aad the Royalty Mall Shopping Centre will provide all-wea- ther protection for patrons Banking Facilities ontained Another branch of the Royal Bank of Canada will. open its wickets to the public in the Ro- do all their shopping without going outdoors when proceed- _ing from one store to another. In Mall N. S has been appointed as manager of the new branch and a staff of five will be em- THE CENTRAL MALL LOOKING SOUTH The large central mal! of who will eventually be able to This view !ooking south main entrance to the Co-op a to doors leading to the P.E.L Liquor Commission’s new fe tail branch. toward the Connolly Street en-“. Supermarket and to the imme- trance shows, on the right the diate left of the outer entrance e ° | one-third of the total non-Com- Canada Trails Australia | munist aid received by Come , | Monwealth countries, the survey e ° e ‘e concludes that the organization Britain In Foreign Aid . | "could. not conceivably. become | a self-contained unit from the By CARL MOLLINS ;tion. and published to coincide “a point of view. LONDON (CP)—Canada has with the opening :of. the iith | ‘It is inherent in the compo~ }more than doubled the valve of CPA conference in Wellington, |Sition of the Commonwealth, lits foreign aid in the last three |N.Z. years but Canadians still give! The study points wp imbal- |Geveloping countries, that i) \less per capita than Britons or jance and inconsistencies in the Should be primarily a receiving | ' Australians to help poorer coun-.pattern of foreign aid. group which looks outside its tries. | A study of foreign aid in the |per cent of the non-Communist economic aid it needs.” | Commonwealth published here world's population of developing | today shows Canada, the rich-|countries, receives only 28 per| MANY WORK FOR LORD | with its great preponderance of | The Commonwealth, with 47 Membership for the bulk of the fe a a eh fe oe 3 a i > Sneek tks retro bBo Hiciicet SPOT TO STOP FOR A QUICK SNACK grocery carts. 28 FEET OF DAIRY PRODUCTS DISPLAYED A snack bar focated off the will be providing light lunches which measure 6 by 10 feet entering and leaving the side of the Co-op Supermarket for the ‘shopping public. Large will add to greater conven- <a i. see is puidont when large crowds are , yalty Mall on Dec Ist provided ployed under him. est member of the. Common- cent of total non-Commumist de-| Blenheim Palace, the English thet nnunter Nitine= “eerive fren! Lonstion of a bank ia the i ‘ i ’ j : ‘ Montreal, ‘The-asetstent mana- north portion. of the city. will wealth in per capita wealth, velopment aid. The Common- home of the Duke of Marlbo- won a oo Co-op pes oe for @ This particular section of the wall adjacent te the meat and along ger °° the Rove’ Berk in Cher- Iottetown said this seems to be th- Petar at tag oe This new branch of the Royal bank will be the second in Char- lottetown and the fifth for Prince Edward Island G. G. Miller from Waterville United States Steel Industry | Outlook Bright | CLEVELAND (AP) -— Steel magazine, publishing its annual forecast bared on a survey of US metalworking industry exe- cutive comes up with an optim- istic picture for 1966 OM the 7,000 “metalworking managers” contacted, Steel says. 7 per cent expect. better business. Averaging their pre- dictions, the trade public#*ion forecasts a 73 - per - cent im- provement in sales during this year “Using 000,000 in sales col ths year's $218,000, . Steel says. ‘Tt means the 1966 be $234,000,000,000."" However, only 58 per cent af the respondents expect to see profits improve next year. Some other highlights the survey: =A 3 Sper-cent rise in “vol: ume in plants producing for defence. ~An increase of 3.4 per cent tm manufacturing costs (La- bor, materials and overhead). —Price increases averaging 2.1 per cent ~A->three-per-cent increase in the number of workers em- ployed. ~—Automatic wage increases going into effectin 56.8 per cent of the plants. : —A 46-per-cent buildup in capital expenditures for plant and equipment, =A two-per-cent “increase in funds going to research and development. total will “from ‘Workan Artist Has Small Cabin asa hase.”’ provide service to residents in that part of Charlottetown who den’t have a. bank in their area. Modern _in_ all aspects,..com- plete with ful banking facili- ties, the Royal will be protect- ed by a burglar alarm system. Approximately 0 deposit boxes have been installed along with four customer wickets with jroom. for more_if the need ari- see, Controfied by the Canadian Banking Association, banking hours will remain the same as in other Charlottetown banks Mondays through Thursdays the bank wil] open at 10 a.m. and close at 3 p.m. and on Fri- days the Royal will open at 9.9 a.m. and close at 4.30 p.m. for the henefit of those who wish to make deposits late Friday afternoon. ROYALTY MALL - CO-OP SUPERMARKET a weakth Parliamentary Associa- |wealth itse¥ supplies less than popular C-I-L. Paints gave $7.35 a head of population wealth has 13 per cent of the rough, is maintained by more’ in foreign aid during 1964. Of non-Communist world’s “rich” 3 three other Commonwéalth population, but gives only 10 countries rated as cine mem- per cent of total bilateral aid. -bers, Britain gave $10.57, Aus-|- Canada { iralin $10.90 end New Zealend |wted “choct’ $n0,eonnon mr tte | $5.10. ‘total foreign aid of $140,000,000 ‘However, more than two- to the Commonwealth, gave al- thirds of Australia’s foreign aid most half to Asia. India and |total goes in grants to its neigh- Pakistan received $54,186,000. boring trusteeship dependencies Ceylon and Malaysia. alone ,of Papua and New Guinea. New |received about the same amount |Zealand devotes about half its of Canadian aid as all. nine foreign aid to South Pacific is-| African Commonwealth coun- land dependencies. Canada's aid tries together—about $4,000,000. | lis more widely distributed, al-| The rate of total foreign aid | though Asia gets the lion's received by | share, |tries varies widely, COMMISSION STUDY jcents for -each=Nigerian ta>-a | “Aid in the Commonweaith,” year to $1.87 for each Indian a statistical study by the pri- and $189 for each of the 5,000 vately - endowed Overseas . De- inhabitants of Niue Island im the | velopment Institute, was com- |South Pacific. |missioned by the Common-| Noting. that the Gemmon- than 100 servants Best. 0900000000000000000000000 8 aie Stylist Color Service! ducts distributed five convenience for the publiie. Soh a steam Wishes on the opening of CO-OP SUPERMARKET ROYALTY MALL }{ sng We are pleased to Rave suppfied CASH REGISTERS for this modern new Supermarket Co-op ts located on the south delicatessen | departments. DIGBY, N.S. (CP)—Canadian | artist Maude Lewis lives in @ one-room cabin; 10 feet by 18, four miles west of here. . Sometimes called ‘Canada’s Grandma Moses'’’—she now is in her sixties — Mrs. Lewis has never travelled farther than Halifax in her life. Yet her paintings, which sell for $5 each, are becoming..known from coast to coast and appear in many collections. She was apologetic about raix | ing her prices to $5 from $4, but it had to be done because art supphes went up in price. “Sometimes I think I should charge more,"’ she says, but fears it might drive away her present customers. Her paintings show the sort of tural life she has known all het life—small houses, farm ani- mals and -gardens. “Everything: is playful and in nocent, and people love it," says Bill Ferguson, owner of @ nearby art gallery and one ef | Mrs. Lewis's admirers. | “Her use of color is and her composition almos faultless,” adds John Cook, a Helifax' painter. “Like every good artist, though, she breaks the rules and she gets away With it beautifully.” We are proud to make available to our customers a . complete range of quality C-I-L Paints for interior and exterior use. There is no finer brand of paint manufactured in Canada. ie | If you are planning on. decorating soon, come in and let us help you seléct the exact color you desire. This is-part of our service and we are happy to do it. Satisfy all your painting needs at our store. Drop in today. Don’t forget ——- when decorating insist on the paint most Canadians prefer. It is made by... 1. M. SIMP Great George St. _Charlettetown | — ig SON LTD. _ Summerside Water Street — ~~ t ~~ « ee