Three-Quarter Profit Reports Show Business Is Going Strong | By KEN SMITH Canadian Press Business Editer jthe new models, with compara-, Ltd. reported tively earrings of few major design $9,422.00 from $11,354,000 while | Corporate earnings are con- |changes, would win enough pub- Bat tinuing to climb despite some |lic fancy to extend sales pe ay nig e “i san.on0 ar rx suggestions early this year that Canada’s prolonged economic expansion had been due to run out of steam. A selection of third-quarter jords. | Among |higher companies reporting | third - quarter results| showed a rise to $3,312,000 from | 000.0. Fraser Co. Ltd., however, were Moore Corp., yp to $15,- | $2,918,000 while Domtar Léd., | "975.000 from $13,030,000 in 1964; \was expected to announce earnings reports indicates that,| Dominion Foundries and Steel |hi ird - quart with the possible exception of |Lid., to $19,608,000 from $17,- ote a and a o parts of the pulp and paper in- 561,000;* Trans - Canada Ripe tions later this week. dustry, many major companies Lines Lid., to $10,013,000 from Backed by the profit picture. are on their way to more rec- ords in sales and profits. Buoyed by sustained — and aparently growing — con- aumer demand, even companies that had been fearful of a late- yeer’stowdown now report con- tiried strong demand, Sales of new cars, running about 10 per cent higher gen- erslly than a year ago,, were a »otent factor in the optimism. Some industry officials had ex- $9,502,000: and Campbell Lake Mines Ltd. to from $1,804,000, {PROFITS SAG |, Giant Steel Co. of Canada Ltd_ reported a profit drop to | $29,821,000 from $32,313,000 al- jthough*sales in the period rose Ly $384,000,000 from $360,000,- 0. |higher wages and abnormal ex- /pansion costs, but said the gen- presced doubts as to whether jeral outlook for the fourth quar- ON THE AIR WEDNESDAY PROGRAMS CFCY-TV 1.30 p.m.--Musicale 200 p.m.—Film Festival 2.30 p.m.—Film Festival ‘3.00 p.m.—To Tell The Truth $9.25 p.m.—Take 30 4.00 p.m.—Moment of Truth 4.31 p.m.—Magic Boomerang 5.00. p.m.—Rin Tin Tin 5.30 p.m.—The Secret Squirrel 6.00 p.m.—TBA 6.15 p.m.—Political Telecast ‘6.25 p.m.—Robin Hood Flour Jack- 10 P.M.—Gazette 00 p.m.—CFCY-TV News 15 P.M.—Purity Flour Jeckpot 20 P.M.—Political Telecast 30 p.m.—Walt Disney . Presents 8.30 p.m.—Bewitched 9.00 p.m.—Free Time Political “P.C. '9.15 p.m.—Free. Time Political 2 é ‘7. 7 7 a iter remains strong. Among pulp and paper com- panies, Crown Zellerbach Co. Red | several $1,829,000 creased their dividends or de- It attributed the decline to | Final Death Penalty Seen LEEDS, England (AP)—What may be the last death-sentence for murder in Britain was im- posed Monday, even though Par- liament has voted the end of the death penalty. The law to end capital punish- ment had not received Royal as- sent before the sonthanteg of David Stephen Chapman, 23, for idrowning a night watchman at \riod and __ profit a swimming pool while robbing the pool’s cash box. But Chapman is virtually ter- tain to be reprieved. All those sentenced to be hanged since the bill to abolish capital punish- ment was introduced almost a year ago have had their sen- tences commuted to life im- prisonment by Home Secretary ' Liberal @30 p.m.—Bob Hope Theatre 30.30 p.m.—Festival 12.00 p.m.—CBC News 32.13 a.m.—Local Weather and Sports Scores 12.15 p.m.—Sign Off CKCW-TV 9.57 a.m.—Station Sign On 10.00 a.m.—Canadian Schools 10.30 @.m.—Nova Scotia Schools 11.30 a.m.—Friendly Giant 11.45 a.m.—Chez Helene 12.00 p.m.—Butternut Square 12.20 a.m.—Across Canada 12.50 p.mi.—Wednesday Playbill ; The Pirate p-m.n Crocker p.m.—To Tell The Truth pim—lake Thirt p.m.—Moment of Truth p.m.—Razzle Dazzle p.m.--Secret Squirrel p.m.—Toytown LTV p-m.—Supper Club p.m.—TV News p.m.—TV Weather p.m.—TV Sports p.m.--Supper Club 7.00 p.m.—Man From U N.C.1.E. $8.00 p.m.—Big Valley | + 9.00 p.m.-rFree Time Political ; P.C.—Lib: *9.30 p.m.—Bob Hepe Theatre $0:30 p.m.—Festival 42.00 p.m.—CBC-TV News 2.15 a.m.—Viewpoint gh a.m.—LTV News $2.30_a.m.—Station Sign Off __ crcy RADIO WEDNESDAY - 6.30—News and Weather 6.35—Morning Roundup 6.45—Island—wr- jand. 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Roundup 7.46—Morning Roundup 7.56—Sports Capsule and Scoreboard | 8.00—News o | 8.16—Morning Roundup 8.45—Weather 8.50—Atlantic News Roundup + 8.58--Thought For Today } 9\00—CBC National Néws—CBC 5 9.11—Preview Commentary—CBC | $ 9.16—Notes and Music 110.00—News and Weather 110.05—Notes and Music 110.25—Sunlight Eye +10.30—Notes and Music *11.00—News and Weather }11.05—Notes: and Music 111.30—Montague Entertains 111.40—Notes and Music '11.45—Bulletin Board 411.50—Notes and Musie 191.55—Atlantie News Roundup '¥2.00—Weather 12.05—Tewn and Country Time 2.30—News and Weather 12.45—Town and Country Time 1.00—News and Weather 1.05—Town and Country Time 1.15—Tommy Hunter Show—CBC 1.45—Town and Country Time 2.00—News and Weather 2.05—Mostly” Music 3.00—News Headlines and Weather * 9$.03—Trans-Canada Matinee—CBC + 3.30—Tops In Pops * 4.00—News Headlines and Weather ; 4.03—Canadian Roundup—CBC » 4.10—Tops Ih Pops > 5.00—News and Weather ; 5.05--The Outports + 5.25—Marine Weather 5.28—The Outports 6.00—News and Weather 6.15—On Parliament Hill—CBC 6.20—Today’s Editorial—CBC 6 25—Sports Parade : 6.30—Business Barometer—CBC ' ' ’ ’ ’ t ‘ ’ ‘ ' ’ ' ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ At Home With Helen | _.3.00—CBC News 8.11 —Weather : fe. companies have _ in- \clared extra ones, assuring rec- lord total payments this year of well over $1,000,000,000. Elsewhere on the business scene, Trade Minister Sharp an- | nounced a new wheat sale to ‘Communist China which, he |said, could range in value from 000,000 over three years to la possible $900,000,000 over five years. | “Based on past experience 1 am confident that the quantities purchased will be closer to the imaximum figure,”” his state- iment said. | If so, it would be the larg- lest single agreement ever con- icluded by the Canadian Wheat | Board. Canadian Breweries Lid., be- | set by declining sales and fall- | ling profits, announced it is clos- ling the new $10,000,000 brewing | iplant of its subsidiary, Carling | Brewing Co., in Fort Worth, | 'Tex. |BREWERY DOWN | | Canadian Breweries sales for | \the three quarters ended July 131 fell to $119,000,000 from $124,- | \000,000 in the similar 1964 ve-| to $3,600,000 | ifrom $5,300,000. | A company spokesman), has | blamed a 10-per-cent sales. de- cline by Carling for much of its lwoes, while Carling said the Fort Worth problem “‘was a) ‘major part of the situation.” With the signing by President | Johnson of _ the. Canada-U.S. lauto-trade plan, Chrysler Can-| Frank Soskice. The new law {s\ada Lid. cénfirmed what has) expected to go into effect some peen obvious to Windsor, Ont., time this month. | 11.05—Starlight Serenade 11.30—News and Weether 11.35—Starlight Serenade | 12.00—CBC News, Weather and | Sports—CBC 12.15—News and Music—CBC CBA WEDNESDAY 6.00—The Morning Show. Part 1 7.00—The Morning Show, Part 1 8.00—CBC News and inland Wx 8.15—Maritime’ Sportscast 0:32—The Morning Show Part 2 --8:35-—-Max Ferguson | 9.00—CBC. News 9.11—Commentary 9.16—A.M. Chronicle 10:30—Music On The Move 11.00—CBC News 11:05—Joan Marshall | 11.15—For Consumers 1 11.20-—-Record- Album 11.30—The Archers 11:45--Music On The Heather 12.00—Jamboree Junction 12:15—Boy Meets Girl 12.30—Meritime Farm B’Cast 1.00—CBC. News and Weather 1:15—The Young Folk 1;45—The Open-Road- Show 1.59—D.0. Time Signal 2.00—The Open Road Show 2:45—Arthur Philps Speaking 3.03—Trans-Canada Matinee 4:00—CBC News 4:03—Canadian Roundup 4:19--Music On The Air 5.00—Mar. Fish B’cast §.20—Tempo CBC Notebook | 6.00—CBC News 6.15—-On Parliament Hill. 6.20—Today’s Editorial 6.25—Inland Weather and Sports Scores | 6.30—SBusiness Burometer 6.35—Music In The Evening | 7.30--Agenda and Centennial Expo 8.00—Assignment 8.30—The Sound The Sixties 9:00—Mid Week Theatre 10.00—CBC Nat'l News On Parliament Hill end Speaking Personally | 10:30—Chamber Musie 11:30—Musical Program | 32:00 -CBC News, Weather /12,15—Music In The Night CONTRACT BRIDGE ; By B. JAY BECKER | South dealer. North-South vulnerable. NORTH @A1082 84 @AQ104 164, @KQI64 @973 @AI3 @K10653 @K765 o983 aK 493 SOUTH a5 9Q97 @32 &AQ108752 The bidding: South West North East Pass 1@, Pass Pass 2h 2@ 3h 8 86038@ A de Pase S.& |Opening lead—king ot spades. | This hand occurred in | residents fo more than a | month— it is shippinz 300 Cana- | idian-built ears to U.S. markets daily. A Chrysler statement said about 11,000 cars have been. sent to the U.S. under the plan compared wiwth about 500 a vear ago, while 6,000 higher-priced models had been imported. j Company president R. W. Todgham has said Chrysler would be shipping 80,000 cars ito the US. this model year. A Ford of Canada spokesman is sending this said his company 1,000 trucks to the U.S month under the plan, which jpermits manufacturers to ex- iport and import vehicles and lparts duty free, and will import la similar number. | New Pileline ls Completed PORTLAND, Me. (AP)—This | ‘oil port: now has three overland jlinks to Canadian refineries at |Montreal, — |—A—24-inch—pipeline,—built—at_a jcost of more than $15,000,000, ‘went into service Sunday. The Portland Pipe Line Corp. |a. 12-inch one built in 1941 and | an 18-inch line installed in 1950- | | A company spokesman said it | will bring 10,000,000 barrels of | crude into port this month. Be- | fore the new line was finished, | receipts averaged about 7,000,- 1000 barrels a month. |“ | | Most of the crude comes from ‘South America but ships also bring oil to Portland from the ‘Persian Gulf and Lebanon. | | To accommodate the larger | tankers expected here as a re- | sult of the new pipeline, the | harbor's main channel has been |\deepened to 45 feet. MEMBERSHIP_INCREASE Methodist Church member- | ship in nine southeastern states | and Cuba has increased by 112,705 to 2,847,971 in the last ‘year. | ‘Robinson made the contract | inabbing the king of clubs and) losing only two heart tricks, | and, at the same time, demon- istrated a principle of play not too_well_ known. Veal “Roth led a spade, taken with” the ace Robinson realized im-| { | “elear the table.” But he said already_had two smaller lines— | WEST BERLIN PHYSICIAN ADMITS NO FORMAL STUDY “Walter Guenther is a phy- sician out of passion and call- ing.” Reaae said. “He has eeverthing that a great phy- sician needs, and can be cal- led a medical phenomenon.” FRIENDS. CALL BERLIN (AP) — The head physician at a large West Berlin sanitarium has _ re signed, admitting he never formally studied medicine Walter Guenther, until two weeks ago head of the city sanitarium in the district of Neukoelin, has placed his fate Panag toy go ye “So firm said the office was be- ing beSieged “by photie calls prosecutor. from Guenther’s sympathetic Guenther giso steeped down. patients. as a member of the local par- Local authorities have not liament and resigned from the Socialist party, which rules West Berlin. His lawyer, Dr. Pau! Ronge, said Monday Guenther has admitted his deception to the prosecutor's office in order to yet taken any forma! action against Guenther, pending a further study of the law. In his apartment, Guenther referred to some bouquets of flowers that he said his pa- tients have sent to him and remarked: “This looks like a funeral, It is a funeral, for that mat- ter—a first-class one.” hee could not explain why his client had decided to reveal himself now after 14 years as head physician at the san- itarium. RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT (1577-1640) BRITISH ANATOMY . MY OF HAS A PAVEMENT THAT MELANCHOLY? ONSTRUCT’ 3 CONSTRICTED 1940. BOT SUFFERED Pe CeO. Tie ARTISTS on SEVERE FOR 376 YEARS Ser ei, AND FOUND RELIEF ONLY BY STANDING ON SELABOR 4ACH OTHER fas... 1965, World righto vesnreat The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed. Nov. 8, 1965. 18) A member of Ronge’s law | USANA AA, — WATE yan" Cai Sw, ? oi | “ ¢ * 3SNOW AZNDIN 6X LINJOV LaY¥OsS ~~. TT LL landed tac 4 Paes | FIVE DOLLARS For Y NO-8suUT HERES AN ICEA! H1,PoPs,’ DEBBY SOLD ME TWO | 1 DAILY CROSSWORD a FOOT BALL TICKETS’ / OUR FATHERS ILL SELL YOUR D+ D TICKETS TO THE GAME.’ TICKETS / YOU SELL WA HERE! You GO AND MINE!” €\ TAKE WINGEY “4 Tg en M oa ¥ i! e, ¢ b + en A J = rm > Wy} , =| \3 7 | s G a YR A = if [Aint / v = p ae ACROSS DOWN 21. Snoop 8 weaans 1.“Laughing 1. Flatfish 22. Cloth et ake Cavalier’ 2. First mats measure ATH) INTE] painter 3. Cash on 25. Yes: CIA, 5. Melville's Via Veneto Sp. AL captain 4:Enclosure 26. Silli- 2 x E a = A Ste 5 “ 5 9. Mine 5. Whitish ness E ix ICle le [> entrance 6. Biblical 27. Wading TOMO! 8 10. Disable . Name a8 . eid , 11, Shining T. Moslem 29. Be = 12, European princes 30. Co- EINID SMMOIAIS ER flatfish 8. Reigning ordin: Yesterday's Ancwer 14. Citrus fruit beauty ating : 15. —— 11. Glaze particles 37. Peruvian gates 13. French 31. Corolla fertility 16. Jewish river part | goddess month 15. Hawaiian 42. Gaze 38. Relative 17. Emergency food rudely of 27 call 17. Restless 26. Dec. 24, down 18. French 20. Music May 29, 40. Garden .. pronoun note J . 19. Ecclesias- ay oe = tical , a vestment — 23. Cubic meter 24. —— : Dinsmore 28. Newborn 30. Goddess" of harvests 33. Abyss 34. Land measure, 35. Narrate again 37. Ore deposit 39. Barrel part 40, Custom 41, War god 42. Leave out 43. Not so great 44. Well- known street u-> DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXBE : fe LONG@FELLOW One letter simply stands for another, In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos- trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters arg different. | A Cryptogram Quotation AI AN M HMHG@ MIIMACVGCI IT PHTK TES PHMYGLOEEB MC8 UMIJAEB.—YUAES Yesterday’s Oryptoquote: WHO HATH NOT ENOWN: ILL FORTUNE NEVER KNEW HIMSELF, OR HIS OWN VIR- (© 1965, King Features Syndicate, Ine.) imeédiately that he would have ito lose two hearts regardless of | how the cards were divided; | ithat he could not make ‘the con- | jtract unless West had the king \of diamonds; and that the out-| lcome would therefore depend | upon not losing aclubtrick. | | Robinson was aware that the percentage play, missing three ito the king was to finesse in| jclubs in the hope that East had | ithe king, but he abandoned the ‘percentage play for what seem- ed to him to be good ‘and suf- ficient reasons. He assumed that # Roth had \Trials staged in Phoenix, Ariz., | K of hearts he would lin 1982. ‘The bidding shown took | ac, el. 9 St meee’ of jplace at the table where Rob- ert Jordan and Arthur Robin- ing Robinson therefore credi a spade. Pursuing this reason- | ied | json, both of Philadephia, were fast with one of the high heart OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE _ NS GOAT CORPS \| YOU GUYS ARE GOING \ {OL ‘ IST THMNNRe CE THE TOP) on NEES |) ST CUARL RONG. THE CANS, CLYDE! OF MY HEAD, MASOR, BUT, 5 A T HOW ABOUT BREEDIN” OR HOW ABOU S0ME REALLY TOUGH TACKLE METAL CANS AND GLASS BOTTLES? - teat WAIT AND ovr Al HAPPEAS WHIPS THEY PIN A MARSHAL'S BADGE ON A GUNMAN LIKE CLA WIONVY 3NO7 3HL _NIG&NN “Ene Poeonn intense, (85) Well ie ees Ow Ual3INS 2. SOONW rv, ee vNootlvd 30f 7 ye”. ¥ 6.35—Tanight’s Music ; 7.00—Back to the Bible 7.30—News and Weather 7.45—Program Schedule 7.46—Tonight’s Music 8.00—Assignrient—CBC 8.30—Tonight’s Music 8.58—News Headlines and Weather 9.00—Midweek Theatre—CBC 10.00—CBC National News, On Par | North - South against Mike | ; : Shomen oud Alvin Roth; win lin ite’ met Bast would Bet sat East-West. have passed the opening spade, The final contract was ambi- |bid if he had also had the king | tious, no doubt, since it requir- of clubs. ed losing ho tricks in diamonds} It followed logically that ja or clubs, missing the king of|club finesse, if taken, wou leach suit. However, Jordan and jlose, and that the only real Robinson, easily oné of the best|chance lay jin playing ‘the ace Hill and Speaking Personally |Pairs in the United States, are lof clubs in the hope that it seldom shy in their bidding, |would fell the king. And, im| nd this hand was not an excep- 'true storybook fashion, the hope —_\materialized. ‘ We A, A is y Ap y ‘WANSY 111.7 ~£8C 10.30—Chamber Music—CBC ‘H1.00—News end Regional--Weather tion: --- - y