NEW YORK. - Even drill loader Pat Mulligan. right. can't restrain an eyes-right as Des Moi- BRITISH O Air Patrol marches past British nes. la.. girls squadron of Civil cadets during CAP's tenth natlo BSERVERS nal drill competition in " 'efel- ler Center here today. The cadets. members of Air Training Corp. ohk-.4 9tI&V:-'6... "erstotheelasaes.Itwaswonlry y dren under her care seated in the A cnatm to determine the beat all around strident was carried out. It was based u attendance. bringing ones Bibe to Church school conduct, and bringing oth- Dorothy Macliean of Hunts Riv- er. and she received a nice prise. Besides fulfilling all the require- ments of the contest. Dorothy had taken eight other children with her to Bible school. Mrs. lsahelle Watts of Milton. was in charge of the music. and during the closing period, the chil- chair made a very fine contribu- tion to the final programme with their singing as a choir and in individual and special groups. Sev- eral other groups seated through- out the church. also took part In the singing. Ira Drysdale. student minister of E. C ” kindly ' ” dur- ing the week by bringing children In from the Breadalbane district. and helping with the singing. At the closing on Sunday after- noon, his magnificent voice filled the old church with fitting mei- ody when he sang ”When I Sur- vey The Wondrous Cross". Ben Cousins of Stanchell very kindly treated all present on Fri- day. to ice cream. This was a kind gesture on Mr. Cousins's part and was deeply appreciated by all. The Hartsvtlle Bible School for an auxiliary of Royal Air Force. attended drill as observers. AMONG THE FARMERS Federation of Agriculture Newsletter PLAN OF ACTION Out of each of the three county fcderation meetings and it arose spontaneously came a plan de signed to bring about two things. Iirsi. the strengthening of the Fed- rration and second. the creation oi greater interest in better farm practice. These two things are to he brought about by the holding on a monthly basis of meetings m cacb electoral district. The recommendation Is that the three Fcderation directors in each t'lL'Ci0I"BI district will become re- sponsible for the planning and con- ducting of these meetings. Persum- ahly there would be act up a list of persons representative of. for example. the Federal Department or Agriculture. the Provincial De- partment of Agriculture, Experi- mental Farm. Science Service Di- xi.-ion, and farm organizations. From this list each district would make a selection of a speaker or speakers on the partucular topic in which the meeeting might be in- terested. The supporters of this plan poin- tcd out that little use has been made of the country directors in the past and that the suggested responsibil”y should be good for them personally and would result in their taking a much greater in- tcrcsi in the improvement of the Federation and the development of better farm practices. The final decision on this pro- gram and the planning to put I into effect will rest with the Pro- vincial board of directors. COUNTY MEETINGS Attendance at the three county mcetlng ranged from good at Ol- l.cary and Souris to poor at the Charlottetown meeting. In every case there was. however. quite liv- ely interest in the meetings and excellent discussion. Discussion on potato tariffs established the fact quiet clearly that Island farmer! rxpect increased protection a- gainst the movement of American now potatoes into Canada. It was felt that the period from January I to June I5 is far too long a one in which to have free movement. There was also up meat on the COMING EVENTS Dance hllllview Hall every Fri- day night. Dance South Melville School Fri- day. July 26th. St. Anthony's Pariah Ptenlc. Bloomfield. August 1 Dance Bonabaw Iiall. night. In stock. Hay forks. hay salt and lump lime. W.l. Bowman. Friday Horse Races at Hawlbrook Sat- urday, July 27th. 2 pm. Dance Bellast Hall. Wednesday. July list. Reserve August 0th for Potato Field Day at Ea-ye. mental rarnr. point that every effort should be made to have the quotas into the United States restored to the or- iginal levels. Butterfat producers are unaml- moon to requesting that there be an increase in returns. Registration fees on farm trucks came in for discussion and it was generally agreed that there should be a request made for a conces- sion in this matter. Quite recently Nova Scotin has moved to make a substantial reduction in commer- cial ratea for the benefit of farm trucks. The 0'Leary meeting agreed that cream and milk testers should have recognized training in the form of short courses before be- ing permitted to work in this field. Marked controversy developed In the 0'Leary meeting on the ques- tion of Unemployment Insurance for farm workers. Supporters arg- ued thelr case quite strongly on the grounds of social justice and to improvement in the farm lab- our situation. opponents were in- clined to view coverage as a mix- ed blessing which would do little to improve the labour situation and would entail considerable pa- per work. However. there was un- animous decision on the point that Unemployment Insurance he made available on a voluntlyhasls in agriculture. Bible School Of Brookfielcl Holds Closing Sunday afternoon. July 21, I951. saw the lovely old church at Harts- ville filled by the parents a nd friends of many of the children of the Brookfield Charge. it being the final demonstration of the Bible School. This school which has come to be an annual event and one to which the children and their par- ents look forward. was in session Ifrom July isth through the min, from 9 a.m. until noon each day. with four departmentn. The beginners department was under the supervision of Mrs. Ben- Jamin Cousins. The primary had Mrs. Ewen Lamont in charge. the junior supervised by Miss Christine Macinnis and the Senior department was under the care of Mr. Burton Smith. student minia- ter of the Brookfield Charge. The following ' t ” u ably assisted: Miss Bertha Smith. Mrs. Sally Parsons. Mrs. Ken Mae Rae. Mrs. John Nicholson, Mrs. Sterling MacRae. Mrs. Duncan Ni ” ' Miss Shirley Gamester. tention of the public to the good- ness and value of dairy foods. POULTRY SURVEY Present lnforrnatlon is to the ef- fect that the Poultry Industry Sun vey being carried on in this pro- vince by the Atlantic Province Ec- onomic Councll will be available to the Agricultural Committee on or about August 20. Shortly after that date the document should be available for public consideration and whatever action may appear indicated. TARIFF HEARING Next Monday the potato inter- est of Canada will be appearing before the Tariff Board of Can- ada to state their case with re- spect to a better deal for the in- dustry. The main representations will be made by the Canadian Hor- tlcultural Council and the Cana- dian Federation of Agriculture. these representations will embody the collective thinking of the dif- Mrs. Frank Bagnall, Mrs. Burton smith. Mr. Ira Drysdale. The programme for the week while a very flexible one. was con- clse and interesting. It consisted of Hymn and chorus singing the mem- orizing of scripture verses. Bible lessons according to age groups. several interesting flaonelgrapb de- monstratlons by Mrs. Burton Smith. recreation with outdoor games and handicrafts. The missionary journeyings of St. Paul were being studied and the boys of the senior group con- structed a contour map of paper mache. pfotraying the land through which he travelled. This map was the aublect of great interest and the pupils deserve much credit for es from the Old Testament and al- so of Paul's missionary journey- lngs. were made by the Junior and primary departments. while the FOWI. AND TURKEY The decision of the government last week to ' ” ', estab- lish a floor price for fowl and turkey and to restrict American importatlons of both should go a long way to reassure producers that their market situation should generally improve. With turkey particularly a critical situation was building up importations of American supplies at prices as low as In and I7 cents and were proceeding in me. with turkey the real value lies not in the floor price but in the restriction of imports aa a means of retaining the Canadian markets for our own producers. With fow a floor price Ir 2! cents live weight basis Toronto should generally give returns more tiafactoy than has been the one on many occasions in the past. EXHIBITION CHOICES Livestock exhibitors are a ed that the entry deadline is July 29 and that this is the final date. The lateness of hay-making will Il- kely effect to some extent the de- claion on the part of attiemen to show their herds. However. with modern methods and given' fine weather a great deal of hay can be made in two weeks. DAIRY l0(7I'II once more the Prince Edwardl Island Dairymen's Association is: planning a dairy booth which will make available to the public tasty and nutritious dairy drinks. The booth will also display samples of island dairy products and gener- ally endeavour to attract the at- a pan lat-gs vo- . a plerent provinces. senior girls buaied themselves duri- RACEWAY PHOTO SERVICE DAILY-FINISH ROLL FILM 8 EXPOSURES 50c 12 EXPOSURES 70c BOX NO. 40 CIIABLO'l'.l'E'IOWN, P.E.I. N0. C.0.D.'n ROLL or run 1957 was'bi-ought to a close by the benediction. yr nounced by Mr Smith. ' NATIONALIZEI) YEAR AGO. CAIRO ifleutersi - President Nasser will address a mass meet- ing today in Alexandria's Al Tah- rir Square on the occasion of the first anniversary of the national- Ilzation of the Suez Canal. He will ispeak from the same balcony from which he lI'IIIOUI'If.'cd the national- ization a year ago. ROSE WATER Rose water, a mild perfume. is made from oils of the cabbage rose. grown chiefly in the south of France. catchers in action today-showing signs 1! the wear and tear of years of action behind the plate? bold enouur to venture the opin- ion that the 32-year-old Berra and the 35-year-old Carnpanella. each a three-time most valuable award winner. have begun that table downward slide to the point of no return. There is no question that this is 1 gen; win work out 01 1,5, mm. the poorest season ever suffered by Berra in his ll years with New York Yankees. This may not be m with Brooklyn Dodgers. but It isn't far from it. worried. Both appear in need of rest. Both probably will get soon. ion has indicated he may switch string There are some who are even inev- " 's worst in 10 years Both are slumping. weary and it Brooklyn Manager Walter Als- to Rube Walker and if the second- leceiver should perform well at the plate. he may con- tinue there for some time. '..'.:..;'l.'...'t?.;'li'..".' ”"" """i Are Berra And Cam Showing Signs Of Wear? NEW YORK (AP)-Are s uat.!behind the plate. The fleet-footed brick-tough Yogi Berra and dur-lchicago White Sox stole three able. tree-swinging y panella - generally acknow- from Yogi in beating the Yankees ledged to be the two greatestl72 Wednesday. Even Casey Sten- gel the understanding manager. is worried. Roy Cam-zbasee lbles. However. if you tell me that Berra and Campanella have identical .228 batting averages. many points below their lifetime and Campy I2 but their respec- tive t9 and 45 RBI figures are dis- ' imrly low, AFFECTING WORK Berra's sickly batting average DID YOU KNOW? Canada": finest photo finishing is available at THE JENKINS PHARMACY Right here in Charlottetown Dated embossed snapshots in pocket wallets We fo:- Poster and maps depicting scen- x tliarlottetown. Dance in Dixon's Barn Fortune Bridge. Friday. July Ith. Weir star's Orchestra. Showing at Mt. Stewart Friday and Saturday. A Catered Affaln Betty Davis and Debbie Reynolds. Movie "llg Leaguer" starring Edward G. Robinson. St. Teresa's Hall. Tuesday. July 3th. I.& IleM a. I . lung; or ' e dh-Itlay.1ly ::.ns.ntlsIres.OntieIld- Tsallarhet lswsr. ones In Ialsaowla wnareesr tlnalagb prevlsu PEA e SPONSORED BY KINSMEN CLUB OF CHARLOTTETOWN This sunning-in Sponsored sy: co,-or sum MARKET Mtl.l'0ll'S ow sum wsusuunuuunnusvunuly-usaua an yeuerdafs T DAYS FRIDAY, JULY 26 TO 9 P.M. marks. Yogi has hit 16 home runal appears to have affected his work; SALES LADY FOR SHOE DEPT. require either experienced or in- experienced sales lady for our Charlottetown Shoe Department. Apply in own handwriting Personnel Manager - Holman's Summerside or Charlottetown NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! i l l . r i Charlottetown Store 'Sc1l'isiaciion or money said. "I admit he could use a con- ple of days Harry Simpson needed at firnt base and Tony Kubek at short- stop. I've got to use Elston How- ard in left field. Otherwise lid put zbim behind the bat. panella and drew a wild throw "I admit Berra's tired," Casey of rest. But with "I still believe that before long Yogi should have rallied long before this. I ain't going to give you an argument." Canadians Have Left Korea Area OTTAWA tCPi Only one Can- dlansoldierwlllbeleftinltora after July 81. Army headquarteu announced Wednesday 29 soldiers. the last but one of more than 22.000 to serve in the Korean theatre. will have returned by the end of the month. Staying behind is Mai. Gordon Douglas Cochrane. II. of New Glasgow, N.S.. Canadian repre- sentative on the military armis- tice commission at Munaan - ni, Korea. The returning troops comprise the Canadian medical det. ”ment which has provided medical and dental care for the remaining Brit- ish Commonwealth troops in Campanella. the former iron, man. has been plagued with in-l Juries. serious and otherwise, dur-. ing the last few seasons. A crip- pled hand kept him out of many; games last year. Pulled musclesl in both legs, a sprained thumb and colds have kept Campay out of action at regular intervals this season. Berra isn't in the best of health. either. He hasn't been able to .breathe normally since his nose in the middle of a game. .Korea in June. I950, and within contingent is being withdrawn. Most of the soldiers already have arrived back in Canada. The final four are to arrive by air at Vancouver next week. SPECIAL FORCE North K o r e a invaded South two weeks Canada announc ” for- was broken by a foul tip last month and he claims he gets tired DRESSES SKIRTS . ousrnzs COATS SUITS PEDAL PUSHERS SHORTS STRIDES SWIM SUITS CLEARANCE off Clearing 25EVo off 141 GT. GIX)RGE ST- canorom V2 COTTON " .00 puu,ovEn, HALF SLIPS swnarnas In-in , CLEARING Each FUCI-2TTg)INPs SLACKS KNEE - in REG. 2.49 2-99 HOSIERY 1.49 Each 896 THE FASHION SI-IOPPE PHONE 3355 h 2 BIG TIRE DEALS marl: Simpsons-Sears Korea. The entire Commonwealth 1 lTheGIeI'tlenPege3 Friday, July 26. 1957 motion at a special force to flgll with the United Nations. The drst Canadian Army unit to reach Korea was the 2nd Bat- talion. Princess Patricia's Cana- diaa Light Infantry. It loaded it. Korea Dec. II. 1950. and went into action Feb. 19. 1951. The Patrician won a United States presidential citation ior their heroic stand at Kapyong April 14.75. 1951. Remainder of the 6.000-man Ca- nadian brigade arrived in Korea May 4. 1951. and Joined the Com- monwealth division soon after. it was involved In periodic heavy fighting until the truce was signed July 27, I953. The bulk of the brigade came home in September 954. 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