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The Oshawa Times, 5 Aug 1960, p. 14

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14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, August 8, 1960 BIRTHS BUTLER -- Jack and Hilda Site e very much pleased. BUCHSTATTER --Mr, and Mrs. G. Buchstatter are happy to announce the arrival of a daughter, Karin Linda, on Wednesday, August 3, 1960, at the Oshawa General Hospital. First grand- child of Mr. and Mrs, Karl Gross. 6 lbs, 4 ozs., on Wednesday, August 3, 1960, at the Oshawa General Hospital. A brother for Earl. POEPJES -- Bene and Dorothy (nee Bell) are happy to announce the arrival of their daughter, on Sunday, July 31, 1960, at the Oshawa General Hospital. Thanks to Dr. Ross and staff, DEATHS HALL, Annie Ellen -- At the Osh- on awa T 8 August 4, 1960, Annie Ellen Ashby, of 309 Kent Street, Whitby, widow of Robert Edgar Hall, beloved mother of Dorothy. Resting at the W. C. Town Funeral Chapel, Whitby, for service in the chapel on Saturday, August 6, at 2 p.m. Interment Union Cemetery, Oshawa. Minister the Rev. 8. Armstrong. MARE, Flora Naomi -- Entered into rest at Ajax and Pi Geaeral Today's 2--0dd lot, xd -- Ex-di rights, xw--Ex-warrants.) INDUSTRIALS Sales High Low 11 Abitibi 150 $38% 38% Alta Gas 145 $18 18 Alta Gas pr 25 $104% 104% Alta Gas wt Algoma Alumini Alum 1 pr Argus Atlas Steel Auto Elec n Bank Mont Stock 38% 300 2000 310 140 Hospital, on Thursday, Aug. 4, 1960, Flora Naomi Ford, beloved wife of the late Cyril Mare of 30 Tudor Ave. Ajax, and dear mother of Marjorie (Mrs, Lane) of Newfoundland; Eula (Mrs. Banton) of Toronto; Joe Comb- don of Willowdale; Herman Combdon of Ajax and Sydney Combdon of Whit- by; Florence (Mrs. Smeltzer) of Cali: fornia. Mrs, Mare will rest at McEach nie Funeral Home, 28 Kingston Road West, Pickering after 2 p.m. Friday. Funeral service in the chapel on Sat- urday evening at 8 p.m. Further fu. neral service and interment at Jack- son's Arn, White Bay, Newfoundland. (Newfoundland papers please copy), WIGGINS -- Entered into rest in the family residence, 179 Prince Street, Oshawa, on Thursday, August 4, 1960, Kenneth J. Wiggins, beloved son of the late Mr, and Mrs. Robert Wiggins and brother of Mrs. J. MacDonald (Moar- guerite) and Helen in his 54th year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with memorial service In the Chapel on Saturday, August 6, at 1.45 pm. Interment Oshawa Union Cemetery. GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all. RA 8-6226 390 KING STREET WEST LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements and floral requirements for all occasions OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE A 55 OSHAWA MONUMENT COMPANY SPECIALIZING IN Monuments, Markers, Memorials, Cornerstones, Statutory of all types. 1435 KING ST. E. Ph. RA 8-3111 or RA 8-8876 IN MEMORIAM CAMPBELL -- In loving memory a dear son and brother, Ralph Campbell, who passed away suddenly August 5, 1958. He bade no one his last farewell He sald goodbye to none, The heavenly gates were opened, A loving voice said "'Come". 1 often sit and think of you, Butch, The things you used to say: 1 wonder why you had to die Without the chance to say goodbye. Though out of sight you're ever Still missed, still loved, still mine, You will live with me in memory Until the end of time. «Sadly missed and always remem. ®ered Mom, Dad, Diane, Alan. GLEDHILL -- In loving memory of a dear mother who passed away Aug. 5, 1942. --Always remembered by the family. LATAWIEC -- In loving memory of a dear husband and father, William Latawiee, who passed away Aug. 5, 1957, Remembrance is a golden chain Death tries to break but all in vain; To have, to love, and then to part Is the greatest sorrow of one's heart. The years may wipe out many things, But this they wipe out never -- The memory of those happy days When we were all together, 12% 15% Toronto Stock Exchange--Aug. § (Quotations in cents unless marked $. vidend, xr--Ex- Net am. Ch'ge Stock Mark Net Sales High Low 11 a.m, Ch'ge 100 1 1 225 U% 24% Gatineau 150 35 GMC 100 G_ Mackay B 100 GL Paper 300 Gr Wpg vt 160 Greyhnd 100 Hi-Tower 220 Imp Oil 300 Imp Tob 265 Imp Tob pr 225 Inter PL 39 Inv Syn A 90 Lafarge A 100 LobCo pr 145 Loeb M 100 MB and PR 260 M Leaf Mill 105 Mass-F 250 Molson B 200 Mont Loco Moore NO NGas Page-Hers Pow Corp Pres Elect QN Gas 290 Royal Bank 210 St L Cp A pr 220 Shawin 150 Simpsons 150 Steel Can 415 8 Propane 275 Tor-Dom Bk 118 Tor Iron To: Iron A Tr Can PL Trans-Mt Un Gas U Corp A Un Steel Walk GW Wood J A Curb Anglo-Nfld Asbestos Can Ving Stock C Bronze C Paper Dupont Lob Inc n Price br Stock Fleetwood Fraser 250 70 220 220 EEE Am Leduc Bailey S A 250 Bail 8 5% pr Cal Ed 15 CS Pete C Chieftn Cdn Dev C Husky FF A 800 z113 500 100 200 90: 500 1000 1000 300 150 01 Longpoint iC Oils Pac Pete Pamoil Petrol Ponder Provo Gas Quonto Triad Oil 250 50 35 1800 + + ++ FH ++. F FER FEEFR EE - eh, FF 250 220 § 20 500 415 25 600 210 100 A Arcadia Atl C Cop 3000 Atlin-Ruf Aunor Barnat Belcher Boymar Bralorne Broul Reef 500 1000 230 4000 135 150 1100 1000 e Sales High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge $20% 2% $39% 39% $20% $103 90 $38% OILS 530 530 530 $17% 17% 17% $13% 1 256 25 Nenni Ending Ties To Reds ROME (Reuters)--Pietro Nenni is leading his left-wing Socialist party further away from commu- nism in one of the most signific- ant political developments in Italy since the Second World War. The party is the third strongest in Italy. For several years, the 73-year- old politician has shown signs of munists--a move which could have major repercussions in so- cialist movements throughout Eu- rope. The showdown appears to be imminent. Wednesday night, for the first time jn 13 years, the Nenni So- cialists did not vote against the government. Instead they abstained in the Senate vote while the Commu- nists voted against Premier Amintore Fanfani's all-Christian| Democratic g 0 v er nment. The only other party voting against | Fanfani were the neo-Fascists. BRANTFORD PLANT (LEFT); LAKE ONTARIO TESTS (RIGHT). breaking with the Italian Com-| investiture of a new pro-Western th Ontario Pursues Pollution Study TORONTO (CP)--In the middle| sewage facilities, it found the of Lake Ontario, scientists aboard |commission could bite as well as| the 125-foot former naval vessel|bark. It now is building a proper Port Dauphine are dredging up| sewage system. bucketsful of slime which settled] The commission is also con. 10,000 years ago. |cerned with algae and industrial On the banks of the Grand|Waste--the other chief causes of River near Brantford, the most Pollution. Chemicals are being {modern sewage treatment plant| developed to solve the algae prob- lin the world started operations|lem and industrial co-operation is two months ago. | "most gratifying" says the gen- : {eral manager of the commission, Both the research sip on) te Dr. A. E Berry, a doctor of [Zo age Dlant sre exam et or 2 (philosophy in sanitary engineer- on {ing. | the threat of pollution in Ontar- | Aboard the Port Dauphine, af iin no matter how | embers of te Uliveisiy > i oo ." |Toronto's new Great Lakes In- efficient and practical, are not in| tit te are conducting the first ple same class 25 Tew city falls full-scale survey of the world's |and subways when it comes t0|)argest fresh-water system. Be- {wooing civic votes. | sides taking samples of the lake's | GOVERNMENT ACTION {bottom, they are charting cur- For decades municipal poli. | rents, more complicated than ticians in Ontario have been con-|first believed, and measuring scious of this simple principle of depths and water temperatures. They hope the evidence gath- did not come. Stock Brunswick Buff RL Bunker Hill Camp Chib Camp Chib w C Tungsten C N Inca <dn Thor Candore Can-Erin Casslar Coch Will C Discvry C Halliwell C Marben Con M and 8 C Mosher Con Nichol Conwest Cop Corp Coulee Sal 20% 39% -- 3% 20% 10% 8% -- % 20% 10% 38% 3% 13% 6 256 Frobisher Giant YK Gunnar Gunnar wis Hard Rock Hasaga H of Lakes Headway Heath Hoyle Hud Bay Int Nickel n Jacobus Jellicoe Joliet Jowsey Kerr Add Kirk Min Labrador 3000 2500 et Listings on Toronto Exchange N Stock Sales High Low 11 a.m. ores Lake Cin Lamaque Langis Net es High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge 200 320 320 320 6 6 6 500 6 6 1000 100 255 500 Latin Marit 500 000 800 2400 4000 200 Nicke 2000 3400 13 13 13-1 13% 13% 13% + % 7 7 7 = 20% 28 29% +3% 6 6 8 +4 295 395 +10 Uk Hun ---% 52% 52% +% 113 13 --4 9% 9 21% 21% 21% --1% 31 31 31 $13 1 $19 500 1000 3500 1000 200 30 175 $44% 150 $52% 113 9% Lorado wis Maralgo Martin Merrill Multi-M Noranda N Coldstrm 200 Stanleigh Stanlgh wis 000 65 65 65 300 330 320 330 8200 76 76 78 11500 * 51 49 5 1500 5700 2100 1000 1100 Am me MS 580 833% 38% 3 3 3 1% 11% 1% 51 51 51 105 105 34 UN's Critical Test In Congo By DAVID ROWNTREE Canadian Press Staff Writer The United Nations faces a {critical test in the dispute over] Soviets Stress Arms Boycott UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) --Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily V. Kuznetsov told seven neutral delegates Thursday the Soviet Union would boycott the United Nations disarmament commission if 11 met Aug. 15 as the United States wants. He said he hoped their countries would do the same. Kuznetsov, at lunch in the So- viet UN mission in New York, told them a commission meeting would be useless since his gov- ernment had proposed a summit conference on disarmament in the 82-nation UN General As- sembly convening Sept. 20. None of the neutral diplomats replied, since any decision on whether to boycott the commis- sion is up to their home govern- ments. But some were under- stood to feel personally that it would do no good for the com- mission to meet if the Russians the movement of its troops into| Katanga province. Whatever the outcome, the sit-| uation will need all the consider-| able tact of Secretary - General| Dag Hammarskjold. | He is, caught between conflict-| ing interests, the central Congo-| lese government of Patrice Lu-| mumba and the Katanga provin-| cial administration of Moise Tshombe. SNAPPING AT HEELS Lumumba and his ministers| daily urge Hammarskjold to hurry up the move into Katanga. The Soviet Union's press is also! constantly snapping at the secre-| tary-general's heels. | Tshombe tells Hammarskjold| izes military force at the Congo government's request to] restore order and safety; as the number of UN troops in the coun- try increases, Belgium will with- draw her forces, which the Con- golese government says are un- welcome, as quickly as possible. NO SIGN OF STAMPEDE As for Katanga, Hammarskjold shows no sign of being stam- peded by Tshombe's defiant talk of resisting the UN entry. The province is protected by Belgian soldiers and it is incon- ceivable that they would be in- volved in opposing the UN. Apart from that, Tshombe can muster only a small native military force. Tshombe's defiance probably is designed mainly for political ef- fect locally. He fears that the UN operation | "| weeks ago, also opposes sending Clared Katanga independent but to keep out. Belgium, which has.|iS nothing but a cover for Lu- tily granted independence to the Mumba to regain control of the former colony less than five Province, Tshombe at first de- UN troops to Katanga. {has since been proposing a fed- The intent of last month's two|ral form of government for the Security Council resolutions is this: the UN secretariat organ- (Court Orders Mental Check MONTREAL (CP)--A mental examination 'was ordered Thurs- {day for a woman from nearby | Croydon, Que., chanrged with |cruelty after police were told she kept her six-year-old son |prisoner in the basement for six {months The examination was ordered for Mrs. Roland Pepin in social welfare court. She and her hus- band, both in their early 30s. |were both charged with cruelty July 28. Another hearing is to be reld Aug. 25 after the examina- tion, Police arrested them after two of the other four children in the family left the house and told police their brother Noel was being kept in the basement. Po- lice said ihe child was thin and showed marks that apparently were from a beating. |civic pride and for decades On- The new premier asked thel:.rjo's water supplies have been cred will give them more idea of {Congo in place of the present centralized administration. But as Hammarskjold has made clear, noné of this con- cerns the UN at the moment. The UN, however, does have the right to replace the Belgians in Katanga. And until that is a fact, little can be done to help the Congo stand on its own feet. That is likely to be the biggest job of {all, Rural Power In New York NEW YORK (AP)--The State Power Authority announced Thursday it has approved alloca- tion of 435,500 horsepower of Ni- agara power for rural electric co- operatives and municival sys- tems in the Niagara-St. Law- rence project area. Robert Moses, chairman of the authority, said the approval "will provide for the power require- ments of such preference custom- ers up to and including the year 1984, and makes official the re- Chamber of Deputies Thursday for a similar vote of confidence. LOGEMAN -- In loving memory of|ABAin the Nenni group indicated a dear mother, Sarah Logeman, who|it will not vote against the gov-| picsed avay August 4, 1957. |ernment. Balloting is due today| at would we give if we could say| or Saturday. --Lovingly remembered by wife, Stella and daughter, Eleanor. growing more and more polluted. In 1957, when beaches up and down the shores of Lake Ontario| were being closed and the sit. | uation had grown dangerous the pollution problem and how to tackle it in the future. Theft Admitted Another Decline In Interest Rate NET EARNINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA (CP)--The Bank of| American Nepheline Ltd., 0s, ended June 30: 1960, $72,- peated assurances that the Power Authority would provide for rea- sonable requirements of prefer- ence customers for 25 years." Moses added that under the BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Not Just By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor In any previous post-war year, the language of the business plat- forms of the Republicans and the Democrats in the United States could have been discounted. They might have been consid- ered as so many vords--designed to appeal to the voters--which probably wouldn't lead to much subsequent action. The temper of the times, how- ever, and the personalities of the residential idat indicat that this time they mean broadly what they say, even if it is some- what rosy-tinged. The preceding prosperous post-| war years pretty well took care| of th Ives in an ec ie and social sense, with nearly every-| one doing well. Now, however, there is misgiving. MAY MEAN LITTLE Given a high-winging boom, perhaps the platform won't mean much; but if the economy is not advancing as fast as is considered necessary, govern- m~ t action may be expected. This action, however, probably will differ widely according to whether the next president is the Republican's Richard Nixon or the Democrats' John F. Kennedy. The Associated Press sumar- izes the two business platforms as follows: Republicans -- Pledge private| enterprise system with minimum | of government spending to speed | economic growth; reject massive | federal spending and loose-money | policies. | Democrats--Pledge creation of an abundance that would outstrip administration's high - interest, tight-money ~policy; pledge fed-| eral spending programs to en- courage great employment and production. Democrats undoubtedly will deny that their policy is one of "loose money" in the sense that the words imply. Republicans un- doubtedly will deny the Demo- crats' contention that their policy has been one of "high interest" or "tight money'--and will de- scribe it, rather, as one of "sound| money.' 5 Republicans claim that the Democrats' 'policy is inflationary and, through reduced purchasing power, will take away what it at- tempts to give. Democrats say their policy is not inflationary, and will pay for itself out of the Liberals Name New Director TORONTO (CP)--Bruce Powe. 35, of Toronto, Thursday night was appointed executive director of the Ontario Liberal Associa- tion, replacing James Scott who became the party's national di- rector of organization last No- vember. Mr. Powe will take charge of the Liberal Association's head- quarters in Toronto and will be responsible for party organization federally and provincially in On- tario. A graduate of the University of Alberta in economics, Mr, Powe was secretary to former Liberal mines minister George Prud- homme. During the federal elec- tion campaigns of 1953 and 1957 he assisted with party organiza- tion in Alberta. Mr. Powe has been with the public relations department of Imperial Oil Limited for the last three years. His first task will be to organ- ize for forthcoming byelections in the federal ridings of Peterbor- ough and Niagara Falls and the provincial ridings of Simcoe centre and Timiskaming. HISTORIC TRAIN EXETER, England (CP)--An 1874 train driven by men in Vie- torian costume pulled 19th cen- tury coaches into the station of this Devon city to mark the cen- tenary of the opening of the South Western Railway. Talk By Candidates increased wealth it will create, As interpreted by Mr. Nixon's acceptance speech, the Repub- lican doctrine is that a country's prosperity is built through the initiative of its millions of in- dividual citizens that it comes from "the bottom up" rather than being created from "the top down." NOT "CONSERVATIVE" Government action, in ~ Mr, Nixon's view, should primarily be in the area of providing a climate in which individual initiative can best flourish. He is, however, far from being a "conservative" in any traditional sense and can be expected to do things which | would have shocked old-time Re- publicans -- and many present ones. Mr. Kennedy and the Demo crats undoubtedly will reject any idea that their approach is any less one of prosperity from "the bottom up." They apparently feel however, that certain massive government cfforts are needed to stimulate and assist private ini- tiative. Whatever comes of all this will be felt in Canada. If new de- partures work badly for the United States we will feel their bad effects here. If they work well, we will feel pressures to | adopt them. Few Register Under New Act TORONTO (CP)--Only 540 per- sons, including only 65 of On- tario's 4,800 lawyers, have regis- tered as real estate brokers since the Mortgage Brokers Registra- {tion Act came into force a month ago. Registrar V. J. Simone said it had been estimated that between 1,000 and 2000 persons were eligible for registration "I find it hard to believe," he said, "that only 65 lawyers in the province participate in mortgage fund raising to the extent that they are eligible for registra tion." Kenneth Jarvis, assistant see- retary of the Law Society of Upper Canada, said many of the mortgage transactions supervised by lawyers are not brokerage within the meaning of the act. In most cases where a lawyer arranges loans between two parties he charges only his nor- mal lawyer's fee and therefore doesn't come under the act, Mr. Jarvis added. The act requires registration by any person advertising himself as a mortgage broker, or who takes more than $1,000 annually in mortgage - raising fees, or con- ducts 10 loan transactions in a year or five transactions for an aggregate of $10,000. Exempted are persons who ne- gotiate mortgages with trust or insurance companies; credit unions or banks. Posties Irked By Criticism OTTAWA (CP) -- A postal workers spokesman rapped back Thursday at Postmaster-General Hamilton's criticism that work- ers' complaints about salaries were unreasonable, Mr. Hamilton said in the Com- mons that the Canadian Postal Association's complaints about salaries were unreasonable, un- fair and irresponsible, Association General Secretary J. E. Roberts said Thursday that government action on salary re- visions over the last two years has been more unreasonable than the insistance of the association that the workers get the in- creases. Many supervisors, he said, re- ceived 'less salary than those whom they supervised. new formula 314,900 horsepower are allocated to Niagara market area municipals; 13,400 horse- power, Niagara co - operatives; 93,800 St. Lawrence municipals, and 13,400 to St. Lawrence co- operatives. Canada interest rate registered) its third successive sharp de- More Than $1000 cline, dropping to 3.08 per centipivar 14 6 mos, ended June ; BELLEVILLE (CP) -- Norman| Thursday from 3.17 last Week| 1960 $12 850.611. 62 cents a The commission, with the Bennett, 38 - year - old Deseronto| With the sale of $95,000,000 in 91-3 Pi 0 $13,488,000, 65 cents power to force an individual, bookkeeper who disappeared|day government treasury bills. | : se '| company or municipality to do while awaiting trial for theft,| The bank rate, an indicator of| throughout the province, the On tario government stepped in and| created the Ontario water re- sources commission. | m 625; 1959, $85,082. MacMillan, Bloedel and Power "Hello Mum" the same old way; " " To hear her voice and see her aise.) Fanfani, 52, leads the left-wing | Te md talk with her awhile. faction of the Christian Demo- --Lov| y remembered by daughter | indi % Elsie, son-in-law, Bob, and granddaugh. | Tats. He has indicated in past ter, Judy, years he might accept an "open-| CARD OF THANKS |Nenni as a partner in govern-| {ment if the Socialists break their .. TERRY -- We acknowledge with humble gratitude our heartfelt thanks for acts of kindness, messages of sym- pathy and beautiful floral offerings from relatives, friends and reighbors. Also thanking the City of Oshawa, Chief of Police Herbert Flintoff and bis police department, Rev. Mr. Dargan for his comforting words and the Arm- strong Funeral Home for their kind and efficient management during our recent bereavement, «Mrs. George Terry and family, Please Note Deadlines now in effect for this column: Births, Memoriams, Cards of Thonks -- 9 AM. SAME DAY DEATHS -- 11 AM. SAME DAY DIAL RA 3-3492 Contract Settled At Knitting Mills DUNNVILLE (CP)--Year-long negotiations ended Thursday when Monarch Knitting Mills Limited and 400 members of Local 736 Textile Workers of America (CLC) agreed to a 28- month contract. The agreement provides wage increases ranging to 10 from three cents an hour. Monarch industrial relations manager Robert L. Markon esti- mated wage and fringe benefits to be worth an average of five cents an hour. Settlement was reached at a last-minute meeting called in an effort to avert strike action by the union. Communist ties. Since 1947, Nenni has been a fellow-traveller of the Commu- [ nists. But the link weakened after | the Soviet condemnation of Stalin | at the 20th Communist party con- | gress and Russia's suppression of |the 1956 Hungarian uprising. Pioneer Rocket Claim Settled WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S. government announced Thursday a $1,000,000 settlement for infringing the patents of rocket pioneer Dr. Robert H. Goddard, who died in 1945 with- out seeing the giant rockets he foretold and made possible. The money will go to the Daniel | and Florence Guggenheim| Foundation in New York, a non- profit organization which fi- nanced most of the inventor's re- what it's told, hopes to complete | pleaded guilty Thursday and was! conditions in the short - term 1 | luted. In other words, it is water| search between 1930 and 1941. a $500,000,000 sewage plant pro-| remanded for sentence Thursday. gram by 1965 that will all but! Bennett is charged with steal- eradicate pollution. {ing more than $1,000 from his Sewage or partially treated Desoronto employers. Ordered to sewage is the chief cause of stand trial two weeks ago, he pollution. Many municipalities| disappeared, and was arrested have a primary treatment plant Tuesday in an Ottawa hotel. that rids the water of about 60] per cent of solid materials. But until recently, few had a second-| M k t Cl ary treatment plant. | ar e oses PURITY RELATIVE 0 'U ' Sid The secondary treatment pro-| n P 1 e cess is biological and gets rid of| all but five per cent of the or-| TORONTO (cm ™ The Stock ganic waste material. Even that| arse. closed on the up side | after light trading Thursday. five per cent is chlorinated. : ! : Because no water is completely | per, gh Th re, ienti i i ) t Poh 5 05 per cent free af 2% trading, with golds up 247 i i .|at 83.06 a ase metals up .04 organic material to be unpol I Biot Nose Motas Ip in which fish can thrive and chil-| at _79-19. dren can swim; and it can be| Volume was 1,672,000 compared treated for human consumption, With the 1,634,000 shares traded About 20 years ago, Toronto's| Wednesday. city council refused to build a| Banks gained led by Toronto- secondary sewage treatment| Dominion up a point at 52%, and money market, has fallen nearly since July 14 when it reached 3.49 per cent following a five- week rise. Battle Republic In South Africa JOHANNESBURG South Africa (AP)--South Africa's leading op- position party pledged "the men, the money and the morale" | Thursday to a fight against con: |verting this country into a repub- lic which might leave the British Commonwealth. This was the answer of the |United party to Nationalist {Prime Minister Hendrik Verwo- lerd's announcement that a refer- {endum will be held Oct. 5 to de- | termine whether South Africa will be a republic. The campaign promises to be one of the bitterest in this coun- half a point in the three weeks| CROSSWORD PUZZLE | | LTV's | D0 - | ©. Positions | 11. Cantered | 12. brium 38. Man's nickname 14. English author X letod 36. Thrice 27. Sodium (sym.) 18, Vowed +8. ) tom 8. Mack like fishy 20. Smudge 34, Acting foreman 19. Hospital attendants 20. Weight 21. Siberian The settlement gives the gov-iplant. With an eye on the tax|Bank of Montreal, up % at 51%. try's history. Fears have been ex- ernment the right to use more|rates, the civic leaders consid- Stelco jumped a point at 64%, than 200 of Goddard's patents on| basic inventions in rockets and guided missiles. | The inventor's widow, Mrs. | Esther C. Goddard of Worcester, | Mass., also signed a settlemerit, | which transfers her rights to the foundation, LANDMARK GOES | ST. CATHARINES, Ont. (CP) A house built here by United Empire Loyalist Lewis Travers 138 years ago will be torn down| to make way, for a new school. The school construction had tol wait on the death of Robert Mil- ler, who was given a lifetime lease when the land was ex-| propriated 10 years ago, and Mr. Miller died in June. ered one prima la and Atlas and Dominion Found- enough. b Ey plant Was| ries were up % at 20% and 40%. Today the secondary plant is| Westeel dropped 1% at 13%. being built at a cost of $26,000] General Dynamics was off 1% 000, more than twice the 1940|at 43%, United Corporation A up price, and the city soon will have|1% at 28%. four other plants in operation. By| Giunt Yellowknife led golds to 1962 Toronto's sewage will be 95 their third successive advance, per: cent pure when it enters/up 1% at 113%, Lake Ontario. | International Nickel gained % The pattern is similar across at 52%, and Geco and Cassiar Ontario. The water resources|moved up % at 18% and 113%. commission, besides being 'a| Hollinger was off % .at 20%, watchdog, will design. build, fi-|and Noranda slipped ¥% at 38%. nance at low interest rates and| Gunnar lost 10 cents at $7.30, operate plants if requested and | and Denison and Rio Algom were nearly all Ontario's municipali. off five cents at $9.70 and $6.20. ties are eager to take advantage Royalite had a 35-cent drop at of the opportunity. $6.65. Home B was off 30 cents pressed that it will widen the cleavage between the English- speaking and Afrikaans-speaking whites. » Sale Offer Vote By Shareholders VANCOUVER (CP) -- Share- holders of Vancouver based Okanagan Helicopters Ltd. will be asked to vote on sale of the company to Britain's huge Bristol aircraft organization at a special meeting Aug, 19, Purchase price offered by Bris- tol Aero Industries Ltd. a sub- When one city balked at the|at $7.30 while Canadian Husky|sidiary of the Bristol Aeroplane commission's demand for better! gained 30 cents at $9. Co. of Canada Lid., is $4,107,738. 9 Ol [EioZ]m [Zim ioZIe Sr=ring WESE mcr] Sam ®) UNEEEEE (WES Sm mix] Sil \) => OZ >|) 0) NEO OER EE SEEDER SEs i= SESS = LLL GENE W. SLE [g) [O=[RI> | [OIZ[>IC] ImOI=Iro) 0! WOIMIZIC 0m] £3. Silke well (eccl) 88. Live com oun (cally umm MAKES THE DIFFERENCE! The quality of building material spells the differ- ence between high end low maintenance costs of the new home. We offer the best materials at low- est possible prices, and we invite builders and con- tractors to inspect end co! OSHAWA WOOD PRODUC DOWNTOWN SHOWROOM 9 Oshawa Telephones To Serve You BOWMANVILLE -- MA 3-2130 DOWNTOWN SHOWR TILL 9 84 SIMCOE ST. S. MAIN OFFICE AND SHOWROOM COURTICE mpare! TS LTD. RA 8.1617 RA 8-1611 AJAX ZEnith 2-9600 OOM OPEN FRIDAY P.M.

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