tied the financial eomrnuiiity on both sides of the Rockies by an- nouncing plans for a new bank lproducfion on Limited Scale , -me Guardllll. miuiotietown. Mon. Jan. 21. 1964. 11 VITAL S_TAT|51'|C5 [Busine-ssViewsToBeSought owns 0°" C°mmg Tan” c°"f°r°"‘°.c..... n.°é‘ri‘§‘i=§?;‘l. By KEN sM"~H The first anouncement came WALTERS — At the Prince Ed- ‘ Canadian .in the Speech from the Throne :ll'dJIsland Hospital. Satur-; The to B.C.’s legislature and Mr. fly. an. 25.1964. Mr.s_ 6- paring in f - - - . ~Bennett said it would have a A. Walters. 52 Upper ulllsglil-3 round of tariff taelks Zlthclgilglllag llYeltsedofsttTlt:sIEEtrdbad:na’CT)rr‘ll)rY:il °"l"“"'”“'“°" °‘ "'“""y ““?°’ Street. in her 43rd year. Rest- Ealllering slow headway for Market—wiIl be negotiating on'»'."°l.° “"'" ‘5°'°°°'°°°'" .'“al‘”‘3 ing at the MscLean Funeral l"L3"5t’l lll0lllhS. will speed up ‘the basis of across-the-boardzglda 9.“ °‘ the "zest m Ca"- O - l . L Home from where the rune,“ I8 l‘ y when a group of gov- tariff reductions for groups of Mn Bennews suggestion Hp“ Canadian Wl""'y —- Canadian manutac-. MONTREAL tCP)—l-ligh pro-' and secretary on royal commis- Lujegsfhaje ruccessflillf com" ction costs caused by limited-3 sions on broadcasting and the ‘*9 0" ‘"9 3" ‘"3’ 9 5- - ~ ~ - - - scale production are a mayor} automotive industry. Miss Leitch said Canamanilustlflfamnp ml ram"? "ml" hindrance to Canadian manu-§ In situations where they have manufacturers sell 85 per cent 0' ‘l'5"“"“'”‘““l~' "Eal“5l facturers seeking export mar-l been able to take advantage oil of their production at home. but ports in other ways. kets. Elizabeth Leitch, 85515-A - tant economic adviser to the; Imperial Bank of‘ in 8 bid to make vancouve, a . long prodllction runs—farm ma-. Canada still imports five or six ,centre of lchmeryl business forms an rye‘. timer. as much manufacturered BIRTHS nnmsro — At the Vancouver General Hospital on Wednes- dm. January 15th. 1964, to gun and Mrs. Ralph Beairsio. vain-ouver. B.C., a daughter Darlene Elizabeth. weight 9 ll,5_ Asister for Douglas and _ ‘ oods as she exports. in some ll Precise position before the tar quarters. this ratio is cited as lff conference opens . The major participants —- the im- ‘ . Id ..,, Wm be held pm,” I md .ernment officials formally starts'commodities. . . ~ F “ Jan. 27. Interment An all‘ “°““dllllZ out Canadian business- EQUAL VALUE paremly °.““3h'. b"'."'”5m°" °" Commerce‘ smd here’ ’ Sh Bye ,men for their views d. guard. Quick disclaimers of any She lflld the M0llll'e8l BUSI- E 0'“? €l€l‘y In lieu oft ‘ 3 I3" 5°V"“me“l- knowledge about the pl-opnsen ness and Professional Women’: 8l'_0Up. expected to belthe Association says, has 1ll:m;!;iki:';th:;]l abfew days. will lntounlced that ' will offer ~ e usiness t .s ' f l l or More" East» Wlsh lg’ "° ‘l’l"°°""°<l- may now my might ..."I‘f.'}. .‘2a...°"....f.';"°°..‘.‘.§.‘iI‘.§e2l? 'i.‘;”’ Y.i’l.‘.’.§ . “ounce the engagledment o their :PE.I.ERs__At the Prince Cmmw {cnnada lowers ‘arms on cehlcounmes at the talks. ;a new bank in little more than ; volume that 'erIrnlts.t}lie{n to elllt’-‘I daughter‘ anon Irene’ Hospital Annex. Sunday. Jan. ‘tam goods‘ as ‘"3" 35 MW theyl Th°l'°l°l"" °lllY filler d?‘ V8 l(s:L‘)Ia’rl£)Ptl'Tlr(‘eIETelctll3‘l":dyUC:‘VllS. arge. 5Al\'DERS0N'— cor-r —— Mr. an- and Mrs. James W. Sanderson In’ new bank came from major cen- Uh lllal Only Ill C0mPEI‘fillV€ly tl-es few instances can Canadian Canadian Cancer Society will it is the second proposal for; manufacturers achieve a sales CN travel bargains could prom if other countries James Coyne, former chair- memory of Hedley MacPher- son who passed away January 27th. 1959. Like falling leaves the years silo the church cemetery_ Visiting hours, 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. I LAWLESS—At Brooklyn. Mass. on Saturday. Jan. 25. 1964 Mrs. Eleanor G. Lawless in her 84th year. Remains will arrive at the Bowness Funeral Home on Monday evening. and will then be forwarded Tues- day. Jan. 28 to her late ro- sidence in Richmond. The funeral will be held Wednes- day. Jan. 29. to the Immacul- ate Conception Church. Well- ington for Requiem High Mass at 9 am. Interment in Grand View cemetery. gut precious memories never die He lives with us in memory still. got just today but always will. one by one the links are sever- ed. p-mm the golden chain of love. one by one our loved ones go. To the Father's honse above. ; Let our deeds be pure and noble j j\.[a_v our lives be not in vain: so that when the links are v.'eld- ‘ ed complete again will he the I HEADS PRESS GALLERY OTTAWA T<CPi-—Peter Demp- am. I sadly missed by wife and 1 family. l [son of the Toronto Telegram |N {Saturday was‘elected president lot the Parliamentary Press ln Fond and Loving‘ the - - =Galler Association at Memory of G Dedr lgl'oup'3s, annual meeting. other Husband and Fame‘ officers elected: James Stewart Montreal Star, vice-president: l-Orne C- H- Sam Ross, Ottawa R}adioENe'ws Bureau. secretary; om a .e. Carrulhers CBC. treasurer; Jean ' Marc ‘Poliquin, Q u e b e c L'Action. lRaymond Grenier, CBC. Creery, Southam News Services ‘Arthur Blakely. Montreal Ga- zette. and Fraser MacDougall. who passed away January 27th. I958 Sadly missed and lovingly ed by Wife and :3 B § bfl The Canadian Press. directors. NOTICES NOTICES LABOURS PROTECTIVE UNION ANNUAL MEETING TUESDAY, JANUARY 28tl1,l964 AT 7.30 P.M. in UNION HALL SERVICE STATION FOR LEASE This is .3 well established Business. Located in Charlottetown. An ideal opportunity For the right person. WRITE GUARDIAN-PATRIOT Box 19885, Charlottetown THE ‘DOMINION DRAMA FESTIVAL TICKET COMMITTEE REQUESTS That all vouchers being held for pay- ment be redeemed before Feb. 7. - REMEMBER-VOUCHERS ARE ' NOT TICKETS ' ff‘ ‘ll be open for the exchange of §hE:‘i32.ll'?s‘extro(i)iclicef"i-swilor tickets 1.’°b- 24-28. Single vouchers for opening and closing pgrggririances may be exchanged for tickets Feb. .. - . ALL SALES ARE FINAL TENDERS HOUSE clnd LOT No_ 9.3 WALTHEN DRIVE Charlottetown. P- 5- '- be received by the SEALED TENDERS will _ -m-------- up we New on °‘“.l.‘.’.’.l.°.l’. ruary, 1964 for the lot and bunga ow 0 Drive in George M. Grant at No. 93 Walthen Charlottetown. _ Lot 1, 35 feet deep with a frontage on Wallhell Drive of 52 feet. consisting of livlns l‘°°"‘- d bath. Cement founda- furnace House is 7 years old. kitchen, two bedrooms an ' tion and cement basement floor. MW in 1963. Garage. Immediate Highest or any tender not Inspection on the premises. 9 p.m. Lloyd B. Grant A Weltherl Geudet Executors Estate Late George M. Grail’! P. 0. Box 336 Charlottetown. P-E7 possession. necessarily accepted- evenlngs from 7 to fit the_most and damage the least will begin, The Canadian Importers Asso- ciation points out in a recent bulletin to its members that it is not necessary for the cane. 413" llelolflllhg team to have ____________ LOUIS A. MacINNlS There Dassed peacefully away at Souris Hospital on October 38v l953- 8 hlilhly respected iti. zen of Red Point in the personl Mr. Maclnnis, only son of Paul in September i891. and lived all his life eel lRed Point, where for over half 8 ('9lllUl‘.V he was successfully engaged in fishing. In all the contacts of his oc. ciipation. this modest man ever dlsillaiyed his true Christian and all agreeable approach with with friendly assistance. which was ever available. especially to lht’ young and inexperienced. A musician of rare skill. his talents were ever freely given. to every worthy cause and social I event in the community. where his word was known as his bond: wherein he will be missed as a N loving brother in the home and a llrue friends and neighbor in the .' jarea of Louis A. Maclnnis. ’I'lle late lwh lwith detailed analyses. lthe negotiators of where they Illa" But it is obvious that to make l B. . was in thelnew . or win concessions most bene- other story as Pr me Mmmer l expensive". “id |Pearson and President ulohnson V who has served as an advise, Miss Leitch “cm l° Calla“ the “am wlll initialled a set of revisions to new 3 deep f“".d °l k"°wl°dg° the Columbia river agreement about where businessmen stand. Government officials and ma- jor business groups have ex-l pressed concern that business- men may not give the negotiat- ing team enough inform make crucial decisions fu’.ly_ Members of the Canadian Ex- . . porters Association, for exam] E d pl re told last fall to getl S to tell the government} they wil‘. need at Geneva. I NEED FIGURES that apparently brough the. giant project closer to reality. t Now it needs only to get l through Parliament, their highest levels ready CLEVELAND -I buyers in the United Statesghe to be bflcl‘ “P Ill?” P°5l(I:l(:lrlll13j short on their dwindling lnven-‘June, 1962 Plele I0 lhe l85l ll'3_Cll0h OI El further ahead. Steel magazine percentage of potential loss or: savs profit in any tariff change. Al ' .' , . d U to general bland call for tariffs to go up.‘ M'"5 l‘a_‘°"_l 5'3"“ ‘W’ m‘. ' or down would mean nothing to] longer deliveries. but leadtimes; the negotiating team. wgfihieg:¥:g2ll:;“tofl‘;_::'reg2:]‘;2'I bly do in periods of expanding nomic message . 'l . , l . ‘yd tives from five departments——, ‘l"j“al(‘1d5'l:h°k]p"bl'°f"‘”'ll,add§' ::E.?ir:epa(:‘nleM0n;:lay. finance, trade and commerce. qr er 3° d°.g.S gt T" 5 inelfurther “mkness er edging upviark, tuee bC0fll(.ll1-ETueSdayl blue and external affairs. l ":3 rs Sxegmfatgrsthageis °° ‘"3 ' _- o e Dug]; tehequebsfsggegmgfiw 5::-,lel per-cent ahead of last month‘s'aY°rag°5 taken the warnings to advise: P809 uliilltll fSU§3Sl3hl[l3llYlq6l:;9vl-_l°'l a o anua y. . . ‘ stand could rest the immediatel "The lllllfehd lll Sleelmakihl-‘:7'3 ADVANCE success of the negotiations from‘ Will 1‘0llllhl1_9. 35 P|‘0Cll1C€F"S 1'9 Canada's point of View ond to rising demand. the revenue. industry. agricultur well a h average last week Elsewhere on the business. ll1elall'l'0l‘l<il'l8 Weekly Say_!- The scene. Premier W. A. C. Ben-i Janllafy Pl‘0<lll°ll0ll l5 9*‘ aged of 50 stocks nett of British Columbia star-l pected about 9.400.000.-291_5' its l The largely attended funerall ‘was held on Wednesday morning ‘fl‘0lTl lhe Perry Funeral Home to St. Mary's Church. Souris. Set’. l vices at the church and gravel were conducted by Rev. J. J.‘ x neighbours. .\'cil MacLel-ll Ian. Irving Robertson. Elmerl Fraser. Joseph Chapman.§ George MacDonald and Char-i s Ching were pallbearers. l Eternal rest grant unto him; 0 Lord. and may perpetual light 1 shine upon him. May he rest in peace. Amen. l CARD OF THANKS lhilnplrv and Rev. McDonald. 1 ‘d = Si The family of the late Louis I Maclnnis wish to express sin- cere thanks to all who gave mass cards. spiritual bouquets. messages and expressions of sympathy and a special "thank " to the nelirhbollrs and friends for many acts of kind. ness and help rendered during his illness and death. Thank you. OBITUARY inserted b_v friends and rela- fives as a tribute to the deceas. 3 CECIL MacKENZlE Many relatives. neighbours and friends were saddened on November 15th. 1953. when word came that Cecil Maclfenzie had passed away very sliddenly in Milton. Ontario from a heart attack. Cecil was born in Long Creek. October 9th. 1922. the only son of Mr. and Mrs. James MacKenzie and lived the greater part of his life there and in Canoe Cove until about two years ago he moved to Ontario. He will be sadly missed. Being endowed with a very pleasant disposition. many will miss his bright cheery smile. During his time as operator of the govern- ment enow ploilgh no call ever went unlleeded. He was a loyal friend. a wonderful neighbour -but especially will he be missed by the younger people who knew and loved him as a real pal. He leaves to mourn besides his loving parents to whom he was very devoted. his sorrowlng widow. the former Ethelynne MacDonald. two children Re- becca and Stephen. who were his pride and joy. Also four sisters Annie. Mrs. Delbert Quaife. Estevan. Sa-sk.: Mary. Mrs. Dan Macfl=‘hee. Canoe Chester Ont: Mrs. Leigh ‘mamas, Canoe Cove. His remains were taken to the mm; of has sister Mrs. Dan Mac-Phee and later conveyed to the Presbyterian Church at Canoe Cove where service was Pall-‘nears-rrs Stretch. Arnold Mm-Donald. Warren Mac mild. Russel Macquarrie. Ernest lumen. lng son, husband and father was ' laid to rest in the family plot in the Canoe Glove cemetery- CARD OF THANKS we wish at this time to ex- press our thanks and appreciat- lnn to our many friends and nglgthhmirs who helped in so mgny ways during our recent and bereavement. To those who ‘sent floral lrihlltes. messages of cympaflly. SLDCCTC SO I“. Mr. and Mrs. Juries Macken- gie and familv. 1, born at Stanchel. Prince Edward‘. Island. November 23, .1908. anal lltons. compared with 8,8ll0,00U[ ‘tons last. month and 8,400,00tlleph0ne' Standard tons in January. 1963. Rad“, this OBITUARY (Inserted by friends and rela-l Ingot production lives as a tribute to the deceas-_= will rise for the fifth consecu-land pennsylvania R all,-ond lime. Steel predicts. Pr°- posted new highs for 1963-64. in of A.T. and '1‘. they publication estl- were all-time highs . .1 MRS. DONALD NICHOLSON: ‘In the midst of life we are In. tons eath." five duction will exceed the 2,150,000 the (-359 that the ! mates the industry poured last‘ The decision of No more truly could the mean: week. . pos a 25-per-cent ing of those words he realized by Steel's price composite on‘ was disappointing the relatives and many friends; the prime grade of scrap usedlwho had hoped for something ’ om - stock reacted of Iona Nicholson as on Octoberk in steelmaklng, No. 1 heavy‘;-anging fr 15th., 1963. they learned that the; melting. rose 34 cents to $29.67{,5-for-1; the Angel of Death suddenly claim-‘ a gross ton last week. lward. ed her for His Maker. The late Mrs. Nichoisoil was‘, was the daughter of the la t e’ James Dixon and his wife Laura‘ MacLeod. She was first married- to Allison (Bud) MacLeod who was killed in action overseas in 1943. In 1945 she married Donald Nicholson, Somerville, formerly l of Springton. P.E.I. Besides her sorrowing hus- band. she leaves to mourn her passing. her mother. and three brothers: Lloyd of Montreal. Ev- erett and Raymond of Stanchei. Her only sister, Mildred (Keat- ingl predeceased her in 1948. She also leaves to mourn sever- al nieces and nephews who will always cherish her memory. Several organizations will: miss her for she always gave' the last ounce of devotion to whatever she set her hand to do. The thoughtfulness she had for others. her ideals of friendship. for she knew how to . friends and how to be friendly. and the gracious spirit of cheer and gladness always so typical of her life will be missed. espe- cially in the home, where her loving personality will be borne in grateful and lasting remem- lN.Y. Stocks iAdvclnce To ‘Highest Level ation to’ *“°°°55'l d 1 NEW vonx tAP)—The stock- ‘market advanced against some heavy profit taking ‘last week .and pushed the averages to Trading simmered down to ‘AP’ - Sleel 26,300,000 shares from 30,600,000 , ‘ previous week when the Ilaklllg "0 Ch8ll09_5 OI Plllmlhillevel reached its highest since tories. are starllg to order? Although some of the recent ‘high flyers were knocked down -considerably. this did not lead selling. as prophets thought if m‘ ht _ . , The anti-inflationary aspect: I are tlghtcning as they ll1Vat'la-‘of president Johnson's ' tto Congress a chips 5_to_1n_'recovery drive which put the though more stocks fell than rose in the entire list. ’ I Ottawa Winnipeg Edmonton The Dow Jones 7ll3.04. its all-time closing peak. Associated Press aver record closing high. Such issues as American Tel- Moncton Truro Saint John Halifax in history. some 900' irly sharp After some e a r l y led e a (I. even Montreal industrial rose 7.35 to rose 1.6 to Oi‘. I New ‘IBM to pro- stock split to investors up to ‘ down- ‘ H.‘ _ “ti CONTINUES UNTIL SATURDAY FEBRUARY 8th VISIT EATON’S SOON AND SAVE VALUABLE SHOPPING DOLLARS ON THE HUNDREDS OF SPECIALLY PRICED ITEMS FOR THE HOME. LISTED HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY SPECIALS‘ YOU WILL FIND ON DISPLAY to G°°l‘¢° E“‘°5" ‘°“ °‘ ‘“‘''l as I964 Joseph L Pete r ‘tails of the proposed tariff cuts I V I and M” Lewis Go". 0“ B(-“den .1_n his 93 . rs 0 nan be talked into dropping bar- lnave been resented b other lman of the Bank of (.anada.1 A text of her speech was re- r-3-172M _ M ~ L _ rd year Rest- ‘me i C e l . P ,3’ lannouncod in December he and leased to the press in advance 0 O 0' Cl“"l°mt°“: b arfilggiwo mi: at the Bowness Funeral 6:990 minaidlfan pnlduct-S‘ °‘?“"""°5 ‘hat Canada 5 “am lanother group of businessmen of delivery, e u till‘? 913” e wary " ' ‘ Home lintil Tuesday morning iected from alt: (rYl1anna)l“l>n sins cm‘ will be amem get a more exact Would 509k 8 Charlie? I01‘ Ihel “Canadian manufacturers are . u n ' ‘ ‘ ' I . . . IN then to St. Paul s Church. Sum- as possible, the unenviableesigi gaffe (:3 gvflglt ginfifaflfigsegluxgl Bank of Western Canada—capl- I; constantly seynng up machlnepy I MacPHER80N — In loving merside for Requiem nigh of trying to patch the details to. ‘em value promise. ,,_n,al.on $19-°°°'°°°- . ;8"d laklnll _" “°“"‘- ‘f"“°“ '“ Mass at 9 a.m. Interment in gether in such a way as to bene- 5 '" ‘n’ l extremely I-lme-Collsumlllg End $2.20 $2.90 ‘ $3.70 $4.30 $4.30 I | l Antigonish. $5.20 brxnfclielieral service was held on {'.§‘.!’.§f‘GLl.‘fimR_..REEzERs §§.7,'.§.';‘ Mncnmns 2 "M fie brought words of comfort to ' - .« ». hearse to the home of Mrs. John ‘News and Sm“ up to 144 pmmds of food _ _ on buttons. makes button-hclas, livingrooms. dens or l‘N‘l‘CaIlfln rooms Matching J'Th1f‘if(I;§Kd'cm:::£:3b:n§érvice for mvonmhsl Roomy 9-5 l~'ll- It l’0l|'lil£'I'B¢l0ll §tf¢' appliqlles. monogram-s: makes on the evening of ocmber 19“ tion with deepdo1orbmf:1elves, egghwtrlays. _llI.l;lfIr:’ qllial tension clotntglol, built-in Swivel Rocker with “No-Sag‘ .&']‘ll‘.In,'.‘.$. under the direction of the wm._ compartme-nt. tal._ e space, i lqcalsv - damer. Sew-lite . ..-ione grey po a e. mv Mistress. Mrs. Ross. l Buy MW—-Pay llfllllllllll lllllll W‘-" N - — EATON“ EATON’S tAd?lrgtTi mlmmlof mplehalhl EATON“ -95 SEMI-ANNUAL SAIJC. ' 5""-Ml-ANl"l'Al- W-l‘~ ' ell 9 "hm 5""l°° ° SEMI-ANNUAL SALE. 2-Pi . ' on October 20th. Services at the Each EM" 9” gm“ home and graveside were c 0 il- ducted by Rev. Thomas Evans. assisted by Rev. W.R. Under- an ., . hay. Hymns sun w re "The I Lord’: My Shepherd” and "All the Way My Saviour Leads Me" led by Bradalbane choir with Mrs. James Snowie as organist. A solo "No Night There" was feelingly rendered by Mr. Steph- en MacLeod. Pallbearers were: Ml lforo Buchanan. Erland Cousins. Jun- ior Matheson, Arthur MacLean, Gordon MlicLure. and Will Cameron. . Flowerbearers were: I-Iughu. DAVENPORT Here is an excellent value. cover. (‘nus-‘elm: to l'lalld'_V 2-person bed. A variety of colours. 9 .50 Hard wearing Frieze EATON’S SEMI-ANNUAL SALE. Each ROLLAWAY COTS Very handy extra bed with slat and helical spring; mrlng-filled tufted mattress with roll - edge: smootlh-rolling casters. Folds compactly for stor- m 2.79 EATON’S SEMI-ANNUAL SALE. Each FLOOR COVERING Heavy weight will zlve Inn; cnrnre Ahmlt 6' il'H’lF‘ In A variety n‘ pnttcrns arm" cnlolira. EATON’S SEMl.ANNl'AL SA LE, Lin. Yd. r . Hughle Nicholson. Nicholson. Manford Nichols o it Lorne Seaman, Ewen Todd and Percy Tucker. Many floral tokens were beau- tiful reminders of love and al- fectloil. Interment took place in Floral Hills Memorial Gardens. CARD or THANKS l The family andhusband of the‘ late Mrs. Donald Nicholson wish rec VIKING TRIMLINE VACUUM CLEANERS Regular SO35 Streamlined powerful machine for tlhorough clean- ing of rugs, upholstery. floors, drapes, shelves. ehc_ 2 ea.sy-l-olhrlg whet-lvs,. one swivel-caster. Use cloth bag or throw-away paper bags. 9 .95 EATON‘S SlllMl-ANNUAL .5‘-Al.l'Z.. With Attachments 2 QUART ELECTRIC KETTLES Automatic shut-off if kettle boil-s dry. High speed 15(1)-watt element. Cool black plastic handle. Cold attached. EATON’S SEMI-ANNUAL SALT-'.. Each . 3 I 1 9 ALL WOOL 'l‘l'F‘T‘l‘lli ORIENTAL-STYLE DESIGN WILTON RUGS This is an exccllent qua~llt_v for the price. 2 only reduced to clear! EATON’S SEMI-ANNUAL SAI.F., ' 6'9" x Size 9‘ Sin‘ 9’ x I013" 95° 1490- Evans. . Cutcliffe Funeral w h o rid messllea of sympathy. NO DOWN PAYMENT On Budget Purchases "'-.;~E...-‘;.‘.l§'.3..‘-..‘.“~‘--