severe! displays have been teeth 11,, many.‘ p.80 11 _“§;’ h‘f;,‘°‘_°,‘§n,*,“M‘“;m‘c‘;,“‘f,",,“;f Thuredsy. April 22. 1954 tlon from the teachers present. 4- hr th. service. men; then: is “Books tor Bet- ! 5011141113 Smith. Dominion hy- ter Living" by the P.E.I. Libra- rles_ In the display is e wide vari- drosr-vher. said the contract will be let later this year and if all ety oi.’ books ranging from science goes well the ship will be com- ne remarked that in one ed the classrooms at Prince oi Wain there was a. sand table and asked it that could be termed a i'rllL In answering his own question he re- called to the minds of those pre- sent that during the past war the sand table had proved invaluable in wquainting soldiers and air- men with the type of terrain ‘Former P.I*I.I. Naval Officer at Inspection Canadian hydrographic to sport. from nature to fairy tales. Other displays are of scrap- would have to traverse. He remarked that by its use you can do more teaching with taking than by any other method." books. snapshot folders, handwork by women ol the Red Cross. still pictures by the National Film Board and e. large number of paintings and drawings by school pleted by May. 1956. It will have a flight deck and hangar for two helicopters and will act as the mother ship for six survey launches used to chart wa. Dr. Shaw was introduced briefly by the chairman. Mr. Earl Jelley, 0'Lesry, president or the Teach- ers Federation. who presided. Study Perl ode Itudy periods were held in var- ious classrooms for the teachers during both morning and after- noon. Mr. D. C. Monroe, Direc- tor. School of Teachers, Macdon~ aid College, Montreal, held classes dealing with developing interest in Canadian History. Dr. Frank Mac- Kinnon. Principal of Prince of Wales College, spoke on high school history and related sub- Jects_ Methods or teaching ari- thmetic in the elementary grades was discussed by Mr. K. A. Park- er, supervisor at City Schools. Language. composition and de- monstrations by pupils or St Mary's Convent were conducted by Br. St. Alden Maureen. Rythms, demonstration of the use of re- cords ma pupils participation, ters too mallow tor the larger vea- sel's 15-toot depth, Express Regret At ‘ ' A l i children of this city Sunday Convention TORONTO. (CP) — The central presbytery of the Toronto United Church passed a.resolut.ion Tues- day "noting with regret" that the Ontario CCF‘ party is holding a convention on the week-end of Sun- day, May 23. The resolution said that the COP, is becoming “the first major po-‘ litirnl organization to use the Lord’s Day for convention purposes and political discussions." Plan New Vessel- For Arctic Operation OTTAWA. (CP)—’1‘he keel of a. , - ' new vessel specially designed for charting Arctic waters is expected :.-*- /ZX I’. \( At a recent inspection of Queen's University Naval Training Division held uhoard I-IMCS Cataraqui, Kingston. Ont., the Principal of the University. Dr. W. A. Mac- kintosh (left) was the inspecting officer and was accompanied by the O.C. of the U. N. T. D., Lieut. Cmdr. W. M. Martin (center) formerly of Heatherdale, P. E. 1. Continued from page 1 ed primarily to "toss out" some science and health. Dr. Shaw here seat phonics. with a demonstration by pupils, were conducted by Messrs M. Coffin. A. Taylor, M. Guigan and M. Clarlrin. work discussion. teaching first -for ‘EA7'/NG./ Mac-' to be, laid this year. it was re- por_ted Tuesday. The ship .285 feet long and built to withstand the pressure oi pack ice in northern seas, is planned AdveviaesaIa:OI'5.¢ "34 '-‘(oat It's so dellzhtlully delicious . . . so temptingly tender . . . so Juicy good -— that one bite is all that‘: ed to convince you that the meat you buy here is QUAL- need- ‘-«4 'l ‘\ ”‘’‘’Z‘”— T auesutlons in order to get a re- remarked that it was not goo Educational Problems action from the iloor. To do this‘ many years A80 that the intro- I-1-Y MEAT T]. R Ind \ PRIZE STEER BRISKET . he mentioned the many criticisms ductlon.ot geography to the cur- 0 ' V ‘CC’ \ \ I .‘:a<l taught the full 200 days to of education and the present ed- rlculuni was considered a trill. T" °"° "‘ "‘°’° "“’“ "9' \\ 4 l m‘(-;\'(‘ only us much as those who ucational methods of teaching. He Dlftment Vliiuem That finer . " l.\r‘P under that count. said the criticism most frequently Hard To Define "Ivor you.“ “ate ls QUAD .'i The speaker said it was the de- heard was that the schools were . . §\ \, , .l.:r oi the Department of Eduoa- neglecting the iundamentals and Remmmg the ‘°'°““°d mus . ‘TY ' ' ' "M mp "Mu ll '- ‘ml to set all schools started on giving too much attention to the ‘he twchers memmmd 5”’ draw’ q'"'m'v "'°’'‘' ' ' ' ""’""~" HAVE A ‘\\\\\\\\\‘ l tune in the fall to permit flnish- !rilla_ .lI’.1§' dm,ma and ‘final °du”'“°n' “'9 °l°‘°'*"l"""l‘d in slve c k\\\\\ .:_.z the course of studies prescrlb. some people, he said, thought em “as 3 °°“5‘ emble "‘"‘°““‘ you the but meat I...” for TRF-AT—I-B. .. ........... .. , \>.\\\\\ . '. ed (i<‘<Dl'-8 filly llllioleseell i'l8ppen- there was not enough attention!“ disagreement among them as . \‘\§ ‘ ‘ to whether music should be in- your m°"°" l .\\. 1-ms, by June 30. Grade 8 Examinations The Deputy Minister noted that l".r."t'. had been much criticism of late regarding the examinations in Grade 8. He felt that the teachers mtmselves should decide the grad- ng of pupils in the lower grades. were prone to grade on “the hard being paid to the three R's and too much to the three F's which he defined as frills, fads and fan- cies. He called to the teachers {or their definitions or .the fundamen- tals and received a variety of ans- wers from all parts of the audit- orium oi' Prince of Wales College. cluded in this class. The Deputy Minister, noting hesitation on the part of some, admitted that it was hard to define as a {rill something which only recently had come into the curriculum. He read from a Department handbook the present prescribed courses of study and told the P. E. I. GRADE “A” YOUNG DUCKS PER LB. ,. - :~ \ ' A REAL TREAT —— GRADE “A” \\ —10 LB. AVERAGE The Department. he said. did 0i‘ In the main the teachers fe‘t the ‘ i ll L ‘ ' l- ogrisxnasl saliggeagirfgstgfigareeg fundamentals were reading. V\Tll.- ,f:,§m°r:eg“£-d,.l: lkrilrlisy a?1lt*)l°uftI1nIira- 7“ WHILE THEY ~ inc. nrlthmellc. spelling. language me.,ta15 50 10,1. as tlsov Wm M EE-FRESH fromcalifomio and Arizona < -~. ‘ -“_-i‘.----~--. i sidr, and sorgg on the easy side." However, he thought this would he a. better understood matter this mm as the various school super- visors would be starting study groups as soon as the present con- \r‘r‘.tl0n ended. The main discus- mn planned for these groups is the matter of grading with parti- :”lar reference to Grade 8. Dr Shaw also briefly touched on the matter of the call from the lmrvagtimneang ;ffldl:a1atLieoBr::i}lle”1)e‘2en:‘e’ SWEET PICKLED “ RED RIPE : ...‘::. 12° ..°.:*.:°“:';: NECK RIBS .... .; lbs. 25c TOMATOES . .. cln. 25c .2. €.»"aZ%“.‘..f’.3§’.‘i."l‘§. °3‘.i’§"‘.’i..’.‘°§’...‘.’} . in . ' °"°‘°E STE“ “ml” 0"" ;€;9h;r;,,g‘ 3;‘; ::,':,,V,;*;::;, *:,l:°°,,*,; ‘ SHOULDER ROASTS. lb. 43¢ CELERY .. stalk l5C LEAN MEATY LARGE JUICY .1'ik'Wfll’d position in relation to; michers from bigger Provinces, ',.articula.rly British Columbia and Ontario, where teaching salaries ate much higher than here. He pointed out that the tsache go- ing overseas would only be paid in» same salary being received at name. In any event. he stated, there would be not more than two going from Prince Edward Island. Oltee Criticisms Dr lhaw did not have a pre- pared address. saying that he wish- and grammar, history, geography, lowing the pr-.~~:r1‘:cd course. an QB T ER rnvon 49c \f DELICIOUS ROASTS FRESH FROZEN FRESH FROZEN PORK LOINS .. . . . lb. 59¢ .lb.65c SMELTS lb.l7c PORK CHOPS .. . .. COD FILLETS .. lb. 29c GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS lb. 194: GRAPEFRUIT. .1. '. 6 for 39¢ CALIFORNIA — FOR JUICE ORANGES 2doz. for 79¢ GREEN MOUNTAIN POTATOES . . 15 lb. bag 99c EXTRA SPECIAL EXTRA SPECIAL EXTRA SPECIAL. « You;io'o.canha\/_e . ;;";°;;;;=;;;g nmso g§‘°‘;‘}§s ~sol‘te,,r,clearerskIn 5 Lb. Bag 0' “ Y Ll» .- ; ‘V Try CUTICURA Just ~ 7 Days and See Want a elur rndlent it: man admire? 'l‘ry fra t. mildly medicated Cu cure Soap and Ointment to help relieve pimples black- heads, eczema rae —aale- fusrd natural complexion oveiineea. Buy today. CIITICIIIA FIBREGLASS THE IDEAL CAR-TOP FISHING BOAT ONLY 90 Lbs. 12 FT. LENGTH 1 95.00 SALES at SERVICE Repairs To All Makes MOTORS Rewinding and Repairs Pslner Electric human am one Don't let ”Sottnees" tool youl The "SQUEEZE-'l'EST" alone doesn't guarantee "FRESHNESS"! fully-baked “Butter-Nut” Bread on your grocer’s shelves every morning! 39¢ Clean Your Rugs Spring Type Foams & Cleans Simms H-String CLEANING AID LAMOURENE 30 oz. iar $1.19 CLOTHES PINS. . . 3 dos. 29¢: AJAX CLEANER .. . .. tln 2 Bath Size & 1 Reg. Size LIFEBUOY SOAP. all for 33¢ 12 Choc. Mallo Cookies. pkg. 33: Clark's—Large 28 oz. Pork & Beans 27¢: Choice 28 oz. Tomatoes 2 for 35:; Mt. Stewart-12 oz. Strawberry 2 for . . . . . 49: Peter Pan — 15 oz. Peaches. 2 for 31: 29c T5: 29¢: [tone in this all also on sale at: Montague, Vernon River. Morell and Tracadis figmlgg The BUTTER-NUT Boy on every wrapper does! 5 u E '- Repelrs 55 Regular deliveries from Eastern Bakeries guarantee delicious, fresh loaves of DE-E221 I Ma r k E f . ‘T, '\L/. THE C’/VT, 5/l(;_‘/’ .47/v’, , ,sas...~T._...-- v -v— saoous. Special .. ea. 19¢ onosnv i S” It on msphy Ac Lge. Free Polishing Cloth THREE STAR ’ PRIDE. Johnson’: . ‘I6 of. $1.19 ‘ MOLASSES A 129 Kent st. \. ' ' ~ ' s QTS. FOR. H ‘G " $1.00 ;l a t i I ~ ‘ e r gerat on .