‘ 9-.» u‘ cvwfmw . .._- - at?" Q22?! QF-urelifiejr; fiifiifnsnflf __ FOUR ‘n: GIIAIILUTTETIAN President-W. Chester l. hlcluro. l. I. secntary—' huh-Col. I). A. llaeklaneu, ll. l- l). Editor and llaanlllll Associate Idltora—-Frank Wfllhr Ill I). l. Currie llgrflh)‘ llQlly (founded Iss1) so.” per Isl! (la advance) dellvani- » at,” per year (la advance) mailed ll Gilli! Ylee-Pnelleat-l. I; Iullefl Director-J. It. Bureau. Ill "UNI IMMI- v nus, y aim The londou Olscver remarks: Nooounf-ryismmlnneedo! an efficlentseccndohanrbesqwimm. mllodbowersfcrrevisionandds- lly. Inthetwentteth century TUESDAY, MAY H, ' D31 CIVIC CLEAN-UP Now is the time for outdoor spring cleaning, when yards, lawns and gardens, if they are tolook their best during the summer months, must be attended to. Many citizens are already active in this directors. and are thereby contributing, not only to the better appearance of ‘their own properties. but of the cYty generally. No particular dates have been set apart for this work, but it might not be a bad idea if Charlottetown folbwed the example of larger centres and but on an in- ins to m». and "may there hasbemtaikofthepcmibllityofa Japanese nwvement somewhat a- kin m Fbcism. .'l‘he_rocant ‘out- burst is said to have clinlaxcd "a long series of political crimes in- cluding an attack on the life of the Emperor himselfl’. nghteen mm. each wearing an. army.or naval oif- flcer's uniform. have surrendered to the police. ~ - Most of the previous terrorist-lo acts,'_ however, have been ' blamed. either on Koreans or on imp"??- ished Japanese who obiectcd to the nation's economic policies. 0n tensive Clean-up Week campaign ahs spring. In this connection it is interest- ing to note that Montreal is prepar- ing for the lfggest Clean-up Week in its history. The big week comes May 21 to 28. On the opening day there will be a clean-up parade of floats depicting model homes and gardens, etc. Arrangements have been made to distrbute posters, window cards, and display; as well as 50,000 “crusade cards" for householders, (the latter to be cir- culated by the Boy Scouts) all with -“Clean up and Paint up." I A day has been set apart in Week will be discussed in the public school; of Montreal. Other days will be devoted respectively to the advantages of painting-up, of gar- dens, and of fre prevention. As s. forerunner to the campaign a pub- lic luncheon will be held and the Mayor will deliver an appropriate address. Merchants are oo-opflli‘ in: by window displays emphasiz- ing the advantages of the cam- paign, and the movie films and the poppy that Might‘ is Right. she other publicity devices will be ut-iliz- h“ flanged the 15131;,‘ of gracious cd. andput her trust _in suns and clean-up bayonets to enforce hersrrulholli-b. drive is an organization known as NW ‘he 3 finding thatarms can the (my Improvement League. ‘Ihib. b; used with as deady effect‘ for to Charlottetown readers, is the "w" u gm- wnquggg, Back of the Molltrofl most pignificant feature of the munpaign. Movements for civic betterment seldom set ahywht" ywitholfi active and responsible leadership. Public iwhgf, is being done in other cities and could do much to stimulate in- the beck and call of innumerable terest in, and give direction to, organised minorities with its particular asie to Ifllld. A at-rlkln! The campaign in. the schools is instance occurred last week, when. bne of the most important Phases accord!!! i0 W"! of the work, and the leadership of "locust swarm’ of- lobilyilil" cended on Washington we ‘aewunce the new tax bill and to seek to all!" month the figures the burg,“ which 1e would impose country show that, in fact, world organized efforts in civic tidinus. a civic improvement League in this connection would be invaluable. Boys and girls should be to take s pride u. the appearance of their homes, of the streets on which they live, and tho Oil-y 0i’ Wm‘ munity w which they beioiis- In rural districts throughout the Province much has already hem dons by the Women's Instliiltbs. the Canadian Horticultural Society and other bodies to stimulate in- terest in this connection; but there k a wide field herc, particularly in Charlottetown, for further en- uuuragement and leader-shill- BLOODSHED IN JAPAN Japan, in recent months. ha! sown the seeds of mlltlry 588"!" sicn. Now it would 8P9?" W" "he u beginniri! to Hep the "Willi" the vast Mitsui interests, was slain on March 5 of this year, less 9115-" a month alter the ssflslllll-tion 01 former Finance-Minister, Junnosuke gum Opposition Bfinuine, though method will country an accepted and effective tempt had been made by a Korean second c, , _ side the Imperial Psllbo- 0n April 29 a bomb was e. view to spreading the gospel of a; Hongkew p“, "nggf shanghai, resulting in the death of a prominent Japanese civilian of- which the objects of Clean-up mm mg in 15mm; to five Jap- anese army, navy and consular of- ficers. ' enthusiasm at the reason for the number o! ‘could be aroused just as keenly “crank" laws on the siltlltb N“! here as in Montreal if an organisa- of the Republic to the south. They ition for civic improvement were are easily understandable when one formed. Such an oilimization, work- considers the wholesale barefaced m, u; ‘go-operation with the City lobbying that mo; on, not only, It Council, could keep in touch with Washington but in every Btctc 1. .1‘ November 14, 1980, Premier "Yukol Hamaguchf was shot by a student‘ andJn August, 1931, he died from the effects of his wounds. Baron enema; “h, Takuma Dan, manasinqr director of Inoue, leader of tho party and two months after an at- to bomb Buiperor llirohito out- fist which Japan has held W" civilizations. Japan has insistedon 141v ow v. 's. cusrou ’_ Canadians have often wondered prepared at last to "reform it ai- together?" ier leave with the hereditary principle will sgpleded ton correspondent Times. Toronto recently, declared that he looked to the wealth of nations to begin the pro- cess of reviving international trade. the shrinkage cf which was, in his opinion, the . . universal economic disaster of to- Th9” 5" “dunk” °! ‘. W“ day. The main hope lay in the serious state of affairs internally sound political instinct and ingrain- m the country of the nun; Sun. ed common sense N" “m” aummm" The mm“ Zmmiiddle road, would be found be- , tween universal free trade, which GM"! i-l m9 emwdlmepi’ o’ “n he regarded as andeal, but not a attitude of mindthlt hl-I “and practical one, nations being what may powerm n.'fl°m ‘pa! gush they are, and the other extreme of exclusive tariffs, which are produc- ing economic paralysis on a scale never before experienced. members of the British family who will gather at Ottawa in July can- not agreee among themselves to put the common above particular interests of each. he does not know where to look for help. dull as life most lasting pleasures which demand some exertion of body or mind. The freedom which is worth most is freedom to grow in intellect and Victorian age was by no means one of stagnation. tr mendous activity in politics, lit- srature, course the Victorians did not say m mygggchmshqm g“ gelthc last word in these matters, but that does not mean that all their those ,.. never will up, “q m- vu- ousht to be. conceded to an Upper House whose archaic ,_ sition defies every Ilwdgm pymgg. NB 01 representative government. When hereditary sovereignty, with its lineage of far more than ‘a thousand years. has in effect re_ linquished all Political prerogative except its sI-vinc bower of media- tion in emergency; and whcn, to its 81017. it has become instead a new social monarchy, unlvsrguuy be. "VHF-it 1B Dfesumlltuous for the Doers to claim a continued right of ‘coking oi-‘overridlng the people, In any real crisis their claim to that right is impotent or fnflam. lllflwfy-i positive peril to all the interests they mean to safeguard. This makes the Second Chamber, when most needed, a paralytic sham. The social monarchy of today implies a social aristocracy relinquishing in time its incredibly antiquated notion of restraining by right of birth. Are the Conservative "reformers" If not they had bet- it alone. No tinkering Nothing but some kind of special, elective ever create in this Sir Wilmot Lewis, the Washing- of the London addressing a meeting in British Common- major cause of the of the British Somewhere a way of escape If the interest of all Life without aim or purpose is as without liberty. The are those character. The . It was an age of art and science. Of upon the shoulders of , somebody else. Sometimes :openly, Jometlmfii secretly, the lobbyistslu-ve busted themselves more than over ‘this session-arguing, ‘csjcling, flooding Congress with pfopllllldl. exertion pressure for or against legislation. ‘fire most powerful lobbyists. aecorvfng to the press doolllteh. seldom appear at the Capitol it- self. They have their scouts on the ground, but wherrit comes to ' the final business of put-tins the screws on Senator Sc-and-Bo to vote their way they see the Senator at his home or‘ office or i-hllllllh 3M political powers back home. Others work frankly as ‘the “leg- islative represaftatives" of various industrial, trade, farm, labour and of anarchy and revolt. Her 001m"! we h]; been greatly affected by acts of terrorism which have cul- unrated, a; recorded in yesterday's dcspatch , in the assassination of Premier fnukai and the nttemntod killing of other promlnmt mm" men. ‘The acts all?!" 5° 115" reform organizations. Thiaiclass has ,been_mcst promlnentin thedcng Itax dscussloris. They appear be- fore wmfnittfies withthcir. argu- ments, and they organise, propa- igands s0 effectively that. many a congressman comm to work on a inns morning w find his desk buried been the work of younl lrmylbenesth stack; of telegrams and officers. For seine limo has been friction Japanese Government. between the civilian and military arm-i of ti" resulting practice ls beingvfrceiy adopted in from the subjugation of Manchuria Canada in the interests of corn- and the Shanghai expeditfon. Tokyo merclal radio broadcasting, and whgtcygp “ca” qu-y may ha" despatzhes have told of sentiment that William‘ ‘i oinw‘ "94"" achieved in defeating democratic in the amiy for a "firmer" polcy lug-inundated with letter-sand tele- govmmppg p, the" own count" than the Qovernment seemed yrlll- m" ~ ill willnot be repeated hero, identically worded. i It is reported that --_the latter ‘i barriers and achievements are to be cast aside as worthless. Rather we should regard them as stages in progress and uragernents to further progress. Every real statesman, every economist laments the strangling of the world's trade by restrictions. Each from every trade is dwindling steadily; not merely that the balance between import and export is deranged, in this country or in that, but that imports and exports alike every- where are decaying. ' Canada is threatened with the loss of millions of dollars’ worth of sales by action of the United States Senate Finance Committee in adopting proposals of special inter- eats within the a , to'impose prohibitive tariffs against Cana- dian lumber, copper and coal. It is estimated that Canada sold till,- ooo,ooo worth or lumber from Bri- tish Columbia and the Maritimes: $13,500,000 worth of copper from Ontario. Quebec and-British Co- lumbia; and $700,000 worth of coal from the Maritimes Provinces, to the republic last year. The American political world re- ceived a shock last week when it awoke to find that Congressman Garner, of Texas, speaker of the House of Representatives, had cap- tured the preferential primary whraseoicsy-desiened to offset the ~ . \ _. _ V, By lame: W. Barton, l now ivolsa arrnorsiiolyl-l “There arrmany places In "N95; York where a Bengal tiger 4mm roar without being heard at a (up; tance of twenty feet." _ An engineer says that "within u generation noise will vie with dig. ease unless the same medhsdloal in- genuity that has called. the mam. anlcal robot of the age into exist. ence shall also be able to endowft with a soul of quiet." - , _ , City dwellers are saturated with noises from street traffic, ‘railway; huckaters, factories and other eon- ditions and institutions. The con. sequence is_ ' ability to work, irritability, and nervous ailments. What is the effect of noise on the human body? '_ Research ‘work has shown that sudden noise increases the rate of the heamand the breathing, and also the blood pressure. A aignmp- ant fact shown by experiments t; that the mental effort o fthe more highly developed individuals is hin. dered by noise, whereaaless men- tally developed persons-seem to be helped this way. Of the complaints of noise In New York, over half of a total of 11,000 cases. concerned automobile trad and rail transportation. ' ~ As you know. there is noise about you, you are aware of it, and your whole body seems to tighten or be- come tense. It is not because you have any fear. as in the case of an animal which hears a. noise and stiffens its back, fur, or feathers, but it is just something that has come down from the past agag, 1g is Nature's method of having us resist an attack of any kind. Nowthistenseness. this stiifem ins of all the muscles of the body 6m only be done by the brain and nervous system sending down (m- Pulses to all-the muscles of the body. each tiny incrve supplying each tiny muscle fibre thus being called into play. - It is not to be wondered at there- fore that your brain from having to send these impulses down all "the time and you: muscles keeping up.‘ scd all the time, that noises’ are suing to tire you both mentally and physically. , - _ There is no question, of course, i0 11°18". and can learn to do she's work with considerable noise about, but there is no question on the other hand but that noise tires mentally and physically, and the". forcif accurate work is to be done. fatislle will come on much sooner where noise abounds. A11 you and I can do in the or ear stopples in the ears if we must work in a noisy place, Lord Byllg Comes Home (Ottawa Journal) will revive memories, pleasant. - i a Hendrik Willem Van Icon. ' "id "Pm!" uelection in California, leading both Governor Roosevelt _and ex-Gover- nor Smith by wide margins. The Roosevelt Presidential boom is thus given a serious setback, not serious enough, though, we fanoyrto keep the New York- Governor from win- ning the Democratic party's nomi- nation. n had been claimed, b: course, that the New _ Yorkchief executive would have no difficulty in winning-California, but in this. as mother-cases. y: "ctions were guments advanced by rcpresenta- not well founded. thefliletws- 00w the menses arc u" bod'cs and individuals before Speaker Gar- ner, one of adccen leading the Radio Commission u. favor of nwm“ mmmn" with‘ m‘ aidential "nolnination. is an cut- govemment control. 1f m]; be m", “ma” mm m u” w", but m‘ one can only regret the introduction dun,“ of 33mm,‘ m, ‘mum- of such tactics, and hope that ti... despitouajtlfoug boom u. his behalf, have not been , ‘considered verfseriwaly. "The California re- suit will stimulate his pupportera kotion even more i energettivthllrbvfllfl- ' onus-ravine In ‘MM .' ‘at-m, depression oflmz- -, ‘ “I-ilived that winter (loll-fl? ~ cheerfully gave some“ ' Welly, havins our bodies ready, to . but that one can accustom oneself meantime is to put absorbent cotton With a sincerity and affection as deep as it could ever summon for one of its own, Ottawa welcomes Lord Byng. He has come home. Iibr home the Capital of Canada always will be to lord Byng with a niche in its memory and heartfor him that time will never perish, The greetings given to h‘m upon hipst- rival last night rcvealed_'what this city feels towards him, but it was as nothing towhat would have been manifested hadvthe public not re- spected his desire to avoid all public functions. And’ white Ottawa would‘ like his stay here to be longer, and so have hm renew all the old aa- soclations of the year; he spent in this city, it hopu that his brief scjoum will be happy and that’ it brave and “We ire making lristoryfwoare not in the midst of an economic crisis, but a psychological crisis."- " mm in New York Cityydur- in§the Sixth ‘ward. then-i 111101;‘. eminent for rum. uuelor- " mm, want and A. ever before observed it. Isaw two families, including six or eight ‘children; burrowing in one‘ cellar under a stable, a prey tic-famine on the one hand. andto vermin and cutaneous maladies on the other. with sickness adding its her.- rors to those of a polluted atmos- phere and a wintry temperature. I saw men who each, somehow, lillhbilftod his family on an income of s5 per week or less, yet who to miti- gate the- sufferings of thou who were really poor. I saw three wi- dowswithasmany ‘ “ ,living in an attic on the profits of an ap- ple-stand which yielded less than s8 per week, and the landlord came in for a full third of that. But worst to bear of all was the pitiful plea of stout. resolute single young men and young women, “We do not want aims; we are not beggars; wchate to sithere day by day idle and-useless; help us to work-we want no other help; why is it that we havenothing to do?" Slower And Surer‘ (Vancouver Province) The trouble about reasonableness seems to be that the reasonable man is apt to be terribly lonely in the world. l1 you are reasonable in the days of feverish boom, nobody will 8|8ht Of him. cent and rather unexpected con- firmation of the ano'ent adage: More haste less speed. It now ap- pears, in contravention of a great deal of hooey that we used to hear. only a short time ago, that "more haste leas speed" is even literally ‘highways. » speed. Our streets and highways were. more and more in process of congestion byreason of motor traff- ic. Everywhere there were more and ever more motor vehicles, every- where there was more and more con- gestion. nrgo, we must speed up our motor traffic; the more we speeded it,-the less congestion. The reason- wble man who said more haste less speed was only a pathetic survivor of the ‘effete Victorian age, poor fellow. and the man who said that speeding trafllc ‘had soniethlngfto do with the rising statistics of tramc fatalities‘ was just an anaehronism altcgetharfliut. . . I ‘ But it now_ transpires that the reasonable man wasrght after all, with his iteration of- more haste less speed. n transpires that the capacity-bf a one-lane highway- ‘and-most roads. tendto be one-lane when‘ the traffic is very heavy-é-is greatorat as milesln hour than at be, the relative figures being 29f! caraanlrour asazainltaililv. This ll ' lished, u appears, m the math- al formulaievclved by an en- gineer‘ who madefa survey. between Wishington and Baltimore, for the highway Research j Board of the Also. as it appears from similar-annuities made.by_.tbe American diced ‘Builders’ Associa- tion, the, bcstl- strcot sPNd in tiie cityQis_.abo|lt"2l"-1-I_ miles an hour, "and thedriver. who spurts, when i ire camiat-ssfimilclractul-lly slows uptramc. as~niuch as if-he were driivingat/ less~‘tllan-10.'-' - ~ “Thiureason, for; these . seemingly sti-auge-oeusiugicnl.” gays-tbs New vork»nmm,'i"u-to.brfmiad in the i wcodztiaisafil-lsaluol Insull. I s‘ ' take the slightest notice of you. When the hard times come, and thebottom falls out of the boom. and the reasonable man goes round doing hifbest not tolook us u ii- were sayingy“! told you so." well. then, everybody elscrjirst hatesthe » But perhaps. - nevertheless, these ehistened days of our general hum- ility are a good time to note a re- true in its literal application to motor traffic-in our streets and Everybody remembers the terms c: that plausible persuasion to more gum meeting "of its citlnnswai dulynussuiymmwmbfln, . 3‘ . I , in orlluisatfon formed WYQIWLPT. pus-ab. lspilbnjaugum a...) which committees were appointed mjflgtgm. BIfOODI-Jllfl tocanvaasthewardfrcmhouseto, I " H I hcuie, collect funds from thoiclwhq '55‘ m, d“; g ggpubqlum ‘could and would slllllq mpmur-yinm love w muted strings. "and devise ways Ind m"!!! 101' ll! i _ " " ,1 ‘ , systematic relief. Very poor my- in“ 1n,‘ m aelf,'I could give no money, or but I _ mung. ' ' j a mite; so I gl-vc $11M WWW. 1M up" gender grows the frail‘!!! served on one of the visiting cem- _ 13-995,,- ' ‘ Ill-lite!!- Ful"! "l" "m" 4°!‘ Shall‘ not our own sweet isles b!‘ titution more closely than I had ' 1mm, The Isles 0f the Hespcrldesi —-S. Matthewman. in the Poetry RcvlewALorldon.) Wild Infatuation (Manchester Guardian)- Great Britain- s the world's tea- ahop, and it has ' been calculated thatwe drinknine pounds-of tea. or lmopcupe, per head, as Maillot the three-quarters of a pound drunk in America. 1t is not rur- prlsing. thcrcfonmthat when tea makes its appearance with s Chan- cellor of the Exchequefa Budget it should attract a good deal of at- tention to itself. Tea, indeed, has always beena subject of keen con- tmveray, and its-detractors have been as numerous as its admirers. It was Jonas Hallway. the introdu- cer of _ who ‘ ‘ tea-drinking as "a wild infatua- tion}? but his-“Essay on Tea" owed a good deal of its fume to the fact that it brought down on him the wrathcf Samuel Johnson, that fn- satiable tea-drinker, and the mild- er anger of Oliver fiolflsmith. Cobbett declared that he would not give tea to pigs, but, on tho Oi-hol‘ hand, Sydney Smith thanked God that he was notliving before tea came into use. Gladstone, V‘ who could never refuse a cup, w... in the habit of taking to bedwith him a flask containing A learned that theproper y way to make tea. was not to‘ manufacture in casks to be drawn cirffwhen popular in spite of its‘ high price and the taxes" on it. When first 1o pounds a pound, but in 112a the price had come down to twelve shillings. Some of the great tea. lovers have drunk the beverage in unusual mixtures. was at one time the only sweetener His method of mskingtea would not, however, appeal to anyone to- day. He used to half-fill a pot with tea, pour on and then, without letting the-li- and sweeten it with great quantities of his favorite mixture. llflllliililll &wE0., uuiiui The Oldest Insurance ’Agency in P. E. l. . ire like a g dwelling in’ Canada "Do ‘what time yours will be visited? Ba Prepared! Insure Now Lower Queen Street Charlottetown Brahnrin Orange Piekoe Tea ‘ Try Retail price 50c per lb. Sold Only in Bed Alrtllht Packages. very ‘such: ha" . which he drank during this Ilillli-L . It was when the English people i it in gallons at a. time‘ and store it‘ ! wanted. that ‘the beverage‘ became‘ V used in England it cost asfimuch as ’ Handy sugar but Hazlitt used sugar and ‘cream. - boiling water, _ quor stand, he would pour it out _ ' Trusty as an old i’ irienciu-it never ‘tails to please -w_ith its lasting flavour. bilomv sriiiirwmo i Hlclrrvs allelic sou Canadak Own Radio‘ _ (Winnipeg Free Press)‘ ' _ There's a tonic in the news that ’ the report ofthe R-adioCommltt-e a ‘nptional The great news kingdom of ‘the air communication will belong to Can- ado. from sea w sea. 1t is an ex- cellent report, first in _tli_at it is un- animous. Secondly it is an excellent report in that it rests upon unfoun- dation of considered judgment, All the heavy- guns supporting commer- cial control were broughtinto play menu that the influence u‘: great corporations within and ' without Canada could do was done. Private enterprise had its full say. played its last 01rd. ‘The report recommends thatim- plenrcnting of the national policy should ‘rest with a federal 60in- nussloib-consisting cf three members and that the» should be assisted by lllldtlht commissioners, 1mg (or each-province whoshallbethaihead cf an advisory conunittce inand for each province. Never will a_ ppm. mittee getaway to a more ample- iousstart. It has a clear mandate, as to the policy lpprevafl and there. .' . f . . of the l-Iouse of Commons callsvfor I‘ of broadcasting. . ismn‘ or rust V10li’ Eilliii ' i= ii ii'iiI_iii. i ii . " i AOIIO"<UI‘ “I .l~' may. " “:1?” '- that is a mandate clear of ambiguity ‘ 1°"- fm from my’ interference the widening of the knowledge a which monopollzing special interests the other ppm pmvmcpg, might seek to set rip/It is "a ‘man- ‘ date clear also of any ambiguity as to provincial rights, "Canadaj as a whole is the unit ‘of ‘first/consider- ation. yet‘ there iselastieity a'so in the inclusion of provincial ‘commit- tecslwhich may b'e astrength not - only, to the province but, in focus- ing that province's contribution to Fouivo ij One of thebcst prevahtativu K I 3 r "Nowadays, when a writer hasrfl ’anyth‘ng else to writu about l1 makes a running jump and lands kcrplunk, into SexP-y-Peter B. Kyne Shave Every Morning- with colonial. torus snlvmt cnrim y This preparation works into a rich ‘creamy lather that does Jlotdry on the face but retains ~lta moisture until the shave iv completed. It is put up in tubes which contain more than double the uantlty of any 85c Shaving . m and It certainly makes shaving a pleasure. We are giving free with each tube of. Colonial Club Shaving Cream, one of the Club stroppers which greatly adds ts the life of your blades. 0a for Cream and Stroll?"- Get early "My l" movfugnfast. ' "l. i|-:. a. us... osnraar. cancerous