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The Oshawa Times, 17 Aug 1961, p. 20

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20 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, August 17, 1961 BIRTHS ARMSTRONG -- Rhonda and Nancy are happy to announce the birth of their baby brother, Gordon James, Wednes. day, August 16, 1961, weighing 6 Ibs. TORONTO 11 AM. STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Excnange--Aug. 17 Stock Sales Today's Stock Market Listing 11 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge Dist Seag 360 $41% 41% 41% + W 1n Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 25 $25% Stock Page-Hers 14 ozs., at the Oshawa General Hospi- . Proud parents are James and Ardeth (nee Brant), Mother and baby fine. HABER -- Roy and Olga are happy to announce the arrival of a daughter, Louise, on Tuesday, August 15, the Oshawa General Hospital. r for Carole-Anne, Patricia and Elizabeth Anne. That's a Casual Aires! Sandra 1961, at A si -- Margaret and Earl are happy to announce the arrival of their daughter, Janet Marie, on Monday, August 14, 1961 at Toronto General Hospital. A sister for Tom, Bob and Ricky. PHIPPARD --Roy and Donna are roud to announce the birth of a son ark Boyd, on Wednesday, August 16, 1961, at Oshawa General Hospital, Mother and baby fine. VAUGHAN -- Mr, and Mrs. Gary Vaughan (nee Barbara Daynard) are happy to announce the safe arrival of a (Quotations in cents unless arkel §. 2--0dd lot, xd -- Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is D Fadry D Magnes z12 $62 62 62 z50 $11% 11% 11% Stock Abitibi Agnew-§ Alta Dist AltaDis vt Alta Dis w Alta Gas AltaGas w Alg Cen w Algoma Alumini Atlas Steel Bank Mont Bank NS Bath P A Bell Phone Brazil Br Tnk n from previous day's close.) INDUSTRIALS Eddy Sales 1760 100 100 500 1000 270 55 100 1335 2125 Dom Store n 1838 $17 16% 17 Dom Tar 5870 $19% 19% 19% -- WH Dom Text $1414 $20% 20% 20% Emp Life Exquisite pr Fam "lay Ford US Fndtn Fraser Gat 5% pr Gen Bake G Dynam GMC GS Wares GL Paper GN Gas w GN Gas Bw Gr Wpg G Gr Wpg vt Harlee Hardee rts Horne Pf Imp Oil Imp Tob Ind Accep I Ac 275 p 11 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge $42% 42 42 15% 15% -- % $12% 12% 12% 42 42 -1 PC Jewel Pres Elect QN Gas Silverwd A Simpsons St Pav St Radio Steel Can 255 $16%% 16% 16% 220 $25% 25% 25% 130 200 290 290 225 165 165 165 $2 2 2 $17% 17 17% $5214 5214 5214 $21% 21% 21% Trans-Mt $13% 13% 13% Union Ace Stock Sales C Mic Mac 1020 Dome Pete 130 Home B 100 HBO G 400 Medal 1464 Mideon 20 Pac Pete 500 Pac Pete w 20 Pamoil 1000 Peruv Oils * 1900 Petrol 1000 Provo Gas 316 Ranger 100 Secur Frpe 450 W Cdn OG 1575 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge 200 285 285 --4 905 905 905 --10 890 890 890 +5 $14% 14% 14% + W 224 215 5 --6 26 26 26 $11% 11% 11% + % 715 715 715 -- 41 160 +6 60 60 --1 200 155 --1 405 107 MINES Advocate 525 Agnico 250 Amal Rare 2000 1000 14000 290 1000 2713 Bralorne 305 Broul Reef 1000 Camp Chib 200 C Tung 2000 475 460 107 105 8% 8% 8% 8% 4 4" 120 120 8 8 70 70 620 620 28% 28 915 815 1: 10 Lencourt LL Lac Lorado Macassa Ma'atch Mcintyre Merrill Midrim M'n Corp Mt. Opemiska Pce Expl s on Toronto Exchang e Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge 6 66 66 2 2 2 27 27 $11% 10% 11 27 un Nn 205 295 295 62 * 61 61 48 48 160 160 4% 4% +1 ---2 6 6 41% 42% +1 66 66 --4 31% 31% + HK 12% 12% -- 3 9% 9% 82 83 51 351 +1 17 17 52% 52% -- 1 +1 +x5 - hn BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Expect Demand For Uranium URANIUM CITY, Sask. (CP) With boom-time world uranium markets shrinking, Crown- owned Eldorado Mining and Re- fining Limited already is buying a ticket on the resurrection bandwagon it expects to see rolling by 1970 "We hope the demand for uranium will have increased considerably by the 1970s," says mine manager J. M. Douglas 9f Uranium City, "and we intend to be ready to meet the demand with peak production." Preparations include a $3,000,- 000 hydro-electric plant which is under construction, sinking one of the mine's three shafts an- conveyor belt all material from underground of more than three inches in diameter. As the rocks fall off the end of the beit, they pass an elec tronic . scanner, like a geiger se. If the rock contains ura. nium ore, it falls straight down into a bin, and is fed into the mill on another conveyor belt, If it doesn't contain uranium, an air jet blasts the useless rock into a waste bin. REDUCES COSTS ) The sorter will eliminate about 270 tons of waste a day before it enters the mill, with 915 + 7 1b. 10 oz. daughter, Tracy Ellen, at 18% 18% 18% Oshawa General Hospital on Wednes- 5 5 day, August 16, 1961, other 2,000 feet to more than a major savings in milling re. mile--now nearly completed-- agents and crushing and grind- and plant improvements to cost ing costs and an increase in the Un Gas U Corp B 0% Un Steel $6 6 Venez Pw C Astoria 2000 Cdn Thor 2000 5Y 5 5% Cassiar 165 $13% 133% 13% -- W Cent Pat 3700 145 139 143 +3 1835 §: : : Ind Min Re 4 { Inglis 195 [ $17% 17% 17% BA Oil BC Pow BC Phone +% A HAPPY occasion -- The birth of your child. To tell the good news to friends and neighbo! The Oshawa Times is as near your telephone, The day of birth, just telephone RA 723.3492. The rate is only $1.50. DEATHS BROWN, Ellen Suddenly, at her late residence, 414 Masson Street, on Thursday, August 17, 1961, Ellen Jenkins, beloved wife of the fate Robert J. Brown and dear mother of sobert Jenkins Brown. The late Mrs Brown is resting at Mclntosh-Anderson Funeral Home. Service in St. George's Anglican Church, on Saturday, August 19, at 3:30 p.m. interment Mount Lawn Cemetery CANNING, Merley Leggett In Oshawa General Hospital on Wed nesday, August 16, 1961, Morley 1 Canning, beloved husband of Isabel Cal Pow Can Perm CSL Cdn Brew C Br Alum CBAL A w Cdn Celan C Cel 175p C Chem Chem w Gas In p > Husky Build Prod § k i $43 43 @ 50 15 fs 70 70 70 + % 215 200 200 15 $49% 49% 49% -- WH 375 1995 3 50 $32 215 $3 350 450 Kelly wis Labatt Lafarge Lambtn L LobCo A LobCo A w LobCo B LobCo pr 5 Locana 95 95 95 Loch M $17% 17% 17% Mass-F 660 $12 12 12 Met.o Store $9% 9% 9% Mid-West 50 210 210 210 - Molson A $23'a 28% 28% Molson pr 7 42% 42% 42% Mon Foods 11% 113% 11% -- 1a Moore $6212 6212 6214 -- YW Nat Drug $154 15% 15a -- Yb N St Car $13% 13% 13% -- 3% NO NG $18 18% 18% $451 45% 45% + % 6 6 $6 $30% 30% 30% $46% 46 $23% 23 a 41% 4% 50 50 50 Wainwr 160 160 Walk GW $5418 54% Wecoast Tr 0 $18 18 Weoast Tr vt $16% 16% Westeel $10 10 W Cop wt 65 65 Weston A $19% 19% 19% West A wt silk 11 11% Curb Anglo Nfld $9% 9 Asbestos $32 31% 32 C Paper 315 $45% 45% 45% Dupont 224 $26% 26% 26% Int Pap 146 $362 36% 36% Price Br 25 850 50 50 OILS All Rox 1000 33 3 +1 Alminex 1300 192 ~3 Amurex 2°25 225 3 k Bailey S§ A 100 805 5 5 +5 Bail 5% pr 1000 + C Delhi 1300 +5 Cdn Dev 3450 5 " Cent Porc 1000 Chester 1500 Chimo 500 CHrom 400 Coin Lake 10.0 Con MS 195 C Mogul 2140 C Musher 100 Cons Que 500 C Sannorm 1500 Conwest 500 Coprand 26 Cowich 500 Crowpat 1000 anison 151 Est Mal 1000 Falcon 1060 Frobisher 2650 GF Mining 500 Granduc 1275 Gunnar 1050 Hollinger 625 Hud Bay Irish Cop 400 70 $53% 53% 53% --1 Int Nickel xd 525 § 86 86 8% 8% 8% + WH 27 25% 26% 47 47 47 610 605 610 +10 18% 18% 18% '+ $25 25 25 + % 97 96 6 --4 110 115 +6 Rockwin San Ant Sherritt Silmaq Sil Miller Sullivan Sunburst Sylvanite Teck-H Temag Tribag U Asbestos Un Keno Waite Am 3cs 6214" 6214 + 7% 76 580 585 Sales to 11 a.m.: 574,000. +1 Vice-presidents elected were Ridgetown Dominion; Gerry A.| The three more than £100,000. Mr. Douglas says the average daily run of 1,600 tons of ore through Eldorado's plant will continue until September, 1964. "With a reasonable share of the United Kingdom contract now under negotiation we will possibly be able to add another year to this. Peaceful uses of uranium are continuing but there may be a lean period in the late 1960s." [INSTALL ORE SORTER | To make the most of the lean |years, Eldorado now is install- |ing a backfill storage tank, an {x-ray spectrometer and an elec- |tronic ore-scrter. storey ore - sorter mill's already high recovery rate of nearly four pounds of uranuim from each ton of ma- terial treated. Eliminating 270 tons of rock a day from the milling circuit cre. ates one problem. Waste from the milling process will be re- duced and this could cause a shortage of the muck necessary to fill the worked-out tunnels. A new $40,000 backfill storage tank is to solve this problem by holding waste from days when there is a surplus until it is needed. The x-ray spectrometer being installed is a laboratory appara- tus which determines by means of a spectrograph the metal 1 |Man., was elected president of 4 | Stouffville Man {the Canadian Weekly ind Ry Pinckney of the Rosetown, Scott, Gananoque Reporter, and |building wil' house four ore-sort-|.n¢ans "of ores. Similar instru- |Elected To Office pers Association Wednesday at|Sask., Eagle, and C. H. Nolan, Jeff Hurley, Burlington Gazette. |ing units which marshall onto a|, ante are used in Ontario the final business session of -its of the Stouffville Tribune. Committee chairmen include: | mines. It will enable the plant | HALIFAX (CP) -- J. Rundle 42nd annual convention. He suc-| Directors elected for Ontario Executive: Barry Wenger, Wing- Smiths Falls Record News, Ad-/to determine quickly the ura- (McLachlan, publisher of thelceeds Werden Leavens, pub- were: E. S. Spence, Strathroy ham Advance-Times; Postal and vertising: R. G. Shearer, Blen-\nium content of ores and what impurities are present. er and loving father of Mrs. AN ay (Joan) Toronty and John Can , Beaconsfield, Quebec, her of Percy A., Oshawa, and Clare Toronto. The late Mr. Canni mg at Mcintosh Anderson Home, Oshawa. Service in the on Saturday, August 19 m ment Union Cemetery Film Portrays « AJAX -- § raphies of st High School fully comple examinations Richard Ki Mrs. P. T. street, Ajax, at the Ajax Ontario Dep: tions. Richa 81 per cent earn for hi "Ontario Sel nine papers two "Second the Universi Commerce a Derek Wal WwW. S. Wat street, Ajax, a First Clas: 80 per cent, the title * awarded by Education of tend the Uni Winnifred of Mr. and | of 31 Wishbt had a First age of 79 apers, seve and two "S« may be nar Scholar" on pecent on Winnifred w versity of Tt Bruce Hal Mrs. C. R street, Ajax, 74 per cent. University of David Rap Mrs. J. H.R age of 74 pe tend York U James She Shearer, 7 has complet: quirements Dentistry at Toronto with per cent Manfred P Mrs. E. Pap successfully was the on class to atti task. He obt Honors aver He will atter ronto in Eng Marie Hux and Mrs. S ward streel Second Clas 68 per cent. with the Osh tal for traini Robert Sm Mrs. E. S. road, has trance requi Unive: *ity Hon( T | FS J. Koppens Ajax, has trance requi gineering Sc sity of Wate cent average Brian Tho and Mrs. R Admiral ros the requiren 'y of Toro ith a 60 pe 'Richard ( FERGUSON. Effa Winnifred Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen rans eral Hospital on Wednesday, August 16, HAMILTON thy te Charles Arthur Ferguson and| Mother of Robert of Edmonton, in her|0f medicine--narcotics addiction 54th year. Resting at We AMmsuent within the profession--was pro- Funeral Home, Oshawa, with memarial| lags re . ~ service in the chapel Saturday, August vided for delegates at the na- 9, 2 p.m. Interment Zion Cemetery. tional convention of the Cana- 19, 2 p | (All Lady Forresters will hold a mem. |dian Pharmaceutical Associa- orial service at the funeral home on tion here Friday evening at 7:30.) It is a glimpse the LAVIOLETTE, Leona Js imps ; general Entered into rest at_the family resi. public is unlikely to have. dence, 325 Oshawa Boulevard South, | Jt was provided in a film pro- Oshawa, on Thursday, August 17, 1961, | ied Leona Vitolena Vernette,. beloved wife [duced for the division of nar- of Leo Laviolette, wd mother, of Wayne |cotic control of the federal and Phillip, In her 55th year. Resting at ; . the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, health department, and was with high requiem mass in St. Ger- screened regularly at medical trude's' Roman Catholic Church Satur- gatherings, medical and dental day, August 19, 9 a.m. Interment St. lleges d Ing k 1 Gregory's Cemetery, Oshawa. (Prayers | CO 1eges and nursing schools. will be held at the funeral home Fri-|. Entitled Face of an Addict, day evening, 8.39 p.m.) the film deals with a fictional| PATTEN, Mabel E, Dr. Jim Stone who first takes At Long Island, New York, on Wednes- | ativ frre og day, August 16, 1961, Mabel E. Myers, | sedative to help himself relax beloved wife of the late Frank Patten (from the strains of his profes- and joving mother of Mts. A, E. Carley sion. He finds increasing com- (Orpha) Oshawa and Mrs. Er : srrrie oi (Mytle) New Hyde Park, N.Y., the late|{Ort in a hypodermic needle, | Lorne Patten, Oshawa The late Mrs. |eventually becoming hopelessly Patten is resting at Mcintosh-Ande: addicted. Funeral Home from noon on Thursday. re ; . Service in the chapel on Friday, Aug- | The film's purpose, said R. C. Gat 13, at 2 pm. Interment Union Hammond, chief of the narcotic POWLENZUK, Matthew (Mike) Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital on Tuesday, August 15, 1961, Matthew (Mike) Powlenzuk, be- loved husband of Helen Yuskow an father of Mrs, John De Hart (Sylvia), Darlene, Marie, David, Jerry, and Den- nis, in his 52nd year. Resting at fhe Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with mass in Mary's Ukrainian Strike Talk ust 18, 9.30 a.m. Interment Oshawa Union Cemetery. SERVICE, Albert B. Entered into rest in the Plummers Hospital, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario on Wednesday, August 16, 1961, in his 53rd TORONTO (CP)--Both sides, year, after a short illness, Mr. Service [i the dispute which has held |poycott in retaliation against a is survived by his mother, Mrs. John |the CPR-owned Royal York Ho- yg. picket line at a Canadian- for 17 weeks manned agreed to reopen Minn, Dock workers there have Service and predeceased by the late ike. Mr. John Service, two sisters, Maretta tel strike-bound and June (Mrs. Slack) of Detroit; also| Wednesday surviving are two children, Ralph and|npepotiations. Dorell (Mrs. Michael Cirka), both of ¢ Oshawa. Mr. Service is resting at the y; funeral] home in Sault Ste. Marie for manager of the hotel, is ex- Sefviee gu Friday, at 2 pan. pected to meet with A. R. John- stone, Canadian GERROW FUNERAL {Employees Union (CLC) by the Doctor Addicts Royal York ° |tion assumes that the boycott, if called, would only be against vessels plying the Great Lakes oF {and the seaway and not against Greek Orthodox Church Friday, Aug- of the faker ships. He said most | Re-0 ened {erated by Canadians. The Canadian Brotherhood of Angus MacK in non, general The (CP)--A chilling control division, is to *'quietly 1961, Effa Winnifred Balson, widow of glimpse at a hush-hush aspect|educate" the profession to the, realization that narcotics must be handled with discretion by| those who dispense them. | Unlike street addicts who pre-| fer heroin, the professionals use| new synthetic drugs. But apart | from those addicted, the medi-| cal profession was described as| scrupulous in its handling of| narcotics. | "I can't recall a single case] where doctors have supplied an illicit market with narcotics," | Mr. Hammond said. Says Boycott Affect Small | MASSENA, N.Y. (AP) -- A| threatened boycott by a Cana- dian union of U.S. shipping on the St. Lawrence Seaway would have a negligible efféct on sea way operations, the St. Law- rence Seaway Development Cor- poration said Wednesday. A spokesman said the corpora- of the lakers are owned and op- Railway, Transport and General Workers ( ) has called for a freighter in Duluth, refused to cross the picket line. ship has been tied since | July 20. | American stevedores claim| na vice-president | the ship, the Northern Venture,| {of the striking Hotel and Clublis a "runaway flag" vessel. CHAPEL Kindness beyond' price {end of this week or early next | week | So far the hotel, largest in the DIVIDENDS vet within reach of all 728-6226 |Comonwealth, has steadfastly held out for its own terms--a return to work o" strikers at the By THE CANADIAN PRESS Consolidated Building Corp- 390 KING STREET WEST LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements and floral requirements for all | occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING | CENTRE | 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 GIDEON Bible« are a continuing me morial. For placement contact funeral director or phone 725-2327 IN MEMORIAM WOODS -- In loving memory of a dear son and brother, Bill, who passed away August 17, 1957 A silent thought, a secret tear Keeps his memory ever dear Time takes away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf -Ever remembered bv mother. dad, sister and brothers YEO -- In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother, Mrs.. Flor. ence Yeo, who passed away August 17, 1936 God knows best for reasons divine, But memories last for all time ~Lovingly remembered by son Don, daughter-in-law Doris, and family { ake | ate Burst ia Ie BARRAS -- Mere words are inade- | quate to express our gratitude to each and everyone who has through these days of sorrow with beau- tiful flowers, words of sympathy, and | Mark again during light tradin deeds of infinite kindness. We can only | Wednesday say thank you so much. ~--Shirley Barras and family Shipments Down, July This Year WINDSOR (CP) -- July ship-| ments of iron ore, helped us |market dex the basis - of foods ume share mark, compared with 1,- 333,000 Tuesday. hotel's discretion and a solid stand on its last wage offer of a 2!5 cent-an-hour increase Mr. MacKinnon said: "It has to be settled some- time.' However, he would not say whether the management would make any concessions START REPERCUSSIONS The strike. which already has lost the hotel several conven- tions, Wednesday had repercus- sions in Vancouver The Vancouver and District Labor Council decided to urge the Canadian Labor Congress to anprove a hoycott of the Cana- dian Pacific Railway urpe the federal government to nationalize the svstem. The decision followed a re- auest for aid to the hotel strik- ers. . True was her heart, her action kind, Her life was a pattern to those left | e 1 L behind. TORONTO minute stocks (CP) -- A burst by key index pushed the 20 stock indicator to the 600 last The exchange's industrial jumped 2.69 to 600.00, gains in . banks and papers. Vol- rested at the 1,295,000- Bank of Nova Scotia starred| coal and|for the banks with a one-point grain by Great Lakes carriers|rise to 79% to reach a new high| totalled 17,768,008 tons, a de-|in moderaiely heavy trading | crease of 1,401,526 tons from the| same period last year, it was|las, Algoma announced Wednesday. sociation, noted, however, that|¢ both coal and grain showed .in-{Or more. Gains in dividual increases in July, with|f the total tonnage for coal the highest it has been since hur 18 53. to $147 on a volume of 160/$666,021, 78 cents. Hersey - At.| and Dominion In steels, Page - {Foundries and Steel all gained Oliver Burnham, vice - presi-|from 1% to 3%, dent of the Lake Carriers' As-|foods, Loblaw A, while among Canada Pack-| ton A rose a noint| paners were | widespread rs B and ractional but The day's biggest drop went 0 Ford of Canada which fell $8| and to |88.07, base metals .32 to 206.25 gl {minion Tar at 1915; 2,000 Cana-| oration, Ltd , 6 per cent pfd. se- ries A 11 cents, accrued from June 26 at the rate of 15 cents] quarterly, Sept. 1, record Aug. 2 21. Jockey Club Ltd., 6 per cent pfd. A, 15 cents, 5% per cent B, 13% cents, Oct. 14, record Sept. 29. Johns - Manville Corporation, common 50 cents, Sept. 8, rec ord Sept. 1 Loblaw Groceterias Company, Ltd., 1st. pfd Series B 40 cents, Oct. 14, record Sept. 15. | Sick's Breweries Ltd, {common 30 cents, Sept. 27, rec- lord Sept. 1 Toronto General Trusts Cor- poration, common 40 cents, Oct. 2, record Sept. 8. GONDOLAS DWINDLE Venetian gondolas, number- ing about 10.000 in the 16th cen- Itury, have dropped to about 500. | shares. Refining oils were weak amid declining prices On index, golds fell .06 to and western oils .02 to 94.52. Ventures led the metals mar- ket with a rise of 21% to 62 on a volume of more than 8,600 shares. | Gold trading was light. Special - sized transactions in- cluded: 1,000 shares of Bank of Nova Scotia at 7814; 3,000 Do-| dian Oil at 30%; and 2,100 Shaw-| inigan Power at 2434 NET EARNINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS General Development Corpor- ation, 6 mos. ended June 30: 1961, 000 60 cents a share: 1260, 38,774, 52 cents Quebec Telephone Company, 6 mos. ended June 30: $764,239, 85 cents a share; fn Empire Advance of Virden,llisher of the Bolton Enterprise. Age-Dispatch; G. C. Craven,|Parliamentary: A. E. Dobbie, heim News Tribune. BIG-CAR LOOKS... Low, wide, handsome body style, modern sweeping roof line, full wraparound visibility ... all go to make Vauxhall's Velox and Cresta the best- looking, higgest-looking cars in their class! Every Cresta comes already equipped with genuine leather upholstery, whitewall tires, wall-to-wall carpeting, electric clock... and both Velox and Cresta offer the extra-cost option of Hydra-Matic auto- matic transmission! SMALL-CAR ecomammys.. loi, 266 KING ST. WEST VAUXHALL CRESTA Sl a OSHAWA, ONTARIO Remarkable 113 hp performance Is another reason for Velox and Cresta's popularity! You get the power and effortless response of 'a big six-cylinder engine plus the PHONE 723-4364 economy you expect from a "small" car! Drive Vauxhall's Velox and Cresta today . . . you're in for a pleasantly big surprise! VELOX & CRESTA > py Vauxhall Vauxhall, the British Car built and backed by General Motor THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LIMITED WHITBY MOTORS LIMITED WHITBY, ONTARIO

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