16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 10, 1960 BIRTHS DOWN -- Susan is happy to announce the arrival of a baby sister, Patricia Joan, born Sunday, A: 7, 1960, 4ibs. 14 ozs. The parents Bruce and Joan Down (nee Kinsman). ECCLES -- Al (nee Katacs) are happy to announce the birth of their daughter, Lori Ellen, on Sunday, August 7, 1960, at the Osh- awa General Hospital, Many th: to Dr. Ross and nursing staff. and Helen Eccles SHERMETO--Henry and Marg (nee Geisberger) are 'pleased to announce the arrival of twin sons, James Fred- erick 6 Ibs, Stephen Richard, 4 Ibs, 14 ozs., on Monday, August 8, 1960, at the Oshawa General Hospital. Moth- er and babies doing fine. Many thanks to Dr. Irwin and Miss Canning. WATSON -- To Mr. and Mrs. Warren Watson (nee Helen Park) a daughter, on Sunday, Aug. 7, 1960, at Oshawa General Hospital. TORONTO 11 A.M. STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--Aug. rights, xw--Ex-warrants.) INDUSTRIALS Stock Abitibi Alta Dist Ata Gas Alta Gas pr Alta Gas wt 1805 Atlas Steel Bank Mont Bank NS Bell Phone Bowater pr DEATHS LAWRENCE, Frank -- At the home of his daughter, 44 Eastwood Road, To- ronto, on Tuesday, August 9, 1960, Frank Lawrence, beloved husband of the late Rosina Lawrence, dear rather of Elmer (Al) of Whitby; Belle (Mrs. K. R. Wagg) Oshawa; Gordon and Eva (Mrs. J. A. Nicholson) of Toronto, dear grandfather of Joyce (Mrs. J, Bourne) and Bill Nicholson, great- grandfather of Nancy and Patricia Bourne, dear brother of Mrs. K. Clea- ver of Toronto. At the Trull Funeral Home, 1111 Danforth Avenue, Toronto. Service on Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Interment James Ceme- tery. St. MANTLE, Adelia Agnes -- Entered into rest at the residence of her daugh- ter, Mrs. Woodburn, 288 Strathmore Blvd., Toronto, on Tuesday, Aug. 9, 1960, Adelia Agnes Pilkey, beloved wife of the late Albert Mantle of Claremont, Ont., and dear mother of Hazel (Mrs. N. Sanderson) of Claremont; Ina (Mrs D. Woodburn) of Toronto; Olive (Mrs. Harry Jarvis) of Caledonia, Ont. Mrs. Mantle will rest at McEachnie Funeral Perm C Bank Com 1 Cdn Brew Cdn Celan C Chem Dredge CIL CPR Cockshutt Col Cell Con Gas new 865 Con Gas wt 400 Creative Tel 275 Dist Seag 280 Dom El wis D Fniry Gr Wpg vt Imp Inv A Dom Tar Dom Text Fam Play G_ Dynam 220 GMC 70 G Mackay A 100 25 50 Home, 28 Kingston Road West, Picker-| ing, after 7 p.m. Wednesday. Funeral service in the chapel on Friday, Aug. 12 at 230 p.m. Interment Claremont Union Cemetery. MURPHY, Patrick Joseph Brantford, on Monday, Aug. 8, Patrick Joseph Murphy, in his 88th year, of Brantford, Ont, formerly of Pickering, beloved husband of the late Blanche Murphy and dear brother of William Murphy of Brantford; Maurice Murphy of Whitby, and Mrs. G. Clark of Brantford. Mr. Murphy resting at McEachnie Funeral Home, 28 Kings- ton Road West, Pickering. Funeral.on Thursday, Aug. 11 at 945 am. to St. Francis de Sales Church, Picker- ing, for requiem mass at 10 a.m. In- terment St. Francis de Sales Cemetery. At 1960, is STARZYKOSKI -- Entered into rest in the Oshawa General Hospital on Tuesday, Aug. 9, 1960, Thomas Star- zykowski, beloved husband of the late Catherine Hora, in his 75th year. Rest- ing at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with high requiem mass in Holy Cross Church, Friday, Aug. 12, at 10 a.m. Interment St. Gregory's Ceme- tery. (Rosary Thursday at 8 p.m.) THOMPSON, Olga -- At the Oshawa General Hospital, on Wednesday, Au- gust 10, 1960, Olga Champrenauld of 518 Perry Street, Whitby, beloved wife of Walter John Thompson, in her 67th year. Resting at the W. C. Town Fu- neral Chapel, Whitby, for service in the Chapel on Friday, August 12, at| 2 p.m. Interment Groveside Cemetery, | Brooklin. Minister the Reverend D. | Marshall. i 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 RA 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 G Mackay B 225 10 (Quotations in cents unless marked §. 2--0dd ot, xd -- Ex-dividenl, xr--Ex- Today's Stock Market Listi Stock Gr Wpg vt 100 Sales High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge Net Kelvinator Labatt Lakeland Mass-F 5% xd Mid-West Mont Trst Moore Nia Wire B North Star pr NO NGas Page-Hers Parker Pembina QN Gas QN Gas un QN Gas wt Reichold Roe AV Can Royal Bank Simpsons Southam St Pav Steel Can Suptest ord Weston A Wood J A Sales High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge Net ngs on Toronto Exchange Net Sales High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge 4000 55 53 24800 55 53 8 Stock Btock Sales High Low 11 a.m. che O Sales High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge Net Stock Latin Am Loralo Lorado wits Lyndhst Lynx Madsen Maritime Martin Mcintyre 120 52 20 W Cdn OG 500 120 Wsburne W Decalta Zenith 255 255 258 Curb Anglo Nfl Asbestos 100 OTTAWA (CP)--Prospects for installation of small atomic power stations in the Canadian North in the near future dimmed today with the release of a spe- cial report by Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, The report, prepared for the Crown company at a cost of $200,000 by Canadian Westing- house Company Limited, says nuclear stations would increase the cost of electricity to northern residents by 22-25 per cent. AEC president J. L. Gray said in .an interview the 12 - month study shows that it would not be practicable at present to build atomic plants to service northern communities. However, the pic- Hand Claps In Commons OTTAWA (CP)--A bitter ex- change between government and opposition MPs provoked hand- clapping in the Commons gallery Tuesday. It was stopped by a Commons constable, Parliamentary rules prohibit any demonstration in the galleries that might affect debate on the floor. The flare - up occurred while Samuel Boulanger (L -- Drum- mond - Arthabaska), opposition agriculture critic, was reolying 400 6% 000 9% 1 10% 10% 00 268 268 268 28% 300 $6% Abacus Advocate Area 500 ° Zeller's Atl C Cop 12000 100 Murray M New Delhi N Dicken New Hosco New Jason N Kelore Newlund N Mylama Newnor Noranda Norlartie Norpax N Coldstrm O'Brien Opemiska Orchan Pamour Pick Crow Portage Que Cop Rayrock Rexspar Rockwin San Ant Satellite Sherritt Stanleigh Stanlgh wits Steep R Sullivan Sunburst Bailey S pr 250 $16% Bail S 5% pr z50 $18% 00 Chib Jae Coch will Coniagas Coniaurum C Discvry 70 C Halliwell 16800 C Marben 45600 Con M and § 465 © Con Negus 5 Conwest Coprand D'Aragon Deer Horn Denison East Sull El Sol Falcon Faraday Francoeur Frobisher Genex Giant YK Granduc Gunnar H of Lakes 8000 Hud Bay xd 118 Inspiration 4 30% 20 C West Pete 100 1600 Peruv Oils Petrol Phillips Ponder Prairie Oil Provo Gas Royalite Sarcee Secur Free Submarine Tidal Triad Oil U Canso vt Un Oils 500 4000 329 1000 300 Int Nickel n J Waite Jacdbus Kerr Add Kilembe Kilem C wt 1300 Kopan 1000 Labrador 115 Langis 350 Y pa Young HG Curb Bulolo 200 490 490 Sales to 11 a.m.: 613,000. Heavy Words From Ottawa |] | OTTAWA (CP) -- For sheer | | weight of words, the current session of the Commons will go down in history as one of the gabbiest--if not THE gabbiest. Up to the start of Tuesday's sitting, MPs had talked enough | words and tabled enough re- ports to fill 7,787 pages of Han- sard, the official record of Par- liament. | If they keep talking at this rate, they'll shoot past 8,000 pages for the first time in Han- sard's history. So far, their yerbiage weighs 27 pounds five ounces -- and that's in the unbound, news- print version of Hansard. On the average, each of the 265 MPs has spoken 1.64 ounces of words--roughly 29,000 words apiece. And many backbench- ers hardly talk at all. "There's about 1,000 words to a page," said Hansard editor W..W. Buskard. "Two or three more sittings will put the rec- ord past 8,30 pages--so that's about 8,000,000 words." His staff of seven 'English. language reporters and two ed- itors have had to keep pace with the lengthening hours of the Commons--now sitting 55% hours a week. When MPs skip their lunch hour, Hansard reporters have to keep on going--each taking a 10-minute stint in the Com- mons, then dictating their shorthand notes to a typist. They grab a sandwich and a | coffee on the run at times like that. | The reporters, who are civil | servants, don't get paid over- { time. Their annual | salaries | range between $6,300 and | $7,300. To qualify, they have to be able to take 150 words a minute for 10 minutes. Most of them | can handle a fast flurry of 200 werds a minute -- and when pressed they can get up past 260 words a minute. They started work when the current session -- third session of the 24th Parliament--opened on Jan. 14, Tuesday's sitting is the 145th so far. And if the MPs sit to Satur- day, they'll have racked up 149 sittings -- which would be the third longest session since 1867. In 1903 -- the longest session since Confederation -- MPs sat for 155 days and filled six vol- umes of Hansard for 7,431 pages. The second longest session was in 1956 when the Commons lasted for 152 sittings. At that time, their words filled 7,600 pages of a seven- volume edition of Hansard--a record the Commons passed last Friday. At the moment the Commons is approaching the 148 sittings of the third longest session in | 1907-08, which took a mere 6, 797 pages to record. Apparently, the present crop of MPs talk oftener, rather than longer. Generally, MPs are limited to 40 minutes per speech. Some younger MPs suggested the other day that this be cut to 15 minutes on certain days. But in the old days, there was no limit. Oldtimers recall one MP around 1910 speaking for 12 hours, pausing and then saying . . . "And now I come to the crux of my argument." in French to Agriculture Minis- ter Harkness's speech in support of $42,000,000 acreage payments to western farmers. Mr. Boulanger, a gradnate of Insurance Sales Double As More Teens Drive TORONTO (CP)--The increas-|if he were 25 or older and an PC's Laud Farm Aid Plan: a banker and industrialist at | Victoriaville, Que. 5 | Mr. Harkness asked how Mr. |i /ners| experienc ident-free driver. y : [jog wiper Of YOUDE SBF wWiers experienced, sceident fres | OTTAWA (CP) -- A flock of estimate right through to the |doubled the demand for auto in. HIS OWN COVERAGE | Progressive Conservative MPs closing hour Tuesday night, the | e : : |" He would have to pay $132 a gleefully clambered on the gov-| Conservatives kept the embar- surance from drivers under 25 pay : < lan i 3 tive said Tues. year for $100 deductible collision| ernment's $42,000,000 aid-to-farm- rassing old age pension amend- 57 jnsurance exeeulve Sai Tver insurance on a low-priced North ors bandwagon Tuesday in the ment out of the Commons. M, 2 «in| Am car, against a $30/Commons. 3 ; - th More Yeon agers 2nd Pern. a charge to an accident-free driver| One after another, they lauded | PASS 452 DIVORCES sie sary 2 s can Prion hit 25 or older {the government for its $l-an-acre| Between the afternoon hecause they are e pes . | Si reste: evening sittings, money and paying little board at| Most insurance firms prefer to i Jesiem lamers oa) 8 o (home, said N. V. Chandler, gen-|send under-25 drivers to the On-|. "= co oo. oo nt | bloc, taking only seconds to clear| English, he said. eral manager of the Ontario Au-tario Automobile Assigned Risk| 0 izing the Paymem th tomobile Assigned Risk Plan, |Plan. ne » Soars, 2gn A paris AE measures which had been held applauded. One - insurance 'man said his backe y 15 Ontario insurance t 4 N _lup for five months by a CCF| firm advises many teep.- agers companies, it provides public je Deyments ry ap | filibuster, now halted. | was trying to "cause [not to take out collision insurance ability insurance only. | Thirty Conservative MPs got a| Mr. Martin and Samuel Bou-| Where no trouble exists. payments for western farmers. Paul Martin (L--Essex Eas English an erican Laval University in agriculture, Boulanger related his speech to the specific question of acreage| Harkness's and Mr. Boulanger has no facility in the Commons the English language, he should also approved 452 divorce bills en not be peppered with questions in| e! the order paper of all the divorce| Visitors in the public gallery Atom Plant Hope Dimmed ture could change if science [found a cheaper way to build small atomic power stations, if northern communities increased rapidly in size or if the cost of fuel oil for conventional generat ing plants increased substan tially. Westinghouse's atomic energy division made a specific analysis of the .power requirements at | Frobisher Bay, a community of {1,500 some 1,400 miles north of {Ottawa on the south coast of | Baffin Island. COST DOUBLED The report says that the capnai cost of a nuclear power plant capable of providing Frobisher Bay with electricity and heat would be $7,120,000. This com- pared with $3,790,000 for an oil {fuelled plant. Annual cost of operating the nuclear plant would be $974,000 as against $604,000 for a station fuelled with oil. The report said an atomie plant would be more practicable {for a northern community with a | population of 3,000 or more which jdid not have access to fuel oil at {a reasonable cost. A nuclear {plant of this size would have an annual operating cost only two- per-cent greater than that of an (oil-burning plant, | But there are no such commu- | nities in Canada's North, | The plants studied would use expensive enriched uranium as a fuel, Canada is building atomic {power plants which use natural uranium as a fuel but natural {uranium will produce economic {power only if it is used in plants |generating large quantities of electricity. | | How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly in Place Do your false teeth annoy and em- barrass by slipping, dropping or wob~ bling when you eat, laugh or talk? Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your plates. This alkaline (non-acid) powder holds false teeth more firmly and more comfortably, No mmy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. not sour. Checks "plate odor" (denture breath), Get FASTEETH today a8 any drug counter. Mr, Harkness said Mr. Martin | trouble | Consumers' Gas Company [because the annual premium| Mr. Chandler said: | word one way or another in the langer (L -- Drummond-Artha-| |often equals the value of their| 'A low limit insurance Prob-| debate -- against three Liberals baska) carried most of the Lib-| L . cars. |ably makes young persons more| and two CCF MPs. eral oppositions attack on the Award arge A 16-year-old with his first car cautious behind the wheel. .And| acreage measure. Mr. Martin cannot buy more than $10,000|few accidents cause damage CITES MOTIVE | chided the government for keep-| public liability insurance cover-|/enough to exceed the limits. | A possible motive for the flood ing farmers waiting for 18 ing injury to one person, $20,000] The OAARP turns down only of praise by government support-|y nths before offering some as- covering two or more persons three-to-four per cent of appli-|ers was pinpointed by Paul Mar-|gjstance and called the aid pro-| and $5,000 for property damage. cants, usually because of crim- tin (L--Essex East), who ac-| gam a "mere bagatelle." |awarded 18 contracts worth $1, This. costs him $120 a year for|inal motoring convictions. About | cused the Conservatives of talk-| Mr. Boulanger said farm prob-| 1 \ personal liability only, more than|20 per cent of applicants are un-|ing to thwart an opposition bid , = he" The solved by 690,519. Among the main ones: TORONTO (CP)--The |three times the $32 he would pay der 25, said Mr. Chandler. aad company and the United Rubber 000 bonds before a contract can| be signed. | The 75-year-old president, who met in Toronto Tuesday with La-| {bor Minister Daley, said he would {not modify the demand. "We feel it is the best test of bargaining in good faith and of] | Wants Bonds Posted Before Signing Contract KITCHENER (CP) -- A. R., He said a union shouldn't be amended such a motion to call acre." Kaufman, president of the strike-|certified until a vote by secret for a $20 increase to $75 in the| |bound Kaufman Rubber Com-|ballot of at least 80 per cent of monthly pension payable tothe payments would spread don, Ont: pany plant, Tuesday night re-lemployees had been supervised everyone at age 70. A Liberal throughout i od |iterated his demand that both the by the department of labor or sub - amendment sought higher business community, | pensions in co-operation with the $294,000,000 worth of b |Workers' Union (CLC) post $25,-| "The same procedure should provinces and a national con-it filtered through the economy. | some other neutral body. apply to a strike vote." | About half the company's 700 workers are on strike, seeking| wage increases and other benef- its. The company has advertised) for workers to replace strikers. Another Kaufman firm here, Su-| to boost old age pensions. Under House rules, the next item of business would have been the supply motion, which the government must make to bring| main departmental spending es- timates before the Commons on| 'nothing more than a case of| Mondays and Tuesdays. On other days it can do so without a mo- tion. Two weeks ago the CCF tributory pension scheme. A pro-| longed debate on the bill of rights kept the supply motion out of the picture last week. acreage payments, Farmers would have to ask for further payments again next year. Arnold Peters (CCF -- Timis- kaming) called the payments political expediency." He said, "If this is going to be an election gimmick for next year, it will have to be more than $1 an Ken More (PC--Regina) said the whole western generating usiness as J. E. Pascoe (PC--Moose Jaw- Lake Centre) said the $l-an-acre payment will do more than just help western farmers--it will help By debating the supplementary'the whole Canadian economy. Highway 401--$119,460 for the Appointment Highway Contracts Ontario department of highways has {Fredericksburg Township bridge] | northeast of Napanee, Looby Con- |struction Limited, Dublin; $344 |819 for paving and structures {from the CNR subway north of Napanee 2.26 miles, H, J. McFar- {land Construction Company, Pic Highway 17, Trans - Canada Highway--for paving from Ig {nace to Butler, 7.35 miles, Tow {land Construction Limited, Lon $399,702 for paving (northerly 19.5 miles to Poland,| {MacLeod Construction Company, Fort William, J Highway 86--$16,882 for gran- ular base and paving east of Elmira, E. and E. Seegmiller | Limited, Kitchener. | Highway 66 -- $86,381 for six |miles of paving east of Kirkland Lake, Caswell Construction Com- pany, Kirkland Lake. { la clerk MISS MABEL GEARY Ockeh L. Jones, President and General Managger of The Cone |sumers' Gas Company, announces {the appointment of Miss Mabel |Geary as Secretary and Assistant Treasurer. Miss Geary, born in England, joined Consumer's Gas as in 1927. She become Summer Clothes |secretary to the general manager lin 1939, was appointed Assistant intention to abide by terms of a|perior Box Company, has Stopped COSMIC CHATTER CARD OF THANKS | FLYNN -- I wish to thank customers and friends for their kind thoughts of flowers and cards during my stay in hospital. Also to Dr. Sturgis and the aurses and girls in blue and green on 3A for their wonderful care of me while there. --Mrs. Evelyn Flynn RUNDLE -- I would like to express my sincere thanks to my friends for their visits, gifts, flowers and cards. Also to the nurses and ward aides on 3b, to the physiotherapist and to Dr. O. G. Mills for their wonderful care of me during my stay in hospital --Mr. S. C. Rundle ¢ Please Note Deadlines now this column: Births, . Memoriams, Thanks -- 9 A.M. SAME DAY DEATHS -- 11 AM. SAME DAY DIAL RA 3-3492 in effect for Cards of Tells Labor Mend Ways LONDON (CP) Britain's quarrelsome Labor party was urged by its general secretary Tuesday to mend its ways. In a crisp, occasionally plain- spoken pamphlet prepared for his national executive committee, Morgan Phillips told the party's disputing factions to stop blam- ing each other for past electoral defeats and start planning for the future. The pamphlet, Labor in the Sixties, sidestepped the two ma- jor issues dividing Labor's ranks --nationalization and nuclear dis- armament--which are likely to take up a major portion of the party's annual conference in Oc- tober. But it suggested other ways in which Labor should set its house in order: 1. During the next two years. the executive committee should survey the major domestic and foreign issues and make broad recommendations of policy to be considered by party conferences URGES RECRUITING 2. A major recruiting drive for party members. 3. Efforts to broaden the base party membership, explain of contract." | production completely after being | He said during his discussion Struck by the United Brotherhood | with Mr, Daley he "made a few|of Carpenters and Joiners (CLC). |suggestions 1 thought woul d|They are seeking wage increases |check what I consider unfair ex-|and union security. | TORONTO (CP) -- Three ploitation by union organizers." | | months of un-summery summer have dropped sales of summer- NET EARNINGS weight clothing far below those of last year. Many Toronto re- id THE CANADIAN PRESS tatters say sales are down 20 per nglo CCF Leadership Battle Warms Up REGINA (CP)--Strong grass. was before the convention opened roots opposition to a proposed|--a two-way race. CCF leadership compromise set| Hazen Argue, 39. CCF Com-| Propose New leadership aspirants running mons leader, was still the only| Cais Tar lan Telephone cent from 1959. harder than ever today. declared candidate. Alistair Stew- | cean ort Company, 6 mos. ended June 30:| «with such a short selling sea- The weight of opposition, evi-| art, 55, Winnipeg chartered ac- { dent from Ontario and Saskat-| countant and former CCF mem- |1960, $1,164,186; 1959, $972,180. son," says Joseph Hillman, sales chewan delegation c auc uses ber of Parliament, was still avail-| HAILEYBURY (CP) -- A pre- Algoma Central and Hudson manager of Shiffer-Hillman Com- Tuesday night, seemed certain to able. Murdo Martin, CCF Com-|liminary report on the potentiali- Bay Railway Company, 6 mos. pany Limited, "May and June block passage of a proposal of mons member for Timmins, has|ties of Moospnee as an ocean, ended June 30: 1960, $462,212, 81 are crucial months." Last year in the CCF national council to abo- said he will nominate Mr. Stew-|port will be made to the federalicents a share; 1959, $527,922,|the 'crucial months" Ontarie lish the title of national leader, |art. {government this fall, C. E. Rey-|$1.08. |sweltered under a record heat The council recommended al The caucus meetings gave dele- nolds, chairman on the Ontario] Atlantic Acceptance Corpora-|wave, but this year May and constitutional amendment which}gates their first opportunity to Northland Railway, said Tues-|tion Limited, 6 mos. ended June june were marked by below would require a two-thirds maj- express opinions formally since day. |30: 1960, $143,508, 68 cents a share ayerage temperatures. ority of the 319 voting delegates the convention opened Tuesday. "There is no doubt in my mind 1959, $57,298,29 cents. | The only group reporting a to the national convention here.| The constitutional amendment |that the plan is feasible," Mr.| Bishop Oil Company, 6 mos. good season was retailers of Informed sources said a major-| was to be followed by resolutions | Reynolds told business and mu-|ended June 30: $52,577, 12 cents higher priced made-to-measure ity of Saskatchewan's 107 voting | proposing that Mr. Argue be | nicipal representatives during the a share; 1959, net loss, $19,504. |clothings. They beat the summer delegates oppose the council's named parliamentary - leader of ONR commission's annual visit| = : chill by promoting trapical suits | recommendation as do a large the party with full authority to|through this community 60 miles ORONTO (CP)--Western oils| February and March. One proportion of Ontario's 112. |speak for the CCF and that re-|south of Kirkland Lake. featured the stock market Tues-|,.oioiar aid he sold 276 suits in |" Manitoba, Alberta and British tiring national Leader M. J.| The report and the design of a/day in the wake of Monday's de- |; $150 range by sending out Columbia delegations were re-| Coldwell, 71, be honorary leader. | port will be in the hands of fed-|cision by the U.S. Federal Power | 400" brochures in February. ported fairly solidly against the BACKS COMP |eral government in time for in-|Commission to allow imports of | change. It was evident CCF "US ROVISE 5 | clusion of harbor development in natural gas from Alberta. INEW MARKET members of Parliament were| VI. G0 vo addressing thei the next budget estimates, hel On index, western oils jumped| Clothing men, however, are en- | solidly opposed. |Soavention THese5Ys said he feels sig; [3.38 at 84.60 with industrials up thusiastic over the relatively new f {he must retire after 20 years 2s| pre¥njer Frost announced the 2.00 at 480.50 and base metals up market despite this year's dis- TWO-WAY RACE | national chief but offered to keep | . | A i | Rul: i ; |development of a salt-water port .16 at 152.73. |appointing season. Most manu- | The likelihood of defeat for a his connction with the party in i : 4 IG ot . : Bh 4 |at the rail terminal two years| Golds were off .29 at 80.44. |facturers say the new light- | constitutional change 'put the|some less onerous job. He has| : : Tr A : a leadership question back where it|said he supports the council's| 28° and this year the federal and| Volume was 2,078,000 compared | weight suits account for 15 to 20 S Compra {Ontario governments each put up with 1,631,000 shares traded Mon-iper cent of their annual volume, : : The Bs [$50,000 for the preliminary sur- day. Although exclusive tailors have party aims to the public, work ec. = hei involving top men| ey: : | Papers, banks, steels and re- been offering 10 - ounce wool more closely with the trade|in tna party who opposed elect-| , VT: Reynolds said a year of fining oils all adopted a healthy tropical suits to the wealthy for unions and increase party funds.| ino 5 new national leader so close dredging would be necessary be- complexion in taking industrials 25 years, it was not until the in- 4. More vigorous activity in the (to the founding convention (f a|[0re the port could be ready for higher. [troduction of lower priced syn- party's constituency organiza- new, left-wing political party be.| Vintering boats in 1962. | BA Oil gained % at 27% and thetic fabrics five years ago that tions. |ing supported by the CCF and| Imperial Oil was up % at 32%. the light - weight suit became | 5. Liberalization of procedures Canadian Labor Congress. |and temporary conflicts exist be-|Crown-Zellerbach jumped 2% at widely popular, lon Labor - controlled municipal Although speculation continued|tween farmer and trade unionist. 42, | Prices ranged from $35 to $150 | bodies. iA tehite = Premier T. C.|Each was dependent on the other| Alberta Gas gained 1% at 21% for a six- or seven-ounce suit but | : .. (Tommy ouglas of Saskat-|and their sole enemy was. the and Slater improved 1% at 32,|retailer. a In one of its t 8) nha be Bo 3 N aL : » retailers report that most men Wty De ! Se hice} chewan for both CCF and new| 'calculated and insatiable greed" while Canadian Salt lost three prefer the $40 to $50 price range. i Sy : S| party leadership jobs, Mr. Doug-|of those motivated by the profit|points at 34, and Chrysler, dipped y : : that Labor has been depicted by|jas told reporters that under no|motive. gn at 01 y «@IPPCC| The Canadian industry faces its opponents as a backward-|circumstances would he take| Premier Douglas called on the| Hudson Bay was up 5 at 45%, | tiff competition from Japan. Ja- looking party, restrictionist and eithe st | conventi tad]. EY ee Russom - CREE AE b Fond a A er post. 3 ; convention to present a united with. Falconbridge up % at 29% ureaucratic in office, divided National president David Lewis |front as it moves into the found-|and International Nickel up % at| SUGGESTS MAKEUP |and quarrelling when in opposi- warned the party's national con-|ing of a new party next year [53 | GENEVA (Reuters) The tion, | vention Tuesday that offorts w ere| "Let us forget minor and local| In golds, Giant Yellowknife and United States Tuesday formally "And we should frankly face being made to split the party as problems and concentrate cn the| roninger it both off % at 10 proposed that the seven-nation the fact that we have sometimes| Well as to separate the farm and|great challenge before us L orm : iv i lak yements ati : : and 20%. Among senior urani-| given them, in our own conduct, |!abor moveme nts. | democratic social movement in| Deniso i Ri Algom enough evidence to' make such . The Toronto lawyer's presiden-| Canada that will bring a new day Sms, : hy n and 0 65 go i charges stick." yal report presented the theme|and a new hope." [hors eased five cents at $9.65 and, coq of three Western powers, ae: " : | that, aided by the press, 3 cam-| Two CCF MPs--~Murdo Martin, |?0:<V. {two Com ist nations a { | Failips particulacly chided La-|paign is under way 448 er Tin. ard Ely Regier. | Pacific Petroleum, up 9 vents 100, Communist nalians ad No or ev BD A a morbid| farmer and trade unionist in an|Burnaby-Coquitlam -- served no. at $10.25, led western oils to their| wagsworth told the session of ishke 2 pu Li an unrea-| effort to wreck the new political tice they will fight the proposal {biggest daily index win for five ihe three-power nuclear test ban Soning ot of ie, press and al party, to abolish the post of national|months. Calgary and Edmonton conference the Soviet proposal ten lency in s intolerance in| Mr. Lewis hoped delegates |leader. gained 7% at 14%% and Canadian | of three Communist, three West- joreise a ividual members to] would not talk with the press. | Mr. Regier threatened to sit in| Devonian went ahead 62 cents at|ern and one neutral was an in- oe the lines on minor issues. Mr. Lewis said only superficial! the Commons as an independent. $3.10. Ivitation to deadlock. council's proposal arose under a treaty banning nuclear weapon tests 'should he com- Sales Drop control commission to be set up| panese imports of light - weight |clothes had an export value of | $6,000,000 to $8,000,000 in 1960. | Ernest Dunkelman, production {manager of Tip Top Tailors and {president of the Men's Clothing |Manufacturer's Association said his group and the Canadian Ap- |parel and Textile Manufacturer's Association will "present a broad {picture of the damage these for- jeign imports are creating in the |catire textile industry." CRASH KILLS SEVEN VAN WERT, Ohio (AP)--Six persons were Killed and a sev-| enth was injured Tuesday when| a car slammed broadside into a| semi-trailer truck near here, the| Ohio highway patrol reported. | | Sheres MOTEL | DIRECTLY ON "WORLD FAMOUS" | DAYTONA BEACH Largest & Finest -- ® Heated Pool ® Color TV Lounge ® Restaurant ® Cocktail Lounge ® Planned Entertainment ® Deluxe Rooms & Efficiency Suites See Your Travel Agent or write Paul F. Gocke, Manager Geiger counters used in search for radioactive"materials give a constant faint record of cosmic rays from outer space. | Secretary in 1954 ond became a Director of the eompany in 1955. Ll VA ONt NIAGARA FALLS 1-day train-and- motor coach tour of scenic, historic Sun., Wed., Sat. per Adu THOUSAND ISLANDS 1-day tour, train to Kingston, by ship for a scenic cruise of the St. Lawrence. Every Thursday, Fri,, Sat. -< per Adul Gite ~ i "AQUARAMA" CRUISE to Cleveland. Price includes ove: everything but meals. Leave dail As little as sal 8 - vr C5 1015S. ATLANTIC AVE DAYTONA BEACH 7 FLORIDA Niagara District. $55,285 $9.75 Two-day holiday by CNR to Detroit, S. S. Aquarama Detroit night in. Detroit or Cleveland; per Adult "QUICKIE" CATION IDEAS - b/CNR JAY wO0 DA EKER STRATFORD mm FESTIVAL CNR Weekend Theatre Package includes return transportation by air-condi- tioned train, tickets to both Saturday plays, and overnight * accommodation. per Adult 1t = t For information, literature, reservations, contact your local CNR ticket agent All Fares Quoted From Toronto, In Oshawa phone RA 3-4512 RA 3-4122 Te Ve Le] 4 DIAN NATIONAL