Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 May 1967, p. 22

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

22 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, May 8, 1967 [Be On Ost ES AE SW A RS AS eA, a, meal] [EA AFLRLENTA TS TODAY' Ss STOCKS 10:40 Net TORONTO 10:40 A.M. Distributed by C Toronto Exchange--May Quotations in cents unless marked $. xd--Ex-dividend, rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is from previous board-lot closing sale. lot, Stock Accra All Pitch Am Larder Camp Chib Cc. Tung ¢ Jamiesn C Lencourt Cdn Nisto Cassiar Cent Pat Chib Kay pot hrom Coch will Conigo C Callinan Cc Hall Cc Mogul C Morisn Cc Ni eg C Rambler Cc Red Pop Cop Fields Dunraine East Sull F d Int Bibis T Kam Kotla Mt Wright Nat Expl New Cal Newconx N Imperal N Mylamea Newnor MINES High Low a.m. Ch'ge 100010 See list below. 100 345. 345 «345 450 100 1300 2500 500 100 See list below. 7: 66 66 300 50 12 26 560 560 24Ve 24V2 "tn _ 50. 50 See list Deion. 370 600 159 See list below. See list below. $17 146 13 7% 16) S $66 1200 M5 m1 $4234 42% 42% -- V 10 21% 21% 214 300 300 50 12 % 370 156 " v 146 3 77 161 » 345 110 7 10% 25 62 % STOCKS P xr--Ex- 10:40 Net 10 50 12 26 370 | 600 + 5 | 156 --3 90 v7 146 13 345 110 238 $12%% 12% 12% +1 15 200 $13% 13% 134+ % 275 $13¥2 13% 13% ns 500 1000 2000 1615 e ad 2000 1000 1000 1000 2700 1000 1000 725 1851 85 4 10a 3 9A "4 30 300 520 330 1' ss 1 85 24 10' 4 a a See list below. 27 7 27 84 N Senator 5000 hig " Norbask r Pamou! Patino Pce Expl Peerless Pine Point Placer Win-Eld Yk Bear Zenmac 2000 _ ae betow. 40 500 410 1300 65 1270 $10 100 235 3000 ad 900 aise, ist "talon. 6 ee "ne 0 $37 7 a i Hagia : 33 st% i 18% of | es --) fog "4 725 725 +10 | ss as --2 24 10' ay + +" Mh "4 8 oHheg +41 1+ aus eo +% i 25 810 810 810 + + 2125 370 365 370 + 100 580 S80 = + 170 1000 1000 200 200 225 125 125 125 ~--3 1045 $30% 30% 3% + 4 $15% 1558 15% + 500 27 24a 420 485 ae in 118 355 395 385 «(395 VW 2 12% 124-- a 382 390 3BV2 38a 38 See list below. 199 199 19 » 27 24 410 485 Ne % ne 350 n 38% 390 7 2 $18% 18% 18% -- 24 45 5 5 5 5 Sia -- te 6 +2 8 8 355 --2 +10 n 3BV2 +1¥2 390 +5 Stock BA Oil BC Forest BC Frest p BC Sugar BCPh 4% p Br Intl Fin Brooke pr Burns Fads CAE Ind Caigary P CD Sugar € Safway p Cdn Brew CB Alum A Cdn Can A Cc Chem. w C Curtiss Cc Marconi C Marcni r CPR R_pr C Petrofin Cdn Tire A Chemcell Chemc! 1 p Clairton Columbia Cominco Compro Con Bidg Con Paper Con Pap w Cons Gas C Gas r Corby vt Coronatn Craig Bit Crain RL Disti Seag Dome Pete D Bridge Dofasco D Magnes Dom Store Domtar D Textile Dupent Emco Emp Life Exquisite Falcon Fleet Mig Ford Cnda FPE Pion FPE Pn pr Fraser Fruehauf G Develop GMC Goodyear G Mckay A GL Paper GL Power Greyhnd Hand Chm Hard Carp Hard Crp A Hawker S$ Hawker pr Home A Horne Pit H BOil Gas Huron Eri Husky Oil Ind Minert Ind Wire Inglis Inland Gas Intr City pr 1BM IMC 100 $39 39 Int Nickel 2029$100 100 100 375 $312 31% Na+ % 220 $103" 1022 103% + "a Int Util Intpr Pipe James Sti Jefferson Jeffersn w Jockey C Jockey 29 DA eiseg Labatt LOnt Cem Laura Sec Lau Fin Lau F 1.25 Lav F 2.00 tay Levy B tite invest Life Inv wt Lob Co B reo "J A pr Mecaan H M Lf Mills Mass-Fer Met Stors p Milt Brick Molson A Molson B Nat Drug Noranda Nor Ctl @ Nor Phone NSL P Ocean Cm Ogilvie Oshawa A Overland Pac Pete Pow Corp Price Com Reichhold Reitman A 2250 Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 121 $36 3% OB 270 $22 21" 2 $12% 12% 124-- J * 515 63 51S 63 395-395 +5 + 63 Sia 21% 21% $72% 72% 72% -- % 1 200 $: 5 1088 $324 32 200 100 225 450 7362 25 122 140 «(140 5 32' 935 tio "on 16% -- Ve 2 0 $12 2 12 $22% 22 22a-- Va 485 485 485 Va + Ve 260 250 bred +10 -- Ps a "a +20 ae wet = by $13% $39 $532 13% 39 $21 21 $24 sg $72 $18% $162 $23% $372 $16 $122 12% $6 6 a Hes 872 7800 94 13 21 6 87 94 3 34 532 53a -- 18s wet 16% 162 22% Wh 37a 37a + va} 16% 16% 124+ v4 25 $1364 1362 136% 225 $24% 220 $98 142 $23 200 $1734 100 $13 24%6 2479 9 8 23% 23'4 17%2 17% -- Ve 13% 134+ % 902 92 212 2 7 132 $28% 28% 28'4-- %4/the Johnson administration feels 300 200 $247% 500 425 425 12 7 $232 23% 234 24% "ae 425 25 $17% 17% 7 465 $1558 250 395 390 390 210 $85 85 85 605 $19% 19% 1934 340 340 2850 350 103 $33%4 33% 214 $10% 10% 625 $15% 1514 50 ag er l i 25V--0 2311 $14% 3700 $72 1100 $13% sive 250 $19% 22$520 § 58% S'4-- a me | Washington does not want to say --0 | 33% -- a) 10% -- 15% 59% -- % 630 --5 DA+ 25a -- Va 8% 14% 7a + Ve 13% + Ve NWAt 19% | 520 nv ---% $384 382 32-- $ii% 1% Na+ $33% 31% 334 +1%| 415 45 41S $3544 35 3514 + Me) $27% 27% $8% 8% $5 5 274 -- Va +5 8% s-- $162 162 16% 814% 1900 100 275 7130 225 3 1 00 30 220 $ 185 : 7a -- Pell (Dem. R.1.) put it earlier 20% + % | this $23% i aie + Ww with "sitting on its hands when Va $20e 19% $21% (00 390 390 $23% mn 23% + "the right." M4 Ua-- 485 480 480 +5 $124 12% 12% + Ve) 1 21 1 18% My +1) _|for the -first time BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT By KEN SMITH Canadian Press Busi Editor Despite the rapid re-entry of} chartered banks into the house- building officials say it likely 3,|will take longer than expected to make a significant dent in Canada's housing shortage. Central Housing and Mortgage Corp., banks will pour $200,000,000 or more into house-mortgage loans this year. Their re-entry into the field jcomes as a result of amend- jments to the Bank Act, which |took effect May 1. | The amendments free banks from the old six-per-cent) interest ceiling, allowing them) to charge the going seven-per- |cent rate on loans guaranteed mortgage field, many private/i H. W. Hignett, president of the; forecast last week that) since 1959) the; funder the National Housing Act | While builders welcome fresh jmoney from the banks and the lextra competition it will bring in the mortgage-lending fied, many doubt that the effects will ibe noticed quickly in the fast- jgrowing metropolitan areas (where improvement is most needed. Assuming an average NHA mortgage of at least $15,000, the re-entry of the banks into the field will mean little more than {13,000 new housing starts this |year--a drop in the bucket, one building official said. Mr. ber of starts during the 12- month period starting June 1 to about 170,000--the number gen- erally accepted as the minimum target for the next couple of, years. "U.S. Decides To Go Along Hignett said the bank} loans would increase the num-} Bank Boost To Building Of Homes To Come Later As recently as last January, however, some officials at the annual meeting of the Canadian Construction Association were talking hopefully as many ae 175,000 during 1967. "It now looks as though that | target is at least six months late," said one official. "And although the picture now is un- questionably brighter than a year ago, there still are enough problems around to delay it atill| further." PICTURE ROSY The Toronto Metropolitan | Home Builders' Association said| Mr. Hignett's forecast is an in-| centive for construction of hous- ing nationally. "But it cannot be expected to} noticeably affect the specific | housing crisis that exists in| | Metropolitan Toronto. | | "The lack of a formula that jwill provide serviced land for| private housing in the munici-| |palities of Metro and, at the! same time, cope with the in-| | | herent costs of education, still | * With Greek Military Rule %= "ena y [rier to a solution of the housing By ENDRE MARTON | WASHINGTON (AP) -- After days of confusion and shock, the United States has concluded the only sensible thing to do is go jalong with the new military re- jgime in Greece. No official would confirm this) or speak for quotation on how BT age the April 21 military coup jin Greece. Complete silence is observed: U.S. reluctance to condemn the! military coup. A specific reason is the controversial person of Andreas Papandreou, son of former Greek prime minister George Papandreou, now re- ported awaiting trial for trea- son. PROTEST ARREST The state department, it was learned, is receiving considera- ble mail protesting the arrest and pending trial of the younger anything that could hurt a coun- try which--whatever its form of| government--is an important ally guarding Eastern Europe's| "soft underbelly." But in off-the-record talks with administration officials the fol- lowing picture emerges: --The U.S., while definitely not enthusiastically embrac- ing the three military officers 'who now rule the country, will co-operate with their regime while fervently hoping some- day will return to a more palatable political system. --Meanwhile the U.S. quietly but firmly will pressure Greece's important role in the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization military structure, U.S. military aid will con- tinue, although probably lim- ited to items thought neces- sary for NATO purposes. The decision is understood to have been reached after consid- eration of these points: The administration is aware 225 $232 23¥2 23% 1725 $10% 10% 10% 439 "i 113%41 225. $7% 7% "4 +1 7 $27 272 "2'a 120 851 1956 250 100 $124 $52% 52 994 9% $s nv z25 $21 21 500 $144 575 $35¥a 35% 100 $8 8 $13% 13 13%4+% $12" 12%e $13% 13 si0 10 225 a a 1% a+ 52% + 4) $124 12Ve 12M + +" % n 2) M4 Wht % 354 + 8 +" 12% 1% $534 ns Ha a im of growing criticism in the U.S. charging, as Senator Claiborne week, the United States a coup is staged by forces of The administration had to rec- ognize that King Constantine of Greece, who now is co-operat- ing, however reluctantly, with Papandreou and requesting the U.S. government do something on his behalf. The explanation is that Pap- andreou--who lived in the U.S. from 1940 to 1959, served in the U.S. Navy, became an Ameri- can citizen and head of the University of California at Berk- eley's economics department-- was widely-known and respected among U.S. intellectuals, Papandreou returned to his native Greece in 1959 and be- came his father's top aide and cabinet member. His friends in the U.S. dismiss the theory he became a Communist or even a Communist sympathizer, It is acknowledged, however, that he and his father have ac- cepted Communist support dur- ing the unhappy two years of continued government crises in Greece. Phillips Talbot, U.S. ambassa- dor to Greece, is known to have been surprised and distressed by the April 21 coup. But he is re- ported to have nursed the hope that King Constantine would not accept passively what was the accomplished fact. This hope vanished quickly and now Talbot is said to agree with Washington policymakers that the United States is limited to pushing quietly for restora- tion of parliamentary democ- lthe military regime, had his wings clipped. Hoffa To Argue For New Trial rac y. There is domestic criticism of] jerisis in this area.' | The same situation applies in| several other rapid-growth mu-| nicipalities, officials said. Elsewhere on the business | scene, over-all sales of the Big) Three in Canada's auto industry maintained a sharp decline | compared with the similar 1966| period, with only Ford of Can- ada managing an increase in the period. Ford reported its Canadian | dealers sold 73,732 cars com-| pared with 71,213 in the first} four months of 1966 Chrysler of Canada reported) 46,707 car sales, compared with| 47,367 while General Motors 6f| Canada dropped to 89,290 from} 105,877. | BANKS SPLIT SHARES Two more chartered banks) operating nationally joined the move to wider shareholder Par-| ticipation by announcing plans| to split their shares. They were) the Royal Bank of Canada and| the.Bank of Nova Scotia. | The Bank of Montreal and the) Toronto - Dominion Bank an- nounced plans previously leay-| ing the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce the only national bank which had not made such a move. The plans will share prices to the $13-$18 range) based on current prices. | Like the banks' move into the| house-mortgage field, the splits are made possible by revisions | to the Bank Act. The brokerage house of J. ee Timmins and Co. reported that dividend payments by Canadian corporations in the first five months of this year total $516,- 991,000, up nine per cent from the similar 1966 period and 23 per cent higher than in 1965. All categories the house uses to group dividends--industrials, mines, ,utilities and institutions suche banks and trusts--| showed gains. | P.S. 1. Millwork & Building Open Daily 7 am. to 6 p.m. Friday till 9 p.m. Supplies Lid. = 1279 SIMCOE ST. N. Your One Step ing Supply Where ae 728-6291 No Problem here's our greatest "ROUND-UP" of home repair eae ee bee pet tPee Le Wr. WP NOW IN THE CORRAL AND /'\. READY FOR MARKET Platinum Walnut PANELLING /16" x 4°x 7 Regular 3/16" x 4 x 8 Reguler 7.35 NOW 5.75 CASH & CARRY 4 x 7 Unfinished Mahogany V-grooved. Reg. 3.35. CEILING TILE Cash and Carry 12" x 24" plain white. Tongue and groove CTN Lots Only 10' sq. ft. CASH AND CARRY 4 x 8 Unfinished Mahogany V-grooved, Reg. 3.85 Cash and Carry .. 3 09 One of the truly functional products i al ing panel sheets. Reguler 2.99 CASH AND CARRY B. P. VINYL ASBESTOS 16x9x9 CTN LOTS ONLY 8Y2c each NO.1 ASPHALT SHINGLES 3 in 1 210 variety of colours, ONLY per sq. Interior or exterior there has never been @ for any home pegboard is easily adapt- able for use in almost every room. Particularly use- ful in junior's room--the kitchen--or garage or util- ity room. 4x 8" thickness. Reg. 3.10. CASH and CARRY material more versatile than plywoood. Strong easy to work with, plywood comes in varying thickness with one just the right thickness for your special project, 4 x 8 panels VY" only eu ess el Y%"" only beak 4.92 OA OAS ois cas FIR FACTORY GRADE %" only .. PREFINISHED IN Cherrytone From 4'6" to 96" complete with pestformed counter top. 169.75 .. 273,00 MEDICINE CABINETS Several different styles instock. As low as .. CASH and CARRY ee RG GARDEN STORAGE SHED Metal. Will solve your storage problems. No maintenance, Size 5' x 6, green and white. Knocked down, Reg. 99.56. .. SPECIAL, a8 00 . f Cesh end Cerry RRR PAINTED PEG BOARD x 24" x 48" . FLORTILE VINYL ASBESTOS .080 gauge 9 x 9. Regular I4e NOW EACH VINYL ASBESTOS 080 gouge 12 x 12 Traveline. Regular 25¢ each NOW EACH .... 123 Fir Sheathing VINYL ASBESTOS 1/16 gouge Where Yo Are Men CHATTANOOGA, one, (AP) HIGHLIGHTS OF THE powerful labor leader who spent three months here in 1964 on 19th ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE YEAR 1966 THIS WEEK LESS 25% a Electrical Air Purifier ond De- odorizer 49.00 ONLY OILS, GAS nae A 5M S6% be 6% $11% 11% 11% S124 12% 1258 3.3 3 $28% 28% 28% -- Ve $832 83a 834 9x 9 Agatine. Reg. 18¢ each NOW EACH Revenue Rockower Rolland Ronald Fd Romfield Rothman Royal Bnk StL Cem A Salada Seaway H Shell Inv w Shell Can 1175 Silknit 200 Simpsons 2200 Simpson $ 100 385 100 900 1516 16 Alminex 300 475 470 475 Am Ledue 5500 16 152 16 Asamera 20 480 4 +5 CS Pete See list below. Cc Dehi 1 at +10 Cc Ex Gas 200 Gridoil 5/16 x 22% Parad a) OTE Be O5* sec A ASPENITE TP ed lao Reg. 2.99 "GASH AND CARRY trial for jury tampering, re-| jturned in handcuffs Saturday | $26% 267% 267% for his fourth attempt to win) 4 ying sn Mel a new trial. His court hearing oe gn 900? 1s |Will begin Tuesday. $267 "2604 Boek -- "| Hoffa, 54, was booked at! ot 1|Hamilton County jail after he| and three federal marshals| came here by automobile from! the U.S. penitentiary at Lewis- burg, Pa. | Defence lawyers, led by Mor- | ris Shenker, converged upon the jail shortly after his arrival and sears immediately went into palate 83a ence with Hoffa. _ Also in the jail are his fives! co-defendants, Ewing King and $7 7 -- | Thomas Ewing Parks of Nash-| 2% -- ve\ville, Tenn., and Larry Camp-| ss, | bell, Parks' nephew and a De- 4 "g ere jtroit Teamsters Union official. < im as 18 - "| In the new trial motion, Hoffa Received $13% 13% 13s + */and his co-defendants charge Oe at ss that the government used elec- | set ve tronic eavesdropping and wire- | 7 tapping before and during his is +% trial. The government has de- | oo. Bip |nied the charge. VINYL ASBESTOS .80 gouge 12 x 12. Heritage. Regular 18 20c each NOW EACH hg aaa Tlaaeeni: Glazed Mosiac WALL TILE 1" x 1" Crystal Glaze, 15 Reg. 1.05 sq. ft. NOW, sq. fe.® 200 200 +5 ia 354 352+ --15 tie sie e-- % 9 120 +8 380 280 410 ae +5 Siler "stl jemine 3 ad St Paving 8 Steel Can 355 Steinbg A Paid out for medical care $63,337,226 eeeeee in $14 Cost of administration (4.54% Total revenue from subscription .. $105 10% 105 + Ve $13 13 «13 =v $8% 8% 8% $24%4 24% 24Va-- Pr $22 2 22 + Suptst com 100 400 400 Suptest od $244 24% Tamblyn p 30 $38%2 38V2 Tancord $10 610 Thom N P $2534 25% vas 185 Tor Dm Bk $7194 71% 305 Traders A $8% 8% Traders B Traders 5 p. Trader A p Transair Tr CFund Tr Can PL Tr Can Pw Trans Mt Un Ac Ip Un . Carbid Un Gas U Corp B Un Woburn Sections Gt COilsds Int Helium Mill. City N Cont Quarter Board Factory rejects 4 x 4 x 8 sheets, Ri 3.70 $ 3,317,489 $73,024,887 1,725,018 9,279,834 of total revenue) .. Numac P. G i revo Gas CASH AND CARRY Scurry Rn Spooner Triad Oil U Canso 2543 330 W Decaite hen ed 4 W Decit w 125 5 sey Bistribution Distribution of Treasury Shares The Toronto Stock Exchange has been advised that the following companies have entered into underwriting and op- tion egreements which may result in treasury shares of these companies be- Ing under distribution currently through the facilities of the Exch ae 22 1900 262 26% a F "a v7 7 7 14a 38¥2 +1% 10 No. of persons enrolled .... 590 585 585 $20%4 20% eo cceee 0 59 60 1" x 1"- Clear Glaze, 780 No. of medical services paid ...... $9% 9 UTILITY BOARD Ve x 4 x 8 sheets Reg. 1.90 SPECIAL 1.35 CASH AND CARRY Satna memmmegencenaenes UNDERLAY 42 x 4.x 4 Poplar Plywood Reg. 25 SPECIAL ..... i] CASH AND CARRY ss erence SINKS Stainless steel single 18" Reg. 12.60. SPECIAL Sis. speci." * 20,95 _ SE aaome SHOWER STALL 30 -x 30" ONLY . SS GARDEN TIME corry @ good supply of CIL Ferre and Siecle rage Garden seeds rn Oe as +" Builnose Caps $554 534 5% Lin, ft. .. In 19 years P.S.1. has... 3/8" x 3/8" Micro Jumble, 9 pat- $488,533,515 100.0% ' ' 2 ' : tern to chrome from Paid out for , EER 4 Medical Care $442,094,826 90.5% Use SOLIGNUM to bring out the best in all outdoor wood. Poid ouk fot A long-lasting, beautiful wood stain, neither blisters nor it peels. Protects from weather, mildew and ine €___> administration sects. Available in a wide range of colours, BROWN 4.15 DRIFTWOOD 8.25 GALLON ....500050- CEDAR GREEN 6. 25 GAL. 6.25 MAHOGANY GAL. seeeese see eseee Cam Mine ¢ Lencourt Cdn Nisto yeaa" Silage * § onigo 6000 22 21222 + Cc Red Pop 4-23 2B --1){ oe Man 2 27 B +1) "Eldona 42 141 142 +1 | | Glenn Exp 0 20 Ww $35% 35¥2 3 s 5 + Ve | Irish Cop ee ae eee ae 23 Kid Coper 7 ase aes sage vl 28 pada Vive ie ta ee eee $0 tu 2% | Offer To Shulman 1eVs ele lela + Wl Ww Baciic: «0m Ok 6 Me 265 $20% 2056 . H Denied By Nixon pas i 77 ce xp! wine om +0] Gms Hs $11 71K m PEMBROKE (CP) -- Robert Win-Eld | Beis] Weston a 21% Woodwd 337 2912 Bia-- Ve CS Pete 20) 201 201 9 York ail B ms in" 225225 INDUSTRIALS Zellers 36 2 = one " Sales to. 11:00 am. 578,000, pete Ontario Liberal invited | 200 $10'4 10% denied Saturday he. was invite es ga 8 Falconbr nS 8h are as by Dr. Morton Shulman, former | Als 25%_ -- Va seh 4 Bo siti --'a\chief coroner of Metropolitan | uf a, ul ce. ee # +! Toronto, to join a provincial] 43 -- 4) East Sul 500 2 |Liberal-NDP coalition to defeat, 2 Carigis "Stl "700 % ---2 \the Progressive Conservative a+ 200 6 100 ~19 |government of Premier John) 400 --15 po oi Robarts. 500 "There is no truth to the re- port," Mr, Nixon told a Liberal party meeting. He had talked politics with Dr. Shulman on at least three} occasions but a coalition had) not been mentioned. | i $38 38 $14% 14% $15 (15 88 87 WHILE THEY LAST LESS 10% $ 28,933,449 5.9% Transferred to General Reserve ...... $ 17,445,240 Earned from Investments .... $ 8,482,431 x 20". vesveve ee O25 6.25 8.25 mesh Abitibi 6.25 Ackland? Al is 194 - Va STRAW GAL 11 Gauge Green plastic 2" 36" height only 12.35 per 50 ft. roll 42" height only 14.15 per 50 ft. roll 48" height only 15.95 per 50 ft, soll 7' T-Bar Fence post 1.09 each Sidewalk gates 36" 10.25 opening height 42'" CASH & CARRY sep Woee GAL. Mk ae PHYSICIANS' SERVICES INCORPORATED 2221 YONGE STREET, TORONTO 7, ONTARIO Canada's Largest Medical Core Prepayment Pien Silvfields Siscoe Upp Can --_1 COINS COMMEMORATE 2514 The coin club of Medicine Hat, 51% + '2 Alta., is striking 200 silver and "pa ule 000 bronze medals to observe Canada's Centennial, Séaver pr $25¥2 Bell Phne $51% Bramalea Pi Brazilian 121 Brdg Tank. 1 os as as tis 51%

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy