16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 9, 1959 TODAY'S TORONTO, MONT TORONTO By The Canadian Press 'Yoronto Stock Exchange--Dec. ations in cents unless marked §. xd -- Exdividend, xr--Ex- « Odd lot, rights, xw--Ex-warrants.) INDUSTRIALS Sales High Low 11 815 $39% 39% 22% 22% $10 10 285 280 $27% WU 37% IT $31% 31% $42 12 % 33% 39% 2% 10 285 bd 200 235 15 576 1420 $4; 435 905 40 25 735 § 200 880 50 Atlan Ace Atlas Steel Auto Fab A Bank Mont Bell Phone Brazil BA 0il BCE 4 pr BCE 4% pr BC Forest BC Pack A BC Pow BC Phone Build - Prod 30 Bullochs A 200 Burlington xd 125 Burlington rt 310 77 Burns 310 $13% Cal Pow Can Cem coe" Stone 1 Fndry Can Wire B é 710 210 225 200 70 2100 $ 20 In Celan Fairbks A * Hydro Car CIL Cdn ©il CPR Cdn Pet pr Cdn Tire Col Cell Comb Ent Con Gas 3 Con Gas rt 12039 Corby vit 5 Crown Zell 50 Crush Int 10 Dist Seag 22: D Bridge D Fndry 105 100 815% 400 215 § 205 10 100 125 $ 115 D Magnes 5 Dom Stores 1120 Dom Tar 1044 Dom Tar pr: 100 Ed Match xd 200 Fam Play 100 $2 Ford US 200 § Ford Com 50 Fraser 50 Gatinean G Dev 200 GMC 130 GS Wares pr 720 GN Gas 115 GNGBw 100 2 Hahn 300 H Cotton Hard Crpt Hardee Imp Bank Imp Life xd Imp Oi Imp Tob imp Tob pr Ind Accep Inter PL Inv Syn A Jockey C Jock C pr Jock C B pr 300 100 275 630 #10 #75 1300 300 85 'as 100 100 35 210 wm, Ch'ge Stock Nor Star A 2125 N Star 57 wt 250 9 NO NGas Penmans $16% 1 345 ¥ $16% Royal Bank Russell St Maurice Salada-8 Shawin Shawin A pr Silverwd A 2 Net + % Svartan wis Steel Can Std Wire $ Propane Thornelf 1900 Tor Dom Bk .115 T Fin 57 wt. 100 § Tr Can PL 2028 $26 Trans Mt 690 Un Gas 125 Un Telef 4200 Viceroy A 170 Viceroy B #84 Walk GW 490 W Cop wts 400 West Groc pr 100 W Plywd B xd 25 $15 Weston A 100 Weston B West A wis Woodwd A Curb Anglo Nfld Arb ostos CD Sug CG Inv C Marconi C Paper Dupont Int ULI Maclaren Price By 1335 1400 Acme Gas 1000 17 Am Leduc 9 Bailey S A 735 Basco 5 C Oil L wis C Chieftn Cdn Dey C Husky € Husky wis Cent Del C Mic Mac Cree wis 58 35 Dynamic Fargo Home Oil A Home Oil B HB Ol G L1 Pete Longpoint Marigold N Davies Pac Pete Pamoil Pace i oader #rovo Gas Ranger Sapphire Sarcee South U Spooner Stanwell Acad Uran Agnico 00! North Star GIFT OF ALUMINUM Commonwealth House In London gift to the Institute, valued at over £4000, will be made through the company's international sales organization in the United King- By M. McINTYRE HOOD @pecial to The Oshawa Times LONDON When the new Commonwealth Institute building which is being erected in South Kensington takes shape, a gift of some 20 tons of aluminum from Canada will play an important part in its construction. The en- tire requirement of aluminum for the building, up to that amount, has been promised by the Alum- inum Limited of Canada. This No Decision On Licence Plate Fees TORONTO (CP) -- Transport Minister Yaremko, commenting on a published report that fees for automobile licence plates will be increased in Ontario, said Monday "no decision has been reached." "The department of transport has the current fees under re- view. ¥ the cabinet decides it wants this information, we'll have it for them." The newspaper report said li- cence plate fees for 1960 would be increased because of the prov- ince's general need for more rev- enue. Present fees range from $10 to $25 according to the number of cylinders and horsepower. Tobacco Sales 1,981,226 Pounds TILLSONBURG (CP)--The, On- tario Flue-Cured Tobacco Grow- ers Marketing Board gpeported sales Tuesday of 1,981,226 pounds at an average price of 55.65 cents 2 pound. Sales to date are 19, 055,769 pounds at an average origin of this aluminum, it is an- {of cost, into 49,000 square feet of om. Maintaining the Commonwealth | nounced that the bauxite from which the metal will be extract- ed in the Canadian plants of the Company will originate from British Guiana or Jamaica. COPPER FROM RHODESIA This Canadian gift is only one of many being contributed by dif- ferent Commonwealth countries towards the supplying of ma- Sales High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge 4! 1 3 30 3 Powell R 2 17% E 320 3 6% 5 64 16% 345 16% Can Met C Met wis siar C Callinan C Denison C Den wis C Discvry C Halliwell Con M and C Mogul C Regcourt Yon Sud Conwest Coprand Cowich Crestaur D'Aragon Deer Horn Dome Goldray Grandroy Granduc Gunnar wis Headway Hollinger Hoyle Hud Bay Inspiration Int Moly Int Nickel Irish Cop Jacobus Kerr Add Labrador L Shore Lorado Lorzdo wis " 8 500 8% 505 $103% 200 Sock Gales High Low am. 00 66 8315 240 1160 231 175 125 $20% $25% 410 3n% 5 00 275 REAL STOCKS 11:30 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge 280 280 5 30 83 +4 225 20 +5 6 60 --1 BH MU +1 18 13 +1 11:30 Net Ch'ge £3 +1 +1 +3 -1 EH HER - tH . Sil Miller Stanigh wis Steep R Sturgeon Sullivan Sylvanite 'Taurcanis 'Taurcan vi -1 --3 B¥sssisist, Sales to 11 a.m.: MONTREAL By The Canadian Press Stock E Dec. 9 {Quotations in cents unless marked §. #--0dd lot, xd -- Ex-dividend, xr -- Ex- rights, xw -- Ex-warrants.) INDUSTRIALS 12:40 Net High Low A.M. Ch'ge $395 39% 391% 37% + % 31% + % 2 + % 34% +2 stock Abitibi Algoma Alumin Alum 2 pr Argus Asbestos Bank Mont Banque PC Bell Phone Bowtr Paper Brazil B A Oil BCE 5% pr B C Forest BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Nfld. Business Had Small Start largest of any Newfoundland firm. By JOSEPH DUPUIS Canadian Press Staff Writer ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Ger- ald S. Doyle Ltd., of St. John's, exclusive agents in Newfoundland, for more than 30 international firms, has never known a de- pression since its founding on a shoestring 40 years ago. The firm sells everything from aspirin and food products to cold remedies and machine oil. Cer- tain medicinal products it pre- pares itself--such as Doyle's pure Newfoundland cod liver oil, and ginger--are old - time remedies you probably couldn't buy any- where else in the world. The business was started in one small room, but now occupies two buildings on downtown Water Street and a new warehouse manufacturing department in the northwest end. The staff of 50 in- cludes a sales force of 10, the TRADE MAGAZINE It publishes its own retail trade magazine, started in 1921. And only two months ago, because of high costs, it abandoned the Family Fireside, a newsy monthly distributed without charge for 35 years to thousands of Newfoundlanders. Probably the most famous of the firm's enterprises is the Doyle News Bulletin, a day-to-day radio chronicle of rural Newfoundland which has virtually become a legend.. The Bulletin, founded in 1932, began with one 15-minute broadcast daily. Today it is heard in two half-hour broadcasts over the CBC Newfoundland network. Gerald Doyle came lo St. John's as a boy of 10 from the outport community of King's Cove, Nfld.,, where he was born. But it wasn't until he reached the ah eh Fi tn Su ath nie th i LA sie 2 Brothers Testify In Stock Deal TORONTO (CP)--Hotel owner| Benjamin Smith, 46, charged jointly with his twin brother Harry with theft and fraud in connection with a 1956 stock deal, Sestified in his own defence Tues- ay. The brothers are charged with stealing 599.923 shares of Snopner Mines and Oil Limited from the treasury of Perseverance Mining and Development Company Lim- ited and obtaining by fraud or theft $52,086 and 65,920 Spooner shares froni Perseverance. Smith told the court that he Ie on rd Ee Eis < g a § a age of 27 that he began the amazing career which ended in his death in 1956. STOCK MARKET NET EARNINGS uv teeth i i By THE CANADIAN PRESS He was working as a druggist] Leamac Petrolenms Ltd., 16| When he obtained the agency for {months ended Aug. 31; 1959, $4,-|Dr- Chase medicine products and (280: 12 months ended April 30,|Started out alone to roam New- {1958, $2,241. |foundland's rugged coastline ped- | Permo Gas and Oil Co. Ltd., dling his products by boat, horse, {year ended Aug. 31: 1959, net loss|sled and on foot. |$779,207; 1956, net loss, $1,113,402. It wasn't 'long before he ac. Golds Drop staff. He had eight children, In Heavy Trading {seven of them boys, His widow {Mary is president of the firm. {The eldest son, Thomas, 27, is | vice-president. Two other sons, {Robert 24, and Charles, 23, are |directors. "Dad always was a great be- |liever in personal contact," son |Thomas says, "and we try to (clam (elf: 8 (o]0):\ ¢ ry. Ve .o Give and Take office suite to be occupied by the director. It is likely that many| other Commonwealth gifts be forthcoming before the build- B C Power Brown Cal Po Can C Can Iron M Nealon Nes Lab New Alger New Bid New Cal New Delhi N Dicken New Hosce Newlund N Mylama Nickel MS Nipissing Noranda Normetal N Coldstrm Northsp Norsp A wis Opemiska Orchan Pardee Patino wis IL > Int C oil Com ¥ Con M D Bridge Fraser In Face Of 'Disaster' Coghlin Cons Glass Dist Seag D Steel Fam Play Foundation pany, an organization of lindividuals, be backed by city around at lower levels all day. |maintain this theory because it's TORONTO (CP) -- The stock (what the firm was built on." 28 KING ST. E. ow 'em market, for the eighth consecu- tive day, struck higher levels Tuesday amid some of the heav- jest trading in two weeks, The only loser was golds drop- ping several decimal points. Volume was 2,321,000 shares, |heaviest since Nov. 24 when, 2, {381,000 shares were traded. Mon- $5% day's volume totalled 2,219,000 am . % ; | shares. $27 2 2 { Argus Corp., and Bank of Mon- 5 $31% Itreal led industrial winners gain- 351% ing 1% points at 33% and 56% $5494 respectively. General Motors $16% went up % at 50. : 4 pg Mines had a good day with sen $17 {ior base metals ploughing ahead, | 21% |McIntyre-Porcupine went up 13%] 43 |at 89 to lead gold issues while In-| __|ternational Nickel jumped two | points at 104%. Senior uraniums $14% $2414 $213 $13 Power onl E and 8 375 $29 28% private rambled residents in buying the Canadian|Algom fell % and closed at 11, Cotton buildings for later resale|while Consolidated Denison' lost| to firms wishing to locate in this five cents at $9.95. Gunnar was | area. lunchanged at $9.60 { CORNWALL (CP) -- Alderman | J. D. Murray has predicted eco-| nomic disaster for this seaway city of 18,000 if it does mot act| {immediately to overcome rising i unemployment. | "Cornwall has got to wake up," | he told city council Monday night in his position as the chairman of the city's industrial commission. | "The unemployment situation here is serious." | He referred to the announce-| ment of layoffs of some 400 Ca-| nadian Cotton Limited employees | and a complete shutdown of the| will | ing is eompleted and furnished. The present Commonwealth] building, which is now being re-| placed, was built between 1887 and 1893. It was greatly embel- lished by many splendid and spontaneous gifts from all over the Empire of that day. This ad- mirable precedent is being fol- plant's operation. i Alderman Murray urged that the Cornwa!! Development Com- lowed on an even more lavish scale to make the new building a show-place of the Common-| wealth. Separate Planes terials for the new Common- wealth Institute building. All the copper for the roof, amounting to some 25 tons, and valued at over £5000 is being donated by - the Northern Rhodesia Chamber of Mines. The copper rolls from Rhodesia will be converted, free| sheet copper by the Enfield Roll- ing Mills, Limited, of Enfield, Middlesex. About 2000 square feet of Brit- ish Guiana greenheart timber, worth over £400, is being given) by the Colonial Development Cor-| poration. This handsome and ex-| tremely durable hardwood will be used for the floor of the restau- rant in the building. SOUTH AFRICAN GIFT | The vermiculite required for| insulation, principally in the roof, {will be presented to the Institute {by the Transvaal Ore Company, {South Africa, through its London agents. The quantity will be some 40 to 50 tons, valued at about £1500. {SPECIAL NEWSPAGE STORY Messrs. Akberali Hassanali, of Will Retire Urged For Army Company Man | orrawa ce) -- an ame in {the training branch at army] headquarters says the Canadian |Army, short of integration with| the RCAF, should have its own| TORONTO (CP) W. Frank assault and cargo planes. Prendergast, assistant to the] Maj. A. S. Christian, MC, writ- president (public relations) Im-|ing in the current issue of Cana- perial Oil Lid., is retiring under|dian Army Journal, also says the the company's annuity plan ef- army needs a lighter, air-trans- fective Dec, 15. portable tank. Mr. Prendergast, a native of| He says provision of army air- | Montreal, came to Toronto in|craft would guarantee full mo-| 1916 to join the staff of The Mail bility for combat units which and Empire. After service with should be predominately tanks. various newspapers and periodi-| cals he was appointed head of the publicity division of Ford Motor Company of Canada in Windsor | in 1926. In 1927 he returned to Toronto | as advertising manager of Im-| : 2 perial Oil and was made assis. Slipping or Irritating? ant to the president in 1934. | to R00 be muariassed PY Josics Ihlae From 1941 to 1944 he was on| when + ~ loan to the federal government | sprinkie a title PASTEE IH oh Jaa as director of hte information| Plates This pleasant powder gives a : inc | TEMarkable sense of added comfort branch of the wartime prices and security by holding plates more and trade board and was made| firmly. No umm, goney, pasty tasty an officer of the Order of the|S¢ feeling. its alkaline (non-acid). British Empire for his services. | Say grus counter, Worry of FALSE TEETH Mombo, Tanga Province, Tan- ganyika, are contributing 800 square feet of muhuhu timber price of 5.475 cents. from that country for flooring the x Headquarters for i 60 * (CIA (eV) 3 (o]0).1 ¢ "Give and Take" GIFTS HERE OSHAWA CAMERA CENTRE (Photographic Specialists) OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE RA 8.5211 FULLY AUTOMATIC PICTURE-TAKING | | ¥ GET YOUR KODAK Give and Take GIFTS MERE il 14 Photographic" (OSHAWA | >%R'5'5%%" ° STORES IN BOWMANVILLE AND WHITBY "Everything 8 KING ST.E RA.3-2245 PLAZA OSHAWA WOOD PRODUCTS Suggests This As A Must Before Starting Your Recreation Room Don't Just Paint Your Masonry ~ ROX IT! Rox is an inorganic, cement base, all purpose masonry coati i s : atin specially compounded to keep water out. Rox will pi fae pin other product because it far exceeds acceptable standards of quality set hy pendent testing lab ries for masonry coatings. Available in 6 decorator colors. Accept no substitute --there isn't any. EXTERIOR CEMENT BLOCK WALLS: Insulates, beautifies and protects. _ FLOORS (Before laying tile): Keeps moisture from loosening tile. DRIVEWAYS AND WALKS: Beautifies and individualizes, SWIMMING POOLS: Long lasting protection of walls and bottom, Cut maintenance costs . . . becomes harder: than the surface 'sl, OUTSIDE FOUNDATIONS: Cuts heating costs by keeping out water ih tuts heat . . . becomes part of Agi fo which BASEMENTS: Waterproofs from the inside--a must before panelling. GUARANTEED TO KEEP WATER OUT AND NOT BLISTER OR PEEL. GE IN TOUGH 24 HOUR TEST S. Government, an inde "The cinder block wi house showed 00 e front of ba 50 or 60-mile- NO LEAKA 5 d for the U. After a test covered k i eS ith Rox Cement A whatsoever, after 24 Fours' exposure ur wind driven rain. either signs to simulated face, an-ho! YOUR PAINT HEADQUARTERS OSHAWA WOOD PRODUCTS LIMITED Downtown Showroom: 84 SIMCOE ST. S.--RA 8.1617 Main Office and Showroom COURTICE--RA 8-1611 ® 9 Telephones to Serve You © BOWMANVILLE--MA 3.2130 AJAX--ZEnith 2-9600 DOWNTOWN OFFICE OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 P.M. SANTA'S cuoice y/ led FULLY AUTOMATIC DRYER * Wash'n Wear garments re- quire special care and this dryer provides it . . . auto- matically, Following the dry- ing period at a correct, tempered heat, theré's a 10- minute fluffing, cool-off action at room temperature. Clothes are wrinkle-free, ready to wear. ' Christmas Sales Price... 179° "WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL" MEAGHER'S 92 SIMCOE ST. N. RA 5-4711 - a ea] | a A,