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Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Mar 1964, p. 13

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GRANDMOTHER 1 HEARS LAW 'READ Mrs. Maleolm Peabody. (centre), 72-year-old mother of the governor of Massachu- setts, and Dr. R. B. Hayling (right), St. Augustine dentist, hear Sheriff L. 0. Davis, of Peabody and two others left when threatened with arrest. Five of the group were arrest- ed on trespass charges. --AP Wirephoto St. Johns County, read the state law on. "undesirable guests" as a mixed group of Negro and white people at- tempted to get service at a motor lodge Monday. Mrs. CPR Shows Revenue Up MONTREAL nadian Pacific Railway Co. has had an extraordinarily good year in almost all aspects of the firm's operations, the an- nual report reveals, Gross raitway revenues, in- vestment income and net in- come all showed marked gains) for the fiscal year ended Dec | 31, showed a net loss and hotels a} drop in net profit. (CP)--The Ca- 1963. Steamship operations) Science Alters View Of Universe's Size PASADENA, Calif. .(AP)-- half the speed of light, which} Two astronomers say they have|is 186,000 miles a second. discovered an incredibly power- | Until announcement of the ful source of light and radiojnew discovery, astronomers]? distance that current concepts} called jof the universe's size and age] s said that the faster an object have been upset. lgoes the more its light shifts Dr. Marten Schmidt of thejinto the red part of the spec- |Mount Wilson and Palomar Ob-/|trum. |ser vatories said the object, be-| All distant objects, they said, the "red_. shift.' waves in space--an object mov- measured the speed. and dis-| ing so fast and at such a great) tance of objects by a technique| They BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Canad HALIFAX (CP) -- A 13-ton 'bus has arrived in Canada with a British manufacturer's sales pitch for businessmen and 2 refutation of the argument that the British don't bother to solicit orders. It's one of eight such vehicles built for Colchester Lathe Com- pany Ltd. of England, that will). tour the world as mobile exhi- bition trade booths containing working models of the com- pany's products. Eric Patterson, assistant Brit- ish trade commissioner in the Atlantic provinces, watched the bus being plucked from the 7,328-ton Dutch cargo-passenger vessel Prins Van Granje by a 1qans oe The saw the idea as a direct refuta- tion of accusations often made against British exporters--they are all too willing to sit home waiting for orders to flow in rather than to get out and sell direct to the customer. TOUR PLANNED This coach will make a one- year, coast-to-coast tour of Can- ada. Present plans call for it to be shipped back to England after it reaches Vancoiiver. However, there is a chance it will be sent on an Australian tour. The Colchester factory is the largest producer of lathes in Europe. It turns out 120 a week and exports all over the world giant crane last week. TORONTO (CP)--The Easter Monday bank holiday dampened trading slightly on the stock market with volume at 4,840,000 shares compared with 7,204,000 traded Thursday. However, after a slow start both the industrial and ex- change indexes managed to pick up steam and finish the day at record highs. A standout on the industrial board was Alberta Distillers National Distillers of New York has made a takeover offer to the directors of Alberta Distil- lers of $4 a share for the out- standing common and voting trust stock of the company. The common sheres of the; distillery jumped 70 cents to| $3.80 on 37,580 shares and the| oss Bank Holiday Slows Market Zulapa was the heavy trader on the speculative board, trad- ing 544,600 shares for a loss of 644 cents to 39% cents. Consoli-| dated Marbenor shot up 49 cents) to $1.79 on 93,400 shares. Hudson Bay Oil and Gas gained 4 to 15% and 'Union Oil ¥% to 12% in senior oils. Consolidated Marbenor 52 cents to $1.80 on a dull For- eign marke. 18 to a record 135.71, ipdus- trials .18 to a record 144.71, base metals .21 to 67.07, west- ern oils 78 to 132.84. Will See 13-Ton British Bus commissioner said heGasoline generators on the .|potential buyer." rose) The exchange index advanced} 41 to 87.43 and golds! coaches power the demonstra- tion lathes which are fitted into the vehicles, Seven of the company's buses now are touring continental Eu- rope. The coach that now is in Halifax toured Scandinavian countries last fall, One of the buses has been as far afield as Japan. This is the first time a dem- onstration coach has visited the western hemisphere. *Syd Broomhead, sales demon- strator for the British company, says his company believed in going out to sell, TRAVEL ANYWHERE "It doesn't matter if {it's to the four corners of the earth. No matter where it is, we will go. And we are not selling the sort of thing that can be car- ried in a brief case. What we are doing in essence is bringing a booth of a trade fair straight to the front doorstep of every A spokesman for. Foulis. Engi- necring Sales Limited here, the jcompany's agent in the Atlan- |tic provinces,: says the big jcoach will visit the Nova Scotia leentres of Lunenburg, Liver- pool, New Glasgow and Cape Breton Island before going on to Moncton and points west. | Driver for the coach is a Brit- lisher named Dennis Davey. He's just completed a tour of iItaly with another bus and is to jarrive here April Jl from Lon- jdon, Meanwhile, there is to be a demonstration team with the 'bus at all times. Cancer Ja Everybodys Business Storms Force Flying Woman To Alter Course ALGIERS (AP)--Mrs. Geral- dine Mock of Columbus, Ohio, arrived in eastern Algeria Mon- day on her globe-circling trip in the family's 11-year-old sin- gle-engined plane. "Because of thunderstorms over the North African coast, Mrs. Mock flew over the Medi- terranean most of the 900 miles from Casablanca, Morocco. She told greeters she was tired and shaken up by the rough air. The 38-year-old flying house- wife plans to take off today for Cairo, weather permitting. The next 'hop will be to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, she said. A second flying housewife, Joan Merriam, 27, of Long Beach, Calif., finally got away from Surinam, Dutch: Guiana, on her flight around the world. After being held up for eight days for plane repairs, she left for Natal on the coast of Brazil. From there she plans to fly the Atlantic to Dakar, Senegal. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, March 31, 1964 ]3 FIRE LOSS HIGH PORT MENIER, Que. (CP) Fire swept by high winds burned out of control for more than' five hours Saturday, de- stroying a Roman Catholic church, the presbytery, a gen- eral store and two houses in this community on Anticosti Is- land, in the Gulf of St. Law- rence 400 miles northeast of Quebee City. None was injured but 11 persons, including seven children, were left homeless. A spokesman for Consolidated Pa- per Company, owner of the i:- land, said the damage was about $500,000. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST, 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 7 N\ NOW OPEN un FEATURING SCOTT'S. 295 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH, CHICKEN VILLA | OSHAWA PHONE 728-4911 Breakthrough --in styling, performance and price! AN ULTRA-MODERN TIRE available for the first time Railway revenues amounted) ijoveq to be an exploding gal-lappear to be going away from|voting stock 80 cents. to $3.75 on| to $477,197,379 for the 83-year- old firm, an increase of more than $24,000,000 or five per cent over the 1962 figure. Railway expenses increased to $441,936,- 070 compared with $424,191,611 the previous year. Passenger revenue showed a} decline, amounting to $25,000,- 000, down $1,100,000 from the 1962 figure. NET INCOME UP Net income was $40,126,111, compared with $32,358,265. N. R, Crump, president, said in the report that the number of passengers carried increased five per cent but added that the average journey was shorter. Canadian Pacific steamship operations showed a net loss for the 'year of $2,900,000 compared with a net profit of $646,000 ih 1962. Earnings dropped because of "higher operating expenses and strikes at St. Lawrence River ports in October," Mr. Crump said. 4 Canadian Pacific Air Lines Ltd. had net. profit of $347,000 compared with a net loss of $1,200,000 in 1962, Net income of the Soo Line Railroad Co. rose by $1,000,000 to $4,100,000, largely because of lower transportation costs: and greater traffic volume. axy or cluster of galaxies, is|our solar system. They all seem the most distant yet seen by|to go faster--and get redder-- man. |the farther they recede, "We have: had to throw gel The problem is that they keep yardsticks out the window," said. Me Schmidt discovered the new| tronomer Thomas A. Matthews.! They said i is moving cops than anything ever observed i the heavens -- prac be, | DIVIDENDS. By THE CANADIAN PRESS The Algoma Central and Hud- son Bay Railway Co. commor 25 cents, June 1, record May &. e |finding new objects farther and farther away. Does this mean they may find object with the aid of radio as- jvery distant objects going fas- jter than the speed of light? "No," said Schmidt. "'Ein- \stein has proved nothing can go faster than light. What it does mean is that we must begin to be more cautious in announcing estimates of distance, Appar- ently we must crank -some cor- rections into the distances indi- cated by-the red shift." 17,100 shares. j Prices were spotty on the) board as a whole. Among se- lected issues, Maple Leaf Mills rose 1% to. 1814, Simpsons 114 to 4314, B.C. Forest one point to) 3814 and Algoma %4 to 5944. On the minus side, Canada Iron Foundries fell % to 31%,) Industrial Acceptance % to 2334) and MacMillan-Bloedel 4 to} 27%. | Banks were steady most of the day but eased near the} close. Rio Algom advanced %4 to! 1314 and Denison %4 to 14%,| trading ex-dividend 50 cents in senior metals, Lake Dufault was) ahead % to 10. semaeunn re mt 9 nae federal Grain Ltd., pid. 3: Canada Ltd., seven cents, April eents, class A 35 cents, May 1, record April 17. 'fhe North American Fund of} There Are Specia Canada Ltd., seven cents, April] Undated dividends | $0, record March 31. Overland Express Ltd, pfd. 15) cents, common 10 cents, April) 30, record April 16. | Reynolds Aluminum Co. ot) Canada Ltd. 434 per cent pfd.) $1.19, May 1, record ee | St. Lawrence Cement class A 15 cents, April 30, fee For personal use or for @ Company use there ore definite advantages when e you lease a new... e No insurance costs ... for full details. MILLS AU PHONE 723-4634 erd April 15. | No meintenance costs . . ; everything on one or two yeor lease items . . LTD. | Benefits For All BUSINESS EXECUTIVES ; AND SALESMEN | ACADIAN | Other PONTIAC °"..., BUICK Models One rate covers Phone or come in TO LEASE 266 KING ST. WEST YOU ARE INVITED To A emcee DR. C. CAMPBELL, Surgeon DR. R. CLARK, Pathologist DR. A, J. 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