4-'.\"v'-'- ~:."'.~"w-<’.I->,a\.,\~_\I,.-\_~ ' . (that eight o'clock: almost ready: iu-L. . I158 Ill!!! PRESENTING. NEWS i “.4 SATURDAY mammm‘ AND VIEWS mraovaman-r m EDUCATION ‘SCHOOL srranpsncn of ,0- ‘Ilhis is chisfly dus to two reasons: 1. The enforcement oi sdiool at- tendance foiulations acco Section ll! of the Public Bo l Act. 2. The payment of Family Al- lowance which is conditional on attendance at school. Below am two quotations from m; Public Sch ‘ Act. Section 118. (a) Every person having under his control a child ‘between the ages of seven and fifteen inclus- ' ive shall send such child to some public school in the district in which he resides. every month. for at least seventy-five per cent of the days on wihich such public school is in operation. (b) The following are listed as ‘meptsble lflsons for absence: l. If the parent is imabls because 3r poverty to send the child to school or to furnish him with the means of education. ' 2. If the child has acquired the branches of learning @8118“ in the school. 3. Ii the child has been other- ished with the means of education. - i. If the bodily or mental condi- tion of the child has been such as to prevent his attendance at h l. w 0g?!) to the end of January 1946. ramily Allowance Dormant: been s ended in approximately one hun ed cases on account of ac school attendance. The Pro inclal school attendance officer depends solely on teachers‘ to monthly WDOrts for information concerning unsatisfactory attend- 81100- 131111118 the past scihool tom: teachers have given splendid co- operation by supplyins“ the neces- e" '“‘é:‘.l“‘t'.‘°“‘ot‘3§. s." apprecra a n Education. Teachers are asked to take par- ticular n to of the following sug- gestions re the filling in tion (Graded Schools Section 25)‘ on back of the monthly re- por : l. Include all pupils of school age. _ 2. Check 889 cflrehllly- 3. When a pupil attains the iull age of fifteen years he is above the compulsory school age. 4. When a pupil attains the age oi seven years he is within the compulsory school age. 5. Ascertaitn as far as possible if t rs is anv valid reason for ab- s ce and state same in he lust column. 6. Arrange the list in alphabeti- cal order. 'l. Forward monthly report to the Department o! Education by the fourth oi the next month. Late returns cause delay in mill!!! 011i? attendance letters. POINTS TO\BE REMEMBERED IN SPEAKING AND WRITING Pupils who postpone until the last minute the selection of their colnpositvl subject will never write interestingly upon it. When you are thinking of a sto to tell, be sure to select a subjec with a point. Be sure to put enough into your beginning sentence to make a ' good start toward the point of your o story. If y will revise your paragraph three times. you will have a paragraph three timm as good as the first one. Do not use the first word that comes to your mind. Search for the best. better to write one composition four times than four competitions once. ‘Iibe great thing is to believe in the importance of words and to use none without the care of the good workman. It is the last suit: ence that is ‘ 16mm“ w- Real. very. Say: I am ‘very glad. Use real to describe a thll1g—a real diamond: a real pleasure. Use very before a word describes-vow tall. very angry. Borrow. lend. Say: I can bor- row a pencil from John. He will lend it to‘ me. We must remain- ber that we borrow from and lend Most. almost. say: unkind; most unexpected. Almost means nearly; most means very. curious._ Use It is really want to learn or not. Make the last sentence in your next story worth remembering. Watch your speech all day long. You will never learn to speak well if you are careful of your speech only when you are in school. Nega- tives doublealways cause trouble! No workman can do good work in a hurry; nor can any boy 0!‘ Rlfl write anything truly excellent in the first attempt You are in school five hours a day. You are out cf school nineteen. It is the way you talk when you are out of school that shows whether “yo: often a good plan to leave the first draft of your paragraph in vour desk for a day- and than 8° back u; it. You will be surprised at the number of things you will find in it to change and to im- U709. woaps orran MISUSED Sag]: A strange sight; a curious g. Let. leave. Let means to allow: leave means to go away from. Let me see your pen. Leave your book on the desk. Character. reputation. Character is what you really are‘: reputation is what people think of you. Believe. expect. gums. 'I‘o be- lieve means to regard as true; to expect means to look forward to some coming event; to guess means to form an opinion about something you know little about. Fix. mend. To fix is to fasten: to mend is to repair. Want. wish. Want means to be in need of: wish means to desire. o 5' A LANGUAGE DRILL No. not, never. noth . and none all belong to the “no " fam- ily. They are called "negatives." They never travel in pairs. Do not say: No one never goes. They never told me nothing. The doctor can't do nothing for him. i didn't say nothing. Aren't you never c ~ 7 She can't go nowhere today.- He didn't look no better. lie wouldn't try no more. He hasn't no time. ‘ There won't be no game tonight. He wontdo nothing I tell him. He didn't get none. Haven't you no pencil. Bay: No one ever goes. They never told me anything. “The doctor can't do Hoyt-hing f0! m. I didn't say anythin . Aren't you ever coming She can't go anywhere today. He didn't look any batter. He wouldn't try any more. lie hasn't any time. ‘rhere won't be any game tonight. He won't do any tell him He didn't get any. Haven't you any pencil. When you begin a sentence with a word ending in .1118. as hearing, feeling. seeing, you must be sure to follow this word with the name of the person that is doing the hearing. seeing, etc. For exam la: Seeing a crowd ahead. m her ed to the other side. In this sentence mower is the one who is doing the seeing. and mother fol- lows seeing a crowd ahead. libel- ing ill. the doctor was called. In this ease the word doctor is not the name of the person who is feeling ill We may correct this sentence by saylli8. Feeling ill. father called the doctor. Correct the following sentences. l. l-lurrying to school, the book was lost. . 2. ‘frying to reacih the picture. the chair overturned. B. Looking at the sun. there was a circle around it. 4. Thinking it was Tom. there was a shout. 5. Driving the car rapidly, the dog was run over. t. Being- a careful boy. the work was neatly done. 'l. Hearing the bell. there was a rush for the door. 8. Walking down the street, my nurse was lost. BRIEF REVIEW (1945) .J‘l'°;‘l'. 9mm...’ "you: y a r n nations. July l4, egazanh home is- lands were bomber ed for the first time bv the U. B. Navy. experimental July ld-‘llhb nut a tom ' (Continued) signed aboard the U. S. S. lidissouri. "V-J" Day was officially proclaim- Oct. b- e Higsshl-Kuné toism was abolished in Japan. Dec. Th-itatifloation d! the Brot- ton Woods plan by re ndentatives d B nations est! d the m- ti nsl story ofSec-bc altars W This blow south and absorbing moist- ure. Locate the Grant American D000";- the Patagonian pesert in 21th America. and the Gobi Des- in Asia. The Great Ame Desert lies between the Mts. and the Sierra Nevada and 00w uses. in is desert be- 09-"59 We high rnts. condense the moisture in the air whidh falb on ‘Inc teacher should be a con. ssrvative man but the teacher tvho h" m‘ bfflilod by the advance in educational thought should not ranked among the thoughtful conservative. Do we not agree that one of the most essential qualifications 0f I1 good teacher is responsive- ness to suggestions? The edugg. tional iournais are rioh in help- ful suggestions; the great prin- (115198 0! Psychology have presented in simple language by {enters and speakers upon edum. ional subjects: works upon peda- gogy may be had almost for the askinn: but these are all in vain unless we respond to their sug- gestlons. OI‘ INTEREST T0 TEACHERS AND ALL OTHERS’ SEEKING’ the windward side of the moun- tains. Tbs Patagonian Desert is ralnless because westerly winch the high Andes Mountains efirylng their moisture desert area. The Gobi in eastern Gains. is shut ' by high mountain wal which con- dense the moisture in the fore it can cross the mountains. THE CONSERVATIVE TEACHER tions carom. hon consider!»- tiogl and when possible. a fair this‘ day loitering. ‘twill be the same tomorrow and the next more dilatory. . For indecision brings its own de- lays. and days are lost lament- ing o'er lost days. Are you in earnest Boise this verv minute . What you can do. or keam you can. begin Baldness has genius. power, and magic in it, Only engage and then the mind Rrows heated A teacher's value in a. system of schools will depend in a large de- Socialized recitations are a. new and reyolut/lonary development in the teaching o! English. one which can make English periods dynamic and fruit-fill- Thvy are conducted us: A Shakespearean play. for ex- ample. is read in class. and all the nacessa _v parts are explained. Then the clam appoints an executive which. in consultation with the teacher divides the class into groups and assigns topics to eaoih gate a particular aspect of the play. One takes characters. an- other takea setting. another takes (D) Posture: Rigid uniformity undesirable. The main point importance. in re- lation io sit ng, is that the pupil should sit comfortably. Avoid con- stant folding of anns. It narrows “Hands on heads" the chest. is of no value as an exercise and almost certainly hurtful. “Sit and stand tall". defects-For dropping Curing head: Stand with the back straight against a wall. Pull in chin and try to flatten neck against the w 8 . For round shoulders: Swing arms sideways to shoulder level. Try to curve arm upwards and backwards at the elbow. Lower them. Keep the position. Repeat. yo: sunken chest: Fill lungs as iull of air as possible. Exhale. Repeat often. ' 1 Hollow chest or protruding ab- domen: Stand straight against a wall. Blip arm behind waist. Press SILENT READING Directions: Read silently for l5 minutes: “Do seek their meat from God." Put books away and distribute question sheet. Allow l5 minutes for answer. 1. Do Seek Their Meat From God was written by (a) Tennyson, (b) Milwn. (c) Emerson. (d) R0- _berts. 2. The cabin was (a) in a large clearing. (b) of the woods, (c) three miles from the nearest neighbour, (d) near the frame house. 3. The owner of the cabin had (a) gone to the tavern. (b) lost his way m the woods. (c) left the country for some more indolent slime. (d) gone to buy some sup- plies in the town. 4. The owner of the frame house (a) was plodding home from town, (b) was hunting for his five-year- old son. (c) was searching for the drunken squatter, (d) was follow- ing the fresh frail of the panther. 5. The son of the prosperous own- er (a) had goneto meet his fath- er. (b) was ratuming from the cabin. (c) was alone in the cabin o: the squatter. (d) was locked out of the squatter-b cabin. d. The lonely cabin stood (a) three near the highway. (b) miles from the highway. (c) a quarter of a mile ronr the high- way, (d) down at the “Oomers. 'l. The twp pkrlthers (a) were cruel beasts. (b) were angry at the child. (c) were afraid the ohiid. (d) were keen with hunger. 8. The two panthers (a) were following the trail of the settler. (b) were following the trail of the boy. (c) were following the trail of the bear. (d) were their meat from . er reached the lone; simple w of from bu is by is done by bsndinlv anch over and covering group. Each group is to investi-Y PROPAGATION 0F PLANTS _ (Nature Activities) Begin. and th-en the work will be completed." SOCIALIZED RECITATIONS J m: cuaaLor1'ero\§_/_'§.___guisamss .1115 EDUCA TIONAL rzomzozv . the pm are prevented by. sirbe-g hi: to Europe. he was authorised to preach a crusade against the Saracens. in order to regain P31. Bifl-ldiy should be mods of the use o plants. some min-gm“ topics for investigation us; m,‘ value of plants to birds; w“ o! Rreatest value u. m, Wllld éfllits of the 1e pan , in building "1“““‘ 5908i exam ies. Such should be stud ed from the P011111 01' food storage. -1. Tubers: root tubers, begonig and dahlla; stern tubers, g. Bulbs: onions. lilies. tu ps. 3. orms: Bladioli. 4. Rhimnes: iris; - F195!!!’ taproot: radish, turnip, if”- 5- Fleshv stems: asparagus. - Fleshv leaf‘ stems: celery, m“- bflfll- 8. fleshy leaves: lettuce. cabbage. 9. Seeds rich in oil. THE oasssnorpnn 1. Explain what the author means by‘ the statement in the first line. There is always mugig 11: t3: world. 2. What other line e Poem repeats the same idea? Line 9. 3. Why Lg the m. Petition of that particular place? It introduces the second proof which the author gives o; his statement. 4. what proofs does the author give of the statement in the first line? First throughout the summer days the grasshopper provides music when other song. sters are silent. Second in win. i?" "m9. when other musical sounds have ceased, the cricket's song is heard. s. Explain: m. takes the lead (lines 3 to 6). He is altins for tbs Christian world. 8a ' succeeded in raising an army of u, PLANT LIFE the N .- breathe out or otherwise givg Q11 ‘whom 100-000 ‘meek Hf led them as . ar as an , were finally dcfeatgde. but m‘: flax. sunflower. l0. Seeds 1- starch: Oorn. wheat, oats. Seeds rich in nitrogen: ‘is used by all plants and . They need it in thou bodiu for oxidation of food ma. terial to secure energy. as g N. suit of oxidation they give carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is used by green plants in phgtg- synthesis. In this prone“ m; plants produce far more oxygen than they need. Animals ‘produce no oxygen. They do. however. quantities of carbon dioxide. 'l'.hus the Kfeen plants by the process of photosynthesis. supply’ oxygen which animals must have. The ani- mals supply carbon dioxide whmh (Literature) ' green plants must have f ' . ing on photosynthesi. or cam AND THE CRICKET songsters wihtch seem to enjoy the sunrmer heat. 6. When the frost (lines iii-Iii). When everything is, still. on account of the cold, whim hushes the birds and other surn- mer somwters and keeps people within doors. The cricket lives in warm crac or crevices-often close by _or in the hearth their song is sweet and high-pitched. Line 12 growing louder and more 811191 "Slflotlc in the heat of the fire. Line l3. So nearly asleep as to be forgetful of one's surround- ings 'l. Accolmt for the author's impression that the cricket's song is that of the grasshopper. He is sitting before the fire dreaming in its heat, and for a. moment forgets that he is not the summer scarecrow-snowfall"! nnitzmuansewhetlnrmklrll When your life lbw. you aarlil power stops - "and, if you hunt pl!‘ vided a protective fund during yQI working life, your dependents III-t sled earning for themselves. A bard way for than to “pay for” b- snrsnec you failed to get. LET'S TALK THIS 0V1 'M. C. STEWART, Reprelentltlvc, 111-115 Grafton fit, (Ziarlotietown, PJJ. Imllhibians. and reptiles are wann- blooded animals. as are birds. more or less hairy. in contrast to the scale-covered fish and feathered birds. The most mammals are whereas the young of birds, fish. wihose song that- of orlcketflmead". What resembles. Point out an example a poem written in this foam? of imperfect rhyme. “Dr-rad" andnet. MAMEMALS Malmnals in contrast to fishes, depended fonn: he 4 food, clothing. transportation, and num- erous other purposes. One of’ the most unusual ani- mals is the platyrpus. ruped that lays eggs, and h bed feet and s. bill like a duck‘; It is found in Australia. 119111015 Illll U Bond‘ Oil The skin of most mammals is the young of born alive. atnrhibians, and some species of reptiles hatch from eggs. After birtlh youml mammals breathe by lungs rather than by gills as do fish: for a time they are nourish- ed with milk produced by mother. mals in the mammal group are oppossum. annadillo. whale. deer, buffalo, ‘chuck. mole, bat. bear. horse. cat. ' ..'\-"-'b' This Department "n. ducted by the Prince dward Island Teachers’ Federation. Contributions are welcomed and should be addressed to Millar Macl-‘adyf-‘n. 8 1-2 Fei- llu: St- Charlottetown. the Some of the typical ani- rahbit. mouse. wood- then a class meeting. At this. the president takes charge and intro- duces the leader of each group. He presents the group report. There follows a discusion during which any criticisms or additional in- formation is offered by anyone. While the'1‘eports are being gi en. the class takes notes. The tegtcher follows up with a written te . ‘CONSIDERATION OF HEALTH (Continued) hard. II. Pupils appreciate the rela- tion of habits they practise to the pre ‘on of disease. “Knowledge is Safety." They learn how disease is spread. Value of Public Service to Health. III. This is the foundation o! all health touching. Through plav and healthful practices we develop ln the child health. The child learns desirable health habits by bdnfl taught a unit of work of its activ- ities. ‘ Unit I. Food. Types of food that are called builders. regulat- ors. fuels. Eat the right kind of food in the right proportion. Care of food. Habits of eating. Unit. II. Clothes. Kinds. uses, care. Importance of clean loose clothing. Comfortable low-heeled shoes. Plan hike or excursiogi’. IN ’EM v M WITH STRIPES A'GINGH'AM BAGEBALL u SLHT-“EH. KIDSL}. 3E sZlF>§%"’A|fi_“-E'l.? WHERE A CURVE ‘bu THREW... DRESSED ‘ IN GIN CaHAM TOO‘! Read story of Chinese binding feet. TEST-GRADE VI save the boy. (d) lust after the panthers entered the clearing. l0. The settler was armed with a (a) rifle. (b) double-barrelled pistol. (c) a dcuble-barrelled fowl- ing piece,‘ (d) a musket. i1. The ttler reached the cab- in (a) Jus at sunset, (b) in the full glare of the moon. (c) short- ly before day-break, (d) at dusk. . When the settler heard the on if. (b) (c) he recognized the voice. (d) ran immediately to the cabin. ' l8. 'Ilhs female panther (a) gprann updn the settler. (b) escap- ed into the alder thicket. (c) de- fended her mate. (d) was shot in e loins. 14. The settler was able to fire (a) once, (b) twice, (c) three time. The settlers little boy was 15. (a) in 'a dark comer of the cabin. (b) on the threshold. (e) holding the door shut. (d) watching through the window. a l6. ‘Ilhe panthers‘ den was dis- covered (a) a few days afterwards. (b) a week later. (c) not many weeks afterwards, (d) a few months later. _ 1'1. The anthers‘ den (a) was in an alder t icket. (b) near the cab- in. (c) was in depths of the forest. (d) in a ravine. 18. Tbs panther cubs (a) were idlied by a bear. (b) perished from starvation. (c) were killed by the settler. (d) preyed on the settler's sheep. 1o. The settlers little boy (a) father as cutoff mu’ ' ' Tbswoter g fnlntbolilomiwnrdsitaiaoincreasesin - twat-u: "iiiiyau-Y-“lu '°°‘ “.i.°"”‘ k" scheme “dfi Jfflltllll ml M"- out its l ma a formation is . _ .lomeafiiisis . wekarmstnkss the » m!‘ mntheptinvlmmtbefiaoscf acsvarnandmmse- u“... ...,. m... ........ rrmr- ewes-ca ma" t... we .. .- u a» =--' a S2."fi:' .. tampon nadw .:-::':....:~.o _iiT'"""'“° fig Asitgrwsauconaidlrlbleatlfsel. " NATURE SCIAPBOOKS‘ ~ s TI PPY sup "car" sroaas TiPPiEI TIPPIII . _ , . V b.1- . v plot. and so on. Each member of ‘he most fun-loving of all the fields listening to the grasshopper. dog. and man. Mun has always ' a gong gosh?! emu“ .1‘?! OUT OUR WAY - esearc rou ' topic. - . - - . . gel, egogglzttgow lhupaezlhdglven g _V By J. R. Williams OURvBOARDING HOUSE With Major Hoopla 0|‘ Bil 9X1 r DEX‘ I8- »... . m... ma»... i. at... W“Y<€°“-EE snreestsa~qze=v ‘ vssmuc no HOOPLIQS ‘ r“- BIJTARE YOU SURE YOU DON'T WANT TO e0 some PLACE mo CHEW me BARK OFF A we? -~ ‘(n-us l6 MEEELY crry HEADQUARTERS (=02 "ms corp/me 5QUIRREI. Fatima.’ ' LOOK GPARROw-FAC 1' “6PO‘§?T‘"! ANDI. waeshofir UPPER" PLRTES-u-‘DO 1 (IOME IN WAudruc o2 ' Cl-RWING ’ .- o SURE... IT WAS A AUTOMABEEL BACK- FiRE WAY OVER ON , THE SHORE By George McMan us "n-ue 1s A MOVIE ser- Er OUT 0F TH' WAY.’ we've GOTTA TAKE - g some SHOT5 Nowl! m,» " for" c-y- nu. In“, frsrum would m. "MI "ti" '"<“'=“- i. ‘TII- M’ ' §I'. wptamusrstafll. - COMING