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Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Mar 1965, p. 19

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DEBI OE DOLLARD ALLL DP IEEE THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, March 26,1965 49 einen ne at we - Domestic Problems Plague Shamed: cy Se tne 'Maine Tidal Power Project Torente 1-o08 iy fa eeaivioend, XPaBx-| Codemet Wie 13a Va + V2 rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is} Camflo 3200 365 345 350 | Camp Chib 100 435 435 435 By ARCH MacKENZIE WASHINGTON (CP) -- Do- mestic political problems are from previous boerd-lot closing sale. Net | ¢ Tung 100 108 108 108 Stock, Sales Wish Low 0m. CHRP! Con Mines 150 19. 19. 19. INDUSTRIALS C Dyno 200 165 165 165 +4 psi ane a ee pay ag laguing hopes of substantial 012 0 ON Tegisiat ve progress this year on the Passan.aquoéddy tidal power | Much of the difficulty lies in vj % # | Maine itseit. There are attempts = by private power interests to Th |maquoddy plan. : Canada has some objections, too, although some people here BALSON -- Glenn Atchison) wish to s boy, Stephen 4000 General 1. Thanks to Dr. Halam-Andres and 4th +§ staff. DEATHS COX, Viela Sare ered structures in the Bay of Fundy have been filed in both Houses of Congress by New Eng- land representatives. SEEK STUDY : But an application has been made before the Federal Power Commission for a 36-month study on a private proposal to build a hydro project at Cross Rock, Me. : The project, federal and many other officials say, would flood the natural beauty of the Alla- gash River basin, which is one of the last unspoiled streams in Abitibi at +4 ™% 9% C Faraday 400 360 360. 360 i 985 $125 12% 12/4 Cdn Keeley 1000 30 30 20 7% 12% 3500 70 6 70 ee ae project in New Brunswick- }o00 17% 17% 174+ ve Maine waters. soo si 51 OSI 1600 146 5533 + % get approval for a project which asked +2 |would interfere with the Passa- funeral home before HOUGHTON, Rose At Oshawa General Hospital on 2 Saturday afternoon.) o 160 +1 +¥a! bi At rerminchedaametnidhiedthtaniaiecaPtcaeitaanaaa day, March 25, 1965, ine Rose beloved wife of John hton (Thornton Road North), loving mother of Roger of Oakville, dear of Mrs. James Miniker, of Locklin, sister of Cole of Petawawa, Mrs. Helen L of Quebec, Mrs. Resting at Mcintosh-Anderson Fu- neral Home until Saturday morning. Ser- vice at Mackey Funeral Home, Lindsay on Saturday, March 27, at 2 p.m, Inter- ment Riverside Cemetery. MORGAN, Jeanetta Entered into rest suddenly at the Ajax and Pickering General Hospital on Thurs-| day, March 25, 1965, Jeanetta Matchett beloved wife of Lawrence H. Morgan, of 27 Beatty Road, Ajax, dear mother of Jack of West Rouge; Bud of Scerborough; Howard of West lene i Wanda (Mrs. Grawbarger) 'of Alax; Raymond of Rouge Park P.O.; Ronald and William of Scar- borough. Mrs, Morgan is resting at Mc- Eachnie Funeral Home, 28 Kingston Road West, Pickering. Funeral service in. the chapel on Saturday, March 27 at 2 p.m. Interment Erskine Cemetery, LOCKE'S FLORISTS Funero! arrangements and floral arrangements for all occasions, OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 Kindness beyond Price, yet Within reach of all, GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL | 390 KING STREET WEST | TELEPHONE 728-6226 SHOULD A MEMORIAL To last for centuries be requir- ed. The best choice is our MATTHEWS BRONZE courteous advice always MOUNT. LAWN MEMORIAL PARK 723-2633 CARD OF THANKS GLOVER -- | wish to thank friends, relatives, neighbors and Rev. Winnifred Bridges, for their cards, flowers, gifts and calls, also Dr. Rowsell, Dr, Culp and Wilfred ebrune; Hazel Dyson of Lind-| This is a view-of Mont St. MONT ST. ANNE the pastoral Ile d'Orleans in the St. Lawrence near Quebec FOR SKIERS » City. The mountain is being developed as a year-round re- sort, with the accent on winter skiing. (CP Photo) 2,600 feet high, from By JOHN BARBOUR CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) The two astronauts of the Molly Brown--so sparing of words in space--told their story on the ground with wit and charm. Perhaps the junior pilot, John Young, said it best when he was asked whether the three orbits around the earth had made him more talkative. He answered: "I think zero G (weightless- ness) would make an extrovert of anybody." His wry, deadpan humor and command pilot Virgil Grissom's beaming face and crips narra- tion. Thursday spiced their first press conference since they re- turned from a space flight of nearly five hours Tuesday. Both men had high praise for the spacecraft they named the Molly Brown. They thought that manoeuvring the Molly Brown in space was as great an achievement as the Soviet feat of floating.a man outside a spacecraft. REASON STILL LACKING | spacecraft and bring it to earth. Young added: "The toughest task in the as- tronaut business is holding the (spacecraft's) attitude at retro fire. Gus did a phenomenal job. He held it to within one degree. He doesn't usually do that well in the trainer." The only surprise of the flight, said Grissom, was when 'Molly Brown' Partners Tell Story With Wit, Charm he tilted the spacecraft over, dangling from the giant para- chute, into a position for a three- jpoint landing. The spacecraft jwent over hard, and both as- tronauts hit the windshield with their space helmets. A small knob poked a hole in Grissom's face plate, but Young's was only scratched. Neither man was 'hurt, Another Manned : Shot This Year Hinted By Soviet MOSCOW (Reuters) -- A top,18th orbit in a snowbound forest) Crippled Children. \Soviet space scientist today jhinted Russia is planning an- lother manned space. shot this \year. Academician Matislavy Kel- |dysh, addressing a press con- ference on the recent two-man |flight of the Voskhod II space- conference of its kind, with cos- furses on the 4th floor of Oshawa Gen-| There still was no definite rea-;monauts addressing correspond- eral Hospital _and nurses and doctors on 12th floor of Toronto General Hospital for their wonderful care and kindness dur-) ing my stay in the hospitals. --Mrs, Evelyn Glover. SADLER -- The family of the late Wes- ley Sadier wish to express their sincere thanks to their relatives, friends and mv for floral tributi ects of kindness during our recent be- reavement. | Gladys, Eileen and family es, cards andithe retro rockets. son established for land- ing about 60 miles short of the prime target. But Grissom said he thought it might have been a variety of things, including too much braking power from Grissom spoke of the feeling that "we'd reversed direction' ents and answering their ques- tions. "'We can hope for a seventh this year," he added. Soviet cosmonaut Pavel Bel- yayev told reporters the Vosk- hod II overshot its planned landing place and also had to be landed by manual control. in northern Russia. 'HOLDS HIM BACK Belyayev said his fellow cos- jmonaut, Alexei Leonov, wanted |to step out of the spaceship ear-| lier than planned, "'but I held him back." jship, said it was the sixth press} The training for their manoeu- jvres was carried out in a fly- ing aircraft laboratory in con- ditions close to those that awaited the cosmonauts in ac- jtual flight. Belyayev said Voskhod II dif- \fered structurally from earlier |spaceships, and the training of} its crew was '"'much more com- plicated." Crippled Tots On Dude Ranch VANCOUVER (CP)--A cam- paign is under way to raise $80,- 000 to coistruct Western Can- ada's first dude ranch for crip- pled childzen. Alien K. Cowen says the ranch will be on the shores of |Shannon Lake near Kelowna, /B.C., in the Okanagan. He |hopes the first children will ar- irive in the summer of 1966. He says there are many [problems in designing such a jranch, For one thing there can jbe no steps. | "This .camp is for crippled jchildren but it will also be ex- cellent therapy for parents as |well.'"" says Mr. Cowen, secre- tary of tne B.C, Society for | "It will do both the children jand their parents good to spend \separate vacations." Four Cadets 'Quit U.S.AF. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Air |Force Secretary Eugene M. |Zuckert announced Thursday he j|has accepted resignations of 105 jcadets who admitted involve- ment in cheating at the Air |Force Academy, Ve 500 24Va 64 79% 390 $10 % 450 450 450 CB AI B w 750 455 450 455 C Chem w 200 C Coillés pr 7225 11% 11% 11% 9% 19% 19% c Curt W 61 60 C Dredge 1000 325 325 325 +5 CGE pr 50 $4994 49% 4994 +194) C Hydro pr 225 $212 218 C imp Bk C 415 $71% 71 C Ing Orr 205 $12% 12% C Ind Gas p 100 $15¥% 15¥e CciL 475 $27%4 270 CPR 9558 $642 640 C Ut 44 pr «65 $89 8 CWN Gpr 250 16% Cap Blag 100 Chemcell 255 Clairtone 140 7 Col Cell 725 $1\0V%e 10 Computing 105 $24¥2 24% C Saving Ris200 55 55 "MMe 145 $44% 810 $442 44¥_ 44' 115 $13% 13% 125 $21% 21% 300 5005 250 $24 24 24 $15% 15% 470 465 470 5 5% 4 794 % --10 $16% 120 120 1 $19% 19% 7 7 10% + Vo! Ya Crain RL Crush int Cygnus A Cygnus B $54 Cygnus pr 24 Daile-Ros: 1% 160 200 2 #12 26 2 + S¥e+ Ve 25¥a-- Va 23 | Jonsmith Joutel 9% 435 $54¥e 54 East Ch Tr 50 $50%e 50% 50+ Ye Emco 25 $25% 25% 2514 -- Ye) Emp Life 55 $450 450 450 --S Exquisite 150 $11% 11% 11% 205 $9254 92% 92% -- %| 100 $244 24% 24% 100 440 440 440 100. $7 7 7 100 76 76 6% 320 $24% 244 244 25 $109Va 109% 109V2 25 $30 3 + $12% 12% 12% -- $672 be be $16%4 16 16% $22% 22% 22% + "% 50 $24 24 24 Wm Ve 54 Fed Grain Fleet Mfg -! Frosst A GMC G L Power --% 305 305 305 =6+5 100 $13%4 13% 13% 518% 182 18% + Ve $672 67Va 674 $13% 13% 13% 750 745 745 25 $340. 340 340 544 $57% 57¥e S74 + Ve 520 $15 15 5 300 $614 1250 $24% 220 89% 250 $10V2 Imp Tob pr Ind Accp Ind Min Inland Gas Int Bronze Mc 64 6% 24% 24% Me ™% 10% 10v2 294 2% -- Ve Ve 59a a Int Nickel S 68 + Int Util Intpr 062 w inter PL Int Stl P 100 Inv Grp A 400 Tv ind 100 580 300 400 200 32¥e 32a + Ve WW $924 92 2 --1 385 385 385 $12% 12% 12% 9 9 9 $19% 13% 13% + % 655 655 655 5 3 223 n B+ i 1% 9000 «19 1825 $26% 200 $38% East Suill 3050 635 F Mar 100 Frncoeur 2100 26% 38% 620 635 «+10 54 2000 3000 430 430 20 -s --5 1000 Int Helium 700 119 Irish Cop 1000 2 29 205 370 "4 +4 --15 -1 tron Bay Iso 370 Jacobus " Jaye Exp 6 Jelex 23 Joburke 2000 10% 10 joliet 2271 38Va 38 3 6 6% 3000 1000 118 «117-117, 1 344 860 860 860 382 Kerr Add K Anacon L_ Dufavit Lak 1000-25 1000 15% 1000 47 2 1a 15¥a 47 47 Louvict 1 MacLeod 700 110 Madsen 1300 215 Marcon 500 10 10 1 & Y Martin 68h +I Matach aw vs Mattgmi 20% 20% + Maybrun Mm 13 13 McAdam Te Wh McKen WT I McWat Merrill 1000 Metal Mine Midrim 10 110 «+2 22°73 5 ¥ 1 19 -- 'cently on reports it had drilled bg into gold - bearing ore on its léa 162+ property in northwestern Que- bY Be? A, 4 9) + N_ Senator Nick Rim Norbeau Norgold Norlex 18¥2 15% 250 254 fa 82 7 v7 2) i) 110 N_ Bordu North Exp N Rock Northeal Northgte Norvalie 10 Obaska 1 Opemiske 65 «+5 Osisko 2500 Vs a Pax Int 310 Ot + Peerless 2000 15 15 15 100 $27¥a 27¥a 274 600 385 385 385 5500 29 26 28 1000 56 56 656 +1 1500 14a 14% 14¥e Placer = Ve Que Sturg Fal Quemon Radiore "4 13% + Va v 26% + % 3% -- % 470 470 470 WM 13% Wh+ 2 40 32 C+ 400 $15% 1% 15% + Ye full $850,090,000 project this year -1 275 $324 32% 32%+ wi hydro plant at a place called 410. $752 wis Ve 2 | 10M + V2] 166 380 380 380 +5 5015 $144 14 14 -- % t}" | tario Securities Commission has -t 20Va --1¥2 = pits = y,/ Salt ' |than $1 overnight after the Que- +" believe these would be reduced if the Passamaquoddy got a solid endorsement from Presi- dent Johnson's administration. It is unverstood that a deci- sion may be made shortly within the department of In- terior Sec:etary Stewart Udall whether 'o push hard for the lor perhaps even ditch it. \ Earlier word had indicated) efforts to get approval from| Congress this year for just a |Dickey in Maine, on the Upper St. John River near the Quebec boundary. As usual, bills for both 'Dickey and the tidal-pow- Province Probes Alleged 'Salting' TORONTO (CP) -- The On- jjoined its Quebec | counterpart in investigating dealings con- nected with Equity Explora- jtions Ltd., the mining company *\that says some drill cores from property apparently were Attorney + General Arthur |Wishart of Ontario said the }OSC investigation started |March 19. An order has been jissued freezing the company's |funds and securities pending jfurther study. Price of Equity's shares on jthe Canadian Stock Exchange lin Montreal rose sharply re- bec. The stock dropped more jbec Securities Commission said jit was investigating the reports, | The company, with headquar- jters in Toronto, issued a state- jment later saying its geologist jhad been told someone had |tried to salt the drill cores, or the US, The hydro dam at Dickey on the St. John--near the juncture with the Allagash--would not cause such flooding. Udall, the. U.S. Corps of Army Engineers and most Maine rep- resentatives in Congress back the Passamaquoddy which would be 'he first tidal-powered establishment on the continent. But there are enemies in other parts of the government who view the proposal, first made years ago, as a non-economic expenditure in terms of the power to be recovered from the high Bay of Fundy tides and the Upper St. John. New Brunswick would share in this power. Fear of disloca- tion of Passamaquoddy sardine fisheries has been a main cause of Canadian concern, Coins Get In Act Of Special Weeks By THE CANADIAN PRESS With special weeks set aside each year for the promotion of everything from salads to safe- driving, it seemed only a mat- ter of time until money got into the act. Canadian Coin Week, spon- sored by the Canadian Numis- matic Association, will be ob- served April 24-May 1 this year, giving coin-collectors their own week for the first time. Robert Montpetit of Coch- rane, Ont., general chairman of the 15-year-old association, says there now are 120 clubs of coin- collectors in Canada. Many will! participate in the week by put- ting on displays and drumming up interest in numismatics gen- erally. LISTEN HERE: {plant gold traces in them so jthe assays would appear | richer, when the powerful retro rock-| He said that during the 17th} Co-operation between himself) Zuckert also accepted resig- ry Raglan to slow down the/orbit, when the' Soviet spacejand Leonoy at various stages of|,stions from four other cadets Realm zt ad i! Widow's Death 7000 11% 11 'strong Funeral Home with the OBITUARIES ets fired, FUNERAL OF HERBERT J. BUCKWELL The funeral took place yes- terday of Herbert James Buck- well, who died at the Oshawa General Hospital on March 23: Formerly of Hillsdale Manor, Mr. Buckwell was in his 96th year. Funeral was from the Arm- Rev. Charles Catto officiating. Burial was at Union Cemetery. Pallbearers were: Eugene Bull, Ralph Day, William. Tay- lor, Claude Glassford. FUNERAL OF WILLIAM R. ANDREW The funeral took place yes- terday: of William R. Andrew who died on:March 22 at his home, 237. Oshawa boulevard south. He was in his 93rd year. Funeral was from the Arm- strong Funeral Home with the Rev. W. Herbert of King Street United Church officiating. Bur- ial was at Union Cemetery. TIMES SURVEY -- "TI don't know, but there is no need for leisure time to be so used. We must, in this fast-mov-) ing society, be at our 'top' spiri-| tually, mentally and physically.| You may never push a button in an automated plant, but your children may. Your responsibil-| ity as a parent doesn't dis-| appear." LOWER AGE? How about lowering the age limit on drinking? "Psychologists and sociologist should study this question; they Herbert. "The law shouldn't set the age. twins were due to re-enter the earth's atmosphere and land, they noticed the solar orienta- the flight was practised to a |point where they acted almost jautomatically, he said. |found by a cadet honor commit- jtee to have had knowledge of |the cheating and failed to re- tion system was wrong and) On the landing, Belyayev)port it. asked for permission to land manually. He told a press conference they were given permission by the Baikonur space centre in Kazakhstan and landed on the said, the manual controls jworked perfectly, and the cos- |monauts landed "approximately |where we expected, overshoot- ing a little because of the nov- lelty of this landing." If Saybeans, Cinderella Crop, Technology Fairy Godmother LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)-- soybeans the Cinderella crop. Modern technology stands as the fairy godmother. Although soybeans date back and medicine in China--it is only in comparatively recent |United States, following wheat | People in agriculture like to call] and cotton. | Two University of Arkansas jprofessors, Dr. L. D. Bender and N. G. Osman,. predict that there will be no surplus of soy- are trained for it," said Rev.|5,000 years in history--as food|beans for at least a decade. A study they made indicates that 3,200,000 acres more than "There should be some level-\times that the richness of the/the 1961-62 acreage of 28,000,000 boy can drive a car, join the| army, get married, and vote Pallbearers were: Wally God- frey, Cecil Cornelius, Charles} Adams, Pat O'Boyle, Fred! and drink, "But I think the sanctity of O'Boyle and Norman Down, |the home should be inviolable. The law should not be involved) MRS. JOHN D. HOUGHTON |in this area, I didn't know until| The death occurred at Osh- awa General Hospital yesterday of Mrs. John D, Houghton, of} Thornton road north. In her 56th! year, Mrs. Houghton had been in failing health for the last nine months. Mrs. Houghton was born in the Simcoe County village of New Lowell, daughter of John and Edna Lucas. Her mother, now Mrs. J. Mimiker, is still living. She married John D. Hough- ton at Lindsay in September, 1939. She had been living in Oshawa for the last 11 years. She was a member of St. Paul's Presbyterian Church. She leaves her husband, her mother, Mrs. J. Mimiker; a son Roger, of Oakville; a brother, Wilfred of Petawawa and two sisters, Mrs. Helen Le Brune, and Mrs. Hazel Dyson. The body is resting at the Mcintosh - Anderson Funeral Home. Funeral will be from the Mackey Funeral Home in Lindsay with burial at the Riverside Cemetery on Satur- day. MINISTER NOMINATED TORONTO (CP) -- Rev. Wil- recently a parent can't legally! offer his teen-age children a drink in his own home." The Liquor Control Act, Sec-| tion 82 (3) says no person under 21 shall "consume, apply for,| jattempt to purchase, purchase or otherwise obtain liquor'. (A teenager involved in both drinking and a criminal offence, such as drunk driving, would face charges under both the} Liquor Control Act -- an On-| tario statute -- and the Crim-! inal Code. If the person is under 16, the charges would be dealt with in Juvenile Court.) | Section 82.does not apply to) the supplying of liquor to per- sons under 21 for Medicinal purposes only, by the parent, guardian or physician, Dr. C. C. Stewart, Oshawa's| Medical Officer of. Health, says} spirits would "seldom, if ever"| be prescribed as medication for} a person under 21. | In any revision of the LCA this sub-section could well be} John Bain, superintendent of| the Ontario Training School for} Boys at Bowmanville, Says | there are no boys 'sent to the school. "specifically" because of a drinking problem. | liam Smith, minister at Tor- onto's Woodgreen United) Church, was nominated 'Wed-jone of the main reasons boys|has nesday night as New Demo-) cratic Party candidate for the} FAMILY BLAMED "I think family drinking is) are sent to training schools,'"'| Mr. Bain said. "We may have major boom. At the centre of the boom is a small yellow seed so tiny that 4,000 of them weigh little more than a pound. Last year U.S, farmers sold a record 524,000,000 bushels of the beans at an average price of $2.71 a bushel, for a total of $1,400,000,000. Soybeans have been planted as a cash crop in 'the United) States for about 150 years and jnow play some role in practi-| cally everyone's life. EXTENSIVE USE Eat a fine steak -- soybean| meal, used as a special feed, probably added to its flavor. Take a drug for an infection-- it may have come from soy- beans, Open a can of sardines-- they're packed in soybean oil. Soybeans and products from them are used in making bread, marshmallows, paper coatings, fertilizers, insect sprays, live- stock feed and cooking oil. Soybeans, the fastest expand- ing crop min the United States for many years, are an import- ant source of income to farmers in the midwest, the mid-Atlantic and southern states. In Canada, the chief soybean- deleted, suggested Dr. Stewart.| orowing area is in Kent County in southwestern Ontario. Soybeans and products from them are the third largest dol- lar earning commodity for the REACH AGREEMENT TORONTO (CP) -- A_ wage and fringe - benefit agreement been negotiated by the Communications Workers of America (CLC) and Northern York East federal riding. The/the odd boy here who has been|Electric Company on behalf of Progressive Conservative partyjinvolved in under-age drinking|1,000 employees in Ontario and in the riding has Toronto wrestler William Wat-) son. The seat is currently he'd) by Libera! member ee they are here." Mr. Bain said there are no facilities at the school for deal-\creases averaging eight cents|cent to 36,036,000 dozen ing with this problem. nominated|but that is not the*main reason|Western Canada, The terms, to be submitted to union. members or ratification, provide for in- ling off somewhere. Theré are|S°ybeans' protein and oil pro-jacres will be devoted to soy- different ages which, by law, ajJected their production into a) beans by 1975. The export market is boom- ing--particularly in trade with Japan, Canada, The Nether- lands, West Germany, Belgium and the United Kingdom. During 1961-62 those nations imported a total of 118,485,000 bushels. Their imports may in- crease by nearly 7,000,000 bush- jels a year in the next decade. BUSINESS, | | REPORT GOOD YEAR Canadian Industries Limited reported today a record year for 1964 during which sales climbed 15 per cent to $212,- 232,000. The company's annual report to shareholders which boosted individual share value to $1.19 compared with 87 cents in 1963. CIL reported increased sales in most areas and said exports rose substan- tially, doubling the 1963 sales total in the United States. REVEAL SITE, NAME Gerard Filion, chairman of the board of directors of Sid- bec, Quebec's new steel. pro- ject, says the site and the name of the firm's president will be revealed in about 10 days. Mr. Filion, also general manager of the General Invest- ment Conporation, said the president already has been ap- proached and has accepted his position. He said in an _ inter- view Wednesday night the next few weeks will see consider- able activity in connection with Sidbec ' including appointment 'of a technical adviser and sey- eral executives. EGG PRODUCTION UP Canadian production of eggs in February rose by 1.4. per from showed} net income of $9,703,000 for 1964! Two cadets will receive dis- charges under other than hon- orable conditions. "They were involved in steal- ing the examinations after ille- gal entry to an unauthorized area," the air force said. 250 $15% 15% 424 $214 21% 21% Kelsey Co 15% Labatt THIS CHEQUE WON'T BOUNCE! NEW PLYMOUTH, N.Z. (CP)--A cheque written in concrete has. been honored by the Waitara branch of The Bank of New -Zealand, Workmen making con- crete blocks for a new bank building felt thirsty, so they made out a cheque form in the wet concrete of. one block. A man with an ac- count at the bank signed it. Then the workmen loaded it into a wheelbarrow and took it along to the bank teller's window, The man- ager declared it legal ten- der. The beer which the $3 cheque bought vanished be- fore the concrete was dry, BRISKLY jmonth a year earlier, the bur- jeau of statistics reported Thurs- jday. The number of layers climbed by 5.3 per cent to 27,- 711,000 while the rate of lay dropped by 3.7 per cent to 1,571 eggs per 100 layers. SEES LOWER EXPORTS J. H. Warren, deputy minister of trade and commerce, said Thursday lower sales for wheat and military aircraft combined with balance of payments strin- gency in other major markets will exert a restraining influ- ence of Canada's total exports \for 1965. He said 1964's im- pressive export year. was due to "special expansive ele- ments,"" Addressing the Cana- dian Export Association, he said if in 1965 last year's ex: port level is maintained, this would still be well above the trend line of Canada's export jpotential as estimated by the {Economic Council of Canada at 5.3-per cent per annum. PREXY RESIGNS | lan-R. Dowie has resigned as president of Canadian Brewer- ies Ltd., after differences of lopinion arose "'as to the future joperating policies to be jadopted," the company said Thursday. The company said in a statement Mr. Dowie will re- main with the firm a3 a direc- tor. The statement gave no hint 'an hour in each of three years.|35,500,000 dozen in the samelof the nature of the differences, LOnt Cem = 3150 L O Cem w 1875 Lakeland 415 Lakeland pr 2100 Laura Sec 100 240 190 100 59. 470 25 100 100 iS 310% 6% 64 t+ 5 325 330 --S $8% 8% 8% $20% 20% 20% $242 24'2-- Ve S17% W%a-- Ve 313% 3%-- $18¥2 18a 10% -- Ve $10% 10% + Ve $3) ki 125 125 $13% 13% 13% 90 $36% 36% 364 -- Ve Maclean H ¢ 400 MLf Gar 25 M Leaf Mill 100 Mass-F 1195 MGF 200 Milt Brick 250 Mon. Foods 100 Moore 60 Morse B 100 Nat Contain 100 Nat Drug 27 Nia Wire 225 Noranda 1455 NO NGas 159 Nor Phone 100 Ogilvie 240 Overland 150 Overind pr 150 Pac Pete 275 Pow Corp 560 Premium 3350 Price Bros 100 QN Gas a2 QN Gas pr 112 QN Gass? w 200 QN Gas63 w 200 Rothman 125 Romfield 200 Royal Bank 385 Salada 475 Seven Arts 200 Shell Can 760 Shell | w 100 Shop Save 275 274 100 Slater Steel 580 Slater A w Southam St Pav Steel Can Steinbg A 225 Tor-Dom Bk 125 Tor tron A 1750 T Fin A 330 Tr Can PL 415 Trans-Mt 768 Trans PPL = (375 Turnbull 100 Un Acc 2 pr 250 Un Acc rts 659 Un Carbide 850 Un Gas 300 4365 lon 600 West A wts 2115 Woodwd' A Y Knit A Y Knit B Zenith 100 $25ve 25 «25 $67) 4?) 67_-- +2 316% 16% 16%4-- Ye $21% 31% 3%---% $9 9 9 MS 365 365 8% 82 Bat' $65% 652 65Va-- Va $15¥e 158 15'a-- Ve $7 7 7 $12 (12 $24 «(24 $57 57 $252 25% 312% 12% $14% 14% su u $13% 13% Sila 1% $16% 235 235 235 $43% 43% 43+ % $1 uv M45 7 600 600 600 $24 24 200 200 200 $814 84 Bla + a $13% 134 134--V% $14%2 14a 14¥a $17% 17% 17% 620 620 $17" 17% $28% 26% $6 $144 440 7 7 Wa m4 Ve 6 6 --M% 4% h+ % 925 925 --10 u 12% 12 30% $454 45% $6734 $192 $14% $372 $20% 310% 10% 312% 12% + Ve $10% 10% 60 60 --2 $29 2 27Ve + Ve 192 +14 14% -- Ve 37% -- Ve 20Ve 14 WA ve 15% 15% $21% 21% 21+ Ve $23 234 B+ 2 813% 13 We+% Ve 2BVa 280 5% S\a-- Va 130 130 --10 35 385 MS +10 OILS Alminex Cen 100 Gr 2100 500 Provo Gas 8017 Scurry Rain 239 South U 3000 Spooner 2000 Triad Ol) 4700 Union Oil 250 Unispher 1000 U Canso 700 W Decalta 2000 Plains Gridoi! 300 425 425 45 5656 56 +s 1 380 375 380 $21% 21% 21% 27 «2297 «297 «+6 855 845 845 --10 $13¥e 13% 13% 9 9 9 260 255 260 +4 $4 6244 8% 8 8's 0 2 2% 238 238 238 $17% 17% 17% 17% 17% VWia-- Ya M5 345 345 24 279 «284 MINES Agnico A Am. Moly Ang Rouyn Ansil Area Argosy 137 700 100 1100 Bary €xpl Baska Belleterre Bibis Bidcop Big Nama Bounty Ex Brunswk 200 Bunker H = 3000 27 2 a + Va 13% 13% 134+42%4 nn npn -- 9 %%% %--% th %% + 3°35. 8 es om A+. ae ee 50 5050 25a 25Va 25Va $17% 17% Via + Va 3s 8s 3 Rexspar Rio Algom Rix Athab Rockwin 6 66 Roman 1800 710 685 710 Ryanor 5300 16 «616 CUS Sherritt 1625 95. 590 S95 Silvmaq 17000 294 29 29 Si Miller 1855 21 22 2+ ve 400 132 (132)«132 22 3 5Va + Va Ss +5 + 4000 12¥2 11 850 $14% 14 2000 22 «22 3400 +35 --s 76 28V-- 45 (385. +5 25a 252 252 + Ve 80 80 8 +1 1% 17 Wa +l 2 240 35 leva 16 16 165 (165 269 «269 190 190 20 West Mines 525 Windfall 30 Wisconsin 24 24 168 (165 0007 7 $200 364 36 130 330 «(33 Sales to 11 a.m: 910,000 FOREIGN TRADING Algoma 100 $80% 80% gov Inland wis 400 130130." 130 Agnico 200 185 185 LL Lac 100 200 Un Keno 100 985 U Mining Un Buffad 2 50 $25 30 Zulapa 190 a 200 985 --Is 200 985 --0 :-* Baffles Police | CLOVERDALE, B.C. (CP)-- |A year ago a 68-year-old widow | Was tied to a kitchen chair, 'tortured and beaten and finally stabbed to death. Who killed Mary Rhoda Oliver and why are questions still baffling police in this tiny Fraser Valley farming commu- nity 20 miles southeast of Van- couver, Mrs, Oliver lived like a re- cluse, She admitted to acquain- tances she thought she would die an unnatural death. But she never said why. More than 300 persons in Brit- ish Columbia, Eastern Canada and parts of the United States were questioned by police. No suspects have been found. The body of Mrs. Oliver was discovered in her house Feb. 3, 1964. A paring knife was em- bedded in her back. A towel was carefully draped over her face. She had been slain three days before. THE DAY IN OTTAWA By THE CANAIDAN PRESS THURSDAY, March 25, 1965- The Commons completed second reading of the Canada Pension Plan and. only third reading remains before the bill goes to the Senate, Approval of the second reading stage without a for- mal vote came after 20 days of study of the bill with the house in committee. Creditistes served notice they have an amendment calling for $100 monthly pen- sions at age 65 to be moved at third reading. William H. A. Thomas (PC --Middlesex West) challenged the government to call an élection on the pension and opting-out bills, The Liberals did not men- tion plans for province to stay out of shared-coast programs during the last election cam- paign, he added. A. J. P. Cameron (L--Tor- onto High Park) said the bill is the most important of its kind to come before the House. Gerard Laprise (Creditiste- Chapleau) said it is a '"'na- tional fraud" taking money away from persons in hard- ship conditions. FRIDAY, March 26 A bent bread knife was found in the kitchen sink. Her glasses were on the kitchen table. A magnifying glass was on the floor near her body. Police said Mrs. Oliver was tied to a chair and tortured. She suffered a dislocated jaw, a broken nose, bruised eyes and cuts. The killer then stabbed her with three different knives. MONEY INTACT A small amount of money in her purse was not touched. Neither was 'a gold watch of considerable value, She kept little money in the house. She was not sexually attacked. Noth- Jack Dennett ee "KEEP INFORMED..." Jack's many years In the news broadcasting business and his intelligent, ana | and calm look at the day's events have earned him the largest audience of any newscaster in Canada. His ten-minute newscasts at 8:00 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. capsulize 'and c lize the sometimes confusing events of the day on the international, national and local scene. People who like to be well Informed on what's happening in the world, are always found listen- Ing to Jack Dennett. CFRB OO) ONTARIO'S FAMILY STATION ing besides the knives, the chair, the magnifying glass and the towel were out of place in the house. HIRAM WALKER ASK The Commons meets at 11 a.m, EST to consider third reading of the Canada Pen- sion Plan. The Senate stands adjourned until March 30, rus bighteib ae BY APPOINTMENT 'TO WER MAJESTY QUEEN ELIZABETH SUPPLIERS OF "CANADIAN CLUB" WHISKY @ SONS LIMITED FOR "THE BEST IN THE HOUSB"' Canadian Cll by HIRAM WALKER SKY IN THE WORLD a ne ea

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