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Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Apr 1962, p. 15

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Today's Toronto St warrants. trem previous board-lot closing sole.) INDUSTRIALS a ba4 s 2 iT ite 3 usutsge ray Hy z mt 885 3 apgeyreaes re aseeees?e # R ie} -f E > $ aaaa ree gis S8es g 92988 z o 46 tne ry 12% -- % % +10 47% u% + % 4 32 139% 15%6 1 Net High Low «.m. Ch'ge $37 BT $64 6 850% Wie 00 $5 5M 5% 6% 79% 80 1% 14% Steck Sales Seles High Low p.m. Ch'ge 24 32% 3% 100 $3% 23% 24+ % 035 BB & 00 340 30 260 --10 475 450 «450 «+50 1% 3% NM--% 2 Ss er ¥, 8 gtneg3yeatce se' Ei = s i a g 94 --2% g a 38 yEst-yet | +}! +)+ EERE Pe seSeguagetse Bre s 3 i Z 3 i 3 es 17% -- Vs z2?ge so 17% 17% --% 2% Wu-- % --~10 + . we 4 & os 3 BBgosigkedss3g § 1B 8k $8 g % $33%% 3344 33% --1t4 5 $41 40% 414+ % $19 494 4916 00 700 700 700 $2 «61% 2 OILS KO = 8 * 8 = 8 28, eB. 7 7 | $10% 10% 10% S6 8S B 955 1 | $M 56% -- 44 Calvert w 12% -- %4/Camerina NO NGas N@Q Pow Nor Phone Oshawa A Page Hers Phantom j Cent Del |C Mic Mac [Dome Pete 355 35. 355 . $1l% U% 11% | Dynamic 33% 33 Home A 5 $13 BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Tour Presents Diverse By FOR3ES RHUDE WASHINGTON (AP) -- Attor ney-General Robert F. Kennedy Views egates from either countries or announced Thursday the United | 7 --% 6% M 4} Advocate -, i Net High Lew a.m. Ch'se $1746 17% 17% M3 243 «(943 15 15 2 = 173 173 $14% 14% 825 825 Stock Gales ib 173 14% $25 300 18000 MINES | Abacus 00 53 Acad Uran 300 7 7 100 640 «6640 100 970 «970 S00 4 o #" 300 127 17 127 000 62 2. 200 108 o 8 B 48 11 M 4344 655 Yan Cap | +% +2 Anglo Hur 41 Anglo Un Area A Arcadia 7 Atl C Cop Base Metal 20 B-Duq i sti Belcher Bidcop +h Black Bay Bovzan Bralorne Bunk Ank Camp Chib Cc Tung Odin NW C Silica Can-Erin Cassjar Cent Pat Chester ll 4 46a 4045 655 655 22 22 $5 4% ,|Comb Met c jek Dg D'Aragon Sidona Denison oo 2% 6 6B U8 425 $11% 11% 11% + ; A-G Won't Appeal Ruling On Dupont 000 shares of stock in General|¥2% | | Motors. | Kennedy said that, while the 61 --_1 a 108 (108 =~--2)} | Sullivan ock Market Listings ll Net © gales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 300° 385 385 385 +5 2500 9 9 5000 200 700 50 240 300 3600 2000 8 8 8 125 $28% 20% 28% 2920 110 105 105 710 $10% 10% 10% 450 315 315 315 4990 14 13% MU 2000 7 7 7 $20 O15 920 6 23% 67 Stock Dicknsn Donalda E Amphi East Mal East Sull Eldrich Faleon Faraday Frobisher Gaitwin Geco Mines Gnt Masct 6 23 «64+1 +1 +4 +% on +1 Giant YK +% Granduc Granduc rte Guleh Gennar +1 550 3000 225 800 3500 Heath Hollinger Irish Cop J Waite |Jplljcoe 12000 Kerr Add 1000 Kirk Town 1100 L Dufault i200 1500 1000 4970 6 $235 67 3% ¥ 840 10 310 9 46 23% 67 43 Maritime Martin MeWat Min Corp Moneta Murray M New At N Mylama Newnir N_ Senator Nicke] MS Nor Acme Pick Crow Pitch Ore Pow Rou Pros Air Que Lab Que Lith Que Man Quemont Rayrock Realm Rio Algom | Rix Athab } Russell |San Ant Sherritt aie Sigma | Siseo e | Starratt Steep R + eae Rte Timbill Tormont U Asbestos ze tures |Waite Am Willroy | Wiltsey States government will not ap-jcourt did not accept all of the! winch ac Record One-Day Market Decline TORONTO (CP)--Widespread industrial losses drove the stock market to its greatest one-day decline in more than two years Thursday and volume shrank well below Wednegtlay's level. Bank of Nova Scotia, Imperial Oil, Shawinigan and Price Brothers all closed at their low- est prices of the year, with losses ranging to 1% points. '. Bell Telephone and BA Oil also touched yearly lows earlier in the day, but revived slightly. Algoma Steel, Canadian Im- perial Bank of Commerce and Inter-provincial Pipe Line all fell one point, Walker-Gooder- ham 1% and Dominion Foun- dries and Steel 4. Only high spot in the main list was Russell Industries which gained 1% to a 1962 peak of 16. On the exchange index, indus- trials topped 5.44 to 612.58-- their biggest single-session loss since March 3, 1960. Western oils dipped .10 to 114.80--their lowest level since December. Golds rose .07 to 86.56 and base metals .49 to 207.87. Total vol- ume was 2,307,000 shares com- pared with Thursday's 3,051,000. NET EARNINGS THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, April 27, 1962 1§- De Havilland Aireraft of Can- ada Lid., year ended Dec. $1: 1961, $2,518,707; 15 mos. ended By THE CANADIAN PRESS Aluminium Lid., 3 mos. ended March 31: 1962, $7,500,000, 25 cents a share; 1961, $7,400,000, 24 cents. Ltd., 3 mos. ended March 31: 1962, $377,041, 5% cents a class A share: 1961, $245,619, 114 cents. Dec. 31: 1960, $706,804, (Change in fiscal year-end). Industrial Acceptance Corpor- ation Ltd., 3 mos. ended March 31; 1962, $2,423,000; 1961, $2,412,- Bailey Selburn Oil and Gas/000 International Petroleum Co, Ltd., 3 mos. ended March 31: 1962, $6,200,000, 43 cents a share 1961, $8,400,000, 58 cents, In base metals, Noranda climbed 14% while International Nickel dropped one point. A FRANK LAUNDER and SIONEY GILLIAT Presentaton i 'A KINGSLEY INTERNATIONAL RELEASE FEATURE TIMES--1:40-3:40-5:30-7:30-9:10 PLALA RE, 2.2 Rel ENTERTAINMENT SUNDAY 1:30 P.M, 1 ! i i i | | | i} | | with SIM LASH Featuring -- JOHNNY ROMERO EVERY FRIDAY -- 12 P.M. TILL 2 A.M. and EVERY SATURDAY. 'Late Night Dining Music' 12 p.m. till 3 om, PHONE 723-1821 For your LISTENING and DANCING pleasure Relax in the Comfortable Atmosphere of The CONTINENTAL ROOM in the TOWN & COUNTRY RESTAURANT 13 BOND STREET EAST and his TRIO GILLIAN OSHAWA LITTLE THEATRE Presents "THE CHALK GARDEN" By ENID BAGNOLD Directed by at McLAUGHLIN LIBRARY THEATRE May 2, 3, 4, 5th 8:30 P.M. SHARP BOX OFFICE AT HENDERSON'S BOOK STORE HEATH . Canadian Press business editor| organizations and represent no T CP) Cc d but th veg peal from the final judgment government's proposed terms, Zen™ TORONTO ( -- Canada/one but themselves. ' Curb SATURDAY, APRIL 28th, 8:30 A.M. to 6 P.M. entered in the du Pont-General| Judge LaBuy's MONDAY, TUESDAY APRIL 30th, MAY Ist---4:30 te 7 P.M. OPEN DAILY 1 P.M. judgmentiyukon con and Canadians will be seen through many eyes and from many points of view when the Duke of Edinburgh's sec- ond Commonwealth Conference opens in Montreal May 13 and sets out on its 25-day cross- country tour. Canadians, on their part, will see people from many lands and cultures. Representatives will be here from 25 countries as diverse as the make-up of the Common- wealth. They will come from such new and under-developed countries as Nigeria and from the highly - developed United Kingdom. Representatives from Ghana, Nyasaland and Fiji will be fellows with those from Aus- tralia and New Zealand. People from the tropics and the southern hemisphere will shake hands with David D. A. Jones, who will come down from the DEW line in the North- west Territories. HAVE MANY TRADES Most of them will be repre- sentatives of industry and trade unions. But also there will be G. W. King, who describes him- self as a self-employed farmer from Gloucestershire; Maurice Bean, a stone mason from Ber- muda; Dimitrios Charalam- bides, who runs a dairy farm in Cyprus; Herbert Shu-on Cheng, manager of a clock and watch company in Hong Kong; and Chang Ta Kang, owner of a stone and brick quarry in Sarawak. There will be miners and mine executives; railway work- ers and officers; engineers; re- searchers; educationists; man- agers; personnel men; govern- ment officials; and generally a representation about as wide as industry ahd trade unions. Names of 293 representatives, with some more to come, were announced Thursday from con- ference offices here. All were chosen under a sys- tem set up by the conference but, in the words of the an- nouncement, "they are not del- Leaders Defeat Scouts By MRS, CHARLES REESOR PORT PERRY -- The annual Fun Night for the Scout and Guide Organizations was held in the Port Perry Community Me- morial Arena recently. The event was arranged by the group committee with Cubmas- tre Stanley Ploughman acting as master of ceremonies. Scheduled for the evening were open skating, hockey games between the scouts and leaders and a broom ball game. There were over 350 parents, Brownies, Guides, Cubs, Scouts, Rovers and leaders in attened- ance. Mrs. R. Webster's Ist Brownie Pack won over Mrs. A. Roach's 2nd Brownie Pack by a score of 4-1. Mrs. B. Howey's 2nd Guide Company battled with Mrs. G. Nelson's 1st Company, the final score being a 1-1 tie, on a last minute goal by the Howey's. The Scouts took on the lead- ers, mith the latter displaying real desire and markmanship, although badly out of condition. The individual star was Charles Bourgeois, in leading his fellow leaders to a 7-3 win. The fathers created a lot of excitement in their two broom ball games. In the first game, George Emmerson's team tied 1-1 with shorthanded Gerald Nelson's team and in the finals the decision was a 1-0 score over the fathers from the north- oast side. Motors case by Judge Walter|"achieves the basic end of this a.m J. LaBuy of Chicago. The decision brings to an end 13 years of litigation to compel du Pont to dispose of its 63,000,- '|pany, The First Step Toward Faith jimportant litigation : 539,000. | The judgment requires the du) /Pont company and the du Pont lfamily - controlled holding com- Christiana Securities Company, to divest themselves of their General Motors stock) yon it aynocmiy to ptay when holdings | you don't believe? A prominent The judgment further pro-| minister says No" in the May vides that a number of the du| Reader's Digest. He telis how Pont family members must sell| faith -- like science -- begins GM stock they receive in the| With experiment. "Try it," he divestitures. A total of 8,566,646| sys and explains why hig Ha 'y " ic! ¢€ shaking your fist GM shares would be sold in this) ¥0% 0%), colt po fe Hine ysierieaae take will give you added strength. | In a@ stipulation field Thurs-| Get your May Redder's Digest jday, stockholders affiliated with] today -- 37 enlightening, enter- |jthe du Pont management taining and absorbing articles agreed to sell an additional) of lasting interes: 3,079,261 shares of GM stock|---- they now hold or would receive.| | SLIM GORDON presents |) The purpose of the conference is to study "the human con- sequences of industrial change in the Commonwealth and Em- pire." WRESTLE WITH NAMES | goa language Rage e . traditionally slow at catching D F d onto strange names, will have river oun some difficult ones to sroetel with. There are for instance: | R bl Augustine W. Bwanausi, min-| esponsl e ister of ay ce gd i onoment, Nyasaland; Akwasi) Amoakohene, managing di-| In Collision rector, African Construction) Company of Ghana; Shri Ar-| KINGSTON (CP) --A driver vind Narottom Lalbhai, presi-/who died in a crash March 14 dent, Ahmedabad Mill Owners'|that also killed two other per- Association, India; P. B. Olan-|sons was held _ responsible rewaju, Nigerian Trades Union|Thursday for the accident Congress; Abdul Latif Ebrahim,! A coroner's jury ruled that managing director, Husein Tex-/Nouglas Clifford Joy, 21, drove tile Mills, Pakistan; and Lau-/at an excessive speed consider- rence Kalule - Settala, general) secretary, Uganda Teachers'! Association. Nine women will be in the; group. They are Mrs. Lisbeth) A. Brodribb, manager of an electronic equipment company, and Miss Pauline M. Griffin, a cotton - mill personnel officer, both from Australia; Mrs. Jean H. Smith of the Barbados Em- ployers' Federation; Miss Pearl Stacy, school nurse, Middlesex County Council, Miss Susanne} Stoessl, official of a shoe manu-| facturing firm, and Miss Mary Swann, a trade union official, all from England; and the fol- lowing from Canada: Miss Mary P. Garden, person- nel department, Merck, Sharp and Dohme of Canada Ltd., Montreal; Miss Mary Jane Gil- more, staff employment officer, Dominion Textile Ltd., Mont- real; and Mrs. Patricia Minnes, clerk, Outboard Marine Corpor- ation and president of office local, United Steelworkers of America, Peterborough. SOME STUDY HERE Some of the representatives are already studying in Canada. Hemendra Prabhudas, account- uate study at the University of Western Ontario; Joseph Kach- ingwe, from Nyasaland, is at Coady International Institute, St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, N.S.; and Shri Ram- avarapu Sudhakar, mines man- ager from Calcutta, is studying -- at Dalhousie Univer- sity. The largest representation out of the names d Thurs- ant from Uganda, is doing grad-|: DIVIDENDS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Canada Steamship Lines Ltd.,| pid. 31% cents, July 2, record) June 1. Canadian General Securities) ing the icy road surface, and did not have the car under con- trol. The other victims were Tat-| jana Veerovka, 22, and Andrea) Mae Hearns, 17, both of King-| ston, | GRAND OL' OP'RY Ltd. Class A 25 cents, Class B 25 cents, June 15, record May 31. H. Corby Distillery Ltd., vot- ing 50 cents, non-voting B 50 cents, June 1, record May 10. Eagle Star Insurance Co. Ltd., final dividend two shillings, July 2, record May 17. Ingram and Bell Ltd., com-) mon 20 cents, July 30, record) July 16. | International Petroleum Co. Ltd., 30 cents (U.S.), June 8, record May 11. Simpsons Ltd., 20 cents, June 15, record May 15. G. H, Wood and Co. Ltd., pfd $1.37%4, June 1, record May 15. There were three others in the car: Howard Joy, a brother of the driver; Shirley Ann Baxter, of Napanee, and Roy Jackson. They were all injured. Const. Earl McCullough testi-; fied the occupants of the car) were scattered along Highway 33 for 150 feet. He said the ve- hicle had careered 229 feet be- side the road after it went out! of control. | The constable said an empty) liquor bottle and its case were) found. A second bottle was seen floating in open water near the scene, but it sank before it could be picked up. YOUR HAPPY EASTER SHOW! DOORS OPEN DAILY AT 12 NOON rou SANDS Wale Disney ANNETTE say BOLGER: WYNN ADDED ATTRACTION &e \ TECHNICOLOR® (00m RT URE PR TONS ALLA Br HL ST TTOTON OD alt Disneys CHILDREN LifrERBUG f A TECRNICOLOR® CARTOON CONTINUOUS DAILY FEATURE AT .12:45 - 2:55 - 5:00 - 7:10 - 9:15 A FAMOUS PLAYERS THEATRE day is Canada's 77. Other larger representations are: United Kingdom 44; Australia 32; Rho- desia and Nyasaland 16; Ni- geria 12; India 11; New Zealand 10; Pakistan seven. Other coun- tries represented are: Aden, Antigua, Bahamas, Bar- bados, Bermuda, British Gui- ana, British Honduras, Brunei, Ceylon, Cyprus, Fiji, Gambia, Ghana, Granada, Hong Kong Jamaica, Kenya, Malaya, Mal ta, Mauritius, St. Kitts, St. Lu. cia, Sarawak, Sierra Leone Tanganyika, Trinidad, Uganda DEATHS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.--B. C. (Cal) Gartshore, former vice-| president and general manager) of the Great Lakes Power Com- pany. Chicago -- Eddie South, 57,| well-known early jazz musician, after a long illness. Copenhagen -- Countess Alex- andrine Louise Castell-Castell, 47, a cousin of King Frederick of Denmark, following a long) illness. Toronto -- Harvey R. Fuller,| 68, former business administra-| tor for the Toronto board of ed- ucation. Woodstock--Corporal W. A. T. (Robbie) Robinson, a member TOR ORR OS 5 Mim OFFICER 1962 HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES The Naval Career Counsellor will be in OSHAWA, 1 and 2 MAY AT GENOSHA HOTEL ROOM 218 from 10 a.m. to -- p.m. of the provincial police for 32! years until he retired ed years ago " > ROYAL CANADIAN NAVY | Vea. % . Box Office Opens 7 P.M ing at TODAY ONLY! k! Show Starts et Dus ELLE EAE: SEINE OME: ON NIGHTS OF PLAY -- GENERAL ADMISSION -- $1.00 AT THEATRE -- 7 P.M. GARY COOPER. WILUAM. WYLER'S pooucnors PLUS! pavin Lapp IN "RAYMIE" TOMORROW! o "DONDI" * OSHAWA ENunderI2 FREE! ALWAYS A IN PERSON Decea Record Star | ROY DRUSKY and a BIG SHOW including LONNIE end LOTTIE LITTLE SHIRLEY Hear His Big Hits @ Another © Any More © 'Three Hearts In A Tangle © There's Alwoys One, ste., ete. ) | | | OSHAWA ARMOURIES | Saturday, May 5th 6 P.M.--$5.00 PER COUPLE DANCING ONLY 8:45 TO 12 P.M. JACK SHEARER'S ORCHESTRA 2,00 PER COUPLE CLOSING DATE FOR DINNER TICKETS APRIL 28th, 1962 DANCE TICKETS ONLY AT THE DOOR Sun., Apr. 29th, 8 p.m. d by the ONTARIO REGIMENT ASSOCIATION RED BARN @ EVERYONE WELCOME @ WILSON & LEE LIMITED Register Now For MUSIC STUDIOS Lessons On These Popular Instruments ACCORDION @ CLARINET SAXOPHONE @ HAWAIIAN VIOLIN GUITAR SPANISH GUITAR @ TROMBONE POPULAR PIANO @ VIOLA TRUMPET @ CELLO Our 6-week beginner's course on the accordion at 1.50 weekly includes the FREE use of an accordion during that period which is taken home for practice. 87 SIMCOE ST. WILSON & LEELTD. MUSIC STORE NORTH 725-4706 PLUS... FRIDAY OUTSTANDING JAZZ GROUPS SPECIAL ATTRACTION THIS WEEK .. . DOUG Featuring AND HIS QUINTET . Vecalise BRUCE DORAN KEMP Ca ah DANCING 9 P.M. -- 7 A.M, ADMISSION 1.25 PER PERSON bile i foe 5 Oat ed SPOSCSSSSTSSSHSSSSSHESSSSSSHSSSSSHSFSSESSHESHSSSSSHSSHSSSSSHSOSHSHERSSOHSOSSCHTESSE COOKING "15 minutes from ° S@Oeee0e08280086 SSCSSHSSHSSSCSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSTFeTETEERE ...fake her ouf to dinner tonight MOTOR HOTEL AND RESTAURANT Downtown Oshawe en Highway 401 at Bowmanville" OPEN HOURS !! 7 A.M. TO 12 MIDNIGHT DAILY 1! SASHSHHSHHREHREBRESSESFSOSEEHeFeLeSEssgs a es ae > (a): wv, VOOR POORER H ESTE SORES PA THRESH SLETHTSAHO SHH SHHTOSEHH HH TELESHODD ELLE @ervevsereeever

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