TIIE UIIARLUTTHUWN GUARDIAN humane-W. l- IuLIn. I. I- Bdftor und uluinglug Anoelutr ldltorwflllll Yloo-Prnldnuc-J. B. Burnett lavatory-Bout. Cul. B. A. Iullnuou. D- l- 0- Dlroelor-ql. B. Burnett Walker l-ud D. I. Currie (l u! ) delivered. ‘ngguaipfgulyyelihtlligdmgvmli; {n Qeiurud: uud‘ .531!!! Blake. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1931 A Financier Speaks ln his presidential address at the recent annual meeting of the Royal Bank. Sir Herbert l-li-lr. made the lollowiiig encouraging statement: "Business and ind-.i:-tri' have mainlainwl a .-iurprtsiiigly‘ satisfac- tory iolunie n; activity in Canada as compared with other countries. The stability of our great industries llld the strenclh or our financial msiltuliclis durim: ti" pa»! We!‘ constitute a record which wr- may view with pridc. It 1.; this piilblilly that is the basis of ni_v optimism concerning the future. 'l‘hcre are l. IllmClfllf number of favorable fac- tors in the Canadian situation l/a reassure us that a rcsuiiiplion and expansion of ricvclopnic-iit in this Dominion cannot b: loin: ritlnyeil." As the considered Judgment of l. finaiicici‘ of national rcputc. such a stainnciit cannot tail to carry convic- tion. But Sir Herbert did iiiorc than express optimism as w the future. H0 felt it his duty. tn his official capac- ity, to indicate some of lllc steps by which this rcvival of trade and in- dustry will be achieicd. And in doing lo he praised the action of the Beu- tictt Government in adopting antl- dumpini: legislation and tn advanc- ing the tariff at the cnicrgciicy ses- sion of Parliament. He said that, as a rault of these measures, the activ- ities of Canadian industry have al- ready increased from 50 to 80 pcr cent. and over. He hoped that in the forthcoming session the administra- tion would take measures to stop the, dumping of Russian cord, plilp and other products in this country to the . injury of Canadian industry and Ca- nadian workers. He. endorsed the action of Mr. Bennett in favoring the formation of an agricultural credit corporation to finance needy western farmers and to promote mixed farm- ing on the prairies. He spoke of the co-opcrative action the federal and provincial GO\€‘l'lll'll“l'llS and the by bmiks to s0".Ul‘e the orderly market- ing of our surplu: wheat. H0 urged that Canada should yiroducc its own fruit, vegetables and dairy products instead 0t spending monty on foreign produce which we can easily groiv zit heme. . Weighed Rilfllllit such utt=rances by men of the calibre of Sir Herbert‘ Holt, the campaign of petty criticism and iamentiittun persisted in by asco- ‘ion of the Liberal pres". DP JUUECJ for “ha: it is worth lllfl V Radio Prngruntmrx ‘The campaign recently inaugurated b]: the Canadian Radio League in support of thc Airci Commission s rec- ommendation for radio as a national public service L5 nut-ling with the in- dorsiltion cf ii larizc scctiuii uf illc C1- iiadiaii prcw. ‘rlic chief urguiliciit. ad- vaiircd lii favor oi government con- trol ct tarlln, imnehz the (longer. un- dcr [lfllrll/ iiiicipiflcr oi bciiig dom- inated bl‘ ilic CUllllllPltJlililLLCd system iii tlic United Sta-ice. is .1 powerful one. since there is atundant cvidcncc that this i.» actually in plot-cm 12nd that. if thr present policy is contsnucd, Canada will bccouii: al- most undistiiiguLshable from the‘ United States, so far as radio is con- cerncd. Just wlizit this would iiican is ivcll liiUbllTliCfl in an articlc in the‘ currciii Atlantic l\fo.itlily by Prohl William Orton. Orton says, “is more expensive than ever; but it ls no longer the makers i or buyers ot rndio sols who pay that domination "Broadcasting," Mr standards under government mono- Dolv in Great Britain. "In Fhigland this week." he “T1195 "i could obtain at. least oneiull orchestral programme evéfy nlflhl. including whole evenings of Bach. Beethoven, Wagner, and modern work, I could hear the Mozart Fes- llVni from Salzburg and Vienna. Philharmonic under Baunigartner. I could listen to Eugene O‘Nelll’s ‘llcfl to a first-class debate on the international language question, to various lecturers, including Dean Zifnzlry on Christian theology and .\'fr. Francis Birrcll on the cinema; in two or ilirce recitaLs of modern chamber music. to B. couple of rev- ues tcomplelel, to say nothing 0f dance music. political addresses. educational programmes, news. sports, humorous features. and the various local offerings." Prof. Orton seas no hop: for radio as o. vehicle of cultural advance s0 long as the commercialization of broadcasting obtains. The Alrd report Sllblllliifld to the Canadian Govern- ment, hovrcver, made a place for indirect advertising. As u matter of fact. it is becoming apparent that only through a nation- lal slstcm mil Canadian advertising of any character get a chance on the j air. It is highly probable that this ‘l feature will be retained in any Gov- l crnmental system. It seems probable also that any such system would seek to be free from anything resembling party control. But the policy of radio as. a public utility must remain the guiding principle in the sclting up of have a Canadian radio. Cosmic Speculation | Scientists are locking horns these days over the destiny oi the unl- vcrse Sir Arthur Eddington, profes- ior of astronomy at. Cambridge Unl- versity, says that matter is slowly being changed into radiation and ,that. ultimately the universe will ircach a <t.=ite of complete disorgani- {l uniform fcatiirelcss mass IYZAiIOII. ‘iii thermodynamic cquilibrlum,"— !\\'ilfli(’\'9l' that may niran. Sir James ‘iJcans, aziothei‘ Britlshcr, supports i statement that .the sun l~ losing 250,000,000 tons a. to be a lob- and that in n few more billion years tli=r= won't b1- anj: sun left. And now lllr. R/Jvrrt A Millikan. an Ameri- can, conics forivard with the reassur- this vimv with the ‘ iiiiziutc -\vhicl: seem»: ‘iiig news that "cosmic rays" boni- Ibardtnz the earth constantly recreate i lllPVlFl‘. and therefore. the world will , never rile. é Th» olrl theological coiitroiersy as to the llLlflliPr of angels that could stand on the point of a needle seems a ffiLiOllfli and inquiry in comparison with some of the cosmic prosaic speculations of contemporary scien- tists. It is a pity the latter gentle- inrn could not get together and tell us Just whcrc we are at. Editorial Notes Our local contemporary complains that “during the hy-clcction paign in Prince County a member of the gcvemmeiit further stressed the point that the duty of an Oppo- silion was to oppose, not to offer any constructive criticism. This same member also voiced his dlsapprovll of the government plough." Our 0on- lcmporary should insist that the gov- cr in question be giv- cii a scvcrc talking to by the grand panjaiidiuim. cam- criimciit mcmb At present Canada produces ap- proximately seventy-nine per cent. expense-it is thc aciicrtisers.“ and it is to the mast-s rather than the minority capable of appreciating the hlghcr quality progranimcs that com- mercialized radio must necessarily muke its appeal. The moat damning indictment of the aya- tem comes, not from the writer but from the vice-president of the Na- tional Broadcasting Company whom the writer quotes as saying of the quality of entertainment considered moat profitable to feature: “Present your specialty on the level of thir- toen-yocr-oldo. D0 not. overrule the lntolllgenco of your listeners." Prof. Orton invites hi; readers to of the chemicals ‘used within the country, an excellent record for a comparatively new nation. and the industry L; making steady and rapid progress. One of the latest develop- ment-s ta the onimencemeut of op- erations at o plant for the manufac- turing of synthetic nitric acid. The plant is situated at. Beloell, on the bunks of the Richelieu River. At this point is also situated the new superphmphate fertilizer plant of of Canadian Industries, which was also recently opened. The nitric will compare the system prevailing in lflhiléifwflmlmfiwllnl 5810M“, Qntuio, . any system, that is if Canada is to! ‘THQHSUYOS 821d 118W H1011." produced at the Beloeti plant ls made, from Canadian synthetic ammonimi the ammonia being manufactured at‘ , well directed toll that gave edge and bold thlnklnl. price baulka resolute purpose, clear through endeavour. those qualities strong and fine. gone far and willed mastery. The greatest force which the world knows is desire. Where desire is in- tense, undreamed-of latent powers become active, changing the life, and it. may be the ‘destiny, of the desire motivated man or woman. When the ‘desire is good in respect of its object. {and expression, attainment can be ‘immensely enlarging to the individ- ,uul, leading him to nuke super- efforts. In trying one’: moat one‘! lpowers of mind and body become ‘amazingly developed. Thus. the pur- ‘pose and will to earn more money in order to be able to satisfy intense wanting find expression in extra- ordinary enterprise. Men and ‘women, singly and collectively, do ‘their utmost to increase both the iamount and value of what they have {to sell; likewise, they seek to find Qbetter buyer: for their merchandise. fThe farmer in the grip of desire to ymnke more money or to escape in- isolvency, may study the economics of ‘ifarming with a new intensity. and ymay be led by his studies to change lover from cereal-growing to stock- ‘breeding, pig-raising, or dairy farm- ‘ing, or from pastoral farming to the raising of sugar beets. The labourer, {incited by a great desire, will change ithe character of his occupation in order to earn from his new employ- ment a higher wage per hour or day. l , England ought not to have m embassy in Moscow. For trade pur- Iposes a consul-general would be quite good enough to protect those who ‘are sufficiently greedy or foolish to ‘do business with Stalin and Co, con- itends a writer in Truth. The ex- panse, says this A writer. might be ‘passed, if we got anything- for our money, but we do not get. a farth- Ltngls worth. From a moral point of ‘view the British embassy in Moscow ,is a scandal; from a political point of ‘view it is ludicrous; from a com- 1iiiercia1 point of view is usless. 'I‘l1e Americans, who have no embassy, do more trade with the soviet Govern- ment than Rigland does. The nation in every country dwell: ‘in the cottage; and unless the light of ‘your constitution can shine there, unless the beauty of your legislation and the excellence of your statesman- sliip are. impressed there on the feel- Jngs and conditions of the people, rely upon it. you have yet to‘ leave the duties of government. It is manifest that if Great Britain is to recover her position in the world markets, there must be a wholesale readjustment of her basic industries and along with severe retrenchment and reform in national expenditure, such as adaptation of the wage scale as will enable British industry to meet the challenge of the new con- ditions of imperative mandate. To find a right path through the thorny ivildcmess of problems which now bcset Britain will tax the resource- fulness, courage and capacity of her people and politicians to the utmost. The British crisis can be put in n. ‘single line, “New times demand new It is refreshing in know that there are great forces for good at work in the business world; that. improve- ments are but the natural expression of uplifted thought; that example, purer motives, higher ideals, and the rivalry of excellence are leavenlng the world; that oppression is de- creasing tn order that spontaneous effort may be utilized: that courtesy and kindness are gaining recognition as factors of success; and that men are learning to love their dolly work because through it they feel the divine impulse. The lute Lord Blrkenhead once de- clued that he but known but tow spells in his life when he m not worked from ten to twelve hours o day. Handicapped by poverty in his youth, he hid to work hard tn order to reach a place ln his chosen pro- fession of the law. In this effort he had to meet precisely the some con- ,dittona as to competition which con- ifront. and often discourage, the ibeginnt-rs in practically all vocations. lIt would be absurd, of course, to say that he owed his rise solely tn hard Notes by the Way Greatness in I nun coma from be-| in: ahead of other men-ahead in bold doing, bold dreaming, and, bold during. Millions of men could be great if they would pay the prlcdof greatness, but the them. The price of greatness is the sum of deep think- ing. sustained effort, forceful striving, tbtnkinl. Greutueu is achieved and attained by matching oneself lglinlt one‘: fellowmen and by eurplssin them, in respect of which make men Greatness is not: growth; it is achievement through resolution and hard work; is is going beyond those who themselves have high. Greutnesl is THE CHARLOTTE l llfbat A A 380v? of A Quilts aygii-iawgqgit/ito -" All BWLLLOWIN G I have spoken bcfore about u pro- fessional hockey pill?!‘ W119 W” grectly troubled with air in his stomach. Before a game and during the rest periods he would be in con- siderable distress, but once out on the ice ho forgot ull about it. Now there are u. grout many peo- ple who swallow air when eating or at other times, and the pressure of this I11‘ in the stomach and intes- tines is often so severe that; they consult their physicians as to the possibility of heart; disease, obstruc- tion of the bowel, and other condi- tionl. Dr. Aahor W‘ keisbeiri, New York. tells us that at: least: 00 per cent of patients with real organic ailments, or ailments due simply to nervous- awnllow of food or the saliva-the mouth digestive Juice-some air en- ters tl-ie tube going down to the stomach. Sometimes this is immed- iately belched up and at other times it enters the stomach. When it en- fer: the stomach it immediately goes to the top left side of the stomach. From here, when it begins t0 mill!!! presaure, it is usually belched up again by the individual bringing it up by movements of the body or by deep breathing. This is considered a normal condition and not a symptom o!’ any real trouble. . l-lurrytng or gulplng the food, and swallowing while breathing air with the lungs, is frequently a cause of air swallowing. To get. rid of this air, forced expir- "ticn is made with the opening into the lungs held tightly closed. Dr. M. Heyer says that: these air swallowers are usually nervous in- dividuals, excitable, irrltable, tense and anxious. Now this swallowed air cannot for the most part be absorbed by the blpod and body tissues and must be removed. Bending the body from side to side, attempting to put head down- ward between knees, the use of pep- permtnt, all have proven helpful where the individual was unable to expel it by forcing out his breath. gNow although most. of these cases are due to nervousness and not to organic disease, nevertheless this air in stomach or intestine may actually be a symptom of real organic trouble of liver. gall bladder, heart. or in- testlne. 'I‘hc point: tlieii is that air swal- lowing is usually Just e habit which should be broken. If it persists it. would be well to consult your family physician. Our birth is but a sleep and a for- getting: The Soul that rises with us. llfe‘s star, Hath had elsewhere its setting. And cometh from afar: Not in entire forietfulnesa. And not in utter nakedness. But trailing clouds of glory do we come From God, who is our home: Heaven lies about us in our infancy! Shades of the prison-house begin to close Upon the growing Boy, But he beholds the light, and whence it flows, Ho sees it in his Joy; V The Youth. who daily further from the east Must. travel, still ls Nature's Priest, And by the vision splendid Ia on his way attended; Oil!‘ -Wl1llam Wordsworth. Naturally f am biased in favor of boys learning Elngllah. 1 would make them all leun English; and then I would let the clever one; learn Latin u 1n honour, Ind Greek ll l treat. But‘ the only thing I would whip them for is not knowing ltngliah. I would whip them hard for that."- Winstoii Churchill. brilliance to his nutiinl endowments. Perhaps no other fact bu been more clearly established by experi- ence than that. all education, and in a. brood sense all fitness for high place. is acquired by the exercise of will power; but will power must be work. He had extraordinary abil- ities; but it was his incessant and riesii, swallow air. With almost every} FROM “lzlgrauéllzlis o" tenors are lVllcCormacks or Char. u!“ leskys. The common or garden variety of bath-tub or radio tenor TOWN GUARDIAN The Can-Opener (‘me Huron Expositor) Old l-lmg customs have O0!!! so largely displaced in the modern home that the Brandon Sun is not. fur wrong when it says that the good old day; were those when meals wen: opened with l. blessing lnateud of u can opener. _ Twenty-five years ago, to partake of I mes-l. no matter how humble, without first ukibl I 519N188. Wllld have been considered next dour to sncrllege: not in one l-iuuie in every fifty would it have occurred. ‘lb-day, perhaps, not in one home in fifty, is the old custom ObBBIi/Bd- We do not believe it is because the people of to-dey are my less religious or any less appreciative than their fathers and mothers were. 1t is Just the speed of the age we live in: there isn't time. 0r rather, we think‘ we haven't: the time. we can find the time to spend in a hundred and one amusements that our forebears never even ima- gined, or if they could they would not have spent them in that way. But they, who worked two hours t0 our one, and often at heavy back- breaking labour, time to express their appreciation of the things they received. even when the only way these things could reach the table was through the svvcat of the brow. We do not work as hard for the things we have as our forefathers in this country did, and we have more, far more. And we boast about it. We are more clever. We say we use our heads to save our hands and our backs. We believe we are more 1n- dopendeiit: we do not. ask,‘ we take. We believe we are more self-reliant, more self made. And to tell the truth there is a home-made look about many of us. In fact, We are bewming so self contained that m: are loath to cred- it our well being or our prosperity to any one but curselves. But those many things we have come to believe and which we take as a matter of course, are not all true; not all o.‘ our own making. At least that is the teaching of history and history ls a. wise old book; an unirvpeochable authority. Singing In The Bath l Exchange) We fear the Freiiziti tenor Char- lesky has doye us no good service by letting it be known that he sings in his bath. Nobody is likely to object when an opera singer gives free ex- pression from his tub at ten o'clock in the morning to an assortment of ten-dollar notes for the gratification of passcrs by in the hotcl corridoni but. would the reaction be as favor-i able at. seven oclock, or five? Furthermore who is to decide when a. singer is good enough to be per- mitted to sing at large, as it- were? Unfortunately there are persons, numerous persons, who are pro- foundly convinced their voices are things of art and beauty and whose friends are too pollt-e to tell them the truth. Are they also accorded the privilege. or right. of greeting the new day with lilting melodies or guy arias hot from the operas? Then it is all too true that not all Ls quite another proposition, and it is open to argument whether he should be permitted to sing under any circumstances. l-lcre is where danger arises from the precedent set by M. Chai-lesky. If it; is right could always find, population ‘and purchasing power it. the home market. lempvfflry seems to want, wouldn't nopoly of the home market. Social Service (Exchange) When lfiealdent hoover naked the richest country in the WIN l0! $150,000,000 for unemployment relief there were rumblings from Maine to the Golden Guts. When Mr. Ben- nett naked‘ Parlfimeut for 020.000.- 000 for the sumo 11117110" W "Mimi the thing wu terrible. nu juul; been issued in Britain, and it shown flail: 1. ‘Ihut Already Uhll year the Lub- or Government liu liked Parlia- ment for nearly $022,000,000 to help unemployment. 2. That the coat of IOOII-l act-vices in Britain annually ‘h 81.150.000.000. 3. That in the lut complota your 20,000,000 persona benefited to the extent of $465,000,000 under the com- bined Unemployment and Health In- surance Ante. These figures on all but stagger- ing. The question they must; give rise to is this: How long ~an Brit- ain go on taxing its neoofé for such enormous outlays? How long can iiho g) on, u in the cue of death duties. diverting money that could be used in industry into the channel of the dole? 1t is hard to be pessimistic about Britain; history n11 but forbid: it. Yet modern economic conditions would seem to prohibit the long ex- istence of a. condition under which a nation cuts into its capital mild its estate to satisfy current liabilities. ' ‘ Economic Arguments (Ottawa. Journal) ‘There is little in the world more senseless than the academic doc- mnfllrv "Yin! to fit his pet theories to the world's hard realities. Illustra- tive of thtaure some remarks in a, folltemPvrflry "Proms of existing western wheat conditions. Noting that Mr. H. E. Spencer, well known U. F. A. M. P., would save money by burning 9,000 bushels of wheat lie has to sell, the writer brilliantly l concludes : “'I‘here is apparently something defective in the grand old Ngtiongl Policy when it cannot protect the farmer better than to pay him less than nothing for 9,000 bushels of wheat." l Note the overwhelming logic. Mr, Silencer cannot: sell his .wheat oe- cause there is too much wheat tn the ivorld. Too much wheat in the United States, in Australia, in the Argentine, in India. So our con- temporary! contribution of wisdom is that a. good way to help Mr, Spencer would be for Canada to let. the United States and the Argentlug and Australia come along and dump some of their surplus wheat here. Further: if the National Policy has not helped Mr. spencer to sell his wheat profitably, has Free 'I‘r9,dg helped the British agrlculturlst to sell his products profitably? Mr. Bennett told us something about that in Regina. Protection provides no guarantee that Canada will sell all of its wheat profitably when the world huatoo much wheat. Nothing else could. But if Protection builds up Canadian communities and increases our at least affords a guarantee that l. lot of Canadian wheat will be sold in Free ‘nude, which is what our con- even do that. Wouldn't even give the westeiyi wheat producer a mo- Well, s Government White Paper‘ Cameron Block Partnership Between BERNARD H. HUGHES and ARTHUR‘ W. EDMONDS HUGHES & EDMONDS Fire, Life and Automobile l Insurance tlharlottetown / JANUARY 14, m, Announcing a ‘flnsiut on our Black o >‘\"| v l Twistt- IILhBSfQ lasts time. a longer better us... it" Fire, and E. 146 Richmond St., Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis R.BROW Charlottetown Life, Accident, Sickness‘ Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate. . seen daily in the shaving soap ad- g w g __ A‘ mum the Mm pewelv“ it m” vertisments-who sings as he shoves rzimi- :22?“ oeciaflfg: UWlYi d Wmsu whue h gives um lronlzed YCIII . .... .. 9,0 And fade into the light of common ‘figmuce uses "Iommg e m“, and Nlllvl - - - - - - - - - 81c d: 60o ~ day‘ - Philips mu Mlgflella 45¢ stratlon of inward elation in facing another day's labor. In such mat- ters women are a race apart, but we say frankly, if a bit sadly, that; no man is at his best or fit for the society of his fellows until he has had his breakfast and the morning ill/PBX‘- and proper and commendable that r, star from the Opera Comlque should perform for the reporters from his Chateau tub, how, short; of physical violence, is the boarding house miiistrel to be restrained? There is a fine question of principle involved. In the private home there are wuya and incans of bringing hilluence to bear on the unruly soiigster, and the situation is not so acute, but even here the force of an example so out- standing ls apt to have annoying consequcnw. Too many families are afflicted with a mcnqcr-hc can be GUT SALE 0F DRUGS something ought to be done about it. As a matter of fact this business of getting up in the morning and launching u new day ought to _be done without any outward demon- Plnkhunu Veg. 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