Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Nov 1966, p. 15

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-- + menrmemse oso mate i a NR a, A A A? RS 4 il OE a Jn A a 9 ---- STOCK REPOR "dt |_ i '@ Pen |] Fb Benes Bes en aa wll ta sw sw = -- St} Htliesail-t | St ale BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT petitors on the fruit export market as the United States, New Zealand, France and Italy. All these countries, says the provincial government's Nova Scotia newsletter, are increas- ing apple production by setting out new orchards, employing new methods of growth and are becoming more and more ag- gressive competitors, The Annapolis Valley indus- try now is bouncing out of the anesthesia of years of low grade orchard upkeep with crash pro- grams of pianting new tices combined with new spraying, cultivating and pruning tech- niques, DESTROY TREES In many cases, trees eradi- cated were those that had been Technique Seen Aid To Business This approach was critized in the report of the Ontario Attor- ney-general's committee on se- curities legislation in March, 1965, for being open to dangers of market manipulation, false rumors and . artificial excite-| ment, Mr. Deacon said, however, that the exchange feels its re- vised program will meet the major criticisms and said that if further changes are needed to protect the investing public they'll be made. FORESEEN IN REPORT This approach of continuing primary. distribution while try- ing to control it was foreseen in the report of the second gov- ernment inquiry, the royal com- mission on Windfall Oils and Mines Ltd., made public a year ago. In the report, Mr. Justice Ar- thur Kelly wrote that even if all abuses in primary distribu- tion could be eliminated by ap- propriate regulations, "the ba- sic objection would still exist: Primary distribution of securi- ties has no place on an -ex- change the purpose of which is to provide, on a very wide basis, a market for an investor to buy from, or sell to, another inves- tor securities which have al- ready entered into the market." Elsewhere on the business scene, shareholders of Consoli- dated Paper Corp. approved a proposal to merge with Bath- urst Paper Ltd., on a share-and- warrant-exchange basis. eight or 10--to Montreal, to De- troit, to Florida points, even to Nassau in The Bahamas. Next week it will take a party of newspaper men to Vancouver for the Grey Cup. The company operates 20 small planes, most of them trainers, two-place jobs. The big ones --32-passenger DC-3s and 10-passenger Beechcrafts-- fly out of Malton Airport, 17 miles west of Toronto. Grounded Air Canada pilots, laid off without pay, are seek- ing private charter flights to tide them over what may be a long strike. IF YOU ARE NOW TAKING A LAXATIVE ONCE, TWICE or THREE TIMES A WEEK os THEN YOU SHOULD BUY DR TODAY! the Laxative Tablet with the GENTLE DIFFERENCE Take geniie-acting $8 ... Nature's Remedy! There is no letdown, no table after-feeling. NR is an all-vegetable laxative. For over 70 years, Nt has been giving folks 10:40 AM. STOCKS - 10:40 Ne? TOROS und br ce Stock Sales High Low a.m, Ch'ge Toronte Stock Exchange--Nov. 2 | French Pt 200 450 440 450 +15 in. cents uniess marked $.| Gr Plains 200 811% 11% 11% -- 14 lot, xd--Ex-div ly KtoeBX«| Gt COlinds 260 945 925 945 +15 ights, xw--€&x-warrants. Net change is} int Hellum 1300 350 345 345 --~ 5 trom previous board-lot closing sale, on ay Wa Py us 4 ae is Numac 2000 195 195 195 --2 MINES ee a eS a 10:40 Net ro rd Place @ 1500 233 230 233 +1 died, fale, Mien Low nam NR) prove Gm same os as avo +3 | HALIFAX (CP) -- Nova Acme Gas anger + ; Am Moly 3000 $0 50 50 scurry Rn "490 $206 19% 19% -- %|Scotia's apple industry ts Ang Ruyn be in 3 iy P eon 19000 Mi Af Pa) ad: embarked. on a program of ma- Area ; rig Triad = rooy" 2100065.) dS +3. Union Ol 225 a0 30% om [JOT Surgery designed to excise Armore 500 19 618 19 = Yel U Canto ©4445 955 950 350 and replace half the province's Sen. a ae ae W Decaite 1900 345 340 345 more than 500,000 bearing trees ig Nama 1000 30 30 30.48 IND by 1968, bg Lag Joo 3" a" ach USTRIALS If the incision seems inor- Abitibt ms $10 10 10 Acklands 100 475 475 475 dinately quick and deep to the Pe gle ale le Me outside view, commercial grow- Al en Ve v yy io 00 475 475475 rlers and processors concentrated Alta Gos 7 ge ai Five Fe jin the 100-mile-long Annapolis en i ' : Aigoma St S10" s23te 2314 24+ %|Valley fruit belt are quick to Alcan 4484 $282 27% 277% ---~ %| point out that it is therapy long aaeen ie 10 $27 2404 RAM Mh ete Alumin 2 125 $40% 40% 5 ade Arps 260° yoo $46 «46 «6©466«6+1| «Although amputation may Asbestos 150 $19 19 19% hurt momentarily, eradication Atl Sugar 2150 $94 %% %% is ; i ieti of | Atl Sug A $202 20% 20% }of uncommercial _ varieties | Senta e sk) tae eee v8 5 4 {apples and replacement with Vals : ee oe Bek NS 50 $62 Sv gi'a improved, quality fruit is sim- Bell hin a 45% ty ps |ply a matter of keeping in step i] 4241 54 - Ma St oi ate 130k iu du OF ahead of such Canadian com- Calgary P 250 $2148 21% * | Lag A e 2. Can Cem 22 $34' 34a 34le | re 10 3a" aa Can Cem p 22 $222 2a 2 ga 200 a7 97 a + t| Can tron 100 $177 177% IIa + tp ide 5000 171416 «Wa + | © Packrs 8 50 $71%4 71% mpi ota Se wo eo Perm 13000 $10, 1010, -- M4 ast Mal 1000-145 1454S pen, Bie eee ee gee ast Sull_ 100 650 650 450 + | E SAMI TE ove 200 2014 + Ye Orenede 1000 7% 28 7 Dank 130 $97. 58% 58% Prncoeur 4000 121212 + W)C IP aS Tio site ite 1188 Rrobex MSS 30 SMS En OM ND Stas tate 1m -- Yo Giant Ye 116 815 815 B15 aun oe Golarim ee 8 OS yal & Petrotin 100 siom 0m. 10% ait hae a Val ¥ Grandroy 1250 24 24 2 + es I ag By KEN SM TH Gronisie 300 813 s19 815 Chemeell 2100 713.013) «19 |Canadian Press Editor jo eat in wn Chrysler 330 $344 34-34 --%| The Toronto Stock Exchange Hastings 300 177 W777? + 4) Columbi p 200 $2 20-20 Liss k way = 200024 4A ML Coin 225 $33 32% 32%-- widid recently to have its cake Hour eay 378 $6714. 676 Bue | Compute 25 $v 612 62 | land eat it too. Int Bibis T 8700 119 111 112 --3 | Con Paper 1130 $384 Mts MM -- 4! Despite strong recommenda: | iain Ang "too y y MH 2 forey sy 150. $2121 2 tions recently from two govern-| - \ ry pe aes | Jaye-Exp 7000 20 20 2 +1 | Crain RL 25 $30 30 90 + 4 ment inquiries to eliminate sell- tenes woo ie ie e+ Eyonus A100 415-415 415 --§ ling a speculative company's eeey 210 70 «70 670 Distl soap Bt) bs ag ig --ft|treasury shares through the fa- err Add = 1630 fe ae BD pridge. 215 $17 17% 17% cilities of the exchange, its di- Kid Coper Mo ay as 7 -+2| D Electro. 225 side ide 1a 1 (rectors decided to continue the Kirk Twne 1000 13 13.13 Bolenee ES ota aia oe practice -- under much more Ges yn seo vi 2) 21 --1 | Dom Store 180 $18% 1s i yy (Stringent controls. | Leitch 1200 480 475 489 5 | Dormer 778 St ois wee | Exchange Chairman John! Menok Ms «00 be ar " --1] Emo tite 0 sie ee " Deacon said the technique, Martin $00 35 35 35 caren crs] sieve 202 $42 known as primary distribution, Poo al abe Cae 1. Fleet Mig 4% & © +1 /is. an important vehicle for ru ' ' Me Adam 4600 45e 45 45 12! GMC ts He 78 78 small companies to raise money meine: oR Hard Crp A 120 $33%4 334 33% tor development programs. Metal Min 300.120 120 120 ' oy i Pe ee ts Without it, he said, the com- oes, a || Horne Pit 1050 240 240 240 panies would have to go "into Mult-MI 1650 105 102 105 lett aa Sain ae un the jungle of the unlisted mar- Nealon agers ag hid ae ee a a ket" where they--and investors N"ticocs "100. 245 remy inp Oil 235 $54%8 54% 54% + Ve|--would be more liable to be elmer Geary, Se 310. -ti| imp toh ee Si ae a hooked by unscrupulous promo- N -Kelore $00 10 10 10 +1%| Ind Accept 285 $2 a Ma A t Newlund 100 17 «06 OW 1 Ind Wire 210 4\s 415 415 ers. } N Mylama 1500 20 20 20. +114) Ingersoll 100 $10 10. 10 ie 8 TM, 2B MS 24 IMANDLE SHARE 2000 25 = ; ick Rim 2200 1% Th 11% ' ae poi ay a mA To try. to answer criticisms jorbeau 1200 83 8 83 Int Nicke Pinay npr 1 § primary distribution, the ex- gtd 74 z Lo 4 * Int Unt pr oH tn 2% 27% }change will require that these North Exp 70 35 35 a --2| Imtpr Ploe 110 $80%% 80M O0la -- "\treasury shares be handled in Northgat 650 455 480 450 --10 | Infpr Steel 725 $5 5 4 - wlone of two ways: N Rank 2600 27% 27 «27 -- | Inv Grp A yond rr Mal as Maj tha pebli tside Ybaska 1000 8 8 an Ind ee ae a --Sold to the public ou Qpemaka = --«-275 B10 10 0M Scher C1000 395 395. 395 regular trading hours at a prenen 30 2 MM 4 DA 0 460. 460 fixed price: patho oT a sbatt 25 $17% 17% 17M seme Mian aremeg $000 10 10 et com 399 380380380 Sold through the exchange re, SS Ge a a) tere" SE ot ot a -- 5 | Sat with, a ceiling' on the p 14 15% | " i sed on the prev' preston io 919% 13% 13%+ Ve, Lob Co A 105 sila Bye Bt rind : adi P Probe M ooo 16 4 w= Lob Co B 100 $8%4 8% 8\a | ays trading, urdex mo 8 8 8 *| ie yg = berg ng ra | At present, the treasury ° Y sa gy 00 wm mw | Loeb M 770 $104 10Ve 10%-- Ve|Shares are bought by an under- 0 A 323% 23% 2 -- Wo jel reo se we 34 _ (Writer who sells them to the y Ri Pf was " v7 we Mass-Fer 1213: $21% 21% 214 -- | public at whatever price the Roman 1070 $14% 14% 144 -- Ve Montex 1000 320 315 320 + § |market will bear. Ryanor 2500 «11 nN vv Wal Montex pr $00 $10 Ae 10, : inceahtniiiiniell a atellite 100 22M re 200 $864 85% B6\4 +1% ite! ate fe fe ~°| Meal" sah ian we au Nofe Ting Bi i Eureka 26 110 110 110 4 '-- B tt y port 4| Nor Cl G. 550 $124 122 12% "ig MM Ie a i T4| Nor cioe 3 $25\4 25Va 28a -- Va u onvl e s In Ir "ane a jae in ray Belvie™ ie 00 shane yaa sa + . . marca ae Does Brisk B N Oshawa A 24 $2444 24% 24% bed cont aa ae | Gana A ae ee ae ee. OCS DTISK Dusiness NOW Texore 200 18 COPD | Pac Pete 1700 $10% 104 10\4-- 4 i we si : Tombiit i fait ss 4] Sd pony ee ae is a -0 | BUTTONVILLE, Ont. (CP)-- ~ A le sag x0 " 0 (10 + %| Price Com 820 $12% 12% 12%) | Business is brisk at h egion Trin Chib 2000 9% 9% 9% QN Gas 100 $10% 10% ee ville's little airport. The ma- U Butfadn 1000 42V2 Ava A2va--IVb| RANK Org OS ee em? (chinists' strike which has Un Cmstk 1000 11%. 1 11" | Royal Bnk 720 $68% 67% 67% lo ded Air Canada planes is Un Keno 5 250 250 250 | Salada 130 $9¥2 9% 44) }grounded / ai p Ss is Oe a ok Be oh dB ja boon to chartered-flight oper- Upe Can 1000 150 145 145 --6 | Shell inv p 100 $26va 26% 26¥a tare vi rf Ce oe ee Shelt Inv w 225 670 670 670 ators, . : W Bever mR YY GD +h pi ie i wo ee tae Ge The Toronto executive in a a ia / ve " Wittrey 0 us us s Simpsons 215 $28% 2 28% hurry to get to Montreal, who Wetall 1 MAS 3 --1) nee a " a A ie ies go by scheduled rag We Moe. SRD Aa fh | : can't get rail transportation an 16e-- Va! Steel Can 955 $20 19% 20 4 te ph | Steinbg A 0 siete M4 eva |doesn't want to buck the busy Suptest. od 225 $ 0 ). j Th ; ivi OILS, GAS Himsa, Ht Site fw fu w|highrays Jn Bla car, drives, 1 Abed -- 17500 284 8 M441 | TOC iron WS 100 Sim JW Sd -- lage, tnd dined Anchor 400 10¥a 10% 10V%8-- 9! Traders A 610 $84 8% 8% |lage. ; sl as pte ae a i vy| Trader 65 w 400 105 100 100 --s | He charters a sleek six-pas- ry vi | ij . ar $00 oS 380 250 -- 2 qreneaie = ay et ae ad § |senger executive-type plane, € Ex Gas = 2 " oe --'S5 | +, Can PL- 681 $24% 244 24% ~ v/ Sets to Montreal in little more Momestd 4: 4 age Ga. Times 87h thm |, VC Con th Me ates Aen | than an hour, does what he has Can Trient 190 380 380 380 +20 | PG, 200 $10 10la Vole + |t GO, flies back, picks up his Gent Del as aa 365 | YU Corp B 750 $lom tom tou-- Wwicar and drives in to Toronto. Chieften © 100 920 920 920 Wainoce © 7900 378 365 370 +n |All in a day. Cost; $300. ¢ West P a 2 33 1" Tt Walk GW 243 $29 299 This may seem expensive for arn . 4 Fors 700 305 30S 305 Wonca sd we I 7. a round trip of about 700 miles. ------~ | W Pacific 225 $19 192 194 But at that price he can take pe se | Weston am aa sim ia Vey with him his assistant, his sec: | = ite Pas 4 101 Ve 10M Pyles 4 | Woodwd A ida S235 24% 22 -- 4 /Fetary and three others, aia It's aii the same io Toronto Sales to 11:00 @.m, 952,000 | Airways which flies out of But-| DR _ Os FOREIGN TRADING jtonville. The cost covers the| OYCO = crs 200 €84v 4s S442 | charter of an kircraft--a tiny! boyc tt Grandioy 2000 ass ae ae |four- or six-passenger executive: | Giant Vanite 300 835 835 835 --15 |type job--not just the fare for Kerr Addis 335 $11% 1 uv -¥ » nee 1 isos 200 300 300 300 "one passenger, U.S. Firms -- KUWAIT (AP)--The Arab Is-| It works out to $50 each if pleasant, effective relief overnight, side Traeli Boycott Bureau decided Sunday to ban the American} Ford and Coca Cola companies throughout the Arab world. Union Asks Certification jsix persons charter an Artec | tomorrow alright! plane. | i feel b Before the strike, Toronto} rua ueet Airways ran one or two char-| regULar+ CHOCOLATE COATED + JUNIORS jters a day. It now is operating | Surgery Program Slated Nova Scotia Apple Trees kept for shade or ornamental purposes and had become quickly infected by disease. Hundreds of thousands of ne- glected and wild apple trees have been destroyed to safeguard commercial orchards from disease. A great majority of trees, says the newsletter, have been destroyed at public expense and with approval of property own- ers. The \ government publication says it is estimated that approx- matey 20,008 new trese will have been planted in the Anna- polis Valley this year. There are some 800 growers involved in the valley industry first established in 1633 and 11,000 acres return an aver- age $3,000,000. An investment of $2,000,000 for machinery and labor is 'in- volved in the 140,000 hours re- quired to pruhe the 559,000 trees, the 93000 hours to apply 1,500 tons of fertilizer, the $550-, 000 worth of pesticides and to pay 1,500 pickers for 14% months work at harvest time. ESTABLISH PLANTS There are nine fruit proces- sing plants established, produc- ing a variety of apple products and the processing industry val- ued at $10,000,000 is expanding. About 80 per cent of the apples grown in Nova Scotia are processed for home and overseas markets. New and drastic pruning methods which involve severe cutting to develop a Christmas tree shape for the apple tree are seen as one of the big boons to increasing production. Every indication, says the provincial publication, is that the Nova Scotia orchard of the future will be hedgerows of higher yields, and increased farm operations. better grades efficiency in pyramid-shaped apple trees for $89,500,000 Recovery Total For Atlantic TORONTO (CP) -- Recovery from the assets of Atlantic Ac- ceptance Corp. Ltd, is esti- mated at $89,500,000 in a letter mailed over the weekend to noteholders of the insolvent. fi- nancial institution Montreal Trust Company, Atlantic's re- ceiver-manager. The figure is an increase of $4,500,000 estimated in Atlan- tic's year-end statement issued in August, Book value of the assets was $145,885,569 when At- lantic went into receivership June 17, 1965. Montreal Trust said recovery to date totals about $54,000,000, or $65,000,000 if capital notes of General Acceptance Corp. of Al- lentown, Pa., received for resid- ual receivables, are included, The bulk of Atlantic's receiv- lables Was purchased by GAC, | The letter provides details of application by Montreal Trust for approval of accounts and in- terim compensation for the re- ceiver-manager and its agent, Clarkson Co, Ltd, of Taronto. NET EARNINGS MONTREAL (CP) - Stein- berg's Ltd. have announced net! jearnings for the fiscal | $7,134,626, Total sales volume in the year jended July 30, 1966, was $400,- 882,856, a jump of 5.75 per cent) over the 1965 figure of $379,096,- 946. Earnings per common class A share held at July 30, | 1966, were $1.11 compared to) | 1965 earnings of $1,045 $2.09 be-| {fore the two-for-one stock split) effected in January, 1966, PARK HAS GROWN From 10 square miles in 1885, the Canadian national park sys- tem has grown to 29,200 square miles, LEWIS OPTICAL Established for over 30 years 10% King Street West 725-0444 big money, is needed to develop the Northwest Territories, says a veteran Hudson's Bay Co. factor, says Ernest (Scotty) Call, re- knife, N.W.T, "The day of the prospector is finished, Today is potential to help develop the North, these jobs," greased the skids under the native, a bang up against the primitive Ice Age and this was the finish for the make the transition because his year) whole life was hunting and he lended July 30, 1966, of $7,639,-| couldn't 987, a gain of 7.08 per cent.over| cesses--the throwing away of! the 1965 fiscal year earnings of} waste food." | |BONUS REJECTED | duced, nd) them for a loop. It came too of values." THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 21, 1966 15° Big Money Seen As Need For N.W.T. Development EDMONTON (CP) -- Money, "Our territory needs money," cently retired chief at Yellow- the day of the giant." Mr. Call speaks as one who knows the North after living in it since 1923. He knows its In- dians and Eskimos and their He speaks of the Eskimo "problem" and suggests the way to alleviate it is to 'get the mines going." "Why do we have to bring all ihese people in from the South? We've trained Eskimos to do He believes the white man has spoiled the Eskimo. Welfare and baby bonus cheques have "The 20th century came with Eskimo. He couldn't understand the ex- With the Eskimo's inability to cope with the white man's ways, welfare benefits were intro- But this only "knocked soon and they lost their sense Mr. Call, who in his 43 years with the Hudson's Bay Co. helped establish 20 northern outposts, recalled an incident eo fong Be ayment of baby bonus cheques to Eskimos at Cambridge Bay. "I was criticized for not is- suing the payments to the na- tives. There was a big meeting on the ice and we told the Eskimos they had to take the bonus. They said to thank the King, but it was a good year for fox and they didn't want: it." Opening of the North in the Second World War did much to jspoil the Eskimo, he said. It took away his dependence on nature and threw him at the mercy of the white man's hand- outs, The present generation faces insurmountable problems of adapting to change. The next generation won't pro- vide the answer, he said, 'but maybe their children will."" Part Of the iskimo's proviems lies in his ignorance of the white man's political system. Present - generation Eskimos show little or no interest in local government. 'In the Northwest Territories we have 70 per cent natives who are political infants," he said, "Twenty per cent of the population are civil servants using the territories to further things and are not politically interested, "The underground miner who goes North for a year or two is not interested, which leaves five per cent of the small business- men who have risked everything to make a home in the North," A political solution to the Territories' problems might be "BONUS BABY BONUS You will receive 10% CASH BONUS on any purchase you make with your BABY BONUS cheque ANY TIME at OSHAWA DISCOUNT HOUSE. DA "a Praktlea Nova »+ss""** Yashica A «++***" Yashica D .sess' eeoeeeee Kows H .- Pentox SV Voigtiander Vitoret F .- Fujice Auto M .eeet Kodek Automatic 35F Yashice Minister D .- Instomotic 500 OTE It also considered a possible) MONTREAL (CP)--The_In- boycott against the Radio Corp. ternational Brotherhood of Elec-| of America. trical Workers announced Satur-| Meeting here for its 24th re-day it will apply for certifica-! gional conference, 'the bureau/tion to represent about 9,500 unanimously adopted a resolu-| plant and repair employees in tion banning Ford and Coca/Quebec and Ontario installa- Cola "for persistently refusing|tions of the Bell Telephone. | to conform to boycott bureau) Union spokesmen James Wolf: regulations." gang and Louis Gauthier said| The conference earlier sént/the certification request will be! messages to the giant automo-| submitted to the Canada Labor bile and soft drinks companies! Relations. Board next Thurs-! demanding clarification of their day. intention to open factories in Is-/ The Bell Telephone employ-| rael and received "unconvinc- ees now are represented by the! ing replies." Canadian Telephone Employ-; Both concerns stand to jose,ees' Association, an independent heavily: through the ban. Coca) group. Cola. sales account for a large percentage of Arab-U.S. trade , - » * in such countries as Egypt and vant Laos BETTER Iraq. Ford and Coca Cola have _ Bulgarian Peasants got an big sales in Kuwait. average of 132 eggs each in 1965, The fate of RCA, the third compared with 54 in 1936. company threatened with the A. E. JOHNSON, 0.D. boycott, was undecided. Last week, the boycott bureau commissioner, General Moham-| | Thinking of Selling Your Farm For A We have further clients ACREAGES AND RE It is in your best inte | THE METROPOLITAN TRUST COMPANY TORO mad Mahjoub, said that the OPTOMETRIST preg _-- ames. 14 King St. East eficit o caused a c more than 723-2721 $300,000,000 in Israel's annual! budget. ' Write or call coll Mr. R. ¥. Tiedemann, Tel: 362-4761 Good Price? interested in purchasing , FARMS, TREATS rest to sell through NTO lect, Bay Street Instamatic M 65 .... Instamatic M 80 .,.. Argus 870 Cabin Slide Projector Argus 538 Kodak 600 Yeshice J-P with Meter .- Cononet 2-8 ..-+++'*° AY "Charge It' WITH YOUR Kmart CREDIT CARD Instamatic M 60 ..... SLIDE PROJECTORS Argus 543 .......+5. cae 113,80 soe gg 159.95 69.95 139.88 $4.95 57.95 veseart® ettaneee 87,95 CAMERA SPECIALS! CAMERA & ACCESSORY GIFT IDEAS AT LOW, DISCOUNT PRICES Elmo Zoom 8.CZ Kodak Escort bse Ansco § 84 Voyager Super 708 Sankyo Super CM Bell & Howell 43] ras Bell & Howell '430 ae : LIMITED QUANTITIES CAMERAS A SAVE ON PHOTO ACCESSORIES cee 8/100 . EACH 65 Garis een? tee Oh. orate Home Movie Title Set ...... Universal Slide Troyes ...... '] Flash Cubes sees Cee eeeeeeeenee AG 18 Flashbulbs 40 x 40 Screens .... Flash Cube. Adaptors Sawyers Rototrays Kodak Carosel Trays ...... ish, the ci severely. ots oat plead tee G home on . was reported still in a Feo : : etl a to be patric develop," . When you turn 21 you're no longer cov- ered b a parents' Hospital Insurance. To keep Insured, you must take out indi- vidual membership within 30 days, Get your application fofm at a bank, a hospital, rd from the Commis: sion. The 'family' Hospital Insurance premium must now be paid to cover husband and wife. Notify your 'group' without de- lay OR, If you both premiums direct, noti- fy the Commission. To keep insured follow the instructions on the Hospital Insurance Certificate of Payment 'Form 104' that your present employer is required to give you on leaving. Your ONTARIO HOSPITAL INSURANCE Plan Ontario Hospital Services Commission Toronte 7, Ontario a AY

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