-.‘-:‘— ‘.?_~¢c.r~__:-., -,- .. .. . -_.-..- ‘pm-i apnea-p“ --.. ' PAGE EOUR rut cllnnlontrown GUARDIAN "dud "YT"! W" i...- President-W. Cheater 8. Metal-e. M. Itdltnr and Manlllnl to Annoolala Edllnro-Frnulk Wall Morning Dally (Inlmtlrd llilii $1.00 ller I “so per your (In advance) mulled P. net-reiary-J-leut. C01. l). L. IlA-ltlnnolh D- 5- o- One - ’ lays the Hamilton. - VIre-PrelIdont-J. u. Burnett Herald. Whfll 50ft 0f B cfl-‘ll-idfl "W; United States would bring the leading men of all the parties tn-a gether 1n a desperate effort to save the country. What would ell- tice Mr. Alfred Smith and Mr. Calvin Coolidge and Mr. Hoover r-I. B. Burnett and II. It. Ourrlo o. advance) delivered- ln Con! a and United lute; Iilru Reminders and Reviews s58 It would seem that poems are like wine 1n that they must be mellow- ed by years to be valued, other- B’ I... |y_B¢wgfl_p_ wise the works of John Bannister sarrmnay, sr-zvralvnsaa 12th.. last. and Mr. Roosvelt and Mr. Raskob and Mr. Fess and the leading sen- CUB-ING STAMMERING Tabb would lie better known than Forging Ahead - (Sydney Post) p That the Canadian dairy-us in‘ lustry is now on an esl-flbli-dhed 9x‘ 'port basis is shown by the official records issued bl’ U" D°mlm°fi| Bureau of Statistics. In the 1- months ending with July, Canadfl exported 5,149.60) pound! d! but“ ter valued at $l.216.144. B8 955m“ Missing Letter r CLO OK For Our New they are 1n Canada. Thirty years 1,217,810 pounds valued at $418.- Oontest Pag ‘ENGLAND smzvvs TRUE vCome the three comers of the world in arms. ‘And we shall shock them: naught shall make us ruc, - 11 England to itself do rest but true." ' These dauntless lines from Shakespeare, which were quoted frequently during the War, must have been in Chancellor Sherman's mind as he delivered his masterly budget speech ill the British House of Commons on Thursday. The Chancellor's problem was to find fitra revenue to make up for a deficit of 3370000000 in the pres- ent budget and an estimated defi- cit of $850,000,000 in next. year's budget. The solution of the prob- lem involves drastic taxation meas- ures, increased customs and excise duties. a. reduction of l0 per cent ln the “dole? and n. reduction in the salaries of school teachers, po- licemen and other officials, includ- lng civil servants, from the Prime Minister and Cabinet members downward. The temper of the Brit- ish people was shown by the man-, rier in which the budget announce- ment was rcccivcd by the House. "As Mr. Snowden rcsllmul his scat he was accorded an ovation such ls is given to few Chancellors." There is no immediate danger of "the three corners of the world" coming in arms against England; but the present economic situation warrants war-time measures of economy and retrenchment, and the British Govcmnlcnt and peo- ple hawe risen to the occasion with the spirit that has characterized the race in times past. Great Brit- ain to itself is standing truci It is sale to say of every in- dividual member of the Labor par- ty now in Opposition, if’ they had happened to be Chancellor of the Exchequer at the present crisis, that they would have thought and acted exactly‘ as Chancellor Snow- den has done. They too must have thrilled to the final challenge which the Chancellor, "his pale features drawn and his hands shaking," (lung across the House: "Shakespeare's voice and Nelson's ' hand, Milton's faith and Wordsworths truth, In this our chosen and chainless i land Bear us witness . . . Come the world against us, England yet shall stand!" THE‘ "VICTORY? The recent International speed- vboat race in which Gar Wood f(America) and Kaye Don (Britain) were the outstanding contestants for the Harmsworth 'I‘:'0phy, proved so unsatisfactory from every stand- point that lt is being made the subject. of debate among Sport writers the world over. The major- ity of opinions are to the effect ‘that Gar Wood should no longer- hold the trophy which hc has suc- leasfully defended for over a de- bade. In the first heat, Miss England HI led the other two contestants, lifflssiAmérica VIII and Miss Am- erlca IX, over the course at llil m<p.h., finishing six lengths ahead of the second boat, Miss America IX. Forty-five minutes before gt-he lecond heat, Gar Wood asked for a postponement because of aleak 1n his gasoline, tank. Kaye Don rightly said that according to rul- ings, unless twenty-four hours no- tice were given, no postponement could be allowed. The sportsmaniike thing for Gar Wood to have done would be to have allowed the two other con- testants to "fight it out" between themselves. But Gnr Wood was an old hand at the game, he knew a Iew "tricks," so he hurriedly re- paired his tank, nnd moved toward ate intention of rnisleadirll; Kayo. Don who had been doing a lot of! prggtlslng on his starts, being able‘ to reach the startinz line at 100 mph. Fearing to lose this advant-j age when he saw the American boat dashing for the line ahead 0f him, he at once began to follow, crossing the line seven seconds’ ahead of the gun. His boat struck the back-wash of Miss America IX. capsized and dove to the bottom. Miss America VIII which had nev- er in its hLstory approached tho record made in the first heat, went over the course at a little better than fifty mph. It was not a race. Gar Wood has but surely he cannot be proud of his act. It is a. repetition of the story of the dog in the manger. If he did not win the race, he at least could and would prevent Kaye Don from winning it. What sunrises everyone is that the Judges did not reconsider their decision upon hearing Gar Wood's open "confession" later. In thc sporting world, any underhand work is regarded with contempt, yet in an International race like this it seems to be lauded as one of the fine points in racing ethics. At any rate Kaye Don drove his boat to a, sensational and record- breaking victory in the first heat, and evcll if the breaks were against him he "played cricket." A CASE WITH A MORAL The case tried recently in Suin- merside in which judgment was given against the plaintiff, a. Unit- cd States company which contract- ed to supply an expensively bound ten-volume Source Book of general information to the defendant, fur- nishes much food for thought. The full text of the judgment appears in today's Guardian, and we com- lproblem than anything we ators" Republican and Democrat, n ,5 cermnb. Jm-y P1533158 m to bury their hatchets and make w, the rapld strides being madg in common cause together {or tho-cm,“ rstanlmenngg Que 9g my sake of Uncle Sam? It would beieam. recollections is o] the bright- something stiffer 1n the‘ way of ale“ pupil 1n the class being a vic- hdvhtln. of the stammerlxlg habit. hear of yet. Partlasn feellflS B‘ The idea underlying treatment V"! W008 i" the milled sidtes-Iin the past was that the stamlner lived up to his title “Silver Fox,".|a Labor Senator at Washington! and it is unfortunate that it is s0. since good men in either party flll- pear to feel it to be a devout duty to oppose to the uttermost any proposal, however, good, that the other party thinks of first. This is the alien note in the United states that marks 1t 0f! from the original Anglo-Keith: stock. In Britain Norman and Sax- on and Kclt and Dane all meet t0- gethcr as Britons when need arises and the Flag or the Throne or the Pound Sterling or whatever it may ybe requires an extra hoist. Imagine Yet Lork Sankey is Lord Chancel- lor of the Realm. Which is the more truly democratic nation? Look into the soul of youth and you don't find that ecstatic king- dom of joy with which memory gilds your own youth. They ought had some defect of the tongue or mouth which made it difficult '0 pronounce certain words or use certain letters of the alphabet and this accounted for the fact that he would ‘wrlthe’ 1n his chair, holdhls breath, jerk his head or struggle to speak. Dr. C. S. Bluemel, Denver, Colo- rado, who has studied ‘stammering’ for a number of years, ls of the opinion that the organs of speech- mouth, teeth, lips. tongue have nothing to do with causing stam- merlng. That stammering 1s all impediment or blocking of thought, not a blocking of the speech. He thinks that. the idea, the vision of the word 1n the brain, seems to drop out o! the stammer’! Canada. raised 3s,11s,s1'l pounds-onion or consciousness for the of tobacco in 1930. an increase ofmme being, and u he can’; gee nearly 25,003,000 pounds since 1921.11“ word Wm; the baring gyg, he just can't say or use that word. It is this effort to try and brln! the word back to his WDSOIOUB- ness that causes him to do "-11 80115 of things with his face and body to be happy, God bless the creatur- cs, but somehow-they aren't. The boys always need more money, and don't, know how to get it. The girls may gct invitations and have admir- ers, but they aren't always the right invitations, and the right admirers. Hcart-achrs, envy, passion, sensi- tivencss, despair, unrcturncd love, longing, dreams, ambitions that words belong to blind blundcrlng yearning, ignorant youth? Those who are critical of the Motherland because she has per- mitted tlle creation of a $600,000,000 deficit in her annual budget-a figure which has been considerably cut by \ closer examination- should tlull their attention to the United states which faces a de- ficit of a billion and a half for the current year. Deficits are all the style this year. The majority of European cine- ma-goers will have probably felt mend it to the attention of all our readers who are interested in edu- cational matters. The significant point is the amount of erroneous information about Canada which, according to witnesses for the de- fense, these supposedly authoritative text-books contained. New York, not London, was cited as the larg- est city fn the world. In the 1927 supplement all Canada was stated to be under Government Control, whereas at that time neither Prince Edward Island no: Nova Scotla were under this Act. There were also erroneous statements concerning the entry of this Pro- vlnce into Confederation. About seventy-five per cent of the articles, it was stated, dealt with United "States matters. The part played by the Americans in the. War was magnified an'd the whole work was ‘declared to be unsuitable for Can- Aladian children. Having looked Jnto the volumes in dispute, the trial {judge accepted the opinion and ‘conclusions of the defendant and this witnesses, and found that tho lwork was not such as it was rep- resented to be. \ uneasy after seeing a film which lportrays the worst elements of ‘Western life. Nor is it films deal- ing with crooks, murderers, and un- {disguished villains, that do the iharm, but rathcr films singling out for interest and admiration cheap and silly people living reck- lcss lives in luxurious flats and hotels. We entirely disagree, says the Kingston Jamacia Gleaner, with Sir Herbert England should have continued t0 that a respectable preference to British Empire sugar would have Exchequer-foreign sugar would have been taxed-would greatly have developed the British Empire sugar industry, and by this means would have brought about greater purchases of English goods by the Colonies, Dependencies and Do- |mlnions; it would also have rend- ercd England increasingly indepen- dent of foreign sugar and thus would have conferred several direct as wcll rs indirect benefits on both ithe English people and the people ‘of a large ccction of tile British Empire. On Sunday, August 9. the S. S. Ukraine landed in London a party rend the very spirlt-dolft all these: Samuel's view that I purchase sugar from Cuba: we hold‘ to make the word come to him so that he can say it. Dr. Bluemel says that if ten men ‘working with hammer, happen to ‘strike their thumbs the whole ten‘ ._will do something dlffererit. One will look at his thumb; one will stick his thumb 1n his mouth, one ‘will fling the hammer to the ground: one will whistle; one will faint and so forth. They all struck their thumbs but they reacted dif- ferently. Slmllary with the stammers 8-8 they-try to get the vision of the word. What about treatment? The first step is for the stammer ‘not to struggle to say the word, but just let his mind tell his mouth the word to say, that is to ‘think’ the word first, before he tries u. say it. By giving up this struggle better in' finding it for himself, to say the word his mind works because he is calm and quiet. In class work the group read to- gether: then the pupils are requir- ed to read singly but at any hint of istammering the group joins in and carries the stanuner past his thought block. The pupil is taken gradually from easy to more diffi- cult sltuatlons and aided instantly when stammering ‘fl/ppearg, Dr, BluemePs method of curing stam- merlng is certainly worth trying. TEE SWIMIVIEBS brought in revenue to the British‘ Down go the water's edge they run, eager. loushins. soyyldd swimmers. Into the brave eye of the sun And the golden light-drenched Bil‘- Scarcely they hestitate, but 9111089 Swift to the breathless sea that shimmers With million sparks of brlzhtnesl- Bare Limbs cleave the ripples Wm‘ 9- lunge, Break through the lacing foam that's flung Brilliantly white against the blue. Slow-falling, pendant, Jewel-hung. Now in the widening track that fol- lows . Quenched is the flame o! The their ago this poet-priest was contribut- ing lyrics, quairalns, and "sonnets of surpassing beauty to Sei-lbners, Helpers and other leading American magazines. ‘ He did not write extended poems; he had a gift for condensing great thoughts into a few simple words. These smoothly flowing lines must have been condensed with infinite care, for his purpose was brevity. He tells us the reason for this in the opening poem of his "Later Lyr- ice." "0 litle bird, I'd be A poet like to thee Singing my native song Brief to the ear, but long To love and memory." This descendant of an old. and a wealthy Virginian family had every advantage of birth and education As a boy he had private tutors. but eye trouble interrupted his studies when he was fourteen, and for three years he devoted himself to music. becoming proficient on the piano. During the Civil War he served in the naval department of the Confederacy and was taken prison- er June the fourth, 1864. l-Ie was sent to "Bull Pen” at Point Look- out where he met Sidney Lanier, the poet. with whom he formed a life—long friendship. When given his release he had neither land nor money but decided, on the advice and with the assistance of a friend, to fit himself for a musical career. He practised seven hours a day un- til his patron failed, then secured a position as teacher at St. Paul's School, Baltimore. He became a Catholic in 1872 and immediately began to study for the priesthood- It was not until the Christmas of 1884 that he was or- dalned. The faculty had recognized his ability as a teacher and retain- ed him, aftcr his classical course, to teach English. Heltaught at st. Charles College until he became tot- ally blind; a. short time before his death in 1909. ' We are told that "Father Tabb consecrated all his energies to the vocation of teacher," and conclude that writing was the relaxation of his leisure hours. I know a pupil of his who told me Father Tabb kept a. small tablet no his desk where he jetted down elusive thoughts’ to be written up after classes. Ordinary, everyday things are clothed 1n beauty by the magic of his pen. And, apparently. simple ar- rangement of words explain a sun- beam and a work of nature, in an dxquliitd way not easily forgotten: "The Sunbeam" "A ladder from the Land of Light. I rest upon the sod, whence dewy angels of the night Climb back again to God." Even snow flakes are made real and lovely things. “Are ye the ghosts of fallen leaves, O flakes of snow, Fbr which. through naked trees, the winds A-mourning go? "Or are ye angels, bearing A host unseen Of truant spirits, to be clad Again 1n green?" home IHls "Evolution" has been fre- quently quoted and widely imitated: "Out of the dusk it shadow, Then, a spark; Out-of the cloud a. silence, Then, a. lark; out of the heart a rapture, Then, a pain; Out of the dead, cold ashes. 335 tn the preceding year. In July alone the export 118111188 were 2.1 140,600 pounds, having a value d‘ $458,483. Such expansion of a diialile 1"‘ dustry in the worst 12 1110111118 M a world-wide business dellfcssm" warrants what some of the news- pnperocall "note and comment.” The sudden revival of the Cana- dian butter trade is as everyone knows, due to the abrogation of the Canada-New Zealand treaty 8nd the adoption of an adequately Pro- tectlva tariff by the Federal Par- liament. Between 1925 and 1930, the general tariff on butter enter- lng Canada was only _3 cents P01‘ pound, while the treaty rate W Australia and New Zealand W88 fixed at the absurd level of l cent poi- pound. As a consoquenod this Dominion was deluged with cheap New Zealand butter, and not only did Canada's export trade in but- ter disappear but its home market was glutted, and the dairy industry of this country was threatenod with extinction. ' On the eve oi the Federal elec- tion of 1930 the late King Govern- ment gave notice to New Zealand‘ that the treaty would be cancelled‘ as from October 30, and, that there- after New Zealand would come un- der the British preference. But before October 30 arrived the King Ministry was defeated, the Bennett Government sworn into office, and the short special session of Parlia- ment held. One of the most impur- tant of the fiscal changes made at that session was an increase in the general tariff on butter to 14 cents, the British preferential rate being fixed at 8 cents per pound and being made applicable to New Zealand butter. For months after these changes were made they were of little benefit to the Canadian Educational and Interesting. llFree, Merchandise Prizes Each w“, BRAHMIN TEA Add Edidy Ito Supreme Qualities 55c Per Pound Sold Only in Red Air Tight Packages dalrylng industry, because millions had been shipped to this country between May and October of last year and kept in cold storage ware- houses to supply the trade during the fall and the greater part of the winter. But with the depletion of this New Zealand supply, the Can- adian market was conserved com- pletely for Canadian butter pro- ducers, and the industry has since grown at a remarkable rate. No more conclusive vindication could be flu-nlslled of the beneficial ef- fects of the tariff legislation en- acted at the short session of Par- liament. As has been noted above, We dill’? industry of this country has expanded at an unprecedented rate during the very acme of the general business depression.‘ That it will increase greatly in impor- tance under normal conditlons,goes without saying. And what is true of dfllrying is equally applicbale to other Canadian industries which new have the benefit of an effec- tive tariff against unfair foreign competition. No. sane Canadian to- day would think of reversing the Bennett Government's protective measures with respect to the dairy- ing industry. The time is not. far distant when the benefits o1’ those measures to every important Cana- dian industry will be similiarly ap- flbarent and quite universally ap- illroved by well-informed public ‘opinion. Not Great But Famous (Ottawa Journal) To the more dlcriminatlng novel reader of today that success of the late Sir Hall Cainc, may seem hard to understand, but 1t must be re. membered that the novel only rec. cntly had become popularized front the era of the stately, discursive, of pounds of New Zealand butter! Imwer Queen street HOME AND PROPERTY Might be DESTROYED OVERNIGHT ADEQUATE FIRE INSURANCE WOULD ENABLE REPLACEMENT LET US ARRANGE THE NEEDED PROTECTION HYNDil-IAN & c0., LIMITED.‘ Tile Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. I. Charlottetown BLllCKi-TWISTY iiifififliifiliil - / ‘i i/ ,_ r iKEY 6t ‘NICHOLSON S f! / cucwluc 4___ sheer melodrama, and his reactions ing pictures of life in the roman of "shock workers" from Soviet The moral in this case 1s surely lnussla. They were being obvious. The best text books for use t d .3... 1.1.3.16. 1.. w a o a n , by Canadians are those written redbmpgnie for fyaitiiful service to and published In Canada. or at the Communist Party. All these least 1n 50mg part, o: the British, workers who came to see London, Empire. The 13th edition of the En- ‘or dwham three hurimlvd “if” men Ml f t Ii d t d lyclopaedla Britannica. which is to work 25x22’: [is rgquitgdurgsfegge‘ rho lost edition Published 1n Ens- Soviet authorities and for as llttlci land, is probably the best and most Pay as possible. As soon as they ar-i authorative reference publication 1n m”: at nulibegh °r 3'29"?“ $329; ‘ mac ogc rm gve er‘ the world‘ The 14th edition’ pm” ‘views on their own country's new fished in the United States, be- system and on London However, trays its origin 1n the manner 1p they were closely guarded by a which it glormes American achieve, number of the members of the in- or» o r o~=.§l";‘;2i..°;..‘.l;.'}.i’."; i:i:‘::.:'::; of propaganda in this country, and mow their accsptance’ ‘he be“ w" M dealing Wm‘ l" m Commenting upon this the Mom- tn purchase literature more in‘ing Post editorially says, with bit- keeping with Canadian ideals, both ins sarcasm: "They are, as 1t were, to be let out on ticket-of-leave. 1 1 ts a i ‘or ‘ch00 "q" "men m ‘amuDantc, when he paid his visit t0 home reading. lhe starting line with the deliber- a slower the brown arms lift. W1 the Inferno, was allowed to speak bu; soup." estasy, Life again." whrougll Cool curcles curved, swallows Jn-‘imy-Photograph" he gives us a very happy and "different" con- ception of death. Their bodcs yield to the Weill"! "My sister Sunshine smiled on me, 50d- And of my visage wrought a shade. At length they turn and wade W" “Behold,” she cried, "the mystery Wilt. Of which thou art afraid! Dream-laden from 011K655, To find in vision transient A world new~washed 1n lovlness. ‘like the wave's "For death is but a tenderness, A shadow, that unclouded Love Hath fashioned in its own excess —Eliza)beth Tatchell, in The Satur- °f Iddidddd "dm dbdvd" day Review. Father Tobb's poems are collect- ed In five volumes which were pub- llshed in the following order: freely with the dammed. The ld-It "P9503" "ii-WNW!" "ohm! Vdflet’ RBYHOW 01' B11 Such Volume-d P11b"allowcd to speak to “foreigners? souls o! capitalism are evldentlyiWrater Lyrics?’ and "Sonnets." and Pinero were creating new mod. lished by our southern neighbors. ‘Little gifts were offered them, butlthought to be beyond the Dale oi‘ "Poems! the volum}; from which hes in the theatre; Kipling had burgl; I - / we are not, inter-gated m ma; kind grain the Boards of those "faithful even passing intercourse. The Bol- quote, published by the University like a. rocket out o.‘ the East and U / workers“ Wcrposed and refused to ahevist elect may look upon the Press, Cambridge. U. B. A.. was lnhccptlcs, realljts and 1r onoclnsis 2 misery of their British oomradesjits fifteenth edition ‘March, 1913. but may notgive them one Wordiseven thousand five hundred copies of comfort about that better land of this one volume had been sold Where. 8-! Ml‘. Bhaw has testified.'lherl, and numerous edvions have everyone is happy and free to en- been issued since. Fither "Wbh is 10y a diet of black bread and olb-icertalnly appreciated in his own country. and dignified Thackeray Scott and Dickens. Outside of these and their hundreds of imitators, and the numerous “Ouida" school of society novelLsts whose chief stock in trade W85 the governess who married the t-arl, there were few novelists who made a direct appeal to popular tastes. ~ It was a transition period and a brilliant one at that. not only lrt Eusllsh fiction. but generally in the creative arts. Tennyson, Swinburne, Henley and Stevenson, had created new magic in metre; the Prc-Rnph I aelités. Rossetti, Mlllals and Holm- i‘ ~ . / an Hunt were vying with Byme- ,_ '_ n S Jones, Whistler and others in a sec- ond renaissance; Oscar Wilde, Ibsen to life those of a glorified school- boy; but despite all this he was a marvellous story-teller who gave delight to millions. His nearest ap- proach to fine or finished charac- terization was seen in his earlier books, "The Deemster," and "The Manxman." 1n those efforts he gave some powerful, accurate, and mov- \\\\\\\\\,‘ , PILLS _.RAII\\\\.. lwcre bldzinz the way to the mod- L K Y em era. ' . ' ' | [) N l Hall Caine filled a m'nnr role in ,",1., Pa.“ HAiJ-I a ""18 Pound of trrnsitlon. He never ("ltvih 3D‘ ‘i “in Wm“ “V711” Bnbrnnchin". great I ‘ ‘ “EMMA” t or enduring literature. His char-ac. ' WI "to lunhiy artificial, his plots little isle of the Irish Sea. The Liverlllnll Kidneys Must Be Kept Active. u tho mien II to "°"" '“ " free. normal arrange W33.‘ digestion and Andrew's Liver Stilts Guaranteed a 1W" "a hum‘ "n!" Yunnan’ fluhee tbs. ,. kidneys, cleanses the liver and‘ mum g, general foo"!!! N“ "mum. u; vigour. _. solrun a o:- fllu- "l" m‘ e ‘the 2 "A051 nauosroas m Great ooom 9 Moll 0mm 0"" MONUM-