ee a te we 1@ THE OSHAWA Times Mendey, January 8, 1962 Say 'obis are|Alum 2 pr INTERESTING family histories can be written with clippings from The Oshawa 'Times of the Happy Events .. Engagements and W '8. Notice for these events are only $1.50. Bring them to the Classified Counter or telephone The Oshawa Times, RA 3-3492, .| AltaGas pr 2: ny|Bank Mont 230 Bank NS Births, | B: Today's Stock Market Listings STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toron toStock Exchange--Jan. 8 (Quotations in cents unless marked $. z--Odd lit, xd--Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is from previous board-lot closing sale. INDUSTRIALS 11 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 160 $40% 40% 40% 700 $13 13 13 1135 $38 37% 38 TORONTO 11 A... Stock Abitibi Acad-Atl Alta Gas +% + % AltaGas w Algoma Alumini 230 17 260 $49 449 649 825, 100 75 --% Ang Pip pr Ashdown B A St Wire C Atlas Steel 250 $9 1000 150 625 $30% 30% 30%4--% $74% 74 74%4--% 156 $83 8 83 Beav Lum 300 $32 32 32 . 1323 $57% 57% 574 --% 725 $54 «(54 54 466 320 320 320 8 1025 $36% 150 "% 64+ % 250 13 15% + % 51% -- % BC Forest BC Pow BC Phone DEATHS Phage vest Leone Quinn rile, on Saturday, January 6, 1962, Leone Quinn, beloved wife of Bruce Berry, 63 Liberty Gtreet North, Bowmanville. Resting at Morris 1 Chapel, Bowman- Funeral ville. Service was held in the chapel on/C Monday, at 3.30 p.m. Interment at Bow-| C' manville Cemetery. CLARK, Baby in the Oshawa General Hospital on) Friday, January 5, 1962, | Clark, infant son of Mr. Gordon Clark (357 Rossmount Avenue), | ¥ aged one day. Interment was in Mount |< Lawn Cemetery. CONNOR, Frederick At the Fairview Lodge, Whitby, on Mon- day, January 8, 1962, Frederick Connor (formerly of Dunbarton), beloved hus- band of the late Florence G. Hughes, fm his 87th year. Resting at the W. C. Town Funeral Chapel, Whitby, for serv- foe in the chapel on Wednesday, Janu-| ary 10 at 2 p.m. Interment Groveside Cc y: the Rev. 8. Armstrong. (Visiting hours, Tuesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.) BARRISON, Ruth Victoria | Suddenly at her residence in Port) on Saturday, January 6, 1962,| Ruth Mark, dearly beloved wife of! David Harrison, dear mother of Jean) (Mrs. A. Mark) of Toronto, Norma (Mrs. 8. Weyrich) of Whitby, Oshawa, Lioyd, Rena (Mrs, R. - ster) and Merle (Mrs. H. Short), all of} Port Perry, in her 68th year. Resting/ at the chapel of McDermott-Panabaker,| Port Perry, for service on Tuesday at} 3 p.m. Interment Pine Grove Ceme-| tery. LANE, Tressa Fowler | Suddenly at Hampton on Saturday, Jan-| uary 6, 1962, Tressa Fowler, in her! Sand year, beloved wife of George Lane, 46 King Street East, Bowman- ville, and dear mother of Ronald and} Joan. Resting at the Morris Funeral) Chapel, Bowmanville. Service in the chapel on Tuesday at 2 o'clock. Inter-| ment Bowmanville Cemetery. | O'DONNELL, Mary Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital on Monday, January 8, 1962, Mary McHugh, widow of the late John Joseph O'Donnell, in her 85th year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with High Requiem Mass in St. Gregory's Church, Oshawa,.Wednesday, January 10, 10 a.m. Interment St. Gregory's Ceme- tery. GIDEON Bibles are a continuing me- morial. For placement contact funeral director or phone 725-2327. GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all. 728-6226 390 KING STREET WEST LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements and floral requirements for all occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 10 +% 354 --1 9 20% 3 --% 22% + 4 Build Prod Bi 00 4 2795 C Imp Bk C 150 IL, Cc Cdn Oil CPR Cons Bidg Cons Bidg pr200 Cons Bidg w 575 Con Gas 1360 Corby vt 210 Corby B 175 Coronation 225 Crain 600 Dist Seag 465 D Bridge 375 D Fndty 490 Dom Stores 270 Dom Tar 670 Dom Text 250 15 $109%4 10914 109% 4% 17 17 vee 6M 36s -- Hy ,|\SKD Mfg y,| Slater Ind xd 25 v7 fy Steinbg A /, | Trans-Mt 11 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 150 -5 2110 911 Ind Accep 175 I Ac wts 450 $: Inland Gas 455 Inland G pr 220 Int Util 200 Inter PL 135 Int pr dis 100 $7' Th Th Int Stl P 200 185 = 185. $61 60 61 +1 110 10 105 --5 $6: 6 6% $15% 15% 154% + % $7 7 7 370 ' 370 =370 00 $124 12% 12% $33 330 «33 $18 18 18 $25% 25% 25% -- % 39% 9% We--% 400 395 395 $10% 10% 104+ % $50% 50% 50% $33 33033 00 100 100 100 $18% 18% 18% $12% 12% 12%-- % 39% We %--% $11% 11% 11% 285 et 285 Stock Horne Pf Hur Erie Imp Oil % 83% + % 7 Milt Brick Mont Loco 25 Moore 430 N St Car 1395 NO NGas 575 Nor Phone 250 Ocean Cem 225 Page Hers 290 Phantom 1500 Pow Corp 30 QN Gas 170 QN Gas pr 50 $: Rapid Grip A100 Reichold 175 Roe AV C Rothman Royal Bank Royalite 7, | Russell 2|St Maurice Salada-S Selkirk A Seven Arts Shawin 25% -- Ye 13% -- % 29% -- % 7 Silverwd A Simpsons 559 450 235 St Pav z10 Steel Can 1435 79%4--% 225 % 2% Suptest ord L 14 Tamblyn 225 20% Texaco 150 $58% 584+ % Tor-Dom Bk 430 722%--% Tr Can PL 1322 "4 27% + Fin A 340 54a + Ye 3160 %15 +% Trans PPL 250 4 64+ Ve Un Acc 2 pr 300 10% -- % Un Gas 200 23% -- % 4 Dover Du Pont Emco E 225 2% -- % 17% + %| %) 'am Play Fanny F Forl US Fraser Frosst A 19% Gatineau 3 374% + Ys) Dynam 321 32 Goidyear | G Mack A 250 GL Paper 2160 G L Power 11020 G L Pow w 2530 GN Gas B w 100 GW Coal A 200 Gr Weg G26 Gr Wpg vt 2114 Hard Carp 200 Hi-Tower 600 15% 15% 17% 17% -- % $16 «16 = «616 | Walk GW Ty12|Woodwd A 2105 $17% 17 _¥ -- 4%! Asamera U Gas B pr 80 57% -- % Union Oil -- £100 "4 365 58%-- % Vulcan 100 465 West Coast 996 5 +% West Cst vt 695 4 19 -- %& Wood J A 50 $: 36% 3656 --1%4 17% Zenith 285 Carb Asbestos CD Sug 325 C Bronze xd 100 223 200 z10 100 100 100 285 34% 24% 20 +10 270 uu--% 24% 20 --% 40 5444 -- % 8580 270 251 400 105 105 265 105 +10 --2 Alminex 11 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 910 905 910 --S $25% 25% 25% 131 131 131 101 100 101 395 380 6385 100 100 100 425 425 425 405 400 405 163 735 162 «163 35 730 «735 11% 11% 11% 385 Stock Bailey 8 A 1000 Bail 5% pr 100 Banff 100 C Oil Ids CS Pete C Chiefta C Dethi Cdn Dev C Ex Gas Cent Del C Dragon C Mic Mac 385 «385 C West P 234 234 234 Dynamic 52 52 «(52 Fargo 2 2 2 365 365 365 Fr Pete pr Hime 138% 13% 13% Home B 13% 13% HB OUG $18% 18% 18% LI Pete +1 iad + +1 Trans Can Triad Oi Un Oils Wayne W Decalta Acad Uran Amal Rare Anglo Hur ---5 Bary Expl Base Mets 8 8 8 +% 13% 13% 134--% 150 148 150 +2 22 «22 |Bouzan "0 49 Bralorne | Cadamet |Camp Chib |C Tung C Astoria |C Dyno Can.Erin "a3 23 --4 Cassiar xd $12% 12% 124--% |Cent Pat 00 157 157 157 +32 |Chimo 57 \Coch Will |Coin Lake |Comb Met |Con Key {C Callinan |C Discov |C Dragon jC Halli C Morrison C Mosher C Northid > Sannorm 8 8 8 163 «157 «160 «+4 |Coprand | Daering | D'Eldona Denison | Dicknsn | Dome |Duvan | t Sull al | Faraday |Fatima | Frobisher |Geco Mines | Genex 16 OL (Giant YK 440 $10% 10% 10%-- % I on Ve x5 13% -- ¥%| Langi: 11 Net Gales High Low a.m, Ch'ge 100 375 375 «375 Gunnar 510 840 «840 «840 Hsaga 3000 15 «(14 15 Hh H of Lakes 1000 14% 144% l44--% 52 30 SL 11 10% ll Stock Grandus Bomb Shelter Fraud Charge Laid By Police HAMILTON (CP) -- Kenneth} Newton, 29, has been charged two phoney ing as woman paid a total of $9,435 to "government in- spectors" who told her she had to have a fall - out shelter. Joan Gibson has been chargd with obstructing police after officers seeking a man in con- nection with -the case were told he was not in the house. Police said the two men pos- inspectors went to the with fraud after an elderlyihome of Mrs. Alice Steel last October, examined the cellar, and told the woman the law re. quired a shelter to be built. The men offered Mrs. Steel a contract and collected $680 in cash. They returned several times during the following weeks and said each time they needed more money to com-' plete the job On Saturday, police said, de- tectives went to a house seck- , ing a man and were wld by a woman who answered the door he was not htere. A search war- rant was detained # man, clad only in his trousers, was found in the attic. ANCIENT AREA St. Paul's Church at Jarrow near Newcastle, England, in- cludes remains of a Benedictine monastery founded in 685 AD, Silvermq Steep R Sylvanite Taurcan Temag Thom L Tormont Tribag Un Keno Upp Can Ventures Vespar Violam Waite Am Willriy Wiltsey Yk Bear Young HG 35 Zenmac 17 1% 27 102 3535 164 16%4--% Sales to 11 a.m.: 1,017,000. Board Orders CNR, CPR To Reduce Rates OTTAWA (CP)--The Board of} Transport Commissioners Sat-| urday made public an order di-| recting the CPR and the CNR) to reduce their rates on carload| lots of alfalfa meal and dried) ground grass moving from On-| tario to points east of Montreal.| Effective Feb. 1, the rate] must be no higher than the! rates as reduced by so- called "bridge subsidy" on car-| loads moving from Fort Whyte,| Man., to the same territory. The subsidy, as.explained by) the board, is a colloquial ex-| pression applied to provisions of| government pay for maintaining certain trackage between Sud-| bury and Fort William in con- IN MEMORIAM COLLARD -- In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother, Amy Janet, who passed away January 7, 1946. Just as you were, so will you be, Treasured forever in our memory. --Lovingly remembered by the family. LITTLE -- In loving memory of a dear husband, John Milton, who passed away January 8, 1960. His smiling way and pleasant face Are a pleasure to recall; He had a kindly word for each And died beloved by all. Some day we hope to meet him, Some day, we know not when, To clasp his hand in a better land, Never to part again. --Sadly missed by wife Gladys. REID -- In memory of Robert Reid (late of Port Whitby), who passed away January 6, 1961. A page in the book of memory Silently turned today, We remember you in silence And make no outward show, And what it meant to lose you No one will ever know. --By his friends, Charles and Barbara Gin. SCOTT -- In loving memory of Alex Bcott, who passed away January 8, 1961. No morning dawns, no night returns, But that I think of you. Those left behind are very dear, But none replaces you. ~--dLovingly. remembered by wife Mickey and children, Michael and Alexis, WODNISKY -- In loving memory of a dear husband, William Wodnisky, passed away January 8, 1956. You're not forgotten, husband dear, Nor ever shall you be, As long as life and memory last I shall remember thee. remembered and sadly missed by wife, Mary. YOUNG -- In loving memory of a loving mother, Bella Young, who died January 8, 1961. Dear er, you are not forgotten, Though on earth you are no more, 6till In memory you are with us, As you always were before. tain freight rates." The Eastern Canada Alfalfa Meal Association, with head- quarters at Renfrew, Ont., sought removal of the subsidy jon alfalfa meal and dried }ground grass moving from | Western Canada to Eastern Can- ada. The board dismissed this application. Picture In Paper Assists Salesman Trader's Furniture, Phoenix, Arizona, believes that familiar faces place salesmen on friend- ly terms with customers of their chain of seven stores. Featuring one store's personnel at a time, a series of some 30 eds pictured managers, sales- men, and other employees along with brief biographical notes about their families, homes and hobbies. Of 120 employees, have appeared in newspaper ads sometimes as a_ group when a double-page is sched- uled and always with a head- line notation that they are 'the friendliest people in town." Comments of "I saw your pic- ture in the paper," are fre- quently reported by salesmen, who find that these customers are easier to sell. The store reports "traffic re- sults are three to five times greater than usual." over 70 Winnipeg Air Pollution Down WINNIPEG (CP)--Air pollu- tion in Winnipeg is below the national average, says L. A. Kay, director of environmental sanitation for the Manitoba health department. Reporting on aseries of sur- veys in the last four years, he said: "Our findings indicate that Winnipeg's air pollution level is still pretty low. A burst of de- velopment could intensify the problem but right now our pol- lution figures are below the na- tional average. « "Winnipeg had -a few Canada Directors Addition To Board TORONTO (CP)--Borden Co. Ltd., subsidiary of the American Borden company, has added four Canadian directors to its board. They are G. Allan Burton, vice - president and managing director, Simpson's Ltd.; J. H. Moore, president, John Labatt Ltd.; B. M. Osler, Qc, Toronto; and O. B. Thornton, president, Montreal Trust Company. Of the 16 directors, 11 are Cana- dian residents. cases of pollution hazards but there is no over-all. problem. We're lucky that we're out in uated in a valley." sideration of a reduction in "cer- Fa the open instead of being sit, OAS May Impose Cuban Sanctions WASHINGTON (AP) -- When the hemisphere's foreign minis- ters assemble in Uruguay Jan. 22 to discuss the Cuban ques- tion, the case of the Dominican Republic will be in the back of many minds, It will be present in some fashion such as this: "The Organization of Ameri- can States was able to clean up the Dominican mess, so why can't it clean up the Cuban mess in the same manner?" There are many similarities between the two cases. Under the late dictator Ra- fael Trujillo, the Dominican Re- Section 468 of the Railway Act.|PUblic was found guilty of an This provides that the federal| 2c of aggression against Vene- jzuela. The OAS declared Tru- \jillo personally responsible for ja plot to assassinate Venezue- \lan President Romulo Betan- 'ourt. | Diplomatic and economic sanctions were imposed on the mer government. Less than 1% years later Tru-|. jjillo had been assassinated, a |Democratic go vern ment has been installed, the Trujillo fam- lily has left the country and the |sanctions were removed. The |United States resumed diploma- |tic relations with the Domini- }can Republic Saturday. In the Cuban case, the for- eign ministers will be presented with evidence of Cuban - spon- sored plans for invasions of the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Honduras. So the question arises: Why can't the OAS condemn Cuban aggression as it did in the Do- minican case and take steps to isolate Cuba from the rest of the Americas? What could be a preview of the forthcoming discussion at Punta del Este was seen Thurs- day when the OAS council de- bated lifting of the Dominican sanctions. Everyone agreed the OAS-- when it imposed the Dominican sanctions, while it maintained them and when it removed them--had in no way violated the principles of non-interven- tion and. self-determination. But there were many distinc- tions. DIDN'T JUDGE Mexico pointed out that when it voted for sanctions in 1960 it did so "without passing judg- ment in any fashion and mak- ing no allusion to internal char- acteristics of the Dominican government." It also emphasized that it voted for the sanctions only after an investigation deter- mined that the Dominican Re- public had intervened in Vene- zuela. By parallel reasoning, the Mexican position. could be pro- jected into something like this when the Cuban question comes up: Sanctions cannot be imposed on Cuba solely on the ground that its government is not a representative democracy. 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HARRY DONALD LIMITED 140 BOND ST. WEST 300 DUNDAS ST. EAST WHITBY, ONT. OSHAWA, ONT. PHONE 725-6501 = uoNE MO 8-3304; MO 8-3305; MO 8-3306. | === Be sure to see Bonanza on the CBC-TV network each Sunday. Check your local listing for time and channel. --=-- icici ase tsnn Cen es