Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 23 Oct 1959, p. 16

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

. Others, more optimistic, sug- gest that the only result of the strike will be to stretch out the business recovery from last year's recession: where they had expected the boom to run its course this winte:., they say it will continue to mid-1960. In the present bitter atmos. INTERPRETING THE NEWS 16 we OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, October 23, 1959 ODAY'S TORONTO, TORONTO im. Oe Hayride Victim Dies Of Injury TORONTO (CP)~Judith Anne MONTREAL STOCK 11:50 Neb Net Lake, 15, one of seven teen-agers Low sm. an Sales High Low 11 a.m. orn injured when a car smashed into 9 $47% 4TH 47% + Sales Low sm. Ch'ge 791 $33% 100 $12% $339 lot, , xwe-Ex-warrsats.) Lyndhst 3600 +h Hu -1% 4000 Net Sales High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge $36% 36% 36% -- % 50 $22% 22% 2% 6 6 3000 1 70 $31% 31% N% 127 100 $124 12% 1244 OILS Martin 41 ! 85 847% 41% 4TH 500 4] 125 $12% 12% 12 e. mn 8 12 12 12 AP Cins 1015 5 105 105 105 ilvie 55 843 4 Alminex 200 Pac Pete 228 $114 11% Que Nat Gas 220 $15% 15% Que Pow 75 $35 Roe Bak H $80% Royal Ba 185 Newlund 2 BD Salada Shir 260 N Mylama Shawin al Noranda. Steinbg A 198 84 ! tein! Normetal 500 3 -8 Tr Can Pipe 25 orpax alk w 100 Nor:h Colst v a » N Goldert CANADIAN Opemiska Orchan Paymast Peerless Ang Cn Pulp 150 $38% Gad C Dom Sug 100 $22 23 C Ingersoll 60 $38 Cons Paper 1640 $36% 36 Cons Gas 25 $42% Horner A 275 825 Loblaw Co B n 27% Al n Algoma Am Alumini Asamera Basco Britalta Calvan Con "SPECIAL oN ov FLL Fa FF 3 EE Tle ole 2s = 11+] ' Pac Pete Petrol Place Prairie Ofl Provo Gas Rocky Pete Spooner Sub Of Tidal wis Trans Can Triad Oil Un Olls Wsburne sglsggpuayes ¥zeeyiyssuns pa FEE BE 2 = + 3 13 plindation itineau C 3 +1 2 8g TL +) sssFss Gold Age Hollinger 100 Int Ceramic 2200 50 800 388s niysg $538 OSHAWATY OSHAWA y3=8Elgeaizagnsd ggasssugacsy fs Busey g8s 2.8 F 55% 88 14% 1 158 11 10% 11 8 15% 15% 650 635 65 361 GIBBONS ST. RA 8-8180 = bik 8 of INDUSTRIALS 12:30 Net Sales High Low a.m. Oh'ge 100 $16% 16% 16% -- 3% SNIRLE Stock Agnew § Algoma 390 7% IT% Alumin 1435 30% 30% + % Ang C Pulp p 20 50% 50% Argus » $32 NH 3% - % Argus 240 pr 1 70% 70% + Banque CN 25 oS SI +% 0-30 _S0 Ye 50 390 390 390 Banque PC 230 838% Bell Phone 215 Virginia uy 12 13 1 a Bowatr Pap 925 Sales $0 11:80 a.m: Industrials 17,8005 3200 $17 17% 17% Bowal "m Mines 88,700. $7% TH oF B A Oil 260 = Que Smelt 5t Law Riv C Denison C Den wis CG Arrow C Halliwell 510 500 510 + Slik 1% 11% 11 1 1 orth Star or Star A or Star pr iO NGas Nor Phone Difice Spec Pembina Pembina pr PC Jewel pr Powell R premium pres Elect Strike Effect Stock Bales High * . . Int Nickel "+ 229 10 400 0 a hay ride in suburban Etobicoke V D 38 1004 fob 0% hh Cop 30 1 100 10 +8 Ba Saturday, died Thursday. 1 WS 1V1 e phere, the Tait-Hartley Jagat, to 2% Ind Act 3% 3 tion; which wou or 2% 250 20 --10 i Yai m0 1 wm 0 a Jeers admisied 10 hospital By DAVID ROWNTREE Dave McDonald is sald 0 Be osle 80 days, does not seem 55 For 15 weeks, 500,000 Steelwork-| not the most popular of union likely to lead to a "cooling-off" CB $34 but there have been no Moun Malton, has been charged with|chequles been muted in these weeks which INDUSTRIALS 250 $144 14% 14% impaired driving and criminal|visible signs of a crack in the| oe of the rank and file regard m Joss ve uo negligence. striking union's ranks. as a life-or-death struggle. A . "I've stuck with a union this Buying Interest [ii "Dave McDonald is trying to save our jobs," another said. By comparison, the companies of a resurgent interest by United|lar was also keeping the Ameri- States buyers in British Columbia|cans away, but they came back P RESSURE ON | COMP. ANTES olf cattle have interior cattlemen|into our market last week and al- big customers ig articularly in hoping for an improvement in fall though their buying is not heavy|y, 0 oom shite "industry -- were cattle for export helped keep PRICES DOWN are fast dwindling, WER prices up last year, but Amerl- Feeder cattle prices are still Another reason was that the i Porage can buyers failed to appear in down about $2 from last year,| companies didn't get the suppoit Prints any number this year when the when good steers and helfers| oy had hoped after President 16 gauge Que Chib 1 began last month. tle prices this year are uP|poard which fall Rudiore" 23300 [4 150 839 Within the last week, however, slightly. i b Jaen Yo brit au Rio Rup H 5 $30 U.S. buyers have been entering| Prices at interior markets have] Tavior and Labor Sec All Welded A 0% 0 §'Chn Pow 6 p18 S113 113% 113% the pleture again at interior B.C.|often hit their peak in October in| james Mitchell, joined by iid 11% 11% -- % Waterman 000 450 435 45 + { : Sullivan 155 188 | $59.95 | K. R, Chowen, manager of the continue into January. a settlement without resort to th | Tombill 750 68 68 +8 MINES B.C. Livestock Producers! Soap. Cattlemen have been watching Taft-Hartley ag . » ig 10 oft wave No erative Association, said Thurs-|the situation in the U. 8. keenly.| vice-president Nixon is sald to!| [i o wave | pom Un Fort 3 3 2 gun im day cattlemen expect continued|U, 8. herds were sharply cut by|pave cautioned the Ae i sntennas on | fog 0 RR level almost as high as last/Canadian cattle in the middle ofl oompanies in a year before a Yk Bear +1 year's. the 1957 season while they built presidential elect!*n in which he Acad Uras Y.ung HG +2 "Until the last eek Satie up their own herds. g | may be a candidate. en't moving to the U. 8. too , cattl ts to the U.S. i i . pend ore 100 28 3% 13 weren ving B, C. cattle exports e But having star.cd the machin Sales fo 11 a.m, 475,000, ket where prices were lower and more than 100,000. In 1958, 36,139 through with a request to the MONTREAL Berd a most of our cattle were going to|head of a total shipment of 107,| courts for an injunction against Merrill the coast and to the east. 516 went to the U, 8. the union. By The Canaian Press jid Cap Iwo HALF THIS YEAR rights, xw--Ex-w May Replace erican buyers in the first six|strike on the economy is divided. months of this year, pared | Some ists say that with with 11,034 in the same period in| mounting unemployment because buoys now marking the seaway culture warned last spring that|retail sales as one indicator of channel through Lake St. Francis|the build-up of U. S. herds might| reduced demand and therefore may soon be replaced by light- become excessive this year un-/less money in buyers' pockets. Thursday it has called tenders agriculture d e p a r tment's live- for soil borings in the lake bot- apne ea division report tom at 12 possible wites for light-| yo" cattle coming in off the house piers. [ranges appears in good shape. m un 2 LL Lae 700 18 +8 good condition, Fe) Sb 6 " leaders but any mutterings of dis-| period in which a settlement long," one striker said recently, Sho / v 1 ' 1 began to waver in their stand in cattle prices. ° y et, we're hoping it will. creep beginning to exert pressure for a annual autumn movement of cat-|were bringing from $20 to $23.50| Gisenhower appointed George Que Cop Steel sales, boosting the price for|past years, but Mr, Chowen says kaiser, head of the Kaiser Steel Taurcanis ---] Violam We) Bellechasse interest by the U.S. and are hop-isevere drought a few years 8g0|administration riot to offend labor | Agnico 928 58 vurb readily," he said. 'The American| totalled more than 20,000 in 1957| ory phy picking Taylor and his Stoc Oct, 90 Unofficial figures indicated) OPINION DIVIDED Seaway Buoys 1958. of the stoppage, there will be de- houses. less some stock was liquidated If the tests are successful, the 9, Don't Be Taken By The $158 15% 15% 320 32 +1 $35 3 sow 2 204 Milton Tonner, 47, of nearby/ers have gone without Pay|.,nioni with his presidency haveleould be reached. "od I'll continue to stick with KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP)--Signs| "The high discount on the dol-/the last couple of weeks. A strong demand for feeder up. settlement. Their stocks of steel tle from range lands to market a hundred pounds. Slaughter cat- Taylor to head a fact-finding Que Man Galvanized feeder cattle by as much as $1./good prices have been known 10 Corporation, all had been urging Teck-H -3 Weiner Bony viis ing prices may be restored to a and Americans started buying|py .1oo strongly supporting the All Rox Pend Ore 100 255 388 255 +45 buyers stayed in their own mar-ifrom total shipments of a little| nape] "the government had to go 1 Kerr Add (Quotations in Po pusbig marke § only 5,000-0d4d head went to Am-| Opinion on the effect of the OTTAWA (CP)--Floating light] The U. S. department of agri-|flation. They point to declining The transport department, said| B.C, officials of the federal $45 300 present buoys will give way to THE AMAZING NEW B C Power Ww nn Coules 33 Tay 80 : 300 $16% 16% 16% -- 7 an an permanent piers on which chan- "0 do do 3 1 12 2% 22 C adi Butter nel lights would be installed. % 130 1% $15% 15% 15% Mh Th TH + Y 80% 80% -- ¥ 10 110 i Hi Wu 600 BBE S BRS EE Ey x, = 14 » 3 3 160 160 n 0% DY ~ BH +N - ] 3 130 30 ; z10 y 15 Falcon Fwest Tung Frobisher Geel Mines 100 195 $36 80 250 ns 30 238 30! 273 100 Goes To Britain OTTAWA (CP) -- A batch of Canadi an butter was loaded aboard a ship in Montreal Thurs. dav bound for Britain, Informants said the federal government made a deal Monday with four or five Canadian ex- porters to have 10,000,000 pounds of surplus butter sold in Britain, Such a move would eliminate the work and expense involved in tending the buoys and their an- choring equipment, all of which must be lifted from the lake at freeze - up and put back in the spring. "Yitamin Racket" How many extra vitamins do you really need a day? Can a food supplement make men more virile, women more re- In addition, permanent channel lights would end the possibility | of the floating markers being| moved out of position by currents ceptive? November Reader's Digest many questi about vitamins and gives you a chart to use in checking the CELLULOSE FILLER ssRBESEE The government sold the price. supported butter to the Canadian exporters for 56 cents a pound--- taking an estimated loss of about ,000 on the deal. RESTVIEW GARDENS Quality Homes Built by Loupan Developments (Oshawa) Limited HOME BUYERS DON'T WAIT Your choice of 5 plans or ice conditions. | brand of vitamins you buy! Lake St. Francis is between) Get your November Reader's Cornwall and Valleyfield in the| Digest today: 35 articles of river section of the St. Lawrence| lasting interest. Seaway. - = Ss +" 16-1 0% 00 $29% 29% 20% 6% 415 415 415 48 » Hud MUI% ATH TH + WN T3getaeeat gas EuBEinkens Walk GW rmy Testing ew Canadian mbat Boots TAWA (CP) -- The army is trylng out a new, Canadian-de- sighed combat boot. : Among other things, the new | bot would eliminate the use of| SIMPLY WON'T FALL ouT! puffees. Its laced top is about 10' inches high, compared with the| sixt - inch height of the present cothbat boot, | Instead of having leather heels and soles such as present army ms it has a joint sole and heel mk whi e from a rubber compound ch is vulcanized to the leather uppers. though not yet of'icially addpted by the army, the boot d be a step toward standard- iza of army footwear by Can- ada,.the United States and the) United Kingdom. Angarmy spokesman sald Thurgfay that its makers, Greb Ind es of Kitchener, produced the boot on equipment similar to that being used for UK. mili Fill that woodwork Plug cutouts in doors ete, POLYFILLA will not Shake iooce, Even on vibeal. trials," the spokes nan said. The boot has been three years in con- sideration, planning and develop- ment., 1 More Tourists From Britain OTTAWA (CP)--Any slacken. ing in tourist revenue from United States visitors next year) may be coftened by brisker busi-| ness from Britain. | That's a hope held by the Canadian tourist industry as It|8 keeps an eye on American plans to make 1960 a big travel year in| the U.S. | The U.S. National Association of Tourist Organizations started the campaign. Director Alan Field of the Canadian Govern ment Travel Bureau office saidy Thursday it began simply as a drive to get more tourists into the country. for 1960, { some American carriers) then turned it to urging more Americans themselves to take next year's vacation at home. | The#Canadian industry is con-| cer because American spend- ing seontributed more than $300,- 000,800 to Canada's tourist rev- enuff of $349,000,000 last year. | travel bureau has asked 501 American advertisers to avolll cutting into Canada's slice of market. The bureau also has {Bans to inject more "direct appall" in its own advertising in the U.S. f Meanwhile, more money now | will: Be spent in Canadian adver- tising overseas as a result of] Brijain's decision to let vacation-| ers spend ly abroad. I Simply paint over the POLYFILLA when dry. OU BUY A 3- ROOM BUNGALOW FOR APPROXIMATELY 1,881.00 CASH DOWN PAYMENT 9.75 MONTHLY Fix that window pane POLYFILLA makes an excel lent Swedish putty for glazing in wood or metal frames. There is nothing as good as Potyenia] Your first need in home decorating Built-in Oven and Counter-top Plates Sliding sashless windows complete with storms and screens. Modern street lighting Sanitary Sewers--Private Drives Eatin spacious kitchens Ultra modern kitchen cabinets Hardwood oak flooring throughout Beautiful interior doors of Japanese Ma- hogany Sodded front lawns Full bright and dry basements Space-saving sliding door in kitchen 'Bonded air-conditioned cil heat Laundry tubs and hot water heaters Ceramic tiled bathroom walls and floors Aluminum storm door Split level entrances on bungalows if de- sired Directions: Crestview Gardens is located 4 blocks north of King St. E. off Wilson Rd. North. 1 pound pack 39¢ Economy 4 pound pack $1.28 Polycell Decorating Products Lid. 550 Church Street, Toronto, RO. 3-1191 Ask for POLYFILLA @t your Paint or Hardware Store! EARLE GOODES' HARDWARE 245 KING ST. EAST N.H.A. Mortgage 6% Carrying For EXCLUSIVE AGENT! "~ METGALF After 5:30 Call Joe Maga Elliott RA 3-9290 Marion RA 5-9191, Lloyd Met- Drew RA 5-7610 Dick calf RA 5-6983 Everett Barriage RA 5-6243. 3V2 Simeoe §, RA 3-9329 RA 3-9312 DODD & SOUTER PAINT & WALLPAPER 107 BYRON S. WHITBY PHONE MO 8-5231 O09 00000

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy