Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Feb 1963, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Nuclear Weapons As Vote Issue OTTAWA (CP)--Some politi- cians say they'd like to swecp peas arms under the rug as a campaign issue for the Apri! 8 election. But some others keep standing on the rug. Chief among these is New Democratic Party Leader Douglas who has called the election a referendum on the nuclear issue. Mr. Douglas-- whose party stands alone with a straight anti-nuclear policy-- in a campaign kickoff speech in Toronto last Friday chal- lenged other party leaders to a national television debate on the issue. Only the day before, Social Credit Leader Thompson called for a nuclear decision by a non- partisan parliamentary com- mittee and said that "if we make defence the basic iss te. we will be doing the country an injustice." BLAMES PM, PRESS He blamed Prime Minister) Diefenbaker and the press for making defence a partisan mat-| ter and dismissed Devuty Leader Real Caouette's stated opposition to any nuclear arms) as "something he said in Que bec." Less than a week previousiy, Liberal Campaign Cha man Walter Gordon told the Ca- nadian University Liberal Fed-| eration that issues ranked in this importance: decisive government, more jobs, better understanding of bi- culturalism and -- fourth --de- fence. Trade Minister McCutcheon told a Winnipeg press confer- ence Wednesday that he doubts whether nuclear arms will be- come a major election issue. "It's a highly emotional . issue and.I don't think people under- stand it. A lot of people are confused." However, the nuclear arms issue has been raised. On Monday night, the new de-| fence minister, Gordon .Church-| ill, made a defence policy state- ment to his Winnipeg hominat-| ing convention, SAYS DETERIORATES On Tuesday, before the On-) tario Progressive Conservative Assocation, Mr. Diefenbaker re- iterated his contention that the original plan for the Bomarc missile anti-bomber defence de-| The need for) teriorates steadily in effective- ness. On Wednesday Liberal Leader Pearson issued a statement ac- cusing the prime minister of contradicting what Mr. Church- ill had said. Mr. Pearson then set out his nuclear policy: 'A Liberal gov- ernment would lose no time in keeping . (nuclear) commit- ments and keeping those weap- ons armed as long as they are useful to defence." Stock Market Dominated By Losses TORONTO (CP)--Losses dom- inated all sections as the stock market moved lower during moderate trading Thursday. Steels, banks and _ utilities were weakest although losses lwere fractional. Imperial Bank of Commerce, Toronto - Domi- nion and Royal all dropped %. Dominion Foundries and Steel was weakest in its group, down (54. Among utilities, Calgary Tariff Board Plans Review Of Plastics OTTAWA grip of plastics on the modern Canadian economy--from baby bibs to videotape and chewing gum--will be. bared at an in- tensive tariff board hearing to start Monday. The agenda is the heaviest since the tariff board began re- viewing the Canadian chemicals tariff in September, 1960. More than 125 Canadian and foreign companies and trade groups will present their tariff views on resins and plastic products. Considerable _argument is an- |Power declined % and Bell! Telephone gained %. Atlas Steels was again active with four special-sized transac tions totalling 45,775 shares. On index, industrials were down .51 at 592.84, golds .56 at| 91.68, base metals .07 at 198.25) and western oils .25 at 114.18. Volume was 2,938,000 shares compared. with 3,046,000 Wed- nesday. Base metals showed a mixed pattern, especially among sen- ior issues. Falconbridge and Crigmont each dropped 14. Hud- son Bay Mining advanced % and International Nickel 14. On the western oil market Calgary and Edmonton showed the best performance, advanc- ing one point at 2114. | @ to pay all your bilis | eto DIVIDENDS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Canadian Celanese Ltd., com- mon. 45 cents (before subdivi- aR: $1 series pfd. 25 cents, till Med cents, March 31, pial reh 1, Great West Coal Co. Ltd., Class B 30 cents, March 15, rec- ord March 1. Harding Carpets 146., com- mon eight cents, 5% per cent pfd. 35.9375 cents, April 1, rec- ord March 15. Imperial Oil Ltd., common 30 cents, 4, The Imperial Life Assurance Co, of Canada, common 75 cents, April 1, record March 15. Ontario Steel Products Ltd., pfd. $1.75, common 15 cents, May 15, record April 15, Page Hersey Tubes common 22% cents, March 15. Toronto Star Lid., pfd. 75 + March 29, record March 15. Zenith Electric 'Supply Ltd., common six cents, March 29, record March 15. Lid., April 1, March 29, record March) e down payment on a home © for car or home repaire eto he the things you and lly want and need | OW without waiting © for any purpose *50 to *5000 or bankable SueUHIY easy monthly payments loans life-insured SUPERIOR FINANCE LIMITED the fastest qrowing All- Canadian loan company 17 SIMCOE ST. N. 725-6541 Open dally to 5:30 p.m. Saturday to 12:00 noon Wednesday to 8:00 p.m. Other evenings by appointment 17 OFFICES IN ONTARIO WAS tells the truth about whisky Water (plain or sparkling) is your most reliable guide to the whole truth about any whisky. Water adds nothing, detracts nothing, b natural flavour and bouquet water test and you'll agree--to be that good with water, it must be a superb fying drink with any man's ut reveals a whisky's true . Put Seagram's 83" to the whisky and a more satis- favourite mixer, ticipated with main controversy between the manufacturers of the raw material, resins, and the moulders, extruders and fabricators who turn it into the finished or semi-finished prod- Production Ot Newsprint Down In Jan. uct. Britain, Japan, United States and West German companies have filed submissions. Several hundred Canadian|ary | firms have been canvassed by) 1i8 the board's industrial commit-| tee. From this, it prepared an erica list of more than 1,000 items including resins, compounds, films, finished plas- tic products and raw materials to assist the board. The sitting may be hard) pressed to conclude the resins and plastics study within the allotted month, tariff board offi- c'als indicate. Another phase of the chemicals field is due to come under scrutiny March 25. (CP) --The firm was 518,488 tons, down 35,- 1962. Canada, which compiles land, ary were 432,956 tons, ary, 1962, Canadian shipment 244 290 tons. MONTREAL (CP)--Canadian newsprint production in Janu- 18 from 553,598 tons in January The Newsprint Association of the production figures, said the de- crease reflects newspaper strikes at New York and Cleve- Canadian shipments in Janu- com- pared with 497,583 tons in Janu- to the U.S, fell 52,780 tons to Production for each available working day in January ave-|000 raged 18,825 tons, down 9.7 per cent from the daily average in January, 1962. Production rate in January was 75.9 per = of 1963 rated capacity, pared with 84.4 per cent 'ot 196: 1962 rated cpeay & in January, 1062. US. newsprint. consumption in January was the lowest for that month since 1 But consumption might have set a record for the period had it not been for the strikes, the American Newspaper Publish- ers Association said Thursday. Total estimated newsprint consumption in the U.S. for January was 504,305 tons com-. pared with 582,565 tons in Janu- ary, 1962, and 567,017 tons in January, 1961. $ SURVEY. RESOURCES The Australian state of West ern Australia has iron ore de- RAE IRAE ST AOI NESE SRG I ARES NRE a ett ner ga Oa department of agriculture's weekly livestock report, re- leased today fo~ the week end- ing Feb. 22, revealed trading ac- tive and prices strong to higher on all classes and grades of slaughter cattle this week at the Ontario public stockyards. more than last week and about 600 more than the same week in 1962, Western cattle receipts were 45 head more than last week at 405. posits totalling some 8,000,000,- eta eos SAI AAS STIS as THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Februcry 22,1963 7 'Active Trade Shown In Slaughter Cattle TORONTO (CP) The federal steers 24-24.50; fancy light feed-jern stock calves to 30; and medium 20-23, -- lot steers 25-25,80; good 22.50. Calves: Choice vealers 35-87, 23,50; medium 19-22; common 15-18; good heifers 22-92.50; dim Pag sy. eee aga , choice to 23, odd sales to 23.50; |boners 16-21. medium 19-21.50; common 14-) Hogs: Grade A 28.05-30.90; 18; choice fed yearlings 25:27,/heavy sows 21.15-21.50; light wales LF ag ee Baer , 8008 sows seine @. $2 premium; cium 15-16.50; canners and cut- eg ee nbc nts weight ters 10-15; good heavy bologna!' Sheep and lambs: Good feed- bulls 19.50-20.50, few tops to 21;/lot lambs $23 a hi common and aetna common and medium 15-19. Replacement cattle: Good Gooties - sheep 8-10; common sheep 3-7 light stockers 24-26, good west- Cattle receipts were 500 head Slaughter cattle: Choice Chevy raf News 400 Sport Coupe GET THE SMART AND THRIFTY CHEVY I Chery Tt late yon save without sacrific- ite No other car comes close to Chevy II's luxury on a budget, or goes as far as Chevy IT' 8 the family-size car with all the comfort and convenience. As for pep, Chevy II's gas-saving 4- and 6-cylinder s economy with style. ate pack a powerful punch. Look into Chevy II. eae Impala Sport Sedan SEE THE BIG AND BEAUTIFUL CHEVROLET chevrotet with its famous Jet-amooth ride and head-turning exterior styling steals the show on any road. Inside, Chevrolet luxury is inviting. Ri colorful fabrics, glove-soft vinyls an handsome appointments assure you of that. On the practical side, Chevrolet's dependable power and easy-care maintenance features, Corvair Monza Convertible "TRY THE SPORTY CORVAIR tt presents an exclusive brand of driving pleasure. Corvair hugs the road on every curve. The secret-- Corvair carries its unique 6-cylinder air-cooled engine over the rear wheels for ideal weight distribution and Corvair lets the whole family in on ag fun. -- d stylish on th cain ee eee and stylish on the outside, Corvair is roomy and luxurious on the inside, Sting Ray 'Sport 'Coupe ( 0 ¢ 0 no mistaking the sensational new Corvette Whitewall tires optional at extra cost. THRILL TO THE DASHING DAZZLING CORVETTE There's Sting Ray with its look-of-tomorrow aero-dynamic styling and surging performance. Rich bucket seats, a cockpit-cluster console and deep-twist carpeting are standard luxury' features that add to Corvette' 's splendor. YOU DRIVE THE WINNER WHEN YOU DRIVE A CHEVROLET 4 GENERAL MOTORS VALUB Be sure to see Bonanza on the CBC-TV network each Sunday. Check your local listing for channel and time. ONTARIO MOTOR SALES LTD. 140 BOND ST. WEST, OSHAWA, ONT. PHONE 725-6501 668-3305, HARRY DONALD LTD. 300 DUNDAS ST. EAST WHITBY, ONT. 668-3306 PHONE: 668-3304,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy