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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Dec 1966, p. 29

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TT ee EL. ab tS ik TET Tt ttt ttt TODAY'S STOC tee Bunce tree Pvt aso Exchange--Dec, 21 ae tle x-warrants. Net change is from previous bosrd-lot closing sale. 23 s o&8=88. 5 i ? = 58,5 aie | 2) sb8E53 1 s. 8 seSseieds ee pp OE -5 ed 5 20 5 'hv "rs us 5 --§ ™" " snag 558 > ™" jes00 2); 2 4500 10% 10 2100 $22%4 22% 22% 3 $63 «463 (63 3000 a 8 700 83 2500 +13 258 v bong ee 4] 5 e Mie 4" 706 $12% "2 z8-112 «112 4 o 136 5380 $13 300 $10% 182 16% 150 32 32 500 6h OM 500 9 1000 165 1000 27) 7 8000 7" 7% woo 13 «(13 150 984 { 2) 1s "" 2 2 ~1 1s <5 ~~? 165 | ~~ Z ; i ei ut if 460 % 200 125 80 925 910 910 20 4500 av 4 200 175 ue | 5 +5 j e Ht ? " 2 yee Fie 5 $244 2% 2% 7S WTA 97 974 a 427 $19 19% 13% -- 6500 10% We 10% 300 38S 380 ei ligt ius pana 525 $17 200 235 700 530 265 755 8 273 2 460 00 $1 Ove 10% N00 35 30 310 --10 300 -1 200 $9% 9% 9% $2% Du WuU-- Ve 25 2S 60 625 +15 $ bs by 2 » » 0% 330 Y | 624 + 1 46% + Vo 4% <Oae hg noBxivdand yaa meee 21 io --" +" t ee) ee 2% 124+ 28 06+ ~ Ve 4 2 1%-- % 6+ * 27 Va Vs + "i we + + + u-- ---% td KS 10 'Stock © Sales Mighi Low ban chips 5% 57% 0 6} $122 12% ie $3) (30% --Ve $8% B%e te 285 m5 40 $384 30m m4 450 695 $15%% bags pdt $%6 a" " ) age | 3% 33% -- Ve 3 36 3 3 3 18 12% 12% -- 10% 18% 1 160 $43 43 $144 tive am ¥ $32 0% NA+ " $i2va 12% 12% $724 ye 7 $21 $39 $% $13 $18 6600 $12%4 318% S16 ; a a0 +1 3 8. a3. 44 Me 23% 235% + Ve 4 M+ Va oe HB Oil Gas Huron Eri Husky Oil Husky C pr 56% 5694 Sis WM th 8% -- ul int Nickel 924 + Ye} Int Uti int Util pr Intpr Pipe Intor Steel Inv Grp A $92¥e 92V2 his "ts 'tia -- uN % " "e Lafarge | LOnt Cem 2322 "a a us +15 | Oo Cem w Laura Sec sim ime iM ae ed y pr Mm" Ws % Fly Lob Co A Lob Co B " 2% va %) 10¥a 10% Lob Co pr 16% 16% + Ve James Jetferson Jockey 2 p Labatt +5 + ve MB Ltd Maher M Uf Mills Mass-Fer Montex w Moore Niag Strue Noranda Nor CH. @ Pac Pete Pac Pete w Peel Elder "aN 84 "re 1 4 yk uy ve | AE 47% 47am Ve 13 $13 13 oe WM aa * Va Pembina sian My 1m 59% 9% 9% 410 410 410 150 150 150 $25% 25% 25% $10 0 10 $26 25% 26 680 = 680 Ve 22 22% mm 1%-- Shell inv p + Shell Inv w Shell Can Shop Save Sim Slater Sti St Paving Steel Can " 2% 20%+% WY 9% WwW 7 Ly 57% " 8% 44 4 Mat 625 625 «625 316% 16% 16%-- s10% 10% 10% 3. 83 so © 0 OM $254 25% 25-- $4 Wh a+ 500 32 320 «320 4 20 260 +10 24 24-4 $30 2% 24% sw ' wv % 24) $18 182 18% Seles to 11 @.m.: 446,000. 200. $5¥2| va Sa V| oo | Bryce, |provincial conference of finance 4\indicates a more normal "a | residential construction, goane, Seas ipa Lk Ont Cem 100 445 Agnico Coch will Deerhorn ii Sui us +2 300 100 500 } +15 100 500 200 48: oo 300 5 325 _ io osc Will Hear | Gruber Views TORONTO (CP) William Gruber, who once worked for the former auditor of Prudential Fi- nance Co., said Tuesday he will testify. at a Dec. 28 hearing be- fore the Ontario Securities Com- mission under duress. He was served with a subpoena Monday night to testify before the com- mission. He said he will attend with legal counsel, since he under- stands that the press and the public will not be permitted to attend. Earlier he had said he 30 +15 a Oo (+5 teiten u would not attend a closed hear- ing. | Mr. Gruber has charged that Finance Minister. Mitchell Sharp showed negligence in not inves-|*~ tigating Prudential Finance after Mr. Gruber told him last January that wrong. Prudential Finance went bak- rupt Dec. 5 and losses are esti- mated at more than $17,000,000. Mr. Gruber said in a staie- ment today that he does not have in his possession any docu- ment relating to the Prudential Finance case. STARTED A TREND The first co-operative in the modern world was founded at Rochdale, England, in 1844. TOPS IN SPEED A laser's beam of red light vi-| brates nearly 508 trillion times a second. | weighted prices quoted by the country | quoted by the Toronto Board of | \ers: Extra large 55-56; large 53- something was| | dian bond market was generally | asked, | vincial bonds were up % point /4% per cent. 'BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Maritimes Tuna Cannery First In Indnstry BAYSIDE, N.B. (CP)--Jan. 3 is' the target date for opening a .$2,500,000 tuna cannery, the will operate five 'trawlers cost- ing $2,400,000 each, It's the first Canadian company to undertake first and keystone industry. in Champlain Industrial Park at|@ complete "Tuna processing this Charlotte County point,|/operaticn -- catching the fish about midway between St.|/using its own vessels, proces- Stephen and St, Andrews. sing and canning them, and Canadian Tuna Co; (1965) Ltd,'selling the finished "product Slowdown In Economy Growth Foreseen By Deputy. Minister OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's rate of economic growth may slow down next year, R. B. deputy minister of fi- nance, said Tuesday. He told the annual fallen far short of expectations in 1966, Too much of the ex- pansion is inflationary "and in real terms we are nowhere near our potential." GAP _ NOT CLOSING The gap between incomes and living standards in the' Mari- times and the rest of Canada is not closing, as. it did in 1964 and 1965, He said regional development federal- ministers the gross national product may increase by four per cent in 1967 in real terms. 4'This compares to around six per cent in 1966, According to officials at the closed meeting, Mr. Bryce's prediction was based on certain assumptions including normal crops next year. Bumper crops, have been valid only in a spe- cial context. "It is not a case of fiddling with the machinery to make it | The new company is a sub- \sidiary of Atlantic policies of the last few years! Park through food brokers directed ie its own sales department. The fishing will be done on the prolific tuna grounds off Peru, each vessel making an average of four voyages a year and having a 1,000-ton capacity for frozen fish, The purse seiners, to operate out of Saint John, N.B., will be manned by New Brunswickers and other Canadians, An annual 20,000,000 pounds of tuna willbe processed here into 100,000 cans daily. WILL EMPLOY 200 The cannery will employ 200 men and women from the sur- rounding area and the payroll for these workers, plus the ships' crews, will exceed $1,000,- 000 a year. Sugar Re-| fineries Co, Ltd., whose other operations include a majority interest in a groundwood pulp mill at South Nelson, N.B., and | construction of a groundfish pro- \cessing plant, with associated jfishing vessels, in Newfound- |land, The 440-acre Champlain park, costing $1,600,000 to develop, has jsuch as. in 1966, could improve ithe picture, The federal view of the future in- crease in the labor force, an- other depressing factor. There was an unusually high "partici. | work better; it is a question of a major reconstruction of the machine," he said, Decentralization of federal agencies and services would help regional growth as would} pation rate' in 1966. ja national development corpora- Informants said federal econ- |tion to nut capital into the At- omists see a 4%-per-cent in-|!antic region for the good of the| crease in non-farm growth edie head offices in cen- 1967. | tral Canada or the U.S NON-FARM GROWTH HIGH Charles §. MacNaughton, On-| | Federal housing legislation jneeds changes to make housing more easily available to the tario provincial treasurer, told| rural poor, he said. Insistence the conference potential non-|that 'he national programs be farm growth for 1967 is much virtually riskless and in the higher. He estimated an in- long run, costless, have pro- crease of seven per cent to 7.5. | duced policies that are too nar- However he said achievement |row in concept for the rural of this goal depends on the re-| poor, duction of significant economic |- an impressive natural harbor, ice-free and virtually silt-free, at the St, Croix River estuary on Passamaquoddy Bay, an in- let of the Bay of Fundy. The federal government and the | development corporation will |share the $500,000 cost of a 300-| foot L-shaped wharf, which will Ihave a 140-foot approach for landing tuna, shipping lumber and handling materials for other industries establishing in the area, Additional industries in the planning stage for the park in- clude a $1,000,000 plant, to em- ploy about 40 and process groundfish, and a fish meal STOCK MARKET TORONTO (CP) -- Finance Minister Sharp's mini - budget was coolly received Tuesday on the Toronto Stock Exchange as volume fell to its lowest level since July, 1965. Only 1,834,000 | shares hands compared with 2,226,606)" Monday. The \* crease in tax as well as an increase in the federal sales tax to 12 per cent from 11, One broker said the increase can only hurt the market. be-| cause it will make money = tighter for investment. purpos In the industrial list, Harding Carpets A tumbled 41% to 31 ani Harding common 2% to 37 fol- lowing an announcement by the company of a two-for-one split in its shares. CPR retreated 1% to 55%, Texaco 1% to 66% and Massey- Ferguson 56 to 22% Canada Bade climbed 4 to 36 6after Denison Mines an- nounced it had purchased a 14- per-cent interest in the com- pany. Denison slipped % to t called for an. in- A: i Lake Ontario Cement, con- trolled by Denison, gained 15 cents to 4.30 and the warrants 2 to 6 cents after jumping 19 cents earlier in the session, On index, industrials were down .29 to 146.27, golds 1.23 to 144.21, base metals .37 to 83.85, western oils .77 to 129.80 and the TSE .32 to 140.23, Hollywood Show Irks Veterans LONDON (Reuters) -- Vet- eran Desert Rats of Britain's wartime. 8th Army are fighting a new war over a Hollywood television series, it was learned today. The series, The Rat Patrol, which is to be screened by the BBC next month, deals with the exploits of a commando unit operating in the desert. But, say the veterans, only one of the four heroes is Brit- ish, The other three are clearly American and wear American badges, they say The series dale with a period of the North African desert campaign before American forces arrived there. A spokesman for .the British Legion, a veterans' organiza- tion, said: 'We are beginning to wonder whether the British plant which also would employ about 40, he old age security |0 BUSINESS BRIEFS REPORT INCOME UP Harding Carpets Ltd, had net income of $1,760,968 or $2.24 a share in the year ended Oct. 31, compared with $1,677,527 or $2.16 in the similar 1965 period, « totalled $29.089.406 in 1966; up from $19,349,860. The com- INCREASE DIVIDEND Dominion. Bridge Co, Ltd, |h.' Tuesday increased its regular] from 20 cents,.it was anounced | in Montreal, No eytra dividend was deciared, > par also announced in Brant- , Ont., plans for a two-for- one share split. It has 500,000 eommon shares authorized, with 259,925 outstanding at last re- port, SEEK REGISTRATION Nova Scotia is seeking U.S. registration of $30,000,000 in 1992 debentures to be offered for public sale through underwrit- ers, the Securities and Ex- change Commission announced in Washington Tuesday, Pro- ceeds will be used for highway construction and general gov- ernment purposes, DIVIDENDS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Occidental Petroleum Corp., 20 cents, Jan, 20, record Dec, 27; stock dividend' of 3 per cent, Feb. 10, record Dec, 27. Harding Carpets Ltd., com- mon 24 cents; class A 24 cents, April 1, record Mar. 18. Sobeys Stores Lid., class A comon 8 cents, Jan, 15, rec- ord Jan, 3, Gives a hot dog status Try Stan's For The Best Prices In Oshawa SKATES By... @ Bauer @ CCM EQUIPMENT By... @ CCM @ Winnweil @ Goolle Pods Rented Wide se ection of Teom Jeskets all Dvosten. Skate Sharpe pening WHILE YOU an Students 35¢ Adults 50¢ OSHAWA'S LARGEST SKATE EXCHANGE STAN'S ima us Rental Ltd. 233 KING ST. Wes Pay pg Open Till @ p.m, Moses te Friday = Saturdey 8 @ Samson is 8 Deoust ad your old skates es @ Trede+ 1 Cresta ne ja is a deliciously dry red table wine made from French hybrid grapes grown in Niagara, he war f at all, Mg bottlenecks and other factors. Mr. MacNaughton said the "most pressing bottleneck" for 1967 is the lack of housing in high-population areas. A strong attack was needed to increase Other provinces' also applied pressure for more federal! money in housing. Among them was Saskatchewan, whose pre- mier, Ross' Thatcher, told re- | porters housing was one soft spot for 1967 that needed a rem- edy. | Finance Minister DesBrisay of New Brunswick said the per- formance of _the economy had PRODUCE TORONTO (CP) -- Wholesale | to retail carton eggs average | Between the crowds ond mas con turn into someth But one stop here and experts, con keep the mi We know what men like b all about sizes, color and v _| department of agriculture as of Tuesday: A large 64; A medium 58.6; A small 48.4. Eggs: Wholesale price to | stations fibre cases| Trade from wholesale egg deal- 54; medium 48-49; small 40; B 42; © 36. | Butter prices: Agricultural | stabilization board tenderable| carlots: Buying 40. score 59; | buying 39 score 58; Selling 61. NET EARNINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Harding Carpets Ltd., year) ended Oct. 31: 1966, $1,760,968, $2.24 per share; 1965, $1,677,524, $2.16. United Auto Parts Inc., nine | months ended Sept. 30: 1966, | $529,630, $1.44 a share; 1965, / $517,140, Sidi, BOND MARKET TORONTO (CP) -- The Cana- up % point in active trading Tuesday. Short-term Government of Canada bonds closed up 10 cents with the 4%-per-cent Oct. 1,| 1967, issue at 99.03 bid and 99.08) Long-term Canada and pro-/ with the Government of Canada 4%4-per-cent Sept. 1, 1983, issue closing at 85 bid and 8514 asked. Day-to-day money traded at Treasury bills ended the day | with the 91-day bills at 5.04 i 182-day bills at 5.10. ROBES Git Sure To Please Everyone On Your Lis!! nMiRROR Frome 30 30" x 48" entrences or eloset doors ., 25.95 OSHAWA WOOD PRODUCTS SHOPPING CENTRE COURTICE 728-1611 30" KITCHEN EXHAUST HOODS 19.95 6-FOOT ALUMINUM STEP LADDER 8.95 728-161 from 7.98 PYJAMAS from 3,99 Brand Namo Dress SHIRTS from 5.50 Never Press PANTS from 8.95 SOCKS from 1,00 SILK PUFFS from 2.00 BELTS from 1.50 GLOVES from 3.99 PING-PONG TABLES with take-aport Legs end Stend 18.50 ® 7 See DUNN'S for Last Minute Shopping Christmas, chores into Christmas Cheers! the decisions, Christ- ing less thon joyful. few minutes with our tth ot a high level. est (just as we know 'alue). So stop in and let us add Merry to your (and his) Christmas, CHARGE ACCOUNT @ No Interest @ No Carrying Charges @ No Down Payment. DUNN' 36 King St. E. 2 LOCATIONS Oshawa Shopping Centre BOTH STORES OPEN NIGHTLY TILL 9 DURING DECEMBER $8,500.00 IN PRIZES! wi Were. cro: Nast souih?s tiie entry eoupon numbers . « « 251743 sntte-- 350570 747295 347768 747296 747298 750106 198343 271250 69715 747229 Ist Prize ~~ $80.00 2nd Prize -- $25.00 ° 3rd Prize ---- $10.00 4th Prize --- $10.00 Sth Prize -- $10.00 6th Prise $ 5,00 _7th Prize -- $ 5,00 8th Prize $ 5.00 9th Prize --$ 5,00 10th Prize ----$ 5,00 Tith Prize -- $ 5.00 12th Prize --- $ 5.00 BONUS NUMBER -- 6 DAY WINTER VACATION Special bonus draw Sat., Dee, 24th SEVEN DAY VACATION FOR TWO TO HONOLULU -- VIA CANADIAN PACIFIC AIRLINES HOLDERS OF WINNING STUBS MUST CLAIM AWARDS BY DECEMBER 31/1966 AT CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST AND SAVINGS CORP, OR NA- TIONAL TRUST COMPANY, BE SURE AND ASK FOR COUPONS FROM STORES IDENTIFIED WITH "WIN-A-PRIZE" BANNERS ON THEIR WINDOWS! . THE BIG DRAW TAKES PLACE FRIDAY, DEC. 30th AT 2.P.M, ON THE C AM ARO ONTARIO MOTOR SALES ALL ENTRY COUPONS RECEIVED DURING THE 'ENTIRE "'WIN-A-PRIZE' PROGRAMME WILL BE DEPOSITED IN THE HUGE CHAMBER OF A CUR. RAN AND BIGGS READY MIX CONCRETE TRUCK + « « AT 2 P.M. ON FRIDAY, DEC, 30th THE DRAW WILL BE MADE IN FRONT OF THE NA- TIONAL TRUST COMPANY, THE WINNING NUM- BER WILL BE PUBLISHED OVER CKLB RADIO AND THE OSHAWA TIMES ON DEC, 31 -- JAN, 3, 4, | 5, 6, AND 7, THE HOLDER OF THE WINNING STUB MUST MAKE CLAIM BY SATURDAY, JAN. UARY 7/67, IF WINNING IS NOT CLAIMED A SECOND NUMBER WILL BE PUBLISHED AND WILL BE GIVEN ONE WEEK TO CLAIM, -- Be on hand for the "Big Draw" Friday, December 30th at 2 P.M.

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