NDERS moking' tt five hamsters. (I ed since this morn- vay be more.) Your e it sound as if the at fault for putting loaf on the table, re a salmon loaf » cat did not belong d have told the boy n who have pets ch them. It's the can do if his moth- m to have a pet in Mad at You i at Me: I agree should be responsi- et, but that was nob . The boy asked if ew he was doing eplied, "Cats don't from wrong. They hey like salmon." a point, Mother, but 'at I wouldn't put a on the table until I i on her wherea- o Reneges 4 incil Fees YROUGH (CP) ial of the Ontario ederation said Mon- F's Ontario Educa- search council eques to six Toronto is this year because 00 small. etary Nora Hodgins 'ing of the council's overnors at nearby tchacoma said the ; year dropped its membership fee for avor of a four-cent- levy with a top rate nto boards refused with the increase. sent $50 to the coun- » cheques were "t think we could from Toronto when yas paying $1,000," is said. joards are not now members of the $ meet SELLERS" Is of your property end g or selling, To serve ate needs and witheut > you, Please call -KINSON ne 576-1411 See ree REAL ESTATE a nl DA'S LARGEST NEST CHAIN CF ALTH Spa's St ss. y fully ren we e rugs. airing, nly 10.80 ce mC Gondolas gently ply the waterways of the Italian city of Venice. The city has about 470 gondolas, all TOURIST ATTRACTION -- IN ITALY, THAT IS custom-built at a cost of $2,000 and up. The job of OUR ECONOMY Development Corporation On Federal Priority List By WARREN BALDWIN OTTAWA -- The Canada De- velopment Corporation has re- appeared on the priority list of government législation. It has probably been the most off- again-on-again-Finnegan idea that ever entered the mind of a cabinet minister -- in this case the mind of the Hon. Walter Gordon. The establishment of this corporation for the purpose of investing some government money but more money put up by the small Canadian investor in Canadian enterprises new and old was promised in the first speech from the Throne pre- sented by a Pearson govern- ment in May, 1963. These were the 60 days of decision and the CDC was high on the list of legislation that must be passed in a hurry. But somehow the sense of urgency wanted. Mr. Gordon himself was busy con- ductirg his retreat from perhaps the most unpopular and cer- tainly one of the most anti- American budgets in history. The corporation was to have a billion dollars to invest, the government putting up $100 million and the rest being ac- cumulated through sale of shares to Canadians at $3 a |share with a limit on the num- \ber of shares to be sold to any individual. No shares would be sold to residents of the United States. The corporation would buy up shares of Canadian com- panies which might otherwise fall into the hands of American investors in sufficient volume to transfer control to the United States. In this way it became part of Mr. Gordon's crusade to stop control of Canadian indus- try by Americans, a crusade which was partly responsible for his resignation from the cabinet at the end of 1965 when he found other ministers including the Hon. Mitchell Sharp held more moderate views on the subject. A FORGOTTEN CHILD In 1964 Mr. Gordon's brain- child was all but forgotten, not even getting a mention in the Speech from the Throne. In 1965, however, he dressed it up like Cinderella and gave it an im- portant place in his April bud- get. A combination of business its chances that year and by December Mr. Gordon was tem- porarily out of the cabinet. His successor, Mr. Sharp, has never had any objection to Frank Trebel Rejects Presidency Of Bank VANCOUVER = (AP)--Frank D. Trebel has rejected the per- manent presidency of the new Bank of British Columbia to resume his duties as president and Chief executive officer of Yorkshire Financial Corp. Ltd. In an announcement Monday, the bank said Mr. Trebel will continue as president until Oct. 31 in accordance with his agreement to serve the bank on a temporary basis until it receives its banking certificate. Mr. Trebel, 39, said in an Interview he turned down the permanent presidency without discussing terms. He was appointed temporary president and chief executive officer in May. All bank offi- cers are on a temporary basis until the bank gets final federal clearance to start business. He is under a five-year con-| tract with Yorkshire and came} to the bank on loan. | "My leave of absence from} Yorkshire was for the period of | raising the capital," he said. "We thought that the mau | length of time this would take new president. would be a year but the job has been done much sooner than expected." 11,000 SUBSCRIBED In another announcement, the bank said Monday that more than 11,000 people have sub- scribed "in excess of $12,000,000 for more than 480,000 shares" during the two-month share selling campaign that ended last week. The figures are estimates pending final tabulation of sub- scriptions by the Canada Trust Co. the bank's original capital goal was $75,000,000. On July 6, the bank cut its target to $25,- 000,000. Premier W. A. C. Ben- nett has said he wanted the bank to raise $250,000,000. In announcing his resignation, Mr. Trebel said: "T felt I had to come to a conclusion and make clear my intentions. I have a commit- ment to the directors and shareholders of Yorkshire." He said he also had a com- mitment to the bank that would give them time to search for a g Union Nationale Support Seen For Roblin In Leaders' Race QUEBEC (CP)--The powerful political machine of Premier Daniel Johnson appears revved up for the Conservative leader- ship campaign of Premier Duff Roblin of Manitoba. | Although Mr. Johnson has insisted he is staying out of the Conservative race, evidence is piling up that the Union Natio- nale is backing Mr. Roblin. One interpretation is that Mr. Johnson is supporting the Con- servatives in a fight to finish off the federal Liberals, whose big power base is in Quebec. The theory is that Mr. John- son has given up the possibility of negotiating -- constitutional change with the Liberals who, the 'Quebec premier feels, are defending the status quo. TRACES EVIDENT Traces of the Union Nationale organization have been evident in the Roblin ranks ever since the Manitoban launched his Quebec campaign at Trois-Ri- scheduled to visit the Quebec to meet then. haps the most fluently French paigned in Quebec for constitu- account of what he has called the province's particular status. him here to teach in French in the public viores Aug. 18. schools of his province, Behind the scenes the signs! are strong that Duff Roblin is the Quebec premier's pick of opposition and an election killed | the CDC as such but he has| objected strongly to Mr. Gor-} don's concept on two grounds. He does not believe it should be used as a weapon to prevent TORONTO (CP)--Ontario's women public school teachers Friday added $335,000 to their professional services fund--in effect a strike fund--but turned down a proposal that they pay $20 each for the next three years to build up the fund. The addition brings the fund to $748,000. Strike action is against the policy of the Ontario Teachers' Federation. Instead they resign their jobs and the professional services fund is used for sup- port. Kay Sigurjonsson, secretary of the federation's committee studying social conditions for non-treaty Indians, told the t s the last year was able to pay out only $1,550 of a $6,000 fund raised to help Indians and Eskimos. Too many. conditions were $335,000 Added To Strike Fund By Ontario Women Teachers THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, August 22, 1967 |] BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT attached to three $1,000 scholar- ships offered to non-treaty Indians and Eskimos going to teacher's colleges and to other grants for Indians and Eskimos studying in high schools. Delegates asked the federa- tion to protest the recruiting of teachers outside Canada. They said Canada should not be depleting the supply of teachers in countries that need them more than Canada does. The last day of the conven- tion saw Annabell McNaughton, of Leamington, installed as 1967-68 federation president, succeeding Melba Woolley of Ottawa. Other officers are: R. Isabel Lawson of Grand Valley and Annabelle Harten of Sault te. Marie, first and second vice- presidents, and Doris Kearns of Barrie, treasurer. WATERLOO, Ont. (CP)--Chi- na is prepared to let the whole of Southeast Asia be neutral- ized, and that is what should be done, Chester Ronning, one of Canada's leading Far Eastern experts, told 425 delegates to the Lutheran young people's Southeast Asia Neutralization Seen Acceptable To China there and later taught there. He| entered the Canadian diplo-| matic service and served in Norway and India and later as! ambassador to China; increasing popularity of moto- rized increased sales of a new high- fashion mukluk, casual boot for men and women. O'Gradnick and manufactured in the Greb Shoes Ltd. plant, the mukluks are a hand-sewn moccasin in high-top style. ger, designed originally for winter hiking, has caught the imagina- New Mukluk Casual Boot Wins Favour In Canada WINNIPEG (CP) -- The toboggans has led to Designed by Frank William Moorby, plant mana- says the footwear, tion of shoe retailers across Canada and the firm has been "pleasantly surprised" by sales winter display. the market was large enough to to retail outlets for fall and Mr. Moorby said the firm felt nylon pile lining in the 10-inch leg section. Women's styles are of the same construction, but of white warrant a special design for ajleather and simulated sealskin winter hiking boot based on the moccasin design, but retailers appear to think the mukluk has a sound future as all-round win- ter wear. "There is no doubt that part of the dealer response can be traced to a demand for special footwear for use with motorized toboggans." Men's styles are of heavy, two-tone brown fringed buckskin Shearling sole lining and red} Algoma Steel Suspends | Expansion 0£$175,000,000 SAULT STE. MARIE (CP)---| Algoma said it has laid off} men's and $24 mukluks. upper, light blue 'binding and shearling pile collar. Both Styles have extra-tough woven nylon laces. Retail ,cost is about $19 for for 'women's Greb, with head office at Kitchener, Ont., has moved into several specialty lines of foo- twear supplementing Hush Pup- leather with|pies which account for 50 per top, natural }cent of its total sales. The firm has developed a {special webbed back for cow- boy boots available for people with high insteps who can't get into regular styles. The webbed back expands to permit easy entrance of the heel then retracts once the foot is seated properly. The firm's line of boots has grown to 25 styles from seven |Algoma Steel Corp., whose net/600 steelworkers, half of them |Tanging from those of the wran- gondolier is passed trom |rne only thing to do in Viet-|'T* cninese and the Russians. |period last | year, announced | father to son (CP Photo) nam is to make terms," he|HAVE COMMON AIM Pompe fey fs ofr deletes | said. "The North Vietnamese| '"'The one thing the Chinese|* The dahioaty sai ote Vai DIVIDENDS will accept a conference andjand the Russians have in com-/999 cteelworkers are being laid will accept terms for with-|mon is the prevention of the drawal." destruction of North Vietnam." ney blast furnace and plate By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian General Securities Ltd., class A 15 cents; class B 15 cents; Sept. 15, record August 28. Bowater Paper Corp. Ltd., 15 cents, Nov. 6, record Sept. 25. Quebec Natural Gas, 5.40- per-cent pref. $1.35; 544-per- cent pref. $1,377144, Sept. 30, record Sept. 15. Western Broadcasting Co. Ltd., common 9 cents, increase of 1 cent, Sept. 30, record "Continuing the bombing is a greater risk to American boys than cessation because bombing may bring in the Communist Chinese, and then the fat is in the fire. "The war in Vietnam is one of the greatest threats to the continued existence of the United Nations, which is our best and perhaps our only hope for peace." Mr. Ronning was born in August 31. China in 1894, spent his boyhood Mr. Ronning carried a letter from Prime Minister Pearson to North Vietnamese President) paye been spending about $3,- Ho Chi Minh in 1966. "One of the reasons I WaS/sion program. Company offi-joperated at 77 per cent of accepted in Hanoi was that! cjais suggested Algoma's sales,| capacity in July and production Pearson was the only head of| production and profits would|was eight per cent down from government that sent a reply to a letter from (North Viet- namese President) Ho Chi Minh, Canada has also taken a rather courageous trying to bring about a cessa- tion of hostilities in Vietnam. American investment in Can- adiar industry. He is ready enough to encourage more Can- adian investment and _ thinks CDC might help but he is not putting any bars against the con- tinued flow of needed capital across the border. He- also be- lieved that Mr. Gordon was put- ting far too much importance on tre corporation and its ef- fectiveness. So, while the CDC appeared in the Throne Speech, he has been careful to empha- size that there was no urgency. Now Mr. Pearson, probably re- flecting the views of Mr. Gordon who is chairman of the cabinet committee on foreign invest- ment, has added that urgency. LOANS OR PARTNERSHIPS By JOSEPH ZUKOWSKI TORONTO (CP)--The elderly man smiled. "It was the booze that got to me and now I'm trying to make helping thé brothers." George (Scotty) Allen, was talking in the kitchen of the Good Shepherd Refuge in Toronto's Cabbagetown district. When a man needs more money to run his busi he Scotty's feelings are shared by several other men who help 54, jcook and clean at the refuge| 'Down-and-Outers Get Help At Good Shepherd Refuge "Our most immediate need is |off, and field construction of ia bas Aug. 29 to Sept. 5. | mill has been suspended. The company is understood to} {000,000 a month on its expan.| |have to improve to continue | spending at this rate. "Production must reflect orders, and steel orders are stand by|lower," a company news|the same period in 1966. |release stated. It said pro- jlonged. construction strikes in southern Ontario have contrib- juted to the company's troubles. | Meetings between the Foun- dation Co. of Canada, building the blast furnace and plate mill, and Algoma were being held Monday to decide the future of 240 men remaining on the construction force. | Sixty-four Foundation Co. employees were laid off Mon- day | will be reduced from lay off another 300 month The company said it will shut} down its merchant mill this week, its bar and strip mill next week, and its rail mill| Basic oxygen steelmaking| Aug. 27 until Sept. 4, but Algoma said} this is an annual procedure, | The Canadian steel industry jthat of July, 1966. Production jtotalling 5,600,000 tons in the \first seven months of this year was six per cent lower than in | Algoma's earnings in 1966 |dropped to $24,800,000 or $2.14-a |share from a record of $30,- 800,000 or $2.66 a share in 1965. A strike which shut down operations for a month between December, 1966, and January, 1967, was given as one reason for lower earnings. The company says it has had to recover business and custom- ers lost during this shutdown, jwhen customers' delivery lrequirements were not met. jrun by the Roman Catholic|for a walk-in freezer and)%9Y: Institute of the Good Shepherd.|money to help meet our $32,000) Since the charity began in May, 1963, more than 500,000 53,298 men given a night's lodg- ing and 22,229 articles of cloth- ing issued--all without charge. the Good Shepherd, the Toronto refuge provides meals and can do two things. He can bor- row, assuming his credit is good, at a fixed interest charge and a fixed term of repayment. In bad years as well as good interest must be paid. Or he can seek out a partner ready to put his money into the business in return for a share of the profits and perhaps some say in run- ning it. There is no doubt of Canada's need for money in the past and for continuing need if our standard of living is to be maintained. We have leaned, perhaps a little too much to the partnership deal. A large por- tion of Canadian industry is owned or controlled by Ameri- can companies, But dollars have no citizenship and recent sur- veys have shown that where U.S. companies did dictate Can- adian policy, it was in most cases to make profits in Can- ada and therefore good for Can- ada. There is a school of thought which urges that Canada's need for money should be satisfied by borrowing rather than allow- ing Americans to increase their share of ownership in Canadian industry. Can we afford it? There is only one way to pay the interes! on increased borrowing and that is by increasing vut- put. Without urging, Canadian bonds held by Americans more than doubled between 1954 and 1964. Since then the increase has been about $1 billion a year. In- terest payments on foreign held bonds between 1965 and 1966 increased by 26 per cent. Can- ada's output of goods and serv- ices in the same period in-| creased by 11 per cent. This may not mean we are headed for bankruptcy yet but no one will argue that it is good busi- ness and the 1967 showing when Canadian output will not be more than seven per cent and new borrowings will be higher should give the degt advocates some second thoughts. the nine-man pack of Tory lead- ership candidates. Mr. Roblin's aides, who admit the Manitoba premier needs strong Quebec support to win the race, say Mr. Roblin would welcome Mr. Johnson's support. The Quebec premier returns from his holidays Sept. 1, the day when Premier Roblin is capital. The two politicians are The Manitoba premier, per- of all the candidates, has cam- tional change to take greater Mr. Roblin also has going for the recent amend- ment to the Manitoba Public Schools Act restoring the right STOCK REPORTS NOT AVAILABLE Due to computer problems at the Toronto Stock exchange, quotations were not avail- able to The Times today. Toronto Industrials Dip Sharply TORONTO (CP)--Speculators continued their buying spree' on the Toronto Stock Exchange Monday as industrials declined sharply for the second consecu- tive session. Consolidated Bellekeno was the most active issue, rising 5 to 22 cents on 841,000 shares. has acquired 100 claims in the Coppermine River area of the Northwest Territories as well as 24 additional claims in the Vangorda area of the Yukon. PCE Explorations, which recently announced it encoun- tered copper mineralization in the Coppermine area, was unchanged at 2.20 after being up for most of the session. UP 12 CENTS Lorado moved up 12 cents to $1 on 308,000 shares, 174,000 of which were involved in a single transaction. Canadian Nisto added 2 at 70 cents on 251,000 shares. Industrials weakened follow- ing a sharp decline on the New York exchange. Algoma Steel slid 23g to 25%, ITL Industries 1% to 405g and Falconbridge 144 to 87%. On index, industrials were off -54 to 169.09, golds 1.49 to 179.75 and western oils 1.52 to 198.47. Base metals advanced 18 to 103.40. Volume was 5,464,000 shares compared with 5,483,000 The stock could have been : '| bought at 7 cents Thursday. Brother Columban, one-time The company announced it medic in the marines during 70. FOUR HOMES The institute operates three other homes in Canada--a men's refuge in Hamilton opened in 1962, the first in this country, a home for retard boys at nearby Orangeville, Ont., and a home at Montreal to be occupied eventually by elderly persons. oe The Good Shepherd refuges were initiated in Canada by a Jesuit priest, Rev. Robert McDougal. After being appoint- ed director of Catholic rehabili- tation operations in Toronto in 1962, he heard of the Little Brothers in the U.S. and got the help of three brothers. Only one member of the orig- inal brothers is still in Canada. the Second World War, now is director of the Toronto Housing Authority hostel for evicted families. The Toronto refuge is under the direction of Brother Martin, 36, a former Canadian National Railways employee from Oril- lia, Ont. "We have only three prob- lems,"' the brother said, "not enough food, not enough money and not enough vocations. Apart from that, we're doing fine." IN DEBT Food for the refuge, in a run- down area just east of down- town Toronto, is picked up Ont, He drives 30,000 miles a year in a panel truck and up to 175 miles daily in Toronto pick- ing up donated supplies. Brother Dominic, 21, of King- ston, Ont., is the refuge's book- inches wide, special budget." Trot: Sten: 4: of tydowy | Dr. Petrie Memorandum employee for 15 years, Brother Eugene, 21, refuge's staff. amends for the lost years by|hot meals have been served,|N.S., a department of defence) and| a high| school graduate from Ottawa, | Staffed by five Little Brothersimake up the rest of the Scores Carter Report this the He said he believes continued) profit dropped to $4,600,000 in|students hired for the summer, |!¢t to boots in fine calfskin for bombing of North Vietnam by the first half of this year from|in the last two weeks and plans the United States could bring in| nearly $14,000,000 in a similar) to dress occasions. For the male square aancer, ie firm is manufacturing a new style based on the cowboy boot without the long leg. It has side gores, leather or soft coms position sole and, naturally, full cowboy boot heel. NET EARNINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bralorne Pioneer Mines Ltd., six months ended June 30: 1967, $31,544; 1966, $123,447. Canadian Tire Corp. Ltd., six months ended June 30. 1967 $1,937,048, 58 cents a share; 1966, $1,656,477, 50 cents. Dominion Magnesium Ltd., six months ended June 30: 1967, $141,626, 30 cents a share; 1966, $156,178, 33 cents. Falconbridge Nickel Mines Ltd.; six months ended June 30: 1967, $10,731,000, $2.19 a share; 1966, $13,800,000, $2.82. Fargo Oils Ltd., six months ended June 30: 1967, $343,000; 1966, $429,000. General Products Mfg. Corp. Ltd., six months ended June 30: 1967, $364,184; 1966, $290,328. | Hollinger Consolidated Gold |Mines Ltd., six months ended June 30: 1967, $2,417,000, 49 cents a share; 1966, $2,822,000, 57 cents. Sogemines Ltd., six months ended June 30: 1967, $2,023,000, 42 cents; 1966, $1,802,000, 38 cents, Waterous GM Diesel Ltd., six months ended June 30: 1967, Operated under strict sy MONTREAL (CP)--Adoptionjanother through adjustment of|si¢.131, eight cents a share must fill out cards giving age, height, weight, religion an name of next of kin. Kept on file, this information is used in event of sickness or death, to help police find miss- ied ing persons and to prevent "repeaters." "We're willing to provide free lodging and meals for a maxi- mum of five days," said Broth- er Martin. "That's enough time for most men to find a job if they really want one." Some of the men helped by|?. the brothers return to express their appreciation by offering money, although this is discour- aged. "We'd prefer a simple word of thanks," Brother Regis said, "or to hear that they were employed and had taken their proper place in society. Music In Prison Truly Inside Job DUESSELDORF (AP) -- A prisoner who wanted some) entertainment brought his ownjone of music along--inside his stom- ach. The 25-year-old man had swallowed a small transistor radio, three inches long and 114 before entering prison in this West German city. He tad assembled the small receiver from parts of Japanese transister radios. When the radio began to daily by Brother Regis, a 24/cause him stomach pains he year-old baker from Port Hope,|reported to the prison doctor, Dr. Philip Hildringer. The doctor said he ordered a ration of sauerkraut which caused the radio to reap- pear in a natural manner." for an average of 600 men daily|tions, the refuge bans drunks\9f recommendations contained|the tax system. leeping quarters for up to|while men staying overnight|in the Carter report on taxation | would create a centralized fed-|would result in "a still greater gives government "with anjerosion of individual property unprecedented degree of peace-|right::." of the economy," says a critical/massive planning required to could Prepared by economist Dr. J./leave its handling "to a very memorandum on the report. |R. Petrie, it is a summary of a special study made at the request of the Canadian Cham- ber of Commerce. The study will be published in limited number next month. | After 43 pages of point-by- jpoint consideration of the Carter report, the memoran- dum concludes that the report "should be neither damned in its entirety nor accepted as a 'basket' proposal." "It contains constructive lrecommendations that should be implemented. Others, however, require careful consi- deration."' Accompanying the memoran- dum is a letter signed by D. L. |Morrell, general manager of jthe Canadian chamber, which says Dr. Petrie's conclusions have not been endorsed by the jchamber. The memorandum says that the main difficulties involved in implementing . the Carter report is that it "plays down" the possibility of conflict between the federal and provin- cial governments. The Carter report conceded that full provincial approval might not be forthcoming immediately, but yet made its plans "basically dependent on provincial acceptance and co- operation " "This appears to be unwar- rant-d optimism," Dr. Petrie says Ako questioned is the report's plan to redistribute incore from one group to keeper and accountant. | 'We're about $4,500 in debt at) the moment and our monthly) Friday. expenses are $2,800. The problems are expected to be corrected in time for Wednesday's edition. MAKE GRAND TOUR GREENWOOD, N.S. (CP)--} Fifteen Canadian airmen are making a centennial cross-Can- ada motorcycle tour. The men from Canadian Forces Base, e PROTE Loy DISTRIBUTORSHIP NO SELLING--PART TIME $1000--$5000 INVESTMENT AVAILABLE FOR INDUSTRIOUS INDIVIDUAL WHO HAS GOOD BACKGROUND AND CHARACTER EXCLUSIVE CTED TERRITORY | association with Crown Life as a special representative in the CROWN LIFE APPOINTMENTS C. Churchley Crown Life Insurance Company is pleased to announce the | Mr, M. Johann as Manager of their Oshawa appointment of M. Johann the reti it of Mr. C. Churchley. Mr. Churchley has been associated with Crown Life for thirty-two years, the last eighteen of which he has served in the Greenwood, N.S., are spending WRITE NOW Agency. Mr. Joh '8 their annual leave travelling i GIVING US FULL DETAILS 4,000 miles to the base at ey IN CONFIDENCE Comox, B.C. Some of the group! Ss capacity of Manager of the Osha ~~ completed the trip and x BOX... 1950 Port H others will leave Nova Scotia as aN oe ; | a take their leave. time control and regimentation implement the report smal! number of persons." The memorandum praises the report for its "impressive logic" in constructing 'an jentirely new tax system" and jfinds it "fresh, imaginativ |Stimulating, aggravating." | "At times the author's smug jacademic tone of omniscience jand detachment from--or igno- jrance of--marketplace reality jis irritating," it says | Yet, "regardless of all criti- jcism, the report has great value." | | \NRI Of Canada | Firm Announced ST, LOUIS, Mo. (AP)--National Rejectors, Inc., announced {Monday plans for a plant in |Toronto .to .manufacture .NRI! jcoin selectors designed to} laccept -Canada's .new .nickel] {coins as well as existing Cana- dian and United States coins. .. The plant is scheduled to} jstart production in early Sep-| tember. It will be known gs/ NRI of Canada. ! This, says the memorandum, Dr. Petrie also warns that the 1966, $129,516 (loss). Carling Appointment M. W. (Mike) Bolibruck The Carling Breweries Limited is pleased to announce the ap- pointment of M. W. (Mike) Bolibruck as District Sales Man- ager for the Eastern District. Mr. Bolibruck, a resident of Peterborough, has had many years of sales experience with Carling and prior to his present oppoiggment, was District Sales Manager in North-Western On- tario. ready fo IDB loans have helped modernize their facilities wa Agency. He will continue his | TORONTO, ONT. : 250 University Is your bu. expansion? medium-sized Canadian businesses to enlarge or their goods and services. We invite you to discuss the financial needs of your business with us. MAL} inpusTRIAL DEVELOPMENT BANK TERM FINANCING FOR CANADIAN BUSINESSES thousands of small and to meet the demand for Avenue -- Telephone: 368-1145