‘are: rwo EDUCA THE PRIIBNTING NEWS AND VIEWS 1A SA TURDA EXERCISE (Correct Word) Select the correct or preferred. word or expression to fill eachi ‘olank. and place it on your paper, after the number of the sentenoez; l My sister—-—me to write, the composition heading correctly. (learned, taught). 2.—-the car to the nearest gs- rage. (bring. take) .—I along on the ing trip? (can. mav) 4. The man jumped—'-the water to save the child (in. into) I have-—books than you. (fewer. less). 6. What will be the-—of the new tariff law? (affect, effect) '1. My father divided the dozen apples equally—us four boys. ‘amonz. between). 8.—-—The dough rise in a warm alaoe. (leave, left). 9. I cannot~—-that statement! vlthout proof. (accept, except) 10, I see hlm-evcry day. (almost hat fish- ll. I've decided to—-ihe baok to the store. (bring, Vie) 12. We have long diets-noes. (left, let) l3. His pretence had a quleting iupon the crowd. (affect, ef. feet). 1d. I gave him the note and told hi1: to—it to my father. (bring, ta e). l5. Will you please-—-this note to the office. (bring, take) 16. They sailed away ithout —-th..=.lr purpose. (affecting, ef- fecting). _ 1'1. Father—me go with him zo Moncton. (left, let) 1B. There were a large-—o! gooths at the fair. (amount. num- er l9. ‘I forgot to-—my English bopk) home last night. (take, brml 20. A band of outlaws captured d—-me to a lonely cabin p (brought, took) . The boyime Tales Courage. (lent. loaned). PRIMARY SILENT READING Once a lady had a big white cat. his name was Teddy. There were two things that Ted. dy liked to do very much. He liked i0 lit on the lady's lap and purr while do potted him. And he liked to watch the fish swim around h the gold-fish bowl that stood on the table. It made the lady cross to have Teddy watch the fish all the time. He seemed never to take his eyes from them when he was awake. The lady was afraid that Teddy would catch the fish some time. so she tied little bells around his neck. "Now. you naughty little ca-t I can hear you when you run around. Whenever you run these little bells will ring and I shall answer. Teddy was red and yellow. Yes, No. 2. He liked to sit on the lady's . Yes. No. 3. Cats like fish. Yes. No. 4. Teddy did not like to purr. Yes No. Yo. Teddy liked to watch the fish. es . No. 6. When Teddy ran the bells would- ring. Yes. No. 7. The lady tied bells on Tedd-y so she could hear him Yes No 8. The fish were in s. dish cup bowl l. The fish were old sold goldfish l0. The bells welre on-the gold. know where you are." "Meow" said Teddy. He d-idn’ti like that. Draw a line around the right Fish goldfish bowl l2. The lady called ‘Teddy s— nsughty little cat naught/y little boy TI-IE POTSDAM CONFERENCE (Continued) 3. Reparations. Russia is free to remove food. machinery and tools of from the area it occupies, with the proviso that out of its share it is to settle Poland's claims to repa- rations. The claims of the U S. A" Britain and other countries en- fitled to reparations are to be met from the zones occupied by the western powers and from Germ. any’s assets abroad. Russia makes no claims to gold captured by the Allies in Germany but it is accord- ed 25 per cent of reparations from the Western zone. Of this share l5 per cent. is to be collected from the metallurgical, chemical and manufacturing industries “unnec- essary for the German peace econ. only", is to be exchanged for an equivalent value _of food. coal. potash timber, petroleum, can, from the R/ussian occupied zone: and ten per cent. is to be trans- ferred to Russia on account of re- parations without payment. or ear. change. 4. Territorial Adjustments. Gor- man territory is to be split into two areas. the area east of the Oder. which is divided between Russia and Poland. pending final determination of their respeoflw western frontiers. and the area sicst of the Oder. divided into the rourmllied zones of occupation. The Baltic port of Koenigsburg and adjacent territory in East Prussia are to be given to Russia. The rest of East Prussia, the port DI Danzig, and Silesia is asigned ‘o Poland. Final territorial adjust- ments will not be made until the peace treaty is drawn up. The Dec , iaration provides for the transfer German pulsation in Poland. Hungary a Czechoslovakia. 5 Econ Ar en‘ "Pri mary emphasis will be to the de- velopment of agriculture and peaceful domestic lndustris". The German economy shall be decent. ralized to eliminate the present excessive concentration of econ- omic powers ln cartels, trusts. syin- dicates and other monopo“ “ u. rangements. Germany is to be deprived of all weapons of war and also of the machinery and materials with which such weapons might b; made. Her chemical, metal 1nd machine industries an to be con- trolled by the Allies. Her produc- tive machinery beyond that need- ed f0!‘ peacetime activitiu, will be destroyed or removed by the Allies. The aim is to maintain in Germany living standards not ex- ceeding the avende of the stand. 5rd! 01 111/1118 in other European countries. 6. Government. Local‘ selLgovcm. ment is to be encouraged along democratic lines. "All democratic Political Dflrties with rights of as. sembly and public discussion shall be allowed and encouraged throughout Gennany, As soon M, local self-government has been rs_ established the same principles 5h!" EDDIY to regional or state governmogm," '1. Civil Llbentics. Irsedom o; 811M611. Dress and religions shall be Permitted. subject w military fifllflly- The formation of flee abour unions is permitted. DOLLARD DES ORMEAUX He was a French-Canadian who saved Montreal from the Iroquois in 1 In the early days the settlement of Montreal was the outpost the colony of New France. In the s ring of 1660, news came to the ittle wilderness village of Montreal that the Iro. quois were about to destroy the entire settlement. In order_ to thwart the plans of the 1111118118,. Dollard and sixteen of his young friends decided to block their line of utiack. They took canoes and ascended the Ottawa River to the foot of the Long Sault Rapids v-hcre the Iro uois must land. A small bond of ndlans joined them. Securing themselves behind the walls of a rude fort, these French heroes under the captaincy of Dollard waited for the Iroquois. Two hundred of them ap cared. The men in the fort held t em at \ bay for flvs days; but then 500 more Iro unis-appeared. Most of the frien ly In ians in the fort, w with fear, deserted to the enemy. Five remained in the fort. Dollar-d, his sixteen Frenchmen. and five Indians, 22 in all, a ainst more than 600 Iroquois, foug g: tfgr e three days more and many o There were Indians were lled. too many of them, Dollard and his friends; and the brave Frenchmen were finally overwhelmed. They were all kill- ed. But they did not die in vain, because the Iro uois seeing that a handful of enchmen could fight with such heroism, decided that the larger number of French in the village of Montreal would he too .much for them to attack. The Indians turned back from theird expedition and Montreal was save . DUICKIE Y FEA TURE-é I ti to ew ur oses as you sin but it i? so important t thus‘)! be notes containing the gist“)! what is important and not a lot of irrelevant and unim rtant de- tails. Select that whic la rele ant, discard that which is le significant. When studying fro: our own, underline on pencil and make notes in t e margin of the page. These mark- ed pagea and your s eclal note cards or note book wil be valu- able for review. The ability to make an outline is a very useful study habit. It involves selecting main ideas and separating them from those that are subordinate. Keep a clear file of notes for fu- Books of References: The ClIll-< dlan Speller, Teachers Manual, by dian Speller, Book II. The a- disn Speller, Teacher's Manual, by uantz. Should spelling instruc- ton be uniform for all pupils’! 1. No. It should be accordng to the needs of individual pu . 2. Different pupils make iferent types of errors. 3. The amoun‘ of ‘ practice required to learn to séaell a certain word differs wi ely with different pupils. This makes it uneccncmical of time to re- quire all to follow the same learn- ing rocess at the same rate. Each upi should study according to is own need. What words should be tau ht. and when should they be taug t’! 1. Teach children words that they need to use in daily life and when‘that need arises. The Can- adian Speller lists are built upon this principle. 2. Local words. words arising in general subject matter, and in dai experience should be added to the lists in the speller. 3. Introduce the word when the need arises, or when the teacher can anticipate that the need will soon arise. 4. A child seldom needs to write a word before he understands its meaning. Therefore, meaning 1. The pupil does not know how to study spelling by himself. 1 2. opies words incorrectly when studying. 3. Does not m rk paper accur- ately when pract clng. 4. Fails to pronounce words correctly, or to hear pronunciation accurately, , e.g., February. 5. Does not associat pronu ‘ tion of the word with the spelling of the word, in the case of phonic words. 6. Does not understand meaning of the word. 7. Writes poorly, receiving an incorrect image o the word. 8. Writes too slowly to keep up with the class. 9. Omits syllables in the middle of words. The introduction in the text. tells us of the position which this poem occupies _1n @1181!“ Iii-em" tug-e, "Magnificent is a word 5 ulled 10 I'll 19W s of Shelley's truly highest praise. Its melody ls evident only when it la read aloud. 1. Explain: "Bird thou never wert": "those heavy - WBIEQQ thieves"; "chorus "Hymeneol . "loves sad satiety’; i113’ lkm '-° poet". 2. What the meanink contained in the stanza beginning "we look before and after’! 3. What solution does the oet offer in exploration -of the me ody ' ‘a of the larks song u“ W“ n“ w 4. What would learn from the 5. If you look closely you will discover that there are really four divisions in the poem. A delfiflP‘ tion of the lark's flight and song a description lay-comparison, an What are they? 6. What question does Shelley ask in verse 7? Read his answgrs. singing ymns 1m - ‘Ido skylarka ling and oetl wor "1. Why u». the met an: the lark a "spirlt"" E” however for l \- 8. Point out. four similes. ll them. ~ panExplain: In the white dawn clear. until we hardly see-we feel that it is there. Answers: 1. The poet prefers to think of the lark as a spirit rather than a bird; the warm winds that steal the scent from the flowers; the sadness that overtake! one when one's desires are obtained; the skill of the bird to sing. 2. People are continually look- ing towards the future and back at the past and are continually‘ wishing for things to be different m can .. ..., eoea solidata the material b your own notes and marl: on t for k a of B! w important po nts with a rad - Gen cred should be made over a period of time. should be wlthn two d figs‘: touching new mater al; weeks and than after two months. Don't one time. lalong in one thing before adding another. SPELLING audy should precede spelling D9 words cause varies with different pupils. 2. English reason. in two different ways. Man Eng- lish words are not quentl word pupil characteristic. ua l a word; emigration, embarrassment, tonne, ' 9 - all, words have only one or two hard spots. ‘Two-third one common mis-speiling. rors words mis . frequen silent ls ters, e.g. Errors fr ling or failng to double a sorant: broccoli, embarrassed, ja- for "slep correct lapel ng: jrne ‘ cuanaorrerowu ouanolau -—-z. TIONAL 11012120? or INTEREST ro rescuers sun am. crane sumac meaovaunur m anucarlou NOTE TAKING AND OUTLINE! ls important to take notes for t reference. h timz-tabls lumen o naming th es and notations made -out edlin hic Id the first review s after the at one week, then three try to learn too much at. Wait until you are "$1 ‘lllng Errors: Wbst difficulty? S klndl of I. Thll gelling seldom follows any words are spelled phone c, e.g. (shun). Errors e- arile, therefore, from the tself, rather than due to a 3. Errors us- y occur in one or two spots in immigration, stationery, cre- ardinlere, February, fern- ge tine. 56 of words have one hard spot. 96 per cent of ' ention" s of wordfi have most frequently renounced, e.g. 5. Errors occur in words with "rheumatism? uently come by doub- con- OCCUI‘ acrost" for anned. 7. Letters are frequent- Y trans ‘psuedwby; s“ l i." iéelct" r or gr. . "Grounded" for us CAUSES OF SPELLING ERRORS BY PUPILS 10. interchanges letters in wor s. 11. Has not a good memory af- ter practice. 12. Needs more time than regu- lar class periods. 13. Is discouraged because of low scores or comparison with the scores of others. Does not feel the personal r ‘billty needed for mastery of his own difficulties, and there- fore does not put forth enough ef- the f rt o . 15. Language and speech limita- tions may interfere with spelling learning. The pupil has not a good general knowledge of the mean- ing of words used by his fellow pupils and in his reading. T0 A SKYLARK. (Literature) in the most sincere laughter there is always some sorrow. Our most melodious songs are and ones. 3. There cannot be listlessnpss in the oy of the lark nor an it ever annoyed. Moreover,- though it loves, it never knows the sadness so often associated with human love. Finally. "i911!!! must have a truer and deeper realization of death than mortals have or, as Shelley says, how could it sing as it does‘! 4. The "sweet thoughts" of the d. g. (a) The poet asks for s. secret of the bird's song. (b) His ex- plgretions of the song. in nature is most like - . What, the lark? "singing songs from its lerks si because of gross their joy ear of death. 7. Because the lark sings in the heavens “Thou does float and run like an unbodlsd joy." .To lark is com ed to a poet, a high born maf en, a glow worm and a rose. 9. Though the moonbsams fade in the dawn so that they can scarcely be seen, yet we know that the moon is still there; so it with the lark. from what they actually are. Even ~ ‘RESOLUTIONS ' Tl!‘ v flampthas. leaflets of Canada are o to inn: efloasas for IN" "‘ "$58.? ‘l2 o.t brass-classical u s- it resolv that the om n- n Government be asked to in: cluds the following expensfl a , . f~.’.‘.§l.'£l‘.°'§'¢.‘§.f’i“si'$5%‘&'.-“<§s .2‘. ooh" ) G d ~ o‘ P“ euluabnhofesslonal gem- dian Flag and Nationa Be it resolved that thr F,:..“'*;-‘.r."r"'":::..l.:, acid e s a on n ~ a Canssiian Flag and a Canadia- National Anthem. Monthly News latter: 4. Whereas the ublicatloa of the Monthly News Letter has been value to the mem- Ksed that we fav- anoe and oventua r’ I. Exchange of Teac era: 5. Whereas lt is desirable that For Monday morning aalssdiag we offer the foil coals: _ ' - Inverness Old Sydney Screened Bras D’0r Lump Acadia Round Avon Lump‘ u. C. BOHAKER um mus-Tr us Blob-cull sum Phone 888 Charlottetown. P.I.I teachers in the various parts of Canada and the British Empire should become acquainted with the educational systems in other provinces and countries through personal experience; and whereas he broader outlook and greater mutual understanding by both teachers and pupils ‘bsulting from this experience would be an im- portant influence in developing Canadian and Empire unity. Therefore be it resolved that the Executive of the Canadian ‘mach- er’s Federation endeavour to se- cure the co-o eration and support of the Cana ian Foundation and the Canada and Newfoundland Education Association in develop- ing a propect for the inter-provin- cial and inter-Empire exchange of teachers. 6. Committees to Study Prob- lems on Education. Be it resolv- ed that the Canadian Teachers’ iii-i; ' "."s"_ s"s's"u"s'\fls'a’u'\-'s"s"fls'h'is'v' | Department is om- I my Prince Edward hers’ Federation. Contrnbutions are welcomed and should be Mlllfellfll W Mlllar user-urea. s l-f Inl- llng 80.. Charlottetown. FederaLion commends and urges ublic, professional and onal bodies to establish commit- tees to study general problems on education i’ WOMF? Aknost masculine exclusivenoss-tlte Roy Military College-is three/toned by feminine invest It is announced that Awrllliary girls will likey course there soon. Drummond Screened (Coke Truck drivers for out-of-town customers telephone us early so we can arrange to load you. OCCUPI- INVADI §ANDHUB8T the last stronghold of a H. R. Large C0 liiiliilifil BABYLONIAN ARTIST MADE PICTURE OF EXCITING EVENT ‘Territorial Service take a training For Foot Ailments cmnoromst ~OONBULT H. J. A. BROWN, DJ’ Orthopedic Qfiliélflfilfi have been rather exciting. ‘lbs picture shows a lion clawing an g ox and as the same time, facing s Au artist of Babylonia made a mm wil) 11ml I I?" It "1' s piotuna of an event which must level of the lion's ehsat. ldl Great George Street CBABLOTTETOWN. EL! OUT OUR WAY B, _,_ m W,,,,,,,,.+.UR nosanmo nousn With Major nmu null “i. Let us put your machine In shape for neat Spring. lave it ready to use when you need it. ‘Mowers g Your will need N- B|¢Y¢|¢5 pairs for next Spill! N!» us \ do it wluils yoacars not using ' ,, it. The Bike shop GRIN!‘ GIORGI- ST. ‘V’? Charlottetown “areollwlll a Gassdiaa West