i‘ ,wtl1cre only scattered showers have‘ _-_ IOIIIIO lflfll - YHI III lll II Ill lOI-Fllll Hltl - Ulll II HSIP OI CIIIII - 7U I l l-.._.__ "I've a feeling it's the cg: for me" llinnor Tendered llotad Agriculturist Dr. J. L. Tennant, head of the Department of Agricultural Econ- omics, Rhoda Island State College, and Mrs. Tennant were gum-s at a largely attended dinner in theii honor at Providence on June i9. The dinner was in recognition of 20 years of service to Rhode is- land and New England agriculture. Dr. Tennant. was formerly on the staff of the P. E. I. Department at Agriculture from May 1914 to Aug. i019. He is the son of the late Wil- liam and Elizabeth Tennant‘ of Brantiford Township, Brant. Coun- ty. Ontario. Mrs. Tennaiit-‘s par- cnits were the late Colonel and Mrs. W. K. Muir of Burford, Ontario. Dr. Tennant completed the pun- lic and high school courses at. Paris, Ontario, and majored in Animal Husbandry and Field Crop‘ at the Ontario Agricultural Gol- lege. He received the B.S.A. degree from the University oi’ Toronto in 1913 and the PhD. degree from Cornell University in 1928. Mrs. Tcnnant was given flowers suitably enscribecl. Organizations, friends, and for- ‘sand dollars which will be known as the J. L. Teniiant Iioau Fund _ and which will be used to assist , students majoring in Agricultural Economics at the college. The chairman was Herman Harrington, president, The island Agricultural Conference and ' the toast/master E. L. Austin, Rliode i Island State Department of Edi», cation. The speakers included: Dr.‘ John D. Black, Harvard Unlvei‘ sity; Mason H. Campbell, Dean,1 and G. E. Adams, Dcan-emerltu." l Rhoda Island State College; E. A.‘ | Perregaux, University of Connect.- I cut; Q. Reynolds, general manager, t Eastern States Farmers‘ Exchange, | Springfield, Massachusetts, and C. l Langcnfeld, president, Rhoda 1s- i l I I I t I land Farmers’ Cooperative, Provi- tlence. i i Polish Catholics Feari II Illll II IIICCII IID lIIGOLI Illllll Church, State Conflictl rapidly. Grasshopper damage is fairly general in Saskatchcivaii hut is worst in the Saskatoon-Rosetcnvn areas. “Crop Report} WlNNIPECg .\ian., June 5 — three provjnpgs early S0,“, “mm, Conditions have improvrd in! 1:; standing up wcll hut 1mm Manitoba due to this m'eek‘s45°'““ “Tams mm“ "W PM". rains. But rain is hadly needed in: “ermmatiwl and “Y9 ‘WY hark- Saskatchcwan and iii Alberta} ward; 3°C“? rail“ ha" illlllfuvfd iOllliltmllS in the Peace River fallen. The crop in Saskatchewan‘ mm‘ accmdim: to the “'e"k1" “m” m“ F" far hold “s “W” hut if a: report of tile Department of general m1" 1,; not received ‘veyyi Agriculture of the Crmnrlian Nat- 90cm the crop will deterioratelhmai Railways. svlllilllY i In all ‘ i Women Prisoners Continua To Riot TORONTO, June 2'! - (C?) —- City and Provincial Police settled ,t'ln\\'n today at. Mercci- Warren's Rcinrmntoryr for a siege which < no senior police officer said "may Just several days." Almost 100 women prisoners Lave hcen locked in their cells since n riot broke out Friday. The hclligcrent women were still 55~(‘l‘€ffll'11lllg insults and throwing fond from their cells. WARSAW, June 27-—tReuiersl—— Millions of Roman Catholics inl Poland, fearing that they may be faced with the choice bctweenl faith and country, today anxiously‘ await the next move in the smoul-l dering conflict between the pro-i Soviet Polish Government and the! Catholic Church. Their uneasiness has bccn cnn-, siderably increased by the latesti open breach between church andi state, in which anti-Vatican nt-I tacks in the censored press werel . £1112. GQAAPIAN -- QHARJ-U".-. ETD W" and Dr. Tennant a bronze plaque; mer students contributed one thou- 1* l Rhone , -' the boys and young men of the First Postwar ,“Y" Anywhere In World“ --._._ ‘The new Charlottetown Y. H. C. A. rwwpuider construction will, when it is completed next full, no the first post-war Y. M. C. A. to be built any where in the world," stated Mr. Samuel Nook, archl~ tectural consultant with the Y. M. C. A. Building Bureau, who visited Charlottetown yesterday. Mr. Nock described the buildinu as one of the finest on the con- tinent nnd that its interior will he colorful, attractive and modern. Both the national body and the Charlottetown board’ of directori- are justly proud of it. It is a. build- in; which well merits the pride of every citizen in the community, Special appreciation to the con- tractor Mr. M. F. Schurman was voiced by Mr. Nock who described the construction work as a. “superu qualitative Job". Because of rising building costs the structure re- quires more funds than the orig- inal estimates called for. However, the extra work involved is being done by the contractor at no prof- it to himself. The construction materials have been selected with a. view to ob- taining maximum wear with a minimum of maintenance cost, which in turn eases the annual operational expenses oi the build- lug. “As an example," Mr. Nook said, "the shower room will have non- slip tile floors to prevent accidents, I non-disintegrating wall tile anti- in the ceiling water-resistant Port- land cement to avoid steam de- cayf! The floors are of durable ma- terial which will wear the life of the building and the ceilings have been acoustically treated to reduce noise, Mr. Nock mentioned that one unique feature of the design of the building is that it; ia laid out so that one person can control all the departments from a central point. Mr. Not-k emphasized that underlying purpose of the Y. M. C. A. in providing these new fa- cilities in Charlottetown is to make available a. centre in which the" city may find ample opportunity to develop socially, physically and innrally to the benefit of the who}: community. answered from pulpits throughout the country with a denunciation of Marxist material philosophy. The last bastion of opposition to the Warsaw Government, the Cath- olic Church in Poland has consist- ently maintained its stand for "freedom of press, freedom of speech and freedom of conscience.” It also demands the repeal of nrw laws under which divorce is permitted and only marriages per- formed by civil rcglstrars are legal. L__ Food Appreciated In a letter received recently by Mrs. J. T. Rodd, City, from ltLrs. Helen Brown, St. Batholomew‘: Vicarage, Craven Park Rd, London. England. as a token of thanks and appreciation for food parcels seat to her by the Woman's Auxiliary of St. Paul's and St. Peter's of Charlottetown, Mrs. Brown has this to say. "I thought I would like to write this time to thank you and the members of your Associa- tion for your great; '''' "kindness in sending us these lovely parcels. My husband is very sorry that he had not written to acknowledge re- ceipt of the one which arrived some weeks ago. but he was very rushed before Easter and not very well. "As a housewife. I appreciate even more than he does what these parcels mean to our larder and 1 do think such actions as your~ make us realize that the Church is one big family. “The lard was a. wonderful gift, —we only have cooking fat and very little of that. I don't know what has happened to all the lard in this country; it makes the pastry so different. I admire your quick and easy. methods of cook- ing, and being often pressed for time, having a large house and no help, I have found these pack~ ed foods a godsend. Also we do appreciate the variety, of what my son calls ‘new food’. Tea, sugar and raisins are indeed treasures. I made the other packet of raisins last about six weeks and when my husband saw a ‘plum pudding’ ar- rive on the table he said ‘here's thanks to our Canadian friends.‘ "I have heard that Canada is a grand country, but I don't suppose we shall ever have the chance to visit it. still I love England with all its drawbacks!" COMPLICATED ARTIEJLE The modern steel pen requires some 16 different processes in its nzanufacture. they all call for. PIIIlIPMIIIIIiIS Cigarettes If ovary smoker linow who! Philip Ilorrl! smokers know-they'd all change h Philip Morris. Try a pocliogo lodoyi IJO Marcy Flight Blocked By Ice In Harbor HALIFAX, June 3'? -—(CP)-iAn R.C.A.F. mercy flight to on the Quebec shore dsnn. Strait has been called off Owing to lack of landing facilities. A Csnso flying boat left here Friday to pick up an Eskimo with gunshot wounds in the head. The pilot, Flt-Lt. Grant Nelson of st. Thomas, 0ni., reported to R. C.A.F. headquarters here Bnturdait night that he had been unable l0 land at the isolated nor-them post because ice was blocking the har- bor. However. drugs and instruction! cre dropped by parachute near e building where the eskisno is to be hospitalized. The injured man is believed to be tho victim of an accidental shooting. __________ l QUESTION or Tasrn “Untility" beef i: just ll high in nutritive value u are the M! grades of b691- Cur Fellow Members Welcome To The bCity and Province or the DEALERS ASSOCIATION Annual Convention, Charlottetown Hotel, J unc 29th. and The Retail Lumber Industry has, in recent years, attained " a leading place in the manufacturing industry of the Mari- gtime_ Provinces and through greater utilization of our. own ‘forest products has reduced our dependence on imports, thereby contributing to the prosperity of the three Provinces. “Co-operation l: Not a Sentiment -- l! lo an ficonolnic Necessity“ Again ‘Welcome Members of the $M.RM.L.D._A'., / MacDONALD-ROWE WOODWORKING c». in. . ii. PO0LE& o. in t 30th