‘II A d l ‘V. 3 vi ‘l on N at M n 5 ll G d. 4 Willi.nn.: .'irrl .liii;iiliv of Stintinerszclr started the ex- L':i\'2ttio:i tor‘ the ill. i‘l' :1- it-1‘ citizens; linii~ut ill “~ ”l‘lnirso.‘i_v atlcr iwiilmzz ii. i; Metal-Working Industry Heads For December Record CLE\'l-Il.‘\_'\l) |,\l’l -— .\l-‘till-v working hti.<iiic<s in |)(‘l'Cllll)I‘I' will set a rt:r:nril for the month and will help L‘£ll‘l'_\' the U5. lil- du:stry's sales to a new high of. $17-l.00t),titl0,lltltl this _\o;l1‘, Stool magazine predicts. .\lctal-wnrk- ing sales in 1062 v.c'.‘e. :;»lli.‘:.0tltl,-' The metal - \i'nrl<ii‘.q ‘.\c(‘kl_\' says demand for stccl and other materials is accclcrziting as many manut.-iv-tzzrr-rs prepare for a his; first qu:trtcr in ltllil. ‘The publication also predicts December stccl shipments will certain to last month‘s. Last \vrek the mills :v:'mliivc"l 2.00.000 tons of .='r‘e‘. hi:hc.<t output since inlrl-.ii=ly, Steel re- ports. Prodnciir-it this \\'(‘E‘l\' is expected to he hither. MILL OYTPUT UP Mill operations have iinrc,i.ml for seven straight necks and. are now about 65.5 per cent oi capacity, Steel says. Demand for at sitio-. ment and consumer durablcs also is on the rise, the mafia-. zine reports. October orders tori machine tools hit the lll£Zli(?Sl~ ‘evel in more than seven yccirsi sur1i.'i.ss EVERY I week for the fifth slt':e~.:i-' .'i~ éllltl a spot t-llmk all t.=.‘i'i.t~ tool huilrlcrs by .'w\i~.i.~ that orrlers are still iltlliiiliil in. “The auto intiustr\'.x mull it »~ .~'iiv-E setting the pace for mi it til} ntetalworkinrz," slcci ». “ill December czlr 3.-wt’ ‘ ' ‘ml Tl’.-‘,(lt)0 (us ~(ltcdnlr~i ' t it dnslrr will wt ll rt" ‘ “M 'llt‘ month. in the i'ir.~~l ll ‘l'it!lllN.‘ car-ntakers built lifllllltilltl ::~.iv~.<.‘ compared with 6,?itltl.'llltl ‘t _vv:i't‘, zico." i Sl.('el’s ])I‘i('e ctvtiipmifc .\’o. 1 heavy nicltin: scrap used in stct-l—ni mained at $28.67 a Lirm till the ,i,- TFJIR.-\.\' t.-\}"l ~— Stliit i‘l -AS, "l‘lCHRA\' t.\Pl - " i>7-re have been tryin: to ; H iu‘l1;;lt-. lihae snow drifts to :i icniivtr= ipnss in nortliwest in ii v.lir~1'PI ; ii! persons were rcnn:':rvl lI‘llfF‘ll \';)y, The \\p£lilt‘l Ke_vli.”in said Satiirrl:-._. Ox chil- dren were among tti~ dead iii the convoy of ‘.29 liu-es Hllll trucks — carrying ziimut fitlllzt pt‘rsons——l'ilockcrl since the n\iil—‘ die In‘ last week in;i.<=i'.'c drifts at 1l:1ir:iti pass. near the Soviet border. urw ow fnnm FARE Dill’ T0 WINNIPEG $35 That's the incredibly low one-way passage fare on the new Faresaver Plan. And look what coach ‘ travel on The Canadian gives you: Reserved reclin- ing seats with full-length leg rests, Scenic Domes, porter service, and music. And you can purchase delicious meals in the Dining Room or Skyline Coflee Shop. The Faresaver Plan is also available for Al|~lnclusive (meals a nd passage) in tourist and standard sleeping cars. See your Travel Agent or any Canadian Pacific office. SAINT JOHN-WIIIIPIO One To Montml sum, to Cnl%IVy‘l.l1mtInltIrI $47 tnnuim a nut Faresavcr Plan to olho -way coach pasun mo 1 points ‘35 In/ormallon and reservations; 892-1261 TIAINI I mucus l min I I-umu I Horne / tutcomnumcnitmo WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM EN|ORHOUihiG UNRWY A ‘LA the snow banks. They were H\\'Ell'(‘lECl the contract for tionr utiits at $36,719. This is one of the six similar projcctts to be crcctcd this winter under the winter works program in is- lzmd communities. These four units‘ are located ' west of the Community Hos- pital on tihe corner of Park- \‘i(-\\' Drive where the five new co-op houses were built 300 yards ‘ two years ago. The buildinil. will have an utility unit in the centre con.~..isting of washing and dir_vin1‘1 facilities and fur- r.a~ce room. Each unit will consist of a livingrnnm. '- chen, bathroom and bedroom. These units will be serviced by the new sewer line itn=Stall- .w ed last spring. Occupancy is expected in curly June if wealheir pc1'mlL\‘. ‘is The Gguu-dtan, Charlottetown. Mon. Do. 9, 1963. ‘ MODERN FE‘MALE’S AT'|'lRE— L()!\'DOI\l t.-\Pl~Tailor and Cutter——-magazine arbiter of British male sty1c—-acknowl- edges that the modern, thinly- clad fcmalc has it stumped. Says the lead editorial in the ntauazinc's current issue: “The weaker sex go through must of the year dressed in cimsidcrably less clothes than their male equivalents. “ls tlicir «the ladies‘) avoi- dance of bronchitis due to a basic hardihood unknown to men, or has half a century of thinned - d own garments merely produced a resistance to the cold via a kind of en- vironmental mutation?” In Victorian and Edwardian , days. of course, British women ; STUMPS TAILOR, CUTTER muffled themselves in many petticoats. whalebone corsets. corset covers, bustle: and other flesh-warming gadgets. Nowadays. despite the chill and wet climate. they must be some of the most undressed women in the world. with toe- less shoes. thin stockings. skirts above the knees and un- derwear no bigger or thicker titan a handkerchief. Addition- ally. many go out in a freez- ing English evening decolletage exposing their chests to the chilling winds . Yet. as Tailor and Cutter points out. statistics still show that Briish women live longer and suffer lrom fewer dis- eases than their muffled hus- bands. . NEW YORK tAPl -«Rising -hopes for an early .U.S. income tax cut sent the stock market to an all-time high last week. A rally started Wednesday .and carried through strongly ;'I‘hursday on tax legislation de- velopments in Washington. 1 Senate Republican L e a d e r 'Dirkisen told President Johnson that he thought he could assure him that there will be a tax- be retroactive to Jan. 1. The ‘new president continued bl- partisan efiforts to push the tax- .cut legislation. cult! bill next year and that it‘ 1 . ' Stock Market Touched l.A||-Time Record Last Week 1 Steel production rose (or the i sixth consecutive week. automo- bile output tor the week and month was scheduled at record 1 e v el 5, construction contract i awards in October showed I 26- per-cent gain over a year ear- lier. orders received by manu- facturers increased suarply in ioctober, mail order sales rose J and wool carpet prices were in- creased. 'Iihe market's performance lien in line with the tradition ithat December is a month ot ‘risin prices. A For the week The Associated Hon M-nook Uvougo use 8.1 to 283.3 and the Dow Jones climbed 9.. . Trading wu nctlvo oil and on ring the week wdtb volume totalling 51,140,870 shares against 19.3G8.7M the precedlnl weak wk :1 there were only three sessions because of the dl/y mourning for President Kennedy Monday and the U.S. Ittankogtving holiday Thuuday. ‘me five moot-active stock: New ,York Stock Ex- nge: RCA. olf ‘A at 97% on 590,400 shares: n-y Rand. up ii at 16%; Westinghouse Electric. on 2% at 33%: Chrysler. up 3 at 88%. and General Telephone. up 21/: 31%. The five moat-active stocks on the American stock use: Syntex. up 10% at 92% on lPe-troluem. in) ‘ii at Kin-Ark oil. up K at average of 80 llldllllfllll. Aidella ’s O Sophisticated Millinory for a dis- cerning clientele 0 Gift Certificates Adella ’s Millinery 177 Gralton Street Charlottetown Aooossorloo to match 0 [If you’re a financial wizard, you don't have to read this ad] Payday. Bills. Expenses. Fun Money. Savings. How to keep track? Easy! Get a Pocketbank A small book. But a mighty big purpose: it. records your -——> progress in saving! This is a Personal Chequing Account chequebook com- plete with its own deposit slips. A convenient and low- " cost way to paying bills. Saves time and trouble too. It's amazing that nobody ever thought of Pocketbank before. Because when you really think about it, it's the only logical way to handle money wisely. Pocketbank is a Personal Chcquing Account, :1 Savings Account and a simplified money management system all combined in 1 handsome wallet. This is o Pockotttonk "Money Manager" Thin handy time card is 1 convnntont old or‘ loin you 2 . balance your income against your oxgsnnkjlb } Suc- C1-Mint budge-tlnn has to be put on paper why the people at "Tho bani" have (wits easily operated monoy mariogrmwns nysurarn list you, 8 use it and you'll really in abut to thing» your tgggom . . . and see your savings umw. 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Andi! who's buying a the SCOUT-t- Ac:-: CONSTRUCTION PINEVIEW FARM‘ .4"- , '*\ » .. CACHELAKE RESO and countless more ranging from country doctors and Arctic mis- sionaries to rural mail carriers and sur- veyors. Why is the Scout already sales leader in 4-wheel drive? The fact is, it can go almost anywhere . . . thanks to 4-wheel drive, rugged power and extra clearance. And because it converts four waya (from a stripped-for-action work- horse to a steel-bodied station wagon), the Scout is the handiest; unit on or off the road. See and drive it—you’ro sure to agree! lurcynunrtohnt -. DRIVE _ Ill scour INTERNATIONAL NARYESTER COMPANY OF CANIDI, UNITED INTERNATIONAL nanvnsnhn oomrmnr or cannon, Lnnum 885 TI-one Avenue. sum John. New amulet Ghulottatown Tlgnllh. no.1. mm mm home 1. c. conduit a mum» Lu. Summ I-side, P.E.l. "°“""3“"'9 1’-E-I mu‘: mun Kelflliu not Bordon wemngum. P_E_L I-M. wanna»: sale. a service L... Elltillftilllilltllll”. .a._-x—:1I—un-...