Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 28 Sep 1959, p. 7

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

TODAY'S TORONTO, MONTREAL STOCKS TORONTO By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--Sept. Sales High Lo (Quotstions in cents unless marked §, #--Odd Jot, xd -- Ex-dividend, xr--Exz- rights, zw = Ex-warranis.) INDUSTRIALS Net Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge Sales High INDUSTRIALS 20% 205 205 2% 25% 38% 36% 3% NX 95 "% 45% 8 74% 0% 7 3» Con Gas Dist Seag D Bridge Dom Stores Dom- Tar Dom Text Fam Play Fanny F G Dev 600 G Dynam 500 GL Pow wis 100 800 GN Gas B wt 100 Imp Bank xd 40 36! Great West 100 Gr Wpg vt 100 Imp Oil 7 837 Inglis 250 Intprov B wis z10 45 Q N Gas 225 Roe AV Can 660 Royal Bank 1225 $8 StL Cem A n StL Corp St Maurice 310 Salada-§ 345 ad sg¥ntadge foun 8 eo a =] ul EgBesandy sas High Cr $11% $11% ny 42 242 10% + 5 Phillips Provo Gas | #® ++ ie Bam ds FE FE & FEREEEE + ° ¥ Buifad Camp Chib Cdn NW Can-Erin Can-Met Casslar xd Cent Pat Chester Chib-Kay Chimo Chrom Coin Lake Cclomace C Beta G C Denison C Den wis C Discvry C Halliwell Ree + - + 145 38 16 85 275 13 C Morrison C Northland Conwest Cop-Man D'Aragon Deer Horm uvan East Mal 955 $26% 490 600 895 849% 3 $89 11 109 + 113 11% $10% 1H spect anenay Be Beanea.s 8 S8e Net ww 11 a.:a. Ch'ge Stock Orchan Pamour Paraminy Patino wis Pato Peerless Pick Crow 11% 11% zn 42 10% Sullivan Sylvanite Taurcan'ls Temag Thom L Tiara 'Tombill Trin Ult-Shaw U Asheshs Un Keno xd Ventures Violam W' Malar Willroy Yale Lemd Young HG Zenmac Sales to 11 MONTREAL B)7 The Canadian Press Stock E Sales High Low s.m. Ch'ge Bin CANADIAN 11:30 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge 3 8B B $6% 6% 6% + 200 3200 200 $38 38 38 $36% 36% -- 70 70 70 340% 0% $23 23 $14% 143% 10% % ---% 12% + % 17 +5 104 76 205 " 5 58 60 +4 13% 13% + W 1 1 415 +10 Cartier Cent Man Cop Man Fab Hollinger Kerr Add Lingside Montgary N Formaque 3000 +8 -13 +1 5 - {with the preliminaries for two RICHES FROM UNDERGROUND Uses Atomic By RENNIE TAYLOR |directly above it and feel nothing jated Press Sci Writer more than a sudden Jo, os They worked out mal The thermonuclear bomb s| : Eh ia ge 0) peacetully| matical formula for containment and quietly. It has the power to landscape the face of the earth; to bring up great riches from the oceans or from underground; to invade the upper air and outer space for! perhaps undreamed-of benefits. American scientists, engineers and technicians already are busy the Nevada desert on Sept. 19, Possibly the first big experi ment to materialize will be Pro} ect Gnome, in which a 10-kiloton dvice is to be exploded in an underground salt bed near Carls- ventures, tentatively slated for/bad, NM N Pac Cal 500 N Viaray 3500 N W Amulet 2100 Nocana 2000 N A Rare M_ 500 Opem Exp 16000 Orchan 4800 1 500 300 5000 450 2 190 3 133 25 ol 2 daBES. +3 = +3 +2 +3 1500 1000 1100 am. 535%. 0888 Paudash Pitt Gold Que Chib Que Smelt ullivan ['azin Mtan Wendell WW Sales fo 11:30 a.m.: Industrials 15,6003 Mines 65,000. (Quotations 04d let, xd -- Ex-dividend, rights, xw~Ex-warrants.) INDUSTRIALS Stock Abitibi Algoma Alumin Asbestos Banque C N Bank Mog Bank N§ xd Banque F'C Bell Phone Brazil B A Ol Cal Pow CSL C Bk Com .xd C Brew C Chem Cell C Hydrocuy CILxd C Int Pow pr C oil CPR C Pet pr C Vickers xd Con M and 8 Dist Seag D Fndry D Glass D Steel xd D Stores D Tar D Text Fam Play Foundation Gen Dynam G L Paper Home Oil 4 H Smith xd Hud Bey Imp Oi] Ind Accep Int Nickel Int Util Jamaica Labatt rte 9% 20% 39 9% 3 Mass F Mitch Rob B Nat Stl Car Noranda N Sco LP Pacific Petes ¥ : Steel Can Steinbg A Tr Can Pipe Walk G W 88.ug 2100 95 Sept. 28 in cents unless marked & ar--Ex -- New Ceylon Premier Red Enemy COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP)--Time and responsibility have sobered Ceylon's new prime minister, who was a troublemaker when the British ruled this island and who once ran with the Reds. Today the leftists are sworn enemies of Wijayananda Dahana- yake. The lank , nearly-bald bachelor was trained asia schoolteacher. But there was no schoolroom manner about him when he used to turn his vitriol and wild ges- tures against the British in the old days. The prime minister, now 57 and always an ardent nationalizt, was jailed by the British in the Sec- ond World War as a threat to security In those days he ram with the Communists as a mem- ber of the Trotskyite-Bplshevist- Leninist party. But st; disciplines were not for is highly individualistic politician. He walked out of the party in 1947. Dahanayake was deep in poli tics when Ceylon became inde. pendent in 1947--the press called him "a baby kisser par excel lence." But it was not until the 1956 campaign that he turned up on the winning side. Among the late Prime Minister Solomon Bandaranaike's cam- paign planks was one to make Sinahl the \ by most Ceylonese, the official language. Dahanayake formed a language front, leaped into the election and shortly after Banda ranalke was swept into power joined Bandaranaike's Freedom Pp . . 11:30 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge 110 $ 33 130 8 36% 990 31% 107 2 z3 54% 525 55% 100 75 39 391% 642 230 15 800 150 225 0 300 300 225 75 100 274 26 100 z75 2200 » z5 200 100 $6 220 125 225 200 z5 25 100 100 250 1265 212 100 235 $33 $77% $25% $25% 835% 55 230 tion within a year or two, called Project Plowshare. Plow- share is the United States Atomic Energy Commission's name for the whole field of undertakings contemplating the use of nuclear explosives for peaceful purposes. Czas of the two imminent proj- ects is the burial of a "peaceful" bomb, which is not a bomb in the miiitary sense, in a salt mine The salt: bed was chosen for severa. reasons. Holes can be drilled down to it with ease from the surface. Salt won't waste much of the blast's heat through chemical changes. It is good material for couserving heat and absorbing the shock. of the Humble Oil and Refining Company, worked out formulas Jang I Ad rps StS THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 28, 1959 7 'Project Plowshare change the world's weather by lifting tremendous dust or water droplets into the stratosphere and spreading them|the blast. like a blanket between the ci.th and the sun? The only way to find out is to try it. Lester Machta of the US. weather bureau says each one megaton blast could lift 100,000, 000 tons of warm, moist air high above the earth where sation to give up to one - of an inch of rain over a square-mile area downward Bomb quantities of ORGAN MUSIC NIGHTLY AT THE . GENOSHA HOTEL ' H. G. Corneil and A. D. Suttle™ to produce heat for power and for the quick conversion of nat- ural substances into highly useful and easily recoverable materials. BLAST OUT HARBOR The second is the excavation of 2 harbor on the bleak mnorth- wy ®t oust Lada, well north) The oil industry has expressed Close behind these are detailed interest in an experimental Blast proposals to dig a new and larger 8 8 $I. J JU erate the Panama Canal; warm up the ude oil so it could be pumped | indicating that the larger devices --one to 10 megatons--exploded in salt or limestone could supply heat enough to produce electric power at prices competitive with conventional team - electric sys- tems. A megaton equals 1,000, 000 tons of TNT) polar regions: attempt weather, | control; curb hurricances and| lightning; produce cheap fresh/ WEATHER CONTROL water from the oceans; enlarge! Can big nuclear the supply of petroleum and explosions 1 other minerals; and make strange f new chemicals including more fuel for both reactors and nu- clear explosives. Ballet The scientists believe ther have I the wherewithal for all these and | more, and have it right now. | The nuclear explosive is con- REGISTER NOW sidered ready because the scien- tists have learned how to aim its! ---------------- split-second violence to trap it| underground in the form of heat which could be stoned and used] gradually. GENTLE BLAST They say they have demon-| strated that they can bury a de- vice at just the right depth to explode it so that you could stand! FOR FALL Srir-------- | Irenie Harvey | A.CCM. | 424 KING ST. W. RA 5-6122 RAD. BALLET -- CDT.A. TAP -- -- ay SH Toho! Witty, Wise and Wicked ! LESLIE DICK CARON BOGARDE | in Bernard Shaw's AIEEE THE Se T----" | 3 DOCTOR'S DILEMMA Rh sl RL ALISTAIR SIM -- ROBERT MORLEY | | Photographed in [ BEAUTIFUL METROCOLOR J _ vv | | | | | | 'THE GREAT ST. LOUIS ee </L| BANK ROBBERY" oF bi & BOTH ADULT ENTERTAINMENT 3USINESS SPOTLIGHT ' Housing Industry Welcomes Funds $y ALAN DONNELLY | Canadian Press Staff Writer | \g industry, slowed recently by, shortage of mortgage funds, as reacted with enthusiasm to je latest transfusion of federal ney. | Since Sept. | as been making direct loans to uilders for small home construc- weeks before the federal loan pro- mortgages granted in Au ceived until Dec. 31, number of requests for the loans {undoubtedly will depend on the| August period, new housing sta OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's hous- availability o! normal mortgage declined to 66,800 units from flie|Ottawa routine duties for the|lster. record rate of 97,054 a year earl- prime minister who thrives on| lier. Starts in August fell to 10,206 travel. loans as the fall season pro- The main limiting factor is a stipulation that a single builder can get mo more than 15 loans. tion industry report that in the ishow from 12,115 a year earlier. These statistics cover about 80) with some other developments! [per cent of housing activity in| 1 the government| Persons close to the construc-|the country. New National Housing Au on. Officials now indicate the/gram went into effect, new mort-|clined to 3,796--less than half th rogram already has exceeded gages loans were most difficult to|7,874 in August, 1958. kpectations, | come by. | A senior governmen gust che- ment is polishing up its atten. t offical Survey reports earlier this year Diefenbaker Quebec Tour 'Wise Move Politically By ARCH MacKENZIE Canadian Press Staff Writer |miles and worked OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis. | Ing. ter Diefenbaker is back in Ot- . : tawa after a week - long trip|travelling since taking office has through Quebec, longest junket, not gone unnoticed by the Lib- lof its kind that he has under-|erals, two of whom last week and the cities of over 5,000 population taken since taking office in 1957.|came out with caustic remarks that during the Januayy- { i} Y P rtslouting, sort of a holiday from outside Ottawa by the prime min- | "It was billed as a non-political|about the amount of time spent China Dislikes Meet Of Ike, Mr. K. KINGSTON (CP) China doesn't like the idea that the United States and Russia can sit |down together and settle world |problems, Toronto lawyer E. B. {Jolliffe told a history seminar at | But it happened to coincide] that might be construed in scme |quarters as evidence that the +t | Progressive Conservative govern- - e|tions to Quebec. And jt followed public opinion that Quebec's political affection in which he covered thousands of in some fish- Mr. Diefenbaker's extensive LEARN TO BE A DG Dancer THE EASY WAY! OSHAWA DRIVE-IN BOX-OFFICE OPEN AT 7:00 TONIGHT ! SHOW STARTS AT 7:30 4 JOAN Any ANN Ail * CorLins * Gray * Shima *MiLLen The Orrosrre: Sex. «==ADULT ENTERTAINMENT -- AND MORE EXCITEMENT AIK CASTMAR COLOR wb ( 2 hr. trial lesson With a maximum six-per-cent said that despite the decline, nev interest ceiling on National Hous- housing starts for the full vein e said the government hoped it ing Act mortgages, many lenders are expected to be around 135,00] ould lead to construction of 10,-| preferred to invest money else. or 140.000. That still would be ths: |where at a better return. Rates/second largesi on record, after lon non-NHA first mortgages are|last year's peak of 164,632 hous. |reported to range around 7 and|ing units started. |7% per cent. | The program of direct federsl Queen's University Saturday. The former Ontario CCF leader said the sight of twe old men, both of them white, in session to- When Prime Minister Diefen-| aker anpounced the plan in July {for the government was om the ebb. Those surveys indicated that the Libe als were regaining] strength in their former strong-| \ gether to solve the affairs of man- hold of Quebec which in the 1958) ind is distasteful to the Chinese. ggoo® general election returned 50 con- x ' ate | Mr. Jolliffe was born in China e { t | SerVaLves among its 75 Commons, his parents s d is-'® only $jeo e000 00OOOL % new homes Officials of Central Mortgage nd Housing Corporation report sat at Sept. 18, loan applications Yes, there's a fun way, a really quick way to learn to ad been approved covering 9,685 nits. Applications were being | rocessed at the rate of 1,300 nits a week. "We would be very surprised if se figure doesn't go to at least 5,000," said one official. INTIL DEC. 31 Loan applications will be re Six Nations Consider Submission WALPOLE ISLAND (CP)--The. ix Nations Indian tribe is con- idering calling a meeting of On- ario Indian bands to discuss a ommon brief to be presented to he federal committee on Indian| fairs in December. | . Councillor Simpson Brigham of | he Walpole Island tribe made the nnouncement Saturday after his ribe conferréd with representa- ives of the Six Nations and Mora- jantown tribes. Councillor Brigham said gov- TIGHT MONEY tight money situation 'has been a major factor in the declin- ing ram of starts on new homes. |The direct loans were cut off lak gures covering towns and mortgage loans is a renewal of the plan that has operated in the last two winters as a method cf (helping winter unemployment, Dec. 31 Convict Returns After Escapade LANCASTER, Pa. (AP)-- Gerald Wilson came home--and | sure handed his family a jolt. His five-year-old son pot only | didn't recognize him; he felt he should cry out "mama." For daddy was dolled up fan- cler than Charley's aunt. He wore a frilly grey dress, spike- heeled shoes, a black babushka and a heap of makeup. Wilson hadn't been home for a while. He's been in jail, serv- ing up to six months for bur- glary and larceny Thursday was a kind of mile- | It was his 15th| stone for him day in jail. He felt he'd had enough. Sometime before dawn he left. He had managed to get a supply of wooden benches from the women's recreation room. These he put end to end, rament officials have indicated hat Indian briefs and recom- nendations have been so numer-| us that many cannot be con- idered. It has not been decided vhether the proposed combined wief will cover all Ontario bands x Jost bands in the southw metion. making an improvised ladder to scale a 25-foot wall For 24 hours he hid in a park That was no good. So first thing Friday he went to a rummage sale and bought himself an out fit. Then he got rn Cones. He wandered about cily some cheap | | streets all day. No one took much notice of him except a | truck driver whose perplexity grew the more he pondered. Finally, the trucker just had to go to the police "Funny thing" he said "That woman's legs were so hairy, Hefty, too. Not like a dame's at all." As patrolmen kept an eve open for an offbeat female, Wilson in his masquerade was home, and not pleased over his reception Without much persuasion, he decided it would be best to give [ himself up, he later told au- thorities. "What can I do for you, lady?" asked Robert Brighton, a guard, as Wilson made his way with a certain wobble to the prison gate. "I wan't to see the warden, please," Wilson replied Back in drab prison costume Wilson 'explained that he chose to impersonate a woman "be- cause my mother al $ | dressed me in ladies' clothing | for Hallowe'en." ample is the two-day flying trip| Ine made | {slonaries VANIER APPOINTMENT "Aside from Mr. Diefenbaker's/ trip, there were two, other recent developments flattering to Que- THEATRE GUIDE bec. One was the appointment of - {Maj.-Gen George 4 Vanier as rock AH » 7.10 and 9.30 Governor - General, first from| pla jig oii Bly | po Last complete show 9 Then there was the strengthen-| : ing of Quebec's representation in'plaze the cabinet with the naming of, ka sixth member in Pierre NSevigny, as associate defence uminister. Now, Mr. Diefenbaker has Regent -- "The Foxiest Girl in itaken his first good non-cam-| Paris," 1.30, 4.25. 7.20, paign look 'at Quebec, He ive p.m. also "The First Man into| carefully non - political. limiting| Space" 8.05, 6.05, 9.00 p.m.| his remarks to the general theme| Last complete show 9.00 p.m, | Doctor's Dilemma" (color) 1.45, 3.40, 5.35, 7.35, 9.35 p.m. Last complete show 9.15 p.m. dg - o 2 = 1 =n LJ dance, thanks t6 Arthur Murray's famous "Magic Step". In your first lesson you learn the key to the Cha Cha, Samba, Foxtrot--all the latest dances. Parties are part of your lessons, so you can count on meeting hosts of new friends --have more invitations than ever before. Come in and have a half-hour $1.00 trial lesson. See for yourself how quickly you learn to dance. "ARTHUR MURRAY 11%2 SIMCOE S. RA 8-1681 OPEN 1 P.M. - 10 P.M. DAILY SAT. 10 AM. - 6 P.M. 0000000000080 00000000000000000000000000 eoovcncnes sammed up in references to a| "togetherness" in Ca adian thought and the "oneness of our| Canadianism." | He told assorted audiences he wanted to get to know them better, shaking perhaps 1,500 hands a day In travelling--mainly| Hy car--through Laurentian re. morts, northern industrial centres, the Eastern Townships and Gaspe |HELPS POLITICALLY He can have done jhimself no political harm if pi AL onl of the political axium that the poli- tisian who shakes that many hands makes more friends than egemies., An aide confessed that thas heartiness of the prime min- ister's reception was a source of '""nolitieal happiness." ! Previously, sight . seeing | sorties from Ottawa have been| limited to a day or two. An ex-| JAMES STEWART LEE REMICK BEN GAZZARA EVE ARDEN KATHRYN GRANT hig to the Yukon last year! "As tense and thrilling a shocker as has come along in yearsI™ LIFE MAGAZINE ARTHUR O'CONNELL Fade, ETT HELD OVER! JOSEPH N. WELCH as Judge Weaver a perk you will for many years fo come. 3 MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY / /3 MARTINE CAROL .. The Golin sis @ picture directed by CHRISTIAN-JAQUE | MEM presents FIRST MAN INTO MARSHAL] THOMPSON ... MARLA SPACE om

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy