y/[ARCH 21. 1941 ' v \ a \ / I QC ‘l "knows i ve! Actor us HAVE GIVEN co u \§ ~\ \ ( Professional Bards /_,_________ ~ nu. 0.s. NORDLAND Veterinary Ellfllll"! Maul", Edward Road Charlottetown. P-E-l- Phone 804 ruouc STENOGRAPHER ' Mlmeqgflphlllg cards and elfwllrl- “mo”; Drug-rams, correspondence, mm,“ “yd n okiieeplag ilELEN GIDIJEN Telephone 1890-1 Apt. No. 4. Cormaught Alli-l- Pownal 51"" "Tffléulclfi, m. NOTARY. arc. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR CURRIE BUILDING .- BELL 8| MATHIESON Barristers, Solicitors, 8w. R. R. BELL, M.L.A., D. L. MATIIIESON, LL.B.. K13. Attorneys-at-Law LOANS ON CITY AND l-‘ARM PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS E 150 Richmond St. Charlottetown, P.E.I. PALMER 8| HASLAM A. l. BASLAM. B.A-. LL.B. BARRISTER. ETC. Bank of Nova Srflia Chambers Charlottetown, P.E.I. MONEY T0 LOAN Phone 85 P.0. Box I3 H. F. McPHEE. B.A., K.C. NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR Riley Building GAUDET 8| HASZARD B‘. . u . _ a Etc. uorrsu. and COMPANY Chartered Accountants Eastern Trust Building Phone 1M1 - B0! i“ Charlottetown B. M. SEARS. (7.5. Resident Partner NEIL W HIGGINS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT I Currie Building Charlottetown Tel. i636 P.O. Box 452 rw-nrooooooeooooo-ooooooo I McLEOD 8| BENTLEY g I 6 w W. l. BENTLEY. KC. .l. A. BENTLEY. KC. Barristers and Attorneys-at» Law 154 Prince Street O-OO—§O§OQOOO-§§OOOO§-OQO0 i H. R. DOANE 8| CO. Chartered Accountants 58 Grafton Street Charlottetown l'iione 2080 Box M‘! Randolph W. Manninl. C.A. ¥0040o4 +0404~O ~§on@oo><ss>oo-fis»oo<s>o (if MATHESON and PEAKE ‘I A. W. MATIIESON, K-C. g .\. II. PEAKE, ILA» LL.B. Barristers, etc. l Collections. - liIoney to Loan w 90 Great George Street Charlottetown . o@>oo@>oo<$»oo§>oo-sai>oo~a ' DR A. R SMITH DENTIST I75 Grafton Street Office flours: 9 to 12-2 to I Telephone 22M veooooOOOOOOOO CHARLES R McQUAlD B.A. P’\ooo~ Barrister, Solicitor. Notary. Etc. amen. Trust Building, Charlottetown Phone 1711 lO-OGOOQOOOQOQOOOOOOO. M. ALBAN FARMER as- mo. MONEY r0 was asnmsren. soucrron. arc. cnnororrerown ‘0066-0-04-00-06-66006-0690-0030 A. iiialthen Gaudot, LLB. Barrister. Solicitor, Etc. Phllllprf Building '1l1 Grafton 5t. "hi"! to Loan. "nllootiona- '*N+o»o4 0000004 4 A 9 o O 4 0 g A o O t V I g 0-0 Canadian Bank of Colnmercedildg. MONEY T0 LOAN GILBERT .1 GAVDET BA. I.l Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg. Charlottetown. P.E.I. Frederic A. Large. il.0. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. NOT RY Royal Bank nf Canada Chambers. Charlottetown. IKEJ. Successor to George .l. Tweedy, LO. on. w. n. ciinson Chiropractor Palmer Graduate Charlottetown Q01 Prince 8t. Phone 1012 OO§OOOOQQ§O§OOGOV§QC §QQQ pYrs EXAMINED ‘ AND GLASSES FITTED 1. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST i Corner Kent and Queen lia. , Phone I956 0 Evenings by Appointment f Phone: Residence i018 y oooooooe- <0O0u -ooeooo KILLED TN CRASH GLAREISHOLM, Alta. Mar. M- (OPl-A pilot and two passeng- ers were killed last nigihlt svhcn a light plane out on a pleasure flight lost speed and crashed in a Silo-foot spin near this town U) miles south of Calgary. Douglas Edlchd of Calgary, the pllot and W. R. ‘Talley, 30. of Claresilolm and his nlnc-ycar-old son. Roland Talley," died in- stantly. a-i»... - - F or Foot Ailments CUNSULT -|, ,|_ 6 nnnwii. or Uflllnpedlc Chirooodist l N! Great Georlr "N" flnflllLtlTTllTtlwN HIT-l _~allil colors FOR SALE’ Place your order for your i947 chicks now, ond sove money. Lowest prices guaranteed. It price lowers, you will get the benefit. THOMAS HUGHES c/o Basile’: Store I44 Elm Avenue Correlation Bet». can Schools '8. Newspape‘; i (Continued from Page 4) progress, discussed or reported in newpapers. make excellent collat- eral reading for students. With its traditional emphasis upon the accumulated learning of the ages, the classroom needs to balance its teaching with the pres- entation of a clear, fresh delinea- tion of life today, against the broad background of the past. To be cf- fectlve, the classroom must be stimulating, fresh, alive and alert. Teaching must be vibrant, infor- mative and inspirational. It must satisfy the intellectual and spirit- ual hunger of eager young children ‘and youth. and give them under- standing of the relationship of the past to the modern world in which l ‘they find themselves. Fresh food is a living, vital affair to every hungry child. Canned food alone will not sail-sly him. The same is true of intellectual food. Too much dry, factual, stored leaming will tend to make tcach- ‘lug dull and uninspiring. To the newspaper, the teacher can turn for s supply of the fresh, vital in- formation concerning current af- fairs, discoveries and discussions of things to come. This kind of knowledge the schools must impart if they ere to be flexible enough to keep their students abreast of the times and to prepare them for adult living. The student most cor- tainly needs a liberal education concerning the wisdom of the ages, but he neéds to be shown how to ,correlaie the past with the "rer- ent. It is in helping to maks this ‘correlation that newspapers can be valuable to the schools. ’ ‘ Xi- I The Stale of Indiana takes pride in its well-educated people. By state law all teachers, whether in |the elementary or secondary schools, must be college graduates in order to qualify for s, teacher's license. Very few other states make this requirement. and no nation as a whole, in the world has such a standard. But in comparison with the stan- dards required of educators, by the law, we must not lose sight of the ‘fact that a good newspaper man or woman is also g, well-educated °"-V Haughel’ "d All)" MRQDOYI" person, not because of legal re- quirements but because of the re- quirements for public acceptance and for success in journalism. The newsparmr man goes through school,‘ Qhdl-lqggewwn secures degrees, nnrl ihcn lnunvircs Darmwm of Agriculmrp h. a WP into the school of hard knocks and ,experience which gives him a ‘broad concept of life as it is. n] 111E Cl-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN CENTRAL GUARDIAN 3M1 ‘ i; reserved for newd "l "c" lllflflh but advertising ol I Nwsy nature may be Inserted i" "Q cents a word strictly psy- able in advance. 109% RiRIZTWPV-ORE-Eweatem Cflrdisans $4.96; Pullovers $4.45. Kennedy's Ladies’ Wear. SPECIALS-One rack of BToliF- “ si- fvrmeriy lilp to $3.98,now $1.90. One lot of Purses going at, 1- Drlce. Kennedy's Wear. ~ TRYON UNITED CHURCH Pastoral Charge: No service on 51171583’. March Z3. REV. J, A. Jardinc, min-i-sfer, RECEIVES sap NEWS —Mr. n. C. Hayes cl Tyne Valley has re- ceived the sad news of the death Ye-Bterday in hospital at Calgary, Alberta. of his sister Maud. Mrs. Montague Robertson. ASPHALT SHINGLES, — I-n 1946 we disappointed a greet many peo- ple who wanted Brantiosd “Arro- lock" shingles. At present we have s. fair stock. We suggest you order now. Fennell & Chandler. RETURN llOnm-Mrs. Norman MacDonald, R.N.. and daughter Mary Jean have returned for a six weeks‘ visit. io her mother who is ill at iler daughter's, Mrs. C. H. MacDougoll, Falmouth, Mass. On her return she visited formcr class mates from St. Luke's Hospital and friends in Cambridge. Arlington, and Mr. and Mlrs. D. C. MacQuarrie of Lynnilcld, Mass. who is a broth- or and slster-ln-law of Mrs. Mac- Donald. FUNERAL SERVICES -— The funeral of Williinm Flynn took, place yesterday nwrning at 10.15 from his late residence, l’! Dor- chester SL, to Si. Dunstaws Be- slllca, “where Requiem High Mass ruas celebrated by Rev. Patrick MacMahon. D.D., who also con- ducted the service at the gmve. The pallbearers were: Messrs. Patrick Dennis, John King. Jer- ome Glll-is, Jchn Gormley, Anth- Personals Mu". “kiln-r S-lunv of ihe De- iient in ihc P. E. I. Hospital. Mrs, Thomas Noonan, Richmond is difficult for an educator to know 5s spending the “Eek and vmmng first-hand the some sort of things day to day in his more varied con- tacis. A teacher, by the very net-- ure of his profession, is restrictedl to more specialized fields of know- ledge and endeavor. schoelmen well may envy the broad xexieral knowledge of the first class news- paper man. Some educators decry newspapers because, they say, they are not always accurate or true to fact. This may he true in some instances, for newspaper writers, like every- one else, sometimes make mistakes. But anyone conversant with the great profession of journalism, knows that truth and accuracy are the cardinal principles of good journalism. The newspaper writer, like every good student. searches for the truth. It is amazing to know the extent. to which a. news- paper will go, in assuring accuracy and fair play. The journalist must be objective. He must reduce his own passions, emotions, prejudices, and bias, to a minimum. He must use good taste and sound Judg- ment in handling his materials, and he must have analytical ability suf- ‘ficent to recognize and empbasirze ‘the salient points. He must have a broad background of information and a ready command of English. Like the teacher, he musi be able to report, discuss, interpret or ex- plain events or situations as they occur. ~ Unlike the teachcr, um journalist must fact an unknown nlld a new audience every time he writes. He must use language ihat the aver- nge reader can understand. He mus-t condense and crystallize his thoughts into a clear, concise, read- able story, The tcavlicr faccs the same class. He knows ihcil‘ menial level nnrl their range of l\‘llC.'(‘=lS, knowlezlgc and vocabulary. His group has rcntinuity and in s sense the sludcnis are compelled (Ly de- sire "to pass") to sustain their l Mrs. H, .l. Blanchard. Maple Hills .8 ‘vhkh “W -i°“""“‘" PM‘ “P "W" and Mrs. m. Le Clair. Cliafiotie- town. Mrs. Wilfred Wood, Georgetown. t the meek end with Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Doyle, Maple Hills. l The many friends of Mrs. Clark Crosby, Bnnshaw, are glad to know that she is recovcrlng from a serious operation in the P. E. I. Hospital. v ‘attention in who! ilicu" icavilcr is saying. The llcvrspapci‘ uri-ivr on the other hanrl must seize tho renders illiPllilf/ll and iry lo hold it. He must write so "that he who runs may read." A remarkable thing it is, that a newspaper can and does so!" ' to a certain ex- tent, a cross-section of humanity- the old and young, the learned and ignorant, the poor and the rich. It is like a, well loaded dinner table where there is food to suit the taste of all. The schools can- not be so universal in their gppblll. Students desiring certain courses go to certain schools to get them. They are not all spread cm one table at any one school. The tremendous responslbilitv resting upon the press grows out of ihe universal aDDeal of newspap- ‘s, and the great confidence which t e people have in the integrity of the newspapers and i-n their sbliitv and facilities to reflect life as it is. without bctrnylng their public trust. To be sure, some newspaper st-orics arc sordid, but so are some sec- tions of our present day ci-viliz.- lion. The best deterrent to corrup- tion, crime or wrong-doing, is the strong light. of publicity. But as long as crime nml evil doing are PAGE THIRTEEN A BIIT BLOOD IIOIORS IAIIST BE BACKED IY IAOIIEY llflfifihb Q. Does thc Canadian Red Cross still need blood donors? A. Yes. As in war-so in peace, the Red Cross carries on this life-giving service. And blood must still be backed by money donors. . Why does the Rod Cross require donations of both blood and dollars in laeacetinlc? For the new n izing. ation-wide free Blood Transfu- siun Scn ice which rhc Red (iross is 110w organ- . ls this Blood Transfusion Service tn he for civi- lians as ucll as for war veterans in hospital? b Yes. lhrtlugll the Rcd Cross. hlutni plasma and whole blood will bc supplied to all civilian hospitals across Canada — so that blood may be always arailab le to any person requiring it. This Space Contributed THE MARITIME ELECTRIC CO“, LTD. Q. Will the Red Cross charge the hospitals or pa- tients for this Blood Transfusion Service? A. No. The Red Crosswill charge neither hospi- tal nor patient-with your help it is to be s gift from tba lreort- to the been. The supreme value of continuous blood transfu- ' s ~- sion service to Canadians cannot be measured in dollars and cents. Bu: it is costing the Red Cross a lot of dollars to extend the work, to maintain the ciirlics, to process and distribute the blood. Money Urmorr to support the [fir-ad donors are what the Red Cross needs today, ’ Be a sharer in this great life-giving endeavor. Help save the lives of hundreds of mothers in childbirth, infants, hospital patients and accident victims. Re- member, the Red Cross still needs your support. Every cent collected is used to good advantage. Make your money gift a true gift from the heart. Give now! Give MORE! PRlllllljlllllAL CAMPAIGN OPENS lMllllllllY man of ihe street but entirely “Pmmfllillflve. ordinal)", trustworthy for use in ihc r“ 1110m- Bui significantly enough, lnflny lcntivilg scholars and lIlSL-wy “"15 °l 1011M)‘. ill their quest for “Cufllcy and an intelligent inter- pretation of ihe pnsi, g0 silxflght t0 the newspaper files as one of their bust sccoifdzir'_v >Jiii‘\‘?:“. Tn " know that ncmpnpers rflpe-rl c - and nu- too rfirstlobjeut should be to keen that i-lllll: and “(Jig iv, lcfL to me to ziccido whelhcr we should hale a govcrllnlcnt without newspapers, or newspapers without govexmncrlx, I allOl-llkl not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. But I should in- icnd that every man shoruld re- rcive those papers, and be capable of undersianrlinp ihcm . " We hope ihui (‘vcry clii/crl will rcni affairs and crcni. - ,. , . | still "I1@\\'§-" WP ill-IV "F! assiir"! wirhnui lJliis durum iiicMpczhar| ilhflwjlmhl‘ ‘ullmimylvlsilmd Hmhilfllly ., . g . .-- - 1i that the had is unusual and w! “Iii-sh L‘lil'l(‘|il llisinq-y is in ineirhjflll- Vivi, i‘lgvl1ll‘llvuyllI‘jl‘roi"le . _ _ _\ _ ~ , . . r/ . t- .- "l ""1 °"1"""Y» view-vs vi bcms: Inoldrd- lion llcilvccll ihe m» pmnn- "lvfiois The We“ 55 ‘m9 “l ihe “mst All ll"l"lilllflll"'l hlsLrviy is written 1nd in» [MP [lftifi powerful] lllSllilll‘l)OTl\ for ‘voicing from pining]? and sFtulnlawi nnri m!) dill! DH iiv opin on, r€~ smurf-cs. if ll i0 In‘ icgnrdci 1x ~- 7 A l we ‘llllYPF- l" ‘Vedlim’? lulilllfll om. nr-rurnl" iliifl ‘Jcliiiivlr- .1! nil. ‘bu if‘ ‘bTB/Rlxn‘ slug’ I LUA- s highly crlurnic mm and women y-qc; .,_- H, 1,, (mm. .- H | u, . .. . .. ., .. l» prcrltivc ihr: iluh‘ ric\\'sp.l~pr-1'_\. nri-hilla; m“."JUVSIYJPLY‘(hrs ‘ 1Hli?.l:ji;iyk"lirvl; 'lgll_‘v_)\\_cv_‘l"lgvl HPH‘ Iii-till" l5 i‘ ""l'1‘°1=\l-i°" l>°l“'°“l‘ ir-lny fr» Bu! an ll(‘l'ill‘.'ilf‘ lllciil‘. l "lfnbilmu whil Uwhirir! roman: uu .." in ar.i":- - -. . " ‘A . ' i118 fi ilfiflb mil lie “ll/SP l" = '-' and lClitllllfi fluid COllkfifiillll, 1.. .. ‘m, me ‘Hm; o; the \,¢;¢.,-;,_-;,_. Bus. the schools nrc the agency which gives these journalists their formal education, training nnd barkgrouad. In iurll the newspapers supply thc schools with ihe running rcpo-rt of thc times 10m! hcfnrc the textbooks rnn catch up with current events While no one would advocate the use nf ll8\‘v‘S}3.'ill"i‘S lo supplant the use of textbooks. schools could well IlllllZE news-par-ers as the handnaald to keep our public school system of education. Ono of the fine ways railjllslcd to the times is to oub- liclze through the daily press, the school programs, policies, proceii~ urcs. Thc schools necd the voice of ihe press and ihe advice and criti- iclsm of ihc editors, if they are to make their maximum contribution ,to ‘ihc communities which they ‘ serve. A few educators regard news- papers with something of disdain, saying that they are good for the present era. why should not our \'1fl-<»‘H'~~111= 0i’ today be using these vcry me neursr-apsr data ‘which lllSlirdliils of ill." fuiur will, any less reliable bccause rt current? Must tho files lie mnnt in libraries alirl turn yeiiov: w-iih use bcfcrc they are valuable or significant? is While we are utilizing newspapers as reference material and as col- laicral reading in the schools, we should impress upon students ihe, tremendous importance of the frcc-i dom of ihe press-one of our (curl basic freedoms guaranteed by the‘ United States Constitution. i Reltcrethig the words of Thomas‘ Jcfferson which so adequately ex- press the indispensable and indis- soluble correlation between the frce public schools and a free press: "The basis ‘of our government lit-lug the opinion of the people, the vcry 1|‘ . nrlzlns r1 hirhly? Is th s material ' ricr- . Act, line» and I‘l\:\fc.\=.iz\i:;il Lon ;J W Proctor. (licircl ildlflimrlrfl- ‘or, iitparimellt of \‘C1B'.'(ll15 affair: JOIITlCCCl. ‘ ALARM CLOCKS l-‘AIL QUliSNElf, B C - iCPw-Rtivcn .fr..~m regular lccfilng grounds be- ‘NI 4amtwe ACTS PHOMPTLY u‘ ,1’ ? F l' ‘k, miserable? Elihu‘: ealsbilrlrg euihlllls ‘rlrllieliwith NR. Trihlcta, an all-vegetable lnxnuvo. Moria in two ntrongths regular NR and Junior NR r, dose) r thou: needing eatrl mild laxative. Plain or chocolate coated. Morrow m" IEIIEE‘°»-on 10¢‘ l 25' cause of heavy s-nowfalls, large numbers o! moose and deer are at- tacking farm haysiacks for food. breaking through fence mils. mml some: tried setting alarm dock; m his slacks 11091118 lo frighten the beasts avwsy but they proved my. fectlve, D@W“" ANNUAL MEETING P. E. i. POTATO GROWERS’ ASSOCIATION Canadian Legion Hall 57 GRAFTON STREET -BELOW PRINCE EDWARD THEATRE Tuesday, March 25, 1Q47 zoo P.M. and mo m. ‘ The Annuol Mccfing oi the P. E. l. Potato Growers‘ Associa- tion tcr the trcnsocllcn at general business will be held in the Canadian Legion Hall. We invite anyone interested in the potato industry to attend. 7:30 P.M. EDUCATIONAL MEETING open to the public at which time various phases of the industry will be considered in- cluding marketing, grading, diseases, spraying and o discussion about making Prince Edward Island a disease free area for potatoes. ' it is in your interest to be present at boih meetings. Bv Order of Directors, P. E. I. POTATO GROWERS‘ ASS'N. ‘co @©©@@@ i;- 10s ,_