Prince Rupert Daily News Tuesday, December 11, 1951 able exhibits in the museum is, naturally, relatively small. How am"ullt "l rk The pro, ta stance, biiM, 5 ' oi , eirls in ;-":v'iclDr Board of Education, partly by , the university, can be broken down into two phases. Instruction is given at the museum to those children within travelling distance of Toronto. The balance Is given far afield, as far distant as Fort Frances, 1112 miles away. j Crisp, straightforward Cath-, arine Steel hpes classroom I 1L. . ' ' "HI. fl, iods of instruction. But Miss Steel and her five aides also lectured before high school students, normal school attendants, university extension classes and a multitude of other groups. They manage to keep it all within an eight-hour day (travelling time, extra) but Director Dr. v! V. Ben Mcen of the museum says no one realizes the prodigious chartered w H k Museum Exhibits Base For Brood Teaching Scheme By RAE CORELLI Canadian Press atalf Writer TORONTO (CP) Six young women are promoting, under the wins of the Universitv of To I I ' V; 1 J -"u'y pupils t t Wt- uSayS Mis., St,, u' 'hut down.- K I ment with the publicly-owned I Trans-Canada Air Lines, immigrants can travel almost as ! cheaply by air as by ship. t-p i ,46 e i".-t, year following the end of the second world war more than 500.000 I immigrants have reached Canada and have helped to swell the country's population to approximately 14.000,000. The best of the immediate post-war years was 1948 when arrivals totalled l"'i14. r small nume- when compared with some of the years Record For Immigrants Nearly 153,000 This Year f.ew Canadian Arrivals Bv D'ARCY O'DONNFLL Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) A near-record number of immigrants reached Canada du.-ing 1951. ever, these students generally show greater keenness. Tiiey are , becoming familiar with every- thing from a burgonet (a steel helmet of the Middle Ages) to fahlband (an ore resembling a piece of ossified birthday cake 1 . 1 The six women do much of their travelling In winter when conditions are toughest. Explan- ! atory literature regarding the current courses prcedes them. Last year, they carried 10 cases of exhibits and covered rural schools from Sault Ste. Mane to the head of the lal-.es. Tnis1 year's itinerary is the Sudbury-1 Sault Ste. Marie region. A com- j plete sweep of Ontario takes 1 four years. ; In 1950, nearly au.000 school children representing 90 public schools in Toronto and many outside were given varying per ronto and the Royal Ontario Museum, a broadening experiment in cultural education nrnh. teachers, in each case, will take ' up where the abbreviated mu-1 scuin-'-ponsored lectures end. Toronto public school children a.e required to attend at least one museum tour a year but ' hundreds taice nice.- They pick ! their own subject orchauOiogy, I gto.oiy, ct;. and are divided I into easily-handled groups for i visual study. iitt.N SidUKVM Pupils m juniiia don't obtain as ccmprenonsive a training. The number of port prior to the first World War. ah i0ii tlic iiumucr ,nnri , aiuuc, ui LrS" We.r,? W immigrant, totalled almost 500,- as immigrants from all parts of ",r uii"iuc i i.aiiaua. They are the nucleus of the museum's division of education. From the museum's galleries they g.uhei" relics of a bygone age with which to fashion something singularly 20th-century: an audio-vi.-ual program of instruction which ha.s all Ontario 000. Don't Be a Last-Ahite '.he world, including formo nemy countries, were admitted :,' ? 7.c ul ' Canada. - . gration to Canada from Jan. 1, o 1946 to Oct 1. 1951. ft f MS m Swppt The increase in new citizens Vfur - a vas partly due to an increase in 194a tor its classroom. The program is under the supervision of brown-eved To- N. Kll. Others 5.633 3.20!) 5 482 10.458 16.957 55,019 17.349 47.833 17.060 35.6W1 I .K. I ,K. 51 4118 11.469 3. 747 9.440 46.057 7,381 22.201 7.744 1.1.4:47 7.799 21,935 6.015 he number of ships calling at 1947 "anadian ports and partly to jjJJJj Federal governments programs JL.60 uaaer which immigrants were loai iven' financial assistance to Tp""' ON HISTORIC WORK Edgar W. Mclnms, well-known Canadian historian, has been working on a study of evolution of post-war settlement since 1945, aided by- a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. Prof. Mclnni.s is on leave f'Om tlu University of Toronto where as student or on the staff he has spent half his life since he was born in Cfmrlottetown 52 years ago. This photo is copyright by Milne Studio. (CP PHOTO) 45.834 56.101 113.776 49.848 10B.405 208.240 WE HAVE AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF TOYS NOW Make the children's wiih c ,:. !ru, by selecting choice toys ot yUtr ANNUAL XMAS TREE Auspices of the Women's Auxiliary U F A W.U. ODD FELLOWS HALL S.V1TKDAY, DKCEMBHK 15, 1:30 P..M. Pi.MAhK NO 111: Presents have now been wrapped for children already registered. We regret that time will not permit further iegitratlon. Mothers are asked to have Their Children at the Hall un time jronto-born Catharine I. Steeif j who holds degrees in English, i history and sociology from the University of Toronto and from Columbia. She drew the ussign-I ment six years ago; .since, with i her. assistants, has iraveUeU i thousands of mile.-:, given huii-: dreds of lectures enhanced by 'exhibits in the museum, the nation s largest. . The audio-visual nrocrnm. fi :me to this country. pmoa' the department's list of A year ago, immigration n7in- ,n h countr.,s are such places as 3ter Han-is estimated that Can- . . would obtain 150.000 new Ib, a; Arabla;,chlna. 9- Mc- uizens in 1951. F.nal figures for "v Jaanv Planc1' e year were expected to show Eston.a.NRusSla. Spain. Turkey, and several Asian countries, at estimate was not far off mark. During the year, agreements i e Gordon & Anderson Well Known City wuie sienna to penniL me pm.ry Piicne 4A " ,Jal rn.lnem01 H1s of tne KiMimhc ! ! of a small number of immigrants fimifP ar 129,885 immigrants were from India and PakistanB The rigUfe JUCCUFiWS Ltd nanced partly by the Toronto T'"'' -i- ""VJ1 "I1 ? ' "' 'I 1 1 J J1 "mil 11 ' MWW'W i '! -Li "' aereemems stipulated that in Charles Oaoura, f.ir maav ; the corresponding period of each 12-month period, 100 citi- years a well known figure with ) The last time the immi- ri,ns frcm Pakistan and ioo the city. street cleaniiiR depau-r.tion.. total passed the 150,000 from India wlll be admilt,ed for uitm. ,.ai-d away hist evoniiu K was in when about pcmanent ivsidence in Canada m Prii-e Kiipert Gen,, al ...3 immigrants came to this pital where ne had bre!, a pa.. Un y' ' rwrm-rvn tient for several months. 1 im Immgrants from the United UUUBUNU Born in Bukovina, Ukraine, .Ongdom in the first nine month. PICTOU, N.S. (CP) Need of ad- Ap-il 4. lob!, mi- unburn h'ui if 1951 t&talled 21,935 compared ditional space in the town c?ell a resident of F ire- i'n- vith 8,804 in the corresponding schools was forcibly pointed out pert far 27 years. His re.skx.c :eriod of 1950, an increase, of in reports to the school com- was at 225 Ninth Avenue Vc;l 24 per cent. The number from missioned. In one Orade 9 class where he is survived by lis wicl- i or them European countries tnere are 50 dests and 53 pupils. 0w. j : i.-34 compared with 13,034 . Two of tne extras use the teach- Funeral arrangements r - i up 252 per cent. From theier's desk- wni'e the third is a the hands of B. C. Uuderfk-rs lilted States there were 6,015 i "flater" using any that happens William Pawcliuk of Kit wanr.a i.npared with 5,884, an increase 1 10 be vacant that day. : is a cousin of deceased. r ' f'r&' 7 i " !,. .. . .. J . f, . it u two per cent. !ll!i!!;!!P!liiil!!!!ISi3 Pre-Holiday Coat Savings U v Other countries sent 56,101 :jmpared with 25,528, an in-,'iease of 120 per cent. AH northern European cpun-:nes, but notably Holland, Oer-niany contributed to the large i..se in immigration from thj lont.nent. Oermany the ban on the entry of German Nationals was lifted in 1950 sent 16.427 compared with 3.920 in the first nine months oi last year. Holland ent 15,880 compared with 6,343 and France 3,833 compared with ' 775. Ihe shortage of skilled workers in many industries led some oin.oiiiics U sponsor the group movement of immigrants, cap-iioie of fulfilling tneir require-in en ts. But the bulk of the newcomers came on their own or with the assistance of the government. ASSISTANCE PROGRAM m .twruary, the Canadian government launched a program to assist immigrants with the payment of transportation. If an immigrant could put up $30 in the currency of his own country, the Canadian government would lend him the remainder needed to reach his destination in Canada. The loan could be repaid within two years. Through a special arrangej j 1 S 1 I i J1 ,e i a A .it '': Luxurious fur is the by-word for Christmas. 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