».- T I! Fl l. . i insftcniniofiiiw Preaidenb-W- rl ‘ s. nah-mu. l. r. YIIlI-PIOIIIDID-xs I- Ilflfi Secretary-Llano. Col. l1- A. Ilnlflnlol. D- l- Iid|fnr_lnd lllnllllll ltlmiorql- ll. line" Associate Editors-Inn "v .I|| ill-KO!!!“ llnrnln: Dally (founded In!) IMII p" you (In ICYIIIIOY. use p" yen (In advunM) nnllvfl SATIJRDAY, Mommy's HOLIDAY‘ "About half a century ago," writes m. Toni More. President the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada in a timely message in the Canadian Labor P:ess, "labor in Canada and the United States be» gan to observe the first Monday in September as a holiday of its own, a day for the celebration of past achievements and for the public declaration of its policies. Following similar action taken by the Government of the United States, the Parliament of Canada h 1894 enacted legislation estab- lishing this day as a. public holi- day, since which time it has been known as Labor Day. Its obser- vance SCYVCS as a. continual re- minder oi the indispensable part that the workers play iu the for- ward march of progress and em- phasizes the constructive influence that can be wielded through organ- ized activity and unity of purpose.” Referring particularly to the present world-wide economic de- pression, Mr. More suggests that every effort should be exerted t0 secure immediate relief and that the time calls for courageous ex- pending and not timid retrench- ment; all possible public_ works should be initiated both by federal, provincial and municipal authorit- ies and the utmost advantage tak- en of the lull in private industrial activity to develop Canada's heri- tage to the full. ' This is a. policy which the Feder- al Government has already initiat- ed and which will be carried out extensively during the coming months. A delegation from the Pro-q vincial Government, headed by Pre- mier Stewart has had consultation with the authorities at Ottawa on this subject. and the result is being awaited with great interest. While this Province has been less affected by the depression than other larger centres of population. it is still necessary to provide for unemployment, especially during the coming winter. No worthier re- cipients of assistance unemployment under the grant exist than our laboring closes, who, like our ‘ farmers, may truly be said to be the backbone of the community. Monday has been set apart as a public holiday to commemorate the achievements of Labor in the life of the Dominion. With the local labor organization in mind, wg cannot do better than conclude these remarks with another quota- tion from the current issue of the Canadian Labor Press—a quotation which Expresses a truth too import- \nt to be ignored: "WOFMHB DCODIc regard labor and service as a. most valuable and sacred thing. It cannot be classed as a commodity compar- ed with tangible. perishable pro- ducts manufactured and created by industry. Labor is life because workers give their lives and their minds when they work with their hands. . . . The ultimate object- ive oi labor is the realization and enjoyment of a higher and bfitter life. . . . The aims of lBbor are s0 noble and its motives are so lofty as to invite and se- cure the support of all those who believe that it is the inalienable right of men and women to enjoy life. liberty and the pursuit of happiness.“ A REAL HOOK I ____ ’ To love books, it has been said, is “to lovc them for ever beyond time Ind change." The clnss of readers to whom this statement applies are IPB-ifllkeli! to require newspaper advice on what to read. Yet there is one book recently published in England which we cannot refrain from commending to those of hm- readers who have been born with, or have acquired, that passionate attachment to "the noble dust of libraries" which is the distinguish. lng trait of all genuine book-worms. The book is by Holhrook Jackson and is entitled "The Anatomy of Bibliomanla." It is in two volumes- Slx months ago the first volume ap- ln Cnnnlln and United SEPTEMBER 5. 1931 peared and was hailed with delight. Mr. Jackson took Burton's "Ana- tpmy of Melancholy" as the model of his work, and he ocmPleqy succeeded, not only in calltuflfl! but m retaining throughout the style and spirit of his Elizabethan model. The reading that went to the first volume must have been prodigious; it is filled from cover to cover with literary anecdotes and allusions, culled from all the cen- turies-an inexhaustible cornuco- pia, capable of being opened at ran- dom with the certainty of flndin! delightful reading on every page. It see —' im- ossible that Mr. Jackson could repeat his success in the promised second volume. But this is precisely what he has done. The new volume, according to the reviewers is as satisfying as the first. It is divided into thirty-two parts, and without the least suspic- ion of repetition the author, with unfailing ingenuity, finds in each of them some new aspect of his subject. Among other matters he writes of "The Misfortunes of Boo ," of "Bookworms,” "Book Hunting,” “Grangeritisfl and asks and answers the question, "Do Bib- liomaniacs Read their Books?" Quotations from such a work can afford no adequate idea of the var- iety and eittent of the whole. Nev- ertheless, as typical of hundreds of delightful passages, take the ‘fol- lowing: “fn this business of'the choice of books I am with the Earl of Balfour when he confesses that at times he is tempted somewhat to vary the prayer of the poet. and to ask whether Heaven has not reserved in pity to this ‘much educated generation, some peace- ful desert of literature as yet un- claimed by the crammer or the coach; where it might be pos- sible for the student to wander, even perhaps to stray, at his own pleasure; without finding every beauty labelled, every difficulty engineered, every nook surveyed, and a professional clcerone standing at every corner to guide each succeeding traveller along the same well-worn road.’ “I will not quarrel with those who think otherwise. They can do no harm, and catalogues of what one ought toread are an entertainment and a. warning. Every reader worth his salt will choose his own hundred best books. A liltary, whether small or large, is a sec. which we must chart for ourselves and explore for ourselves, our own intelli- gence for compass, and with a. fair wind behind us or full steam ahead, we need not fear to reach the Islands of the Blast." STABILITY There is one thing for which, in the midst of the present prolonged economic depression Canadians sliouid be thankful, says a Brant- ford exhcange; and that is the sta- bility of our financial institutions. So far there has not been a col- lapse of any bank in Canada, or of any financial institution that would disturb the country's ixedit or shake the confidence of the people in business enterprises. On the other hand, it is said that during the past decade there have been more than. 6,000.bank failures in the United States. EDITORIAL NOTES “There is general rejoicing,“ says the Toronto Globe, (Liberal) "that the Canadian National Exhibition again is on the upswing, and that therefore things generally cannot be so black as they have been painted." “Canadlansfi sighs a Toronto ex- change, "are not as different ‘from Americans as they were c genera- tion ago. Can one imagine a. gen- eration ago that a Canadian amusement ager would accur- ately have gauged the - leuure-iov- ing pccjffiarities of the people of Toronto by providing them "with the spectacle of Shipwreck Kelly? But today there are apparently enough empty-headed people in this city to make the stupid and vulgar spectacle provided by a pole sitter c valuable attraction to an amuse- ment park." In nineteen months hrthe QM of July says an exchange fort-l’- three spectators, four of whom died, were hit by stray-bullet fired__by criminals on New York streets. The wounded who survived wmnen and twenty-five men.‘ 1n the same period fourteen ,. licemeri were killed and twenty-seven wounded. In the first seven months of this year nineteen bystanders were wounded. ' . The police havg been warned to shoot fast and straight, to shoot above the waist, and they are to be given radio-equipped motor cars as an Aid to mobility. They arc to have the assistance of the federal authorities, who have had some succes in eliminating gangsters by sending them to jail for evasion of income-tax laws or violation of-lhc liquor laws. But the wise New Yorker, when he hears the shooting start, still will take to the subway. On one occasion a. pupil of Whistler, the great impressionist artist, said to her master, rather impatiently, “But, Mr. Whistler, why can't I paint things just us I see them?" "My dear young lady," was his reply, "there is no statute to prevent you from painting things just as you see them. but it will be h-l when you see them just as you paint them.” The authenticity of the story might be doubted were it told about any other man than the author of “The Gentle Art of Making Enemies.” No system of Indian self-govern- ment can work unless Mbslem and Hindu are both willing to acquiesce in it. It is not merely a matter of the signing of a paper pact,by dis- tinguished leaders on either side. There are, says the Manchester Guardian, two questions to be con- sidered-first, whether we can get the degree or initial assent which will make it possible to bring thé new system into operation; second- ly, we have to ‘make as sure as we can that the new system is so con- trived that when lt has been brought into operation it will work so as to allay rather than inflame mutual suspicions or hatreds. It seems says a Cairo , p" that the Egyptians are not to be surpassed in their trade efforts by the activities of‘ ‘the British, at least where Anglo-Egyptian re- lotions are concerned, for there has been considerable satisfaction ex- pressed at home with the good, quiet business methods of Abdul Wahmb Pasha. The financial under. secretary his just_ concluded ar~ rangements at Livenpool for the storage in bond at that port of large consignments of Egyptian cotton for sale. Stores will always be kept full, incidentally giving Lancashire the advantage of a ready supply. When you are in Carnac In France. and you go out to see the mysterious Druid menhirs, which are among the most impressive in the world, you will, of course, be told, as you were at Stonehenge, in England, that they mark warriors‘ graves or are stones connected with sun worshippers and so on. It is well to recall that we. know very little of the religion of the Druids; in fact, one of their laws was, "Do not discuss religion among your- selves." Other laws were: “Women may become judges," “No child shall be reared in a city, but only in a village," and Caesar has left the testimony that "it is a 18W of the Druids that no man shall be richer than his neighbor." n is not the abulltlon of private property, but the abolition of the private life which is so repulsive in the Bolshevik experiment. To be herded together, as the Russians seem to be, and to be at the mercy of propagandists who 56g in you nothing but raw material for the current Five--Year Plan-this is what repels a. man brought up in the ordinary human way. Three is every sign that a trem- endous storm ls brewing, in Great Britain. This is likely to be the more furious because, so far as parliament is concerned, the op~ ponents of the government know that they are impotent. They can- not prevent the cut-aiid-drled pro- gram of the new ministry going in- to effect While they sit by power- les in modify it. ‘There will be "soenes” in the House of Commons when the session is resumed. It may be taken as certain "Ill- sooner or later a tariff will be- come inevitable, in Great Britain. That conclusion was reached five months ago by Profssor Keynes the most eminent of advanced Lib- eral economists. Everything that has happened since-has tended to prove thdt he was right. The only way to salvation in financial mat- ters is,by the application of a tar~ iff. combined with drastic re- trenchment. e. nous TlIE wiv , included five boys. three iilru. BIX - camouf- ‘or musics and ~ masonic When schcoi- opens and the youngster gets hi! first physical el- aminationthe parents may receive a card suggesting that the young- ster's tonsils or adenoid: be remov- ed. ‘ It ls usually suggested that the parent consult the family physician regarding it. . It is only natural that parents sliouid feel a. little backward about ‘having ‘the youngster * an operation, not from the expense standpoint, although that must be considered. but the tonsils might be Serums a useful Purpose and it would seem unwise to disturb them. What about this? Does the re- moval of tonsils help or injure a. youngsters chances regarding the various ailments? Dr. A. H. Kaiser, Rochester, N. Y., who has done a great amount of rc- search wcrk along this line, gives us the record of his study of 4400 child- ‘ren over a. ten year period. He tells us that certain infections have a. close relationship to the presence or absence of tonsils and adenoids. Other infections are not influenced favorably or unfavorabiy by the presence or absence of tonsils and. adenolds. A few infections act- ually occur moie often after tonsils are removed. Removing the tonsils and ade- noids helps to prevent or to make attacks less severe in colds in the head, sore throats, enlarged glands in the neck, inflammation of the middle ear, rheumatism, diphtheria, scarlet fever, and infections of the teeth. Measles, tuberculosis. St. Vitus Dance, (chores) were very slightly helped, if at all, by the re- moval of tonsils and adcnoids. Undernourishment or loss of weight occurred in nearly as many children whose tonsils and adenoid:- had been removed as in those who had not undergone operation. There were more cases of bron- chitls, n- 1e and un- fiammation of the sinuses or caverns adjoining the nose) in those who had the tonsils removed than in those withtonsils; in fact first at- tacks of sinusitis occurred more often in the children whose tonsils and adenoids had been removed. t Now, with the above facts, just what should parents do? They should be guided by the family physician who knows all the circumstances of the case. There is always this one point to be remembered. Infected tonsils cause most cases of rheumatism, and rheumatism causes most cases of heart disease. ( SIC TRANSIT . . . The Cities of the Plain are dust, . Assyria is fox’s plunder; , Sidon and Tyre to silence thrust, Nineveh fallen with fire and thun- der . . . Across the margin of the world The drift of Babylon ls swirled, And centuries of rot and rust Have gnawed Capernaum asunder. Stone crumbles-but more stanchly fares A Dust incredibly translated . . . Judas still haggles at his wares, Cain is forever new-created; Delilah in a Paris frock "Goes out to tea at five o'clock: Salome climbs the subway stairs; Potiphar takes the Elevated! —5ara Henderson Hay, in Harper's Magazine a FARMER OBJECTS TO PLANES sl-lElNAiNDOAH, 1a., Sept. 4 — mrgg years ago, the city welcom- ed planes at the Kiwanis airlWYl- Now the problem is to keep them away. The local Kiwanis Club has forsaken upkeep of the airport and turned it back to the owner. Pilots however, having learned the loca- tion of the airport, continue to lend there. The owner threatened suit because of damage to the alfalfa crop he planted when the Airport was given up. q _.___.i A certain New York restaurant man may be given credit for a rather novel widow display. This man didn’t have much money for advertising, so he bought the big- gest fish bowl he could-get hold of. filled it with water, and put it in the window with this signs. "Filled with invisible goldfish from Argentine." It took seventeen policemen to handle tho crowd. Reminder: and Reviews If you study two famous family you" flu prints o! which U9 ill-- eluded in ever! art-reference v01- umc, you will have {better under- standing of the artistic differflwe between Reylwldl 1M h" "W ocinnioi-ough than any words Family," by Glimboiough , and "Lady cooimm with nei- Child- ren." by Reyflflldl- In correct proportions, vigor and nggumhggg o1 arrangement my- nolds‘ picture excellll in dflifilvy of treatment, background. and 8m" eral setting Gainlbomlldh’! °°n' caption leaves nothing to be desir- ed; they are both perfect, in a sense, yetentirely different. ' Reynolds was always the student. painstaking and exact; Gain-shei- ougli was a dreamfl- Painting c! the impulse moved him and draw- ing his jnspiration from nature. He was more concerned in liar- mony of color than exactness of line: his pictures are poems rath- er Lhan stories. The "Blug Boy," his best known canvas, was painted as a challenflei the selection and arraniemellt °1 color in this and ‘ portrait 0f M18- Biddon, are, directly opposite to Reynolds‘ teaching that blues and greys should be subdue], never dominant. The. soft, tender colors in nature predominate in all Gainmoroug’: portrait studies; in his landscapes only he applies warmer, richer tones. In this class of painting he was really at his best although his landscapes were not appreciated during his lifetime. Some biograiphers say they were painted for his own pleasure and were never offered for sale, others tell us that they were unsslcible: they are highly valued at the pres- ent time. _ Fcinsborough was only ten when he began to draw flowers and trees. His mother painted flowers and bcbly taught him to use a neu- cil. Until he was fifteen ho lived and sketched in the open. Sent to school he spent his time drawing carricatures of the teacher. ‘There was one thing only that he wanted to do and when his parents realiz- ed this he was allowed to Bo to London to study art. For a time he attended the school where Hogarth had received some instructions, and later, studied in a Private studio. In all, he spent three years in Imidon then returned home to waste another two years dreaming. It is possible that they were not entirely wasted years either: his tonéll in the Bneiis and browns of nature; howas not as idle as he seaned. “' During this period he met and fell in love with Margaret Burr. a beautiful gulp-with an annunity of two hundred pounds, whom he married before he was twenty. His wife, who was eighteen when they married, was supposed to be the daughter of an exiled stuart prince. She was a cultured gentle slrl very much in love with he!‘ handsome husband. Probably her patience, and the security of hoi- annuity were responsible for the slow awakening 'of ambition in Gllmmmulh. he was sure of a living and happy, too satisfied with fill-Eli“! conditions to ask for any- ihlnl cJce, and for twelve years did very little serious work. He was in- terested in music and gtifg as much of his time to that as he gave to Dlllnting. Hg was nearly thirty-two moved with family-he had two daughters-lo Bath, n. resort of fashion and wealth, and bescn portrait work in real eameat. During his fifteen years in resi- dence Bath he had many famous sitters, and contributed portraits a! exhibition of the Royal Academy in London. When he moved to the Met-Mimic M71774 he hld attained considerable fame, and was quite .- - ,, iudsin: by thg yearly rent he paid for his" lesidence. Schomberg House, Pall Mall-near. ly two thousand a year in our money. . Like Reynolds, Gainsborough had many inicrestinl friends in Macon. vbut they. were musicians rather than liticfrary men. He used music as Reynolds used writing, as a reiaxtion cnd,he could perform acceptably on" the vloloncello, harp, and other musical instruments. Reynolds afldGainsborougmwei-e warm, friends at first, although they were alwayl rivals in por- trait work. Borne trifling matter estranged them: for. ‘yearn-prob- ll!!! the Pfllltioii unlined to one of Oainliorwlli’: Pictures at Royal reconciled at Gainsborough‘: death-bed, ‘A great "may "oropinnioi-ougu beltportraits ire in private col- lections; many 9f them in America. "The-Boy Blue," prlvaisly owned by m. ons in California, u the poi-emit of unmi- autmi. ‘rifle, and the "Duchess "of Devonshlre," _--—--_.. _ _ give you; they_.lre "The Baille| mind was a storehouse of lovely _ before he thought of fame, then he 1 well as landscapes to the annual ' alsolnAmerlcqai-eliisbutknown i THE CHARM OF MUSiC (Toronto Globe) The artistic side of Canldl‘! great annual Fair is well illustrat- ed by the offences o: the splendid jlxhibltion Chorus, under the 411F945‘ tion of Dr. H. A. Fricker. 011511- ized 1151922, this impressive chorus of more than 2,000 highly trained vocalists has made stronl; BPDEN to the aesthetic tastes 0i’ thulfi attending the Exhibition. This year the chorus 8W9!" l~° have reached new heiBhl-B °1 elm‘ dency. Each season the WW" 9! the organization has been of a more commanding nature. and the verve with _.Whi¢11 i“ Pmlmm‘ have been rendered has been m0." marked. Just a5 the ancient harp of Erin through Tara's halls "the soul of music shed," so the Exhib- ition Chorus has flooded with melody the great spaces of the Coliseum; and on Saturday it achieved a distinct triumph. i Popular and classical selections were rendered with a surety of treatment that bore evidence of capable and careful instruction and first-class individual ability on the part of the vocalists- The occasion was made more in- teresting and impflflfluii bl! the appearance and performance of St. l-flldivs Band, brpught from En!- glngle portraits. H8 16"’ 3 we“ many drawings and sketches. l1- mong them his first P011111"; “will of life known as "Tom Peartree." The“, is gn interesting incident told in connection with this draw- ing. One day, before Gainsborough was fifteen, he was sketching-a pear tree, when he saw 8' 1mm leaning over a near-by fence Mid casting longing glances at the fruit. Unseen by the possible thief he caught a likeness which remains for posterity. ' i If genius demands a. toll, as we are taught. to believe, then Gains- payment. His life seems to have been singularly happy from the very beginning. He was never driv- en by work and could bring en- thusiasm to his every effort;—no artist could ask for more than that. His home life was so happy that public and social affairs failed to interest him, and he made no at- tempt to attract the Royal favor that meant so much to the brilliant men of his dayuI-Ie died in 1788 at the age of sixty-one years. Rey- nolds outlived him four years. . 25c, 50c and $1.00 like 8LO0Mfnenl0ll 68o 35c A. B. S. it C Tablets . 21c 39c 60c Chases Nerve .. 47c 35c Cliuesltdi luPilla .. 29c m 2 MAGS 149 Great George- Street Phone 315 Mall Order: Given Prompt Attention. Gregg Hwshorthand A Winner REPORTING THE PREMIER When the Premier of the Province was delivering hi: Budget Speech In the House this year. he was reported by three graduate: of the Union Commercial College writing Gregg shorthand. One, a former Conn Reporter; , another,‘ the - present. Court. Bourke: and a young Indy from on‘: n: the Governmuit 0mm. These ltudentl were all trained by Principal Mona. Write for further information. Union Commercial College , borough was one man who escaped - Pepsodent Mouth wuih . y... i FREE SAMPLES and " valence. ' oducts NAPANEE. Brace, McoKay b Swnmeni‘ _ qsEPTEMBvER 5 19341 ugh Clip thll Ill Hid lfllll ll With “gm ‘ will send you back a gcnerouancfmpls :nm;xfn“' Miller Io: rm u» m. We want you u» m i... °"-' "m. foxec — especially young pups ‘- qon-g do hmflwmml if Miller food: than on what yon have been using, Ran-Miller fox foods contain h needs-meat crackling, alfalfa, m; 231° §§wgllel "lllml mil whim-I- Thev m i-uh in bone-building mm,“ "‘ ‘ contain tho vlhmlnl of ‘growth and developmgh; n We'll send you some of each kind-lt- 31mg- culls, m grown foxes, a-u Puppy Mhgll lo "I F“ B ' gamed, B-M Khbloc for feeding in milk, R-M Pup” 0r 10m p‘ (I. . cults for counteracting worms xfilrsv; M charcoal m“ a2ii5iflinbil. FQX FOODS Made in Canada. from Canadian Pr ONTARIO. Distributor! l0!‘ P. E. l. 00., Ltd. l-M Stunting; R-M r R-M nigifiznh" "'1" Penn Mi -M Chirgoal :22“, 0h Bu‘, lunil r little fella: “n! 50in’ llomuh land for the period of the Exhibi- tion. It is always a myllflry l0 the unrnusical mind that vocal and in- uvrumental organizations. 111 "l" case divided by the ocean. 06h will‘! together and, without regul rehearsals. 8W8 s" " " f ' renditions of intricate rmdllcflms by the musical geniuses of the world. That is what occurred on Saturday evening, and a delightful audience long will cherish mem- ories of the brilliance and harmony of the united effort of band and chorus. St. Hilda's Band is a. small organ- ization developed among the work- ers in a mining district of England. but the perfection of its art proves again that if therg is music h soul of man it will find exp - _ even in the most disco environment. Truly, when l-fllda's Band and the Exhjb Chorus responded to one baton, notable ‘ l u. ‘ ‘ __ f been merged, and the result for those in attendance an even of unqualified delight, THIEF RETURNS L001‘ (United Press PRINCE-TOWN, W. Va, Sept , Mrs. D. R. May was very m surprise when she received a ~ . containing $115 in bills that ~. stolen from her home a few v- before. FIJI m DESTROYED H YNDMADI & Lower Queen Street USE BRAHMIN TEA 'And Enjoy Its Supreme Qualities I i " 55c Per Pound _ Sold/Only in Red Air Tight Packages Youn HOME AND PROPERTY Might be OVERNIGHT ADEQUATE FIRE-INSURANCE _ i WOULD ENABLE REPLACEMENT l; LET US ARRANGE THE NEEDED PROTECTION co., LIMITED‘, The Oldest Insurance ‘Agency in P. E. I. Charlotleto ~ .. Royal Bank Building Charlottetown mwmmmu CHEWING j‘ . be“