._.,.-__._ THE PIIIINTING NEW ND 1.- . THE .14 still! Lhdlf Fzti11nrs>_ _4____... - connaaronnancc srunv coullsas A bran n f th Depart- tiénnfzvzals Gupta-him a d put into operation in Jan __ 946. out! s rrespondence Study les- ‘scns are proving quite successful ‘and are considered by lihmily Al- lowance officials as Cilfllvlleni- 9° mttendance at school. for their bur- s. The whole set-up may be describ- ~A ~ed under the following seven ‘head- in : as XOIIOWIZ I - um Thev are mailed out w the ' . Pu ff ils nlay be s.“ ; in one the chief official Ll 4e f; slbllity, Apt appliesusually to per- fr t» .1: ‘i’ flTho l ‘ndence pupils who do the $3.... day by day. (2nd) When the -work is completed the answers are ‘ mailed back. (8rd) The “completed co lessons are forwarded t e in- structors who do the checking and the teaching. (4th) The instruct- on: send the checked lessons back "to the Correspondence Study Branch. (5th) The checked les$inig up" are returned to the pupil-L . . process. is repeated over and over- agalnmtill the {all course of 30 les- ‘ m“ can“, (leorresbondence pu divided roughly in four Groups (a) Pupils living in districts that have no teacher. a (-b) Young pupils that are unable ‘$56) older pupils who are needed for home work and who wish to cnnttinue their studies. ' < . r. Her ~. uiiy is to read and check the. pug s answers. to make corrections. offer suggestioibi orig ‘to assistwir: very way poss e. v eompe n Charlottetown teacher-spare acting attend school for various reas- lv as imtnlctors. , l. Bnfilaniaars. If the number of pupils a district. using corre- spondence lnstructiorcgis lame. a local supervision is necessary. His duty is to receive lawn-s and ‘ma- terial fro’? the braglch officiemto ill‘- root Imp as muo as a e an to mail the completed easona back to he uartexa. 5., llioatea. When a pupil suc- cessfully completes the full course of. 30 lessons for his grade he ll awarded a promotional certificate. e o g ea s dthr “l” will‘... Wéiliii"??? their writing is up to the required standard. ' 8. Caste. The cost of the Corre- spondence Study Lessons is 81.00. per month oer pupil. Lemons are ov ce. It! h le school district is or- aniazdwteci- COHVmO£Q€IOG Study "Imus es are o nay no more than th amount of supple- mentt while}: éeyh would ordinarily e r ac e . “i. oTaaohsra. Correspondence Stutdy lessons are available free of s in the Province. (b) All older teachers who have returned to teaching. ' (cl Grades IX and X only. to all teachers in ungl-aded schools. permit teachers W58 ter received from to Hodglns. B.A.. Secretary he Ontario Teachers’ Federa- n Lhave been meaning to writs you and thank vou for the co ies of “The Guardian of the Gu " with its educational page. It is certain- an excellent project. and one hie would appear to combine a first-rate service to your members with very good public y on educa- tion to the general public. You are to be ‘congratulated on being able to obt n the newspaper space and material with which to fill it every week. It must mean a great deal of additipmgl work for you and your comm es. With best wishes. I am. Yours sincerely. N. H. GRAMMAR ~ Do not use a verb. conjunction. Ipmpoeition, or noun in a double ca- fpae ty wtiliceg one of the uses is un a (verb): An was buit in one part o o era house the town. ‘and two churchm in another. R ht: An opera house was built part of the town and two ,Dhlll'0h€8 were built in another. Wrong (congunciionl; H: was as old. if not oder. than any other man in the community. Right: He was as old as any other man in the community. lf not old- e r. Wrong (preposition): fond and diligent in work. t: He was fond of work and diligent in it. He was WORDS OFTEN MISUSED Stationary and Stationery. sta- _ is an adjective melanin! ed: stationery a noun mean- wrlting material. inclpal and principle. Princi- as an adjective means chief or ; le "is a. norm-means truth. Principal as a noun means a sum oi apchool. able. likely. and apt. Likely merely predicts: liable conveys the additional idea of harm or respon- ‘sons, inthe sense of having natural capability, and sometimes to things in the sense cf fitting. appropriate. Already and all ready. Already means by this time or beforehand: all ready means wholly ready. "l have already invited him”. We are all ready to go. Hygienic and sanitary. Both words means pertaining to headth. Hygienic is used when the condition s a matter of personal habits or rules: sanitary is used when the condition is a matter of surround- gs THE lzulvlvilillic srac Note the movement of the poem. whoe poem suggests the gal- tPt“ °’ the stag, renewed move- ment. lass certain of success as the stag breaks away again. Try to "spot" these changes. You may have to read aloud several times to do so ' 1. wlrhi time of en " e garlty autumn: "l be w b‘ ‘ Iogdwpop-anewapp s Ran . 1am - pp and Be oztelig-Northgwe. Chic‘; houn . . lain: The space grew hot. for the scent lay wcll. and the runnable stag goes, right ahead. ST. LAWRENCE The 8t." Lawrence waterways de- rov for deep wa r the Atlantic Ocean the Great lakes. a miles, and the year was it? ter power on the m1] river Th i - um€ii.‘£i';i1°;d$€.i”§§tt%“““i.£s It. Lawrence and other connecting s. ‘lbifllh When the pods fend ’I‘hs.hounds began to travel fast for the scent was heavy and easy to follow and a runnable stag picks the easiest road. 4. What hsppened to the stag? He made for-the ocean and swam until exhausted. then drowned.- 6. What picture do we fonn of the stag’! The picture is somewhat indistinct. but we know it was a large stag. swift of foot and with five horns. 8. Does the writer in- us to pity the stag? No. ‘l’. D0 you consider the ending satis- factory? Yes. ‘The stag rather than be caught and killed by the huntem took his own life after making every effort he possibly could to preserve it. DEVELOPMENT 14 f t a d locks are 2'70 feet 1on8 andegd t2 s1 feet wide. The dist- ance between Mentreal and the h f the rapids in the St. Law- a 112 lnlilles. 3f “which l4‘! e reman- es n‘ can‘ iFrnriver stretches s . an 8t. Fran- . lland Oanal k 27.6 '5'.i‘“u‘°'l' 1”". ti?’ itmi “t till“ . ar . m es on - ‘l d! 76 miles of canal in of l miles from Mon- treal to Duluth. ‘Iio provide f‘! foot navigation throughout. a dam and ada afiggntrol dam are proposed for the cna and intdrna 8t. In 660D n v water-om is tion lopment i-nt {in 0 assoc rnatlonal section of broit vet? and l &,Ollit- and St. . Hi0 l tt*j:.iay;s.a.'n;'..'rr.gxz vtapiiu m’. rn ‘Ad. are. vnlwa or INTEREST r0 rescuers iuraovnmanr m EDUCATION sun am. O wood. and is used to produce a smokeless flame. Ethyl Alcohol is produced from fruits and grains. and has many valuable uses: 1. To produce a. very hot. smoke- less flame. 2. To dissolve germs and fats, in manufacturing. ESSAY WRITING Teaching essav writing should not be considered as a task in itself but should be planned to coordin- ate with the immediate activities o! school routine. It should hello. too. to construct the foundation for richer and fuller living. A background of comprehensive reading is necessaary for an appre- ciation of essay writing. A good way m interest students in this form of literature is to introduce them irst to writers such as Clarence y. Le . Ogden Nash. and other humorists. Prom the lighter types the class can be led to consid- ei‘ religion, politics. and social pro- ems First attempt at essay uniting ENGLISH English in the modern school. has come to mean much more than merely the study of words and their arrangement in sentences. Familiarity with current events. intelligent thinking. _critical judg- ment, logical reasoning and ar- rangement. and understanding of other people and Nations must all enter into the Ehlglish course to- day. Students must be encouraged read newspapers and magazines. to analyse speeches. editorials. de- bates. and broadcasts and to think critically. and always the develop- ment and significance of the indi- vidual. and the spirit of freedom. must be emphasized. If English is to be a living course. the curriculum must not be fo alized. ‘It must be dynamic. flex- ible. arid growing. as too much form and structure will smother the creative spark. The teacher C LOTTETWN GUARDIAN is being swallowed. and they vary in line accordi to the food hab- its of the lldh. Weulote that the fish in the aquarium constantly opens and ‘c s the mouth: this action draws ‘the water into the throat and for- | cu it out over the gills and through the gill openings: this. then. is the act of reailmlz A fish lives in where ii must breathe. move. and find its food. The water world is quite different from the air world and the fish have devel- oped forms, senses. and habits which fit them for life in the water. AUSTRALIA (Continued) Australia is the suunshlne. Every part, even the cooler areas in the south. enjoy 10H! hours of sunshine. Meterolo- B1681 records show that on most days of the year, even those offic- ially lecorded as rainy. the s n shines lcr some hours. No capital fill-i’ 2H5 less than an average of about six hours a day for the Whole vcar. Perth. the sunuiest Capital. has an average of nearly 918M hours? sun daily, and many PH r the continent get even . here are three main mount- B"! Panties in Australia on which 5110b’ lekulflrly falls ~ the Austral- should be brief, with emphasis up-I 18h Alps in New South Wales. the on choice of words. Do not forget Alps ill Victoria. and Mt. Welling- stgle. strive for quality. not uuau- tun in Tasmania. 1,1y_ my“ the unportanu 0g rg- Mt. Kosciusko. in the new South writing in this respect. Content. W819i portion pi the Australian freshness. and sincerity are most Alba. Oloaked with snow for about important. Students should there- Seven months each year. it rises fore be encouraged to write about f0 1.338 fact. sub ts with which they are Ia- _bl New Zvaland. Mi _. Cook lnr, tXCHChCS 11,344) feet, and ll’l the Give students at least two oriEfl-l! 11111165 the volcanic il-aak of three days to hand in a written Rlnialli. on Lambda. near Ball, 15 assignment. Eliminate formal out- 127121 feet high. The ilighcst peak linm in favour of a general work l“ Dutch New Guinea is Mt. Char- plan. Use good examples. such asfle? b01115. 16.730 feet. The average collections cf picturesque speechurfllnfllll in Sydney. the wettest cap- to improve nicetv of expression. and "B1 l8 46-5 inches. to teach students the value of us- I" Deflvetime the living standard ing figures of speech. one of the highmt the world. More than half the dwellings ill Australia are occupied by pwners 0r persons buying tilem bv lilstsl-i ments. Before the outbreak of war there “ere more than 580,000 ‘ tor cars in Australia. The averagci income in Australian in 104a was‘ DQUHGS. Education is 3h ease c! 6 rem omens sesame I WWW“ °i ' I 8. To preserve animal specimens museums. 4. To prepare certain medicines. 5- To use in a few conditions in sickness. l. To fill the thermometer for very cold climates. in must; always be on guard against a programme which does not leave for work which is truly creative) Moreover. he must be genuinely in- terested in what he is trying to puti across to his students. whether it“ be‘ he desire tc; wrigrl». creaélvlcéyhgr] a esson n svn ax. easur . o; 14 m. 1 _ , than information. must be the de- provided f; sired end of teaching at times. my and tech“ a] who ‘ilvluslc. storics and‘ poelms can bg _¢§._€_ s_‘__ 5 gflgd M) 5111B)! 01' DBBSUTQ. an | y the teacher must share in the- UUT OUR “AY emotional pleasure to be derived! from stories and poems. and be I discriminating in his choice of| what to read aloud. The apprecia- tion of prose and poetry cannot be taught a teacher who cannot read aloud beautifully and appeal- ingly. Ghiildren must have time in school not only to listen to the teacher read much prose and po- etry. but to read themselves. WELLTHAT Y MEANS l can‘? HAVE _ nil WILL HAVE ANYTHING’ JAPANESE BEETLE These beetles with their gorgeous armour of green and bronze attack gardens. orchards and fields. This etle begins its depredations in June or July. They eatl the leaves and fruit of many cultivated plants including raspberries. blackberries. apples. cherries. corn. red clover. roses. olms. birches and oaks. When they have eaten all they need. they lay tinv white eggs in the earth. _Whel1 the grubs hatch they eat mots. This does much damage to lawns during the late summer. They spend the winter under- gtround passing through the pupa s a e. elr native land is Japan. ere they are not a pest because they have natural parasites that prey upcun them. and because the Japanese practice such intensive cultivation. but in America they are a serious‘ pcst, costing the farmers and gardeners much mon-i ey by theft-destruction. A few of them were found in United States in 1916. They became such a pest that the Department cf Agricul- ture in the United States. after study of their life his- tory, began to look for some natur- al enemies to help extemlinate them. One of these enemies. which was found and introduced into these infested areas. is n two wing- ed fly and two others are wasps. These insects lav their eggs in or on the bodies of the beetles, and the larvae that hatch out of the figs eat the beetles and destroy em. Farmers and gardeners are us- ing preparticns of arsenate of lead which are spread on lawns during the egg laying season to kill the grubs as they hatch. Sprays usczl on the foliage do not seem to do much good. because the full-grown etles w‘l1 not eat unusual sub- stance. T is cf course will save the plants that are sprayed but, it does not destroy the beetles. making a w»... u a El‘ -;r ».¢____.___ ,__ flfills (‘Alliiflitrli CURRENT EVENTS On January Z3. Felix Gouin. So- cialist chairman cf the Constitu- ent, Assembly. W85 elected interim President of France to succeed Gen. Charles de Gaulle. Vice-Presidents are Maurice Thorez and Francisque Gay. Minister of Foreign Affairs is Georges Bidault. Great Britain's Ambassador to the United States is Sir A. C. Kerr. ' "baseador to Turkey is Sir David Kelly. Ambassador to Moscow is sir Maurice D. Peterson. .Chiet of the Imperial General Staff in Britain is Held Marshal Montgomery. The, Canadian Representative on U. N.‘ 03s Social Economic Council Paul Martin. ‘The Consul-General of Italy in Canada ls Count Carlo Fecia Di Cossaio. Prime Minister of Yugoslavia is Marshal Tito to United an... Ambassador “SHALL” AND “WILL” To express future time. use shall with I and we and use will with you. he, they. In asking quastions. use shall with I and we and use will with you. he, they. Promise or Intermination use I and we and use shall with you, he. they. In the following sentences fill in the blanks with shall or will. l. Where---we cat? 2. I--be pleased to come. 3. You enjoy “iTS" AND “IT'S” “first. AND "IT-s. its written without an apostrophe shows possession. I written with an apostrophe Moscow is Lt-Gen. Waiter B. Smith. Prime Minister of Hungary is‘ Frrclle Nagy‘. President of Hungary is Zoltani Tlldy. ' The chief importance of the Kur- iles is their strategic location. The Governor of Bengal is R. G. Casey. _ The first General Assembly of U. N. O. was held in Lo The President of mlrico Gaspar Dutra. The President of U. N. O. is Dr. Paul Henri Spank '~ Harry Trueman was named "The Man of ‘The Year". The United States special envoy to China is George C. Marshall. The Premier of Greece is Them.’ istokles Sophoulls. , Extraordinary o STOP rue can. _ r oor HIM! Canada's Envoy and Minister Plenipotentiary Denmark is John D. Kearney. The regional capital of Manchur. la is Changchun. Aw - COME ON DOWN TO this book. 4.---I tell you a story? DNTVTTWHAT .5. I hope we mee again. 8. They arrive tomo cw morn- ing. 7. I learn to swim. B. You have a pair of them for vour birthday. 9. I visit vou next summer. l0. You———enjoy that play. I open the windows? ll. You——do as I say. 12. I-—- help you all I can. l3. They arrive next week. l4. We——-—-be glad to see them. means it is. Tile apostrophe shows that the letter i has been omitted. Its coats means that the coat belongs to it. it's standing means it is standing. EXERCISE IN GRAMMAR In the following sentences fill in the blanks with conjunctions taken from the list given below. l. He is a coward——-lu- does not tell the truth. 2. i was late this morning the train was delayed. s. I boarded the train. it began to move. I tried hard.-'----I was not successful. 5. He seems gruff. e very gentle at times. ti. I am sorry rmmgil)... gm“ ow 20mm, I'M so lstao ‘(DU CAME-~CAP FEELS up to my friend. l2. ft is ta er the tallest tree you ever saw. (As or. but. nor. while, because. therefore. yet. so, although, that, until, if. since and than COMPOSITION 1. Good ltin artly d: nd or’: the ugtdléggan in‘: the prlreteilpl: o good . l. A com ition is well organ- ised when ts acts and ideas ale atd the beginning. ly plao ligand the en . * orfm : I had been t year-and I felt I needed a vacation and ,1 too a trip tofrorontc." It s a ,use g doyou tell when m] a the ma haineithsr lfllfl l0! lfld ll of ' “and"..t at to use a de- tence FISHES (Continued) Lin: above the entrance to the sul- bear . We must soft out our M. Better com to Bendent clause? Use it when it. Mange on e veryarere ammo-r to used ct Just memoriaed. Remember Grammar ends with the sen- --sggrswiarttar 1v YE ARé roo 500M l5 THE TIME YO addition there are hundreds of private schools-of high standard Scholarships are obtainable to Uni- iversities and there is now a system of hsubsidies fol-t University and Ell ‘ Australia ls cne of the leading agricultural countries of the world. The range of the Australian past- oral and agricultural industry is immense. Wool production easilly surpasses that of any other country. Cattle provide thr- beef and dairv products and leather which are all outstanding Droducis of Australia. Other livestock raised 1n vast num- bers include pills. horses and poul- try. One of the leading wheat pro- ducers of the world. Australia is 591151118 this product to India and other countries as urll as using it to. produce power alcohol. Fruit of all varieties is grown in EVERY Stale, and the production of vegetables is being accelerated. .. ans-ans?‘ This Department l, m". ducted by the Prince Edward Island Teachers‘ Federation Contributions are welcomed and should be sddrPsscd to Mlllnr MacFadyen, 8 l-Z Fei ling $1.. Charlottetown. f-VJ‘ ;. .--i.-a.-.-zl.- r F i i’ orriivua, Mar sirlcilalis gavel" of c). slopes, [T10- i ,‘ Pl lied the board had ed to remove the l Til, nut cuninu-I imper now 1369583131 to retain them] AT rum! WATCH mm 512p DOWN ‘rt-us ALLEY.’ "nus H0255 / IS oulz FORTUNE-- l'i_l_ ADMIT l. HAD TO jAv some 990T 0M 1w "reaps. BUT HELL MAKE us wu HAVEN'T Looker)‘ J D WI LUA>~5 u» .1...“ ._.. u"... ' industries, M..;§;ur sadly crippled wearing flannel petticoats, shows has recovered much of its with a display of ullts and traditio q nal national Wool Secretariat here. Nearly all had an air of individ- uality and freshness of color, prob- ably beca-use the industry ls still confined to small mills and lact- exillblts were handwoven and most, of the wool cries. Many o: the was from local sheep. The rugs and blankets were in a with one spectacular one in peacock blue with an orange and black design. The honeycomb weave quilts were white or blue while some of the Welsh traditional or checks used for the Welsh national cust- variety of mixed rich colors generally pink and and whiti- fianneis were in the black and red stripes ulnes. naiul threads giving flocked shades. Lady lvlegan Llcwl George, Others were plain with or brightly-colored checked blankets. honeycomb weave > flanneio which were on show at the Inter- ynrn spun with til:- colored in, Needed . By Many Millions LONDON. March 26 — (OP) ~ The swollen industry of Wales, when women ceased norursnv cplisaurs SGHOOI 1 School it I A Boardin for tor and Junior Schools - Grade V - XII inclusive. giving preparation for ent- rance to University. to the Royal Canadian Naval Col- lege, and the Royal Military College. Parents are invited to con- sider the value of the School's training. where em- phasis ls nlaoeil equally on Physical. Personal and Aca- demic development. Enrolment for entry In September 1946 is approach- ing completion. Early en- quiry is therrfore advisable. C. H. BONNYCASTLE. ILA i ‘Headmaster. 8 opening the exilihit-lorl. gave some| background on its decline for the future. She said til;- dustry existed in centuries all parts of Wales also had a surplus to export. "But when," clv Megan "the pink f way to drill a1 a1 industry began to dccli Wales did not. l the new lfl€Cl1Tilll reason ‘ h CLIDUZII li ilrces ic do so, nd cept. for small "came-red units. industry tiled out." FOR A LOAN OESPN, 5 - r. MEED cr-leltilcm. UPPLIES FOR NN ATOMlc lapse/anon - HAQ_21)MPP\- ; NO... THERE MUST E NOSUSPICION. A I‘LL POUR LIQUOR m m5 MOUTH ' TD MAKE iT APPEAR NE HAD cam DRINKING AND N A ‘ new. I P. WADE. l susrcior A TlP "u- BE GIVEN 3O DAYS on t iOO FINE {s55 MBUNE UP ON ‘THAT -- WITH TiPPiE AFTER MM-— SAW YOUR UNCLE iN Hi5 LlON-TAMIN’ PCT AT TH’ CLQCUS", PRETTY GOOD-- and hopes .‘ Welsh woollen in- ihc llih and 12th as a domestic craft and had _ said.» _ pet! oat gave, " Hi8‘, ex- the Today, Wales can produce little‘ this oldest of Weish| more than she req but. the quality Produced is high great demand fol Welsh woollen lndus obtain financial to meet modern Liv help to demands. .ll Mel. ett m"- * Rsstlgcu. 19 ceived a iw L :21 ‘ cLls 9d a a g cheoue for a ax .2!" husband, Fred MaPal: housie, without his kn LAST week THAT Reuc o: om sroxie lgou was streams‘- You STOPPED m THE 805R WAR! -- BUT HEIZQS YOUR. FNS _._. -- Aldo WHAT CHEMICALS AQEVOU usme eesroes mar BLENDED URANIUM- eemsp AT "n-le - owns CLUB é‘ NOTHING WRONG wm-l ms , TEETH, was. STUBBS ',’- ACE seems A LITTLE sxvoi. UH-~SLIGHT TEMPERATURE"! I NEED NEW ecasses“ y _Websl __ TAKETHE- SENTENCE AND wane ABOUT RAIL QNDITIGNS r l’ boys from ages 9 - l8 (Sen- ’ at: éfzs-soii-“a-Zi DALHO5§E~lv—fBT_r/' n 55> cPI .. a ~ cflulrt icrlav on a hrzerv charge 5nd r9. Yffflrlsusnendsd ssnt- s = »