MR. AND MRS J. J. BLACQUIEHIE Celebrate Double An niversolry At Party Mr and Mrs. J. J. Blacqulerai North Rustico, celebrated thelrl Goldell Wedding anniversary on January 23. Also celebrating their 32nd wedding anniversary at that MB. AND MRS. JAMES C. BLACQUIEKI time were their son and daughter- in-law. Mr. and Mrs. James C. Blacqulere. The two couples are WE AND OUR RUHAMAHSCHEINFELDFRANK NEIGHBORS many minutes every any when some groups must be left on their own. Unplanned "busy-work" or during mesa comparatively unsup-'week or last, assume that there so much paper work that no teach- ervised Periods? And, Perhaps the is a fairly competent teacher in er can check carefully, must waste P"Pu5 99"” d” "'9" h”mew0"k clilfle 01 the Cl!!! 01' classes- precious hours a week. Would it partly or wholly dunnx these per- Where this is not the case. qual- be possible to base tests exactly 1095- med ll'llUVldl-lall ill the commun- Thurs., March 15, 1956 The Guardian, Page 3 BUSY WORK 1 Shades of the Old Dominie whose word was law, will nothing in Ed- ucation go unchallenged, not even such time-honored class-room prac- tices as Homework---or Busy- Work! Busy-Work! Some of those class- room dictators of long ago had a grhn sense of humor--the dunce- csp. the punishment of sitting on the edge of nothing in front of the class-o-and coining the double word Busy-Work. Can anyone work with- out being busy? Can anyone be busy without working? Yes, said this school-master, Pupils can! And as a one-time teacher-and an ex-pupil, I am here to confirm this. Tasks assigned to pupils while the teacher's attention is else- where--Busy Work. in short, can result in busy-ness without work, and work without busyness! Dur- ing my early teaching career when a sudden demand came from the office for age reports. or L0. re- ports. or attendance reports, I hast- ily assigned Busy Work: "Write shown above cutting their annlver-, lsiary cakes at a party held in their onor. Isolated Along Coastline - Smallwood Would Scrap 1,000 Nfld Communities By GERALD FREEMAN Canadian Press Staff Writer ST. JOHNS. Nfldp (CP)-Pre- micr Smallwood suggested Tues- day that 1.000 of the 1,300 Com- jnunities scattered along New- foundiand's 6.000-mils coastline be scrapped. Opening a conference on south- ern Newfoundland affairs, he told a crowd of 200, including delegates from all walks of life and govern- rncnt representatives, that p1'llVlliCe'S 400,000 people are "ter- ribly. terribly scattered." He said people began leaving Jar-ge communities and founding .ncw settlements 200 years ago. and continued the trend for 150 years. "in those days our Newfound- land pcople dldnit fly very high in ihcir ideas and ambitions. They collld settle down in a shack in a lace with no trees and poor drink- mg water and by hard work make a living catching codfish. ' "Today they're not willing to do it” He said if the population was rt-settled in 300 large communities "thcy could have conveniences- elct-tric lights, paved streets, more schools, doctors, hospitals, nurses. liner churches and church halls. They could have the many advan- izlgcs they should have." "IS "DEADENING” THING The premier's indictment of is olaiinn rattled the iimbered arches -of lthe Anglican cathedral parish i hal . to I "Isolation is a deadening thing. a paralyzing thing, a cruel thing," he shouted. "Man is a social crea- ture. He must mix with his fellow men or he is not fully alive. Men are never at their best when they live in isolation. We ache for the companionship, the society, the friendship of other men." Mr. Smallwood said the Labra- dor conference held in February, pattern for the present conference. was "an eye opener," in new tech nique of government made neces- sary by Newfoundland's scattered population. "If you can't carry the govern- ment out to the people the next best thing is to bring the people to the government." He said the south coast had tim- ber resources at Fortune bay. fluorspar mining on the Burin pen- insula. and s 500.000 hydro-electric pgggntial revealed recently by a .000 survey. Except for that. he said. "it's true there's nothing but fish. If men can't make a living from fish they pan't make a living." He said the crying need of the fishery is "energetic, ambitious fish merchants." The best solution was co-operative societies to mar- ket fish. but unless membe were well trained a co-op became "a miserable. wretched thing." LENDS 10 MILLION He said the government had made loans of 810,000,000 to fish merchants, the second best bet, but there weren't nearly enough. At present, energies of former great fish merchants were ab- sorbed selling "canned goods. waf- fle irons and television sets." Fish la . tcnded. Widely known and respect- was "just a sideline" to them. Now, he said, "the smell of cod is sickening and disgusting" to cultivated people in St. John's. The conference has drawn fish- ermen, doctors, merchants, skip- permen, clergymen, nurses, may- ors, businessmen and welfare of- ficers from communities along the south coast, including Ramea is- land. Channel, Lawn, Fortune. Harbor Breton and Woody Island. John R. Baldwin. federal deputy minister of transport. headed a 16- man delegation of top t. 3 officials from Ottawa who arrived in St. John's Monday to attend. Top executives represented the Bowaters and Anglo-Newfoundland Development Compan y paper mills, the Dominion-Wabans iron mine on Bell island. the Unem- ployment Insurance Commission, the Newfoundland region of Cans- dlan National Railways and Cana- dian National Telegraphs. and the post office. "Seldom before in Newfound- land have so many distinguished people been called together," Mr. Smallwood said. "I wonder if people appreciate the historic na- ure of this conference.” it went into closed session after his address and will continue until Friday. : See Little Chance Of t)'l"l'AWA (CF) - Only a small measure of tax relief is expected in Finance Minister Harris” 1956-57 budget next Tuesday. A W('ll-lnlarnlefl sources here say -the budget likely will be designed lln prcvcnt C "” spending l00 nulcll at a time of inflationary pressures. This would be in line with re- . cent pleas by Mr. Harris and Trade Jliinister Howe for Canadians to 'use restraint in l956 to reduce pressures on demands for goods ,'which could in turn increase prices. Financial authorities here say a budgetary deficit tends to be in- -flaiionnry while a surplus is de- llaiionary. They believe Mr. Harris 'will think more in terms of sur- plus than deficit. SEE N0 TAX CUTS Although the P ” .v 'lr showing signs of continuing a spectacular advance. officials here tsay there is little chance of any j substantial tax cuts. They believe .lilr. llnrris will have to maintain -current. tax rates to help balance 'his books and ward off inflation- ;sr.v tendencies. - These sources say the chances n of big tax cuts may be better next iycar when the current economic jexpansiun may taper off slightly. . The government also may be -more inclined to grant tax con- '.fes!l0nl next year on political ...-.95-.. - Featuring! Bulova. Cadman and Ulslns Watches. Also a com- Idm stock of smartly designed It Hour Ina-svlng IllrIte's Jewellers - '.-'10 so no. .- 5 in turns l'i'llll' E i Ilotrlgmtlss E lotion is as sauna l smaanolns wlauaasnvlon e l0T0l't8 .- Iawuhggtgqgng ". " I-uh ".2'.".'ii”"" "Substantial Tax Cuts grounds. It now is expected that the llext federal general election will be fought in 1957. The budget. which will cover the fiscal year starting April 1, will be the second presented by Mr. Harris since he was appointed fi- nance minister in July. 1954. ECONOMY SURPRIUES In his last budget. Mr. Harris knocked off sl-18,000,000 in taxes and forecast a 1955& t t y deficit of 3l60.000.000. However. the economy has outpaced all the gov- ernment's expectations and the ac- tual deflclt may be less than S1f8.000.00Q-perhaps virtually non- existent. Mr. lIarrls' deficit forecast was based on a 1955 gross national product-value of all goods and services produced-of 325.250.000.- tlltglga a rise of 31.000.000.000 from However. the gross national prod- uct made a spectacular advance of 32.500.001.000 to a record high of 826.600.000.000. The finance min- ister said he could balance his dbazks with a figure of 828,000,000.- Except for the fact tax collec- tions tend to lag behind economic pansion. Mr. Harris would be expected to have a small surplus for 1955-50. There may be a small deficit. DOCKERS GET INCREASE LONDON (Reuters)-Union lead- ers representing 100.000 dock work- ers in Britain Tuesday accepted wage increases of ii shillings a week offered by port employers. Basic rate on the docks now is ii. an a day. DON'T TAX YOUR FEET THEY'RE NOT DEDUCTIBLE! RUBBER soars FOR ALL THE FAMILY Men's . . . . 4.29 - 4.95 Ioys' . . . . . 3.49 - 3.95 Misses' . . . 2.59 - 2.98 Child's .. . . 2.39 -2.75 Women's 3.95 Society was of societies representatives were have learned that. due to illness, Rev. Mr. Baxter, has been unable to conduct serivces and join in wishing him an early return to good health and duty. the first ten (or twenty or thirty or more, according to the length of the report) words on your spell- ing iist, three times each," would say. "Use each word in a sentence." They seemed so busy. the dears. and working too. But they knew from experience that teacher would never check up all papers. Once in a while,'I took them home and looked them over. They gave me a much needed laugh, anyway! Take the word, "trouble". Surely a troublesome word and much drilled. Well, the good spellers us- ually copled it (the spelling list- printed-lvas in front of the pupils) all right. the first time, then re- laxed "Truble" it came out the second time, and the third time the letters trailed off into nothing at all! And the poor spellers, how did they manage to distort a word correctly spelled before them. so terribly! As for the sentences---the same boys and girls who wrote compositions showing some grasp of sentence structure and punctuat- ion, violated every rule twice over! OWN ACTIVITY In time I gave up any dealing with busy-work. Of course mine was a one-grade class and I knew there would be only occasional in- terruptions and I planned for them. For short periods I allowed the pupils to choose their activity"- they could read or draw or com- pose poetry--as long as they dis- presented with a copy turbed on one. Reward---No home- of a Bible, presented by the Society work. Penalty for disorder--doub- representative. Mr. H. E. Miller, le homework. For longer periods and welcome cards from a b Hampton Nine Mile Creek Bulldogs won the right to meet Cape Travprse Rovers ill the best-of-seven series for the Crapaud Board of Trade Trophy by defeating Albany St. Pats 6-3 in the fifth game of the semi-finals at Crapaud rink on March 7. pa . On March 9 at Crapaud rink. Nine Mile Creek Bulldogs defeated Cfape Traverse Rovers by the score 0 Sympathy to the relatives of the to Mrs. W. J. Howatt, is ex- ed. survived by one sister and two brothers, residing in Tryon. many were present to convey fin- ai tributes of respect at the ser- vices conducted by Reva, Robson and Bishop. Interment was made in the Church of Scotland Ceme- tery at Cape Traverse. Congratulations are extended to Mr. Jan Geradus Loo, Appin Road, upon the recent occasion of hav- ing received a Certificate of Citi- zenship of Canada. following the liking of the Oath of Allegiance before Judge C. St. Clair Trainer at a recent session of the Queen's County Court. Mr. Loo. on behalf of the British and Foreign Bible Freetown in Sierra Leone. Africa was founded by British antl-slav- ery groups in 1797. present to make the presentations. It is with much regret that prepared I list llllAllTY iiie wodd's largest-selling . Hearing Aid last year, and for several years past. more bard-of-bearing people chose Zenith Hearing Aids than any other make. Only outstanding paliiy could explain why Zenith is the choice of so many hundreds of thousands. And only outstand- 'ng quality could explain why so many world leaders prefer Zenith. Doctors, scientists. bdges. explorers. statesmen. clergymen, and bankers-men and women who could afford to pay any amount of money for a hearing aid-choose to wear a quality Zenith Five all-new. I-transistor models to choose from. Price: from 550 to 3150. Ten-Day Money-Back Guarantee. See your classified telephone direc- tory for your nearest Zenith Hearing Aid Dealer. Or write Zenith Radio Corporation of Canada, Ltd., Dept. D5CC il65 Tecumseh Rd. 15."; Wind- sor. Ontario. for free litu-stun and dealer ist. qnolhhvaofwun-r-anon JOIIQIVIIIUIOUIOSOIO of textbook questions. These they could ans- wer with the book open before them. The pupils were told some of the questions would be used in ten; during the next few days. This scheme usually produced con- structive results. But what about the one. two, or three roam rural school? There are members of this pastoral charge Mrs. David Holm is a patient in the P. E. I. Hospital. Weekend visitors here, included ATTEND THE SALON OF AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHY - MARCH llth 1'0 18th Misses Ada Campbell. Sadie Mac- Fayden, Malcolm Maci-ladyen and twin Sons. and Macswain Bros., Moreil. CIVIC CENTRE Sponsored by Charlottetown Camera Club on some part of the work done Any suggestions offered this 1'3? must come tr the rescue. hectic. ”.1Vlerimer'e ” . plums. and (alumni The softest, loveliest coals imaginable. utterly feminine and loitering. loomed M SGOIIGDH Hy II: world-famous Gambia for the fashia -1 Canadian woman. Tailored by the skilled unha- men 00 Gordon's with I master's atten- llon to fine details. h'a duke of I7 spring colon. 69.00 Moore & Mel-eod Ltd. 77 we smowlcuss ARE READY! com: on in, FOLKS! For OUTSTANDING Values Shop At GllEENllALlS MEN'S SUITS to 39.50. SALE Sale l9.50 LADIES' SPRING COATS Tweeds and plain shades. from 24. 50 up MCII'S TOPCOATS. Values to 29.50.. l7.95 All Weather 15.00 plain bacil- coA'rs, belted or to 29.50 Men's Sport SHIRTS. all newest '4 1'0 NV!- Inateriols. Reg. 3.95. SALE- Sale 2.49 3-95 Spring DRESSES. I0 (I20 and Al newest ma- terials and beautifully styled- io 29.50 i Men's DRESS PANTS to l2.95. . SAl.lE- Sclle 6.95 sIIades-- l9.95 l.iadies' SUITS in soil. and and box style. Tweed: and plain to 59.50 SKIRTSP in got-aid or sheath Isitaylle . . in crease-res sting more 5. MensSUflSto55.00. SALE- sh.lo"44p Sale 29.50 295 to 10.95 BALLERINAS In patent leather and suede, in black, blue and DORSAY PUMPS In patent and all leather. also the new elk shade. -"W10? Cuba" H9915- s2.9s a 33.93 S5.98 & S698 BROWN OXFORDS I Missed and C'hildren's Sizes 5 - 10 and 11 to 3 Special S2.98 Also Missed and Clllldrolfs Shoes by Savage.- 34.50 - S4-93 AGNEW SURPASS l sl-tor srom up. if 122 NelIt.Sf. Bnousss in cam. handkerzhief lTn- All sizes- io 5.95 c7iTlBl'tEEN'sE6oAri'sErsTTinTplilii Sizes 1-2-3- 5.95 2070 0" ON ONIOP TOpCOCfS and ene, Dacron, etc. Sulfa Come in and cII:"0u your Ecsh 1'49 er'l'op:oaforS nowarttlese Pdcu. us. our -Ayn, pastel shades. Plan-a deposit wll hold any QINIVOIIB GIRLS' ooA'rs 3 to 14x. Men's JACKETS in Spring mtgtn.aog.lo.9s. SAI.E- V Sole 6.95 Popular Prices. & COAT SETS, sl-IE? I ll.95 up ' nrrsfrmsnsrfemvrsfsiipst PYJAMAS, HOUSECOATS, all at llle GREENDAL Co. l..lll. Men's Wear Store OT. G! 0. ST. I.odles' Wear Store BUDGET PRICED BREAKFAST SLICED OHOIC GRADE "A" iBACON, lb. . . 39: FOWL, lb. 39: WAXED A BY THE PIECE 25c suosn 29c ' RIB OR BRISKET FRESIILY GROUND Corned Beef, lb.29c Hamburg, lb. 29c g SKINLESS omo FRESH BULK 'WlENERS, lb. 39: Sausage, lb. 39c FRESH FROZEN I FISH AND CHIPS, pkg. . . . . . 29c I GWOCERIFS Lowneyls White or Colored MARSHMALLOW. lb. 39: Fresh Ideal Dairy Cottage CHEESE. pkg. 25c - Fine White SUGAR. 10 lbs. . . . . 19: First Grade Creamery BUTTER. 2 lbs. . . . .. 1.23 Graves 20 m. ' APPLE JUICE. 2 this 2:-.. Island Tasty Pak 20 Oz. PEAS. 2i-ins 33: Lantic Icing SUGAR. llb. T0: Graves Solid Pak 28 Oil. APP'ES,i'in ........l9: Florida hite or Pink Grapefruit, 6for 39c Medium Size Sunkist ORANGES, 2 doz. 79: New Texas CARROTS, 3 lbs. 29: APPLES, 5 lbs. 39c Fresli Snappy Green Island Macintosh lb! I I I RED ROSE TEA lb. l.'l5 BROKEN PEKOE TEA lb. 99: