIGN TRADING 260 " fa 2" a va 1000 1000 rt rs 700 210 210 100 525 525 330 100 330 100 560 560 + Www H+ Va "4 +1 + a 440 x» By THE Algoma common 8 Nov. 10. | 414 +2 143 --3 ---5 by Lid., us +9 \tified at the hearing were Ve- + $.| July 5, 1988, closed at 98% bid jand 98% asked. |per cent for 91-day bills and 5.2 nesday adjourned the prelimin-| "'ary hearing of Anton Wallit-| schek, 39, and his wife, Ve-| Baden Building Supplies, test | the training received by his Ca- 2¢°| ronica, 37, and Joseph Wallits-| 9 | chek, 44, and his wife, Emma,) 43, to Oct, 19. The brothers and their wives were charged with conspiracy to defraud creditors after Wallits- chek Brothers Construction Ltd. was declared bankrupt Fe». 28, Among the witnesses who tes- BOND MARKET TORONTO (CP)--The Canad- jan bond market closed gener- ally off % to % of a point in jlight trading Wednesday. |» Short - term Government of Canada bonds were unchanged with the 4%%4-per-cent Oct. 1967, issue closing at $98.78 bid jand $98.83 asked. Long-term Canada and pro- vincial issues were off % to 4 of Canada 414-per-cent Sept, 1, 1983, issue quoted at 86% bid and 86% asked. In provincials, the Ontario Hydro 6-per-cent Day-to-day money traded at | 4% per cent, Treasury bills closed at 5.08| for 182-day bills. PRODUCE TORONTO (CP) --. Wholesale} to retail carton eggs average weighted prices quoted by the department of agriculture as of Wednesday: A lange 66.7; A medium 63.2; A small 46.7. | Eggs: Wholesale price to} country stations fibre cases quoted by the Toronto Board of Trade from wholesale egg deal- ers: extra-large 61-62; large 59- 60; medium 54-56; small 39-40;| |B 42-45; C 35-37, Butter prices: Agricultural stabilization board tenderable carlots: buying 40 score 59; | DIVIDENDS CANADIAN PRESS Central Railway,| cents, Dec. 1, record Falconbridge Nickel Mines 75 cents, extra 50 cents,| Noy. 30, record Nov. 4. "Northern and Central Gas Co. | | Ltd., second ee series A, 2614) | cents, Nov. 1, record Oct. 19. 3 270 --3) 12% + Va} 215 + z +? + 5 | Gregoire, 260 atist Ralli 7 2 Z z | Thursday ce can SEES PEACEFUL SPLIT MONTREAL (CP -- Gilles} leader of the separ- ement National, said he believes independ- Que ue BCMCVe 200 -" pod * +10 | bec without violence, Mr. Greg: Place @ 1 Prairie Oll Provo Gas W Decelie INDUSTRIALS Abitibi Atl Sugar Auto Elec Bahama Bank Mil Bank N $ Bartaco Bell Phne Bow Valy Brazilian Brdg Tnk p BA Oil BC Frest p BC Sugar C Ind Gas S08 SN TO Mi C ind Ges p 225 S10" 10% 104-- % & 143 400 2010 560 S31%e 31%e 3% 215 $70 90 090 100 $2525 mM s+ +3 oire told a group of University} of Montreal students that "'the| 265 265, $10% 10 ae 10% + ¥4| constitutional laws of this prov- 240 a 290 $10 % $16 $24 1% mu 590 $27% ol $35% $20%e 201 20 $19% $10% 19% Se 9% $30 5% " 9 $S3'2 53 $6214 61% 0% W% 00 160 «(160 5 946% 46% 50 $54 $84 $144 14% 4a % 2 ad a iu 2) a bd $21% 21% $\t% 1% 20 817% 17% 3 30 7 O71 30 jince are such that separation |is possible without violence. buying 39 score 58; selling 59. SPREAD THROUGH SPACE | Comets are dirty snowballs--| space dust fused in pieces of water, ammonia and methane| ice. Brothers, Wives Charged - With Fraud Conspiracy 1,/'The Ontario Flue - Cured To- crease of more than five cents joint meeting with representa- tives of six of seven companies that -buy and process Ont rio That yy: 65.9 cents a pound. | the 1966 crop auctions and a lyear ended July 31: ronica's brother, Conrad Schlot- last year to search for molyb-| denum and copper near Pentic- ton, Jack Chu, who graduated from the University of Hong Kong be- fore coming to B.C. and finding a job as a mechanical engineer with Western Mines Eid, These are only a few. NEED SPECIALISTS There is a great need ior more such specialists in the B.C, mining industry, says Thomas Elliott, manager of the B.C. and -Yukon Chamber of Mines. As chamber manager, he re- ceives many queries from around the world from geophys- icists, geochemists, engineers and others interested in coming to B.C. It was Elliott who placed Yu | Shing Chit with Western Mines, | in Strathcona Park, where he} has earned a high reputation for} his professional skill. | For the convenience of his Ca- nadian colleagues Yu has Angli- cized his name to "John Yu." ter, 39, and his wife, Helen of Kitchener. Mr. Schlotter, who operates fied Anton still owes him $4,700; for work he did on two houses in Kitchener. He said Veronica owes him $7,000 she borrowed from him. He said Anton had paid him $2,000 of the money owing for his work and that he had signed receipts which said Anton had paid the balance. He. said this is a normal business practice so that mortgages can be obtained. Tobacco Board Sees Price Hike TILLSONBURG, Ont. (CP)-- bacco Growers Marketing Board told buyers Wednesday it expects prices for the 1966 crop to reflect a production cost in- a pound. Board Chairman Semay De De- meyere of Tillsonburg, said t board presented this view Boy a tobacco. Last year's crop sold for an The chairman said both sides | agreed to a Nov. 10 opening of market recess for the Christ- mas-New Year's holidays be- ginning Dec. 21. The Market would re-open Jan. 3. NET EARNINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Loblaw Groceterias Co., year ended May 28: 1966,. $16,123,702; 1965, $16,010,468. Loblaw Companies Lid., year ended May 28: 1966, $14,605,298; 1965, $14,477,835. Reitman's (Canada) Lid., six months ended July 31: 1966, $360,372, 38.5 cents a share; 1965, $33,776, 36 cents. Hayes Steel Products Litd.,| 1966, $11 551,587; 1965, $1,309,717. Placer Development Ltd.,| year ended April 25: 1966, $5,-/ 994,300, $1.15 a share; 1965, $4,- |843,900, 93 cents. Ea 'Two for dinner N© " +3 it a) +2 an + J Day! celebrate International Credit Union 6 OSHAWA CENTRAL We + 4! : f Sie-- Vo 9 +71} 534+ % 61% 160 4% +) W4+ % + Ve + %| j STU | 7 ee | a" o+t ry} n =1 Mat Va a+ wl a+ a CREDIT UNION OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 723-4945 DY GROUP SUITE 2096 WELLAND WINERY Limit Serve: ihe!" 10, WINONA, ONTARIO {Sen wactans Wintny tiaite "ROSE edn no ve: tied e D, B/INONA," ONTARIO € Take home a tonight. NX Bh. complement Mine manager Bruce Lang says the technical training Yu received in China is equal to nadian counterparts. "I like Canada very much," Yu said in an interview." B.C, has much opportunity for me and everybody else." What Yu says about the op- portunity of B.C. is echoed by other men throughout the prov- ince. Vogan of Brenda said: "I -- B.C. nas fantastic poten- tial." LIKES POSITION McLoughlin, who works for Brenmac Mines Ltd, can't ima- INe | estry study unit set up by Lands TORONTO (CP) -- The Tor- onto stock market scored its biggest daily gain in more than a year Wednesday as investors followed a surging New York market, The industrial-index, a yard- stick of how key stocks move, jumped 1.64 points to 139.68. On Tuesday it rose 1.06. The best gains were recorded issues also traded on the w York and American ex- changes. They included Interna- tional Nickel Co. of Canada, up $2.13 to $83; Aluminium Litd., $1.38 to $26.88 and Massey- Fer: guson Ltd., $1.13 to $2863, Last week the market had dropped fo its lowest level since December, 1963. . Stocks Show Gains In Market Surge ict THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, October 13, 1966 21 NEW YORK (AP)--The stock market roared ahead Wednes- The Dow Jones' average ,of Pi. a 30 incustrial stocks closed up| of he ayeruge --. 3. 54 points at 778.17, the big- York Stock Stock 'ach gest one-day advance since} $1.11. big 2 Nov. 26, 1963, when it gained) erage 32.03 points 'in its" recovery! points ° Seo.4. lan after President Kennedy's ap: ase sane d- 3 1965, when sassination, .5 poiffts, se cited Press. a. A day to its pre ger single day's! gain in almost three years. Some Wall Streeters said the surge in the final ; was linked to are no present indications eco- nomic controls will be needed to support the Viet Nam war. The market picked up from a slow start and shot ahead near the close. Prices climbed for many stocks including blue chips and the high-flying glamor issues that had taken a beating re- cently. Urged In Study TORONTO (CP) -- <[Cicient; planning. and management of Ontario's timber industry could lead to an increase of more than twice the present produc- tion by the year 2,000, a report! to the minister of lands and for- | ests says. The preliminary report re-| leased Wednesday by the for- jand Forests Minister Kelso) Roberts in 1964, says such ex-| pansion should generate 150,000 jobs and $700,000,000 in salaries and wages by the end of the century. The report was prepared by| J. A. Brodie, former chief of! the department's timber branch, as director, and Gordon Cosens, replaced for health reasons last January by Donald W. Milne, a lumberman and consultant. The report says timber de- mands are shifting to Russia and Canada as supplies in Eur- ope are used up, but warns that the future expansion of Ontar- io's forest industries is fav from Wood indusiry Planning Report It says forest product indust- ries now are using about one- third of the over-all allowable cut in the province, and about one-half of the allowable cut of coniferous timber. CITES TASK "The task before us is to or-| ganize and administer the tim-| ber resources of the province) so that the opportunities lying before us--resources and mark- ets--are not unnecessarily sac-| Pificed. | CALL OR SEE DIXON'S, Oil FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 certain. gine a better position than in} the B.C. industry. All these men agree that there| is a critical need for more, highly trained personnel in the B.C. mining industry. The University of B.C., Queens and Laval, in a shared program, have 150 students who will be- come future mining engineers. Many more will be needed, Prof. Emery said in an inter- view recently. Much of the solution lies in greater co - operation between the universities and industry and government, he said, More post-graduate work in Canada is needed, work that will require} more research funds and stu-| dent subsidies. The men in the field acknowl-| edge the fact that an acute shortage of trained mining men exists at the top level, but some disagree with a purely academic solution. "We've had experience with men who are academically well 12> 48% COMPLETE WIT 65 STYLES, SHAPES. COLORS TO SHAPES AND Bo ar Fad) p's) Less yes] NATIONAL BRANDS We fill oll PSI, Oculist ond Std. Gateonattite Pinerisdiong ne --. low prices, KING 4: q (cat 17 Bond St. East 2nd Floor HOURS: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m, Daily Closed Wed, All Dey Phone 728-1261 New York, qualified who, no matter how sek many books on mining they've written, haven't been able to tell|# i the field,' one~ said. Meanwhile, as more and more |jaag mén are attracted here, the B.C. mining industry is continu- ing to get the benefit of the training and experience gath- ered in other Parts « of the world, {| @EwWELLERS | | | Your Silver Deserves the Finest Care Keep your treasures clean and beautiful +. quickly, easily, safely. Hagerty Silver foam 1,00, 1,98, 3.95 sizes; Tarnish Preventive, 4.98, 2.98 and 4.95 Silver Duster, . x. aB QSHAWA_SHOPPING CENTRE «Oy New York is the Board Room of Big Business ... the Big League in Sports . . . the Big Time In Show Biz... the Big Bargain in Shopping .. . The Big Town of the World -- and it's just a /ittle way from where you live by Air Canada. Before you go, drop in to see your Travel Agent. . He'll suggest one of our convenient flights to New York . sand) explain our special discount fares for family travel. Or write to us in Toronto at 130 Bloor Street West Air Canada has up to 7 flights daily to New York from Toronto One-Way Economy: $2 & See your Travel Agent for further details or callus at 925-2311 AIR CANADA @&) FOR RESERVATIONS AND TRAVEL INFORMATION CALL DONALD TRAVEL SERVICE OSHAWA----WHITBY--BROOKLIN 14 BROCK ST. S., WHITBY, PHONE 668-8867 CALL FOR COMPLETE TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE 25 KING ST. E. 7 OSHAWA PHONE 723-71 -- eee ~