L PAGE FOL.“ 1 l, _ " rut: C ETOWN GUARDIAN v 111E cHARLUTTETQWN gummm r0158 BY TIIE WAY Another Tower or _ ——— Babel __Whaa elihanraaneflmea won. dsr why the tax rate cannot. be lowered they might keep 1g mmq tht ffltit thlt lllllltlt on Qygrdrgft iduring the course of the year amounts to aeven or eight “m; on the one hundred dollars in itself, ;-¢||flont—W. Cheater S. slcLura, ll. P. Viee-Pnaldaat-d- In Barnett 3 l §¢¢r¢kfly—l.|e\II-~C0|- D. A. Ilaellanol. I). l- 0. < Edltor and annular Dlrwiec-J- B- Ivlm- Aelnrlntn Billion-Frank Walker ald D. K. Carrie. n .1» llnrnlng Ilnlly noun-lea inn-l) woo per year (In advance) d1 W" gLau p" your (In minince) mailed in Canada and United liaise- (Nevv York Herald-Tribune) _. . The mined tower of Babel‘ re- ‘ ported found by the Univeriity ~01’ Michigan expedition at the aiteof the ancient Babylonian ' city of I Hose "............»... ‘ I __ ivvelr NOT FDR "E SilTUli-DAY. MAY. ll, 1933 A LESSON IN HISTORY In the kidllapp llg and nlllrder oi the Lindbergh baby a Toroiitfl 9X" grain duties. Since then Danish agriculture has been increasingly “anon adapted to animal husbandry, based uon calling roi- the introduction of This is no small item. hut it is one to which many critics of town fi- nances have never flven much at. FOODS THAT POISON THE BODY AND IRRITATE THE SKIN. change sees merely s. natural climax upon an intense cultivation of the “lt would be extremely Imp!‘- Akahak u not the um of these ob- em spade. It comes nearerbefng the twentieth, for there is lng evidence that every Ethylen- ian town 0i.’ any Uni-Sum" D081 seased such a tower. as every New Jects to be uncovered by the mod- ' zeblithr aswcntnor tinflWlt-h , ' gloom The“ stream of love thlt 61ml" home, light hearts and fr”! 41",, “the guts Heaven's bounty lends, Saturday evening from 7.00 to 9.30 p, m we offer eleven hundred pairs Ladies’ silk. Hose at 35c pair. Every pair is guaran. teed free from defects of any kind, all firsts, no seconds, newest shades, every size, wonderful values- I j Hosiery Depart. ment First Floor. in the crime history of the United dent to abandon thb radio t0 pri- States. Years ago, President Coolidge declared Lilat thc Ameri- san Republic had the highest crime rcoord oi any civilized nation. Presi- dcnt Hoover has llscd almost. the same language during his term of soil and on the importation of feod- n” enterprise. n would be m“ 5mm" equivalent to concedin I t0 i te Denmark has per 100 inhabitants mm” control or the m. wgligfls about 86 head of cattle, ‘of which essentially a publlo domain, 175m. 45 are dairy oowafflince the be- i" t: the should not be de- ginnfiig of the century the average em * °' ° m?" m" 0111118‘! is deia d the diff yearly yield of milk 'has increased y‘ m“ “m” 1‘ "m ‘rherc is no question but that E1131,“ V111“, 1m; m 311mm there seems to be a sreat many 81,991,, A, 1n the mum- 9111-1, cases of ‘food 110153111318’ which are two 1199,15, 50mg say ‘thne, evi- ‘I ‘m! ‘m m”. . . , . . accomponitd bi’ 111116 Mmd 5W1!‘ clence of which the archeoiogista mum“ m, muss I prized on inns about the fa" "id My i-o- have discovered. the Bible story is “m, gether with considerable itchinz. confirmed too completely.‘ There ' ' 1d bmmelw The fact mo: it limos Bwoy in a was not one Noah's mood, but at 2°“, jmflrfff‘ m’ ' W“! short time is the reason that l'ttie least two. There was not one row- N" w, I'm‘; l I Nor miai my face. 6"‘ iflmd" I be to accomplish. because of ac_ The P bytery c Canada ‘Monday monferer i‘ the Rev ‘chair. {man of ;Scrvice lfsubjects Bout tMiniste gion. '. it helpful Christk _ vokirlg _ ,' tion in V; er too _f, from t, 5» doing ....._. .....,_._-......._-....._.,-;._ .__,_._.., ~ - -.. s- . office, and other eminent Ameri- cans, including the leaders of the bar and outstanding publicists, have called upon the people at large to rally behind the enforcement of the law. In spite of these appeals, mat- ters have gone from bad to worse. Gangster rule and gangster murd- ers have been the regular order of the day ill such c tics as Chicago. Detroit and New York. Scores of other cities throughout the Repub- lic report criulcs of violence wholly out of proportion to the record ob- tallied from Carladiail and Europ- ean cities. To get back, however, to the first orig}: of organized lawlessness in the United States Oile must read "The True History of the Ameri- can Revolution," by Sidney George Fisher, a well-known New England historian. Mr. Fisher reminds that the revolutionaries included smugglers, law-breakers and a great many of the lower elements of the population. Those people acted in a most brutal manner towards the Loyalists who Ntcn comprised the pun“ 165°" i‘ 5w"? b7 5' “"95" better classes. It was a common mndmt l“ m‘ “mm”! Gu°m' y; m” 1,. mm I”. i 3on4,“ practice to bum the houses of the on m? 13 l!“ ‘hi’ Gum” “m” exchange, as a scientist has found loyalists, to insult their wives and the following Ottawa dwpetw out. that many grown up Ameri- daughters, to strip them naked and "Viscount and Lady Byng will cm‘! bu’ the mind‘ or thirteen: smear them with tar and feathers be guest‘! M the mvenmmfiwer‘ "u. old chum-en’ but that does!“ ai and Countess Beasbomugh explain why we send most of them ""1 1'1“ them °Yi Yam- Ii W“ i" during their stay here." . to Congress. this time that lynch-law becamee In the New Montreal Gazette o’ fixed American habit. To-daysl Och 29, 1829' m": appeared the .The Bank of England has again gangster rule ill American cizics is reduced "5 “m- tms time w 3 1'3 traced directly to these revoiution- following mmmuum from the p“ cent-flu ‘ounh or ‘um cut office of Ordnance, London, dated in as many months. Several ex- ary mobs. Mr. Fisher concludes his Sept 7| 1m: phnauom l" “Wm Om 15 m” P1159313’ W 1h the slisi-‘Eifiiou that rate reduction is a device to pre- if the United Slates had never “General s“ ‘mm 3mg’ 0"?“ vent the exchange value of the mander of the forces, and suAe. broken away from the British Em- pg§ed ghmugh 010110,“; on Mo,” pound rising by discouraging the it “we Ire- €3§e§§§“¥}€t.? l:.l.::.f'*:.; “Jfsisiitili? m law, the burning of ncgroes at the MM Duncannény 1 m’ Bank is planning m‘ way for stake B-Iid tilt? corruption and mlS- n“ even“ above mentioned are 5' wgy 1951; (gonvgygion gghgmg government of its large cities. The ‘razed m ma“ b thouk which would reduce the Govern- theOfy. of course, is that in cutting S” 880g p y y "Kent"! mum‘ burden mam)" the painter and in thus losing the “d5 °z mu" "d huwfludly by ‘ Financial journals aay the Chan- _ period o! over e- cmtury; vet the celior of the Exchequer hopes to benefits Of Briish trgrd-itlfyfls Sfld Occurrence of the ram“? names or convert 5 p". cam.“ w“. loans to a it'll sh jtLStiCf: and British culture, Byng and Besbomugh m Wm m_ 4 or even 3 11-2 pill-mega lgizsigséuTree e United sates brought upon it- stances L, not mm: coincidence. cbeape o crc . . self the reign of crime under which - “'19 “Wine” Bflwraiiy. and stimu- For these names are interwoven in 1“ 1; g n suffers tmday‘ late the aecur es mar e British annals. Their bearers, through successive generations and ~ A. l’ deputmww bullet.“ in Widely scattered 19"“ °f the points out, under present prices Empire, have been faithful guard- most, Canadians can maintain a 1am 01 a nome 11.5.1111“, o1 111311 high standard of living, despite the . m h general depression. Wheat, meat, Servllce and respond‘) W w t e eggs, roots, fruits, vegetables and 5m”- dairy products are lower in price than they have been for many years. An article that should find a‘ place on the ordinary family “I swmg “.911 w the My... fl-d menu is cheel as the housekeep- " er in the purchase of this article Mr‘ Michael F’ Hepburn’ Ontario of diet will get full value for her Libel“ leader’ i" explamm‘ m“ money as she does not have to pay 1 political attitude to a group of for waste. Cheese is wholesome farms of l5 to c0 hcc arcs, one “vorking men re-centba “om, spam and nugfluve and conuflm P111191“, liccpsrc brill: equal ncmriy to tzvo editor." comments ah exchange 11111191115, vlmmmeg and for, an and onc-ilaii ncrcs. The big farms amy- “says he has seen people pep ‘essential for the nourishment of of 120 to 24D ilcctrircs and _ mm a e body‘ Cheese a5 a fwd l3 high" car-gr only a crlllipzlmtivciy modest movement run '_ ataxia: t/oiltnflnvlvrttflvltt tile", ‘ti: portion of till; arm. From olden M present, to quote anbther press mend for 1t 1n Canada 1s 11161-955- t. mas Danish icgiei-niioil ilas taken comment, Mr‘ Hepburn swings wen lng considerably, In 1930 the per care to maintain‘ the greatest pos- to me 1cm but u helm w,” in glsgltgolil-rizxilzgiilc? °is cxgsgorlf: sible number of independent farms, the other direction he Wm ‘wing nkom than {t w“ m m“. with me- wh 1c In mom from?’ times were equally far to the right. He is re- tories disposing of this splendid ar- izgcnlzfslgijgs‘“naoimgfltg; igtrfi gamed as one o1 the sinuous; ticle of diet at around nine and ten lhavc been and still nz-c protected by trapeze artists m balm“ may cents there should be a material n. prohibition against incorporation increase in the demand for it. Into large farms, qr concentration into bsscr firms. wiwrws llarwll- John McCormick, famous tenor, liil.’ 1-! iilivwfld. lillhfiiigli UWYO 15 announces that he is "tired of sing- pwhibitlon asaiist briusius farm-i lng for unemployed horses" and will down below n. certain size by parccl- 5511 1115 fgglng stable, ling. Since 1919 there has been positive prohibition against the ciosng down of any farm without the approval of the ‘Ministry of lsglicuiturc. cd in Parliament on Thursday. This ' When overseas compel/lion in the will be a grgat "He! to the pgoplg production or grain began a to of Cardigan. Imike itccll fclt about fifty -—-—- years H89. Danish farmers The Communists in detention at pride’ u nothing em. w“ ‘or l“ mmmeflccd to concentrate on Halifax are kicking strenuously a- mm Decent cmmump i. m “up animal husbandry and to take gainst deportation. Apparently. l-l ly peril. The Lindbergh case has full advantage of the cheap foreikfl the Sydney Post remarks, these brought to the minds of all a reaii grain, whereas in certain other agitators realize that Canada is a “u” °' 11°" b"! “"41"”! hi" countries this same foreign BT81" better country to stay in than bewme‘ veniem" 1' n“ t“ mm’ . - but there must be punishment for was retarded u overseas oompeti- Russia ls togo to. _ _ __ A“ m. "we“.m' o! m“ mum“ from 6.49s to can pounds, the per- centage of m from sec to and. and the pounds of butter faffroni 220 to 317.2. This is the 7000M‘! o! the control societies of Milk Re- cording societies, which is a feature of the Danish dairy industry. quired rights which, we may be hesitate to invoke. Moreover, the plan which the Committee recommends offers this further advantage: Whenthe ra- dio is made integrally dependent on the State, in the future it can more easily be modified according The handbook says that. the co- mm x1 l t l m‘ h tum been eegenceso ace c pro- opemflve symm u a e y gresa and the public interest."- developed, and now. Danish farms. m “ma. from the largest to the smallest, - . are organized in co-operative aoclet- To hum" m nnumenuulm “h ies and Qtstablishmenta that stretch wards Capone 1, we,“ than ‘my, over sales and pilrcllasea and so to says the Detroit News. It well s“ every branch o; p]°du3fl°n' m nigh shares his guilt for the rivers agriculture itself. The handbook °‘ “M ‘Pmtd "Y Mn“ in adds th t one oi.’ the principal chkm‘ “d “m” °m°"° “ ‘i far as Detroit, during the last ten factors in maintaining the position yea“ cmcago h“ an Improved of Dansh agricultural produce in police and city administration. the mark,“ o; m, warm 1, 1,11, Crime seems on the way to effect- i ssi . - "“““‘t°° °' ‘Mm’ “m” u" my" lfnlffiftl’ wit‘, if 3:11- cilltel. by means of the control exercised ‘emanation a maintained. can by the 138E511 Giivemmfllt- keep the lid on and clamp it down firmly. Our consolidated citizen- ship can make Capone's ease stick as an example to the underworld that neither "big shot." nor small A curious 11.5w,“ 0g history m- in the end escapes the penalties of a. life of crime. HONORED NAMES FARJIIZVG‘ IN DENMA RK Valuable information concerning dgrictliturai methods is given in the 1931 ililllcibook on Denmark. recently issued by tile Royal Dalfsh liiinistry of Foreign Affairs and the Danish statistical Department, Copenhagen. By far the greater port of the agricultural urea of Dcllnlrirk, it is slated, is occupied by medium-sized l4 GOOD ACROBAT 0V8 l‘ EDITORIAL NOTES t One year ago Britain was worry- ing because the pound was going down so fast. Now she is worrying because it is going up so fast. To- day the United States is worrying because the dollar is dropping. Next year, perhaps, it will be wor- rying because it. is going up. The Our local i-Onteililiflflry 88y! it i8 vagaries of currencies have gov- "not at all obiectilig"'w'tlis' 1755f ernments. economists and calcula- of $6,000 for Cardigan wharf, pass- m“ stumped“ cd by this shameful spectacle of the law's impotulcy, its depend- ence o_n the help of thuggery grown powerful before its cyea. the situation is discouraging. National sure, individual exploiters will not Parliamentary attention is paid to it, but it. is really a valuable sign in that it shows that the system has trouble in handling or digesting certain kinds of food. Sometimes there is no skin erup- tion but the individual doesn't feel just right. a few minutes after eathg; sometimes he notices that he has suddenly acquired or de- veloped a ‘cold in the head’, and begins to sneeze and blow his nose. As you know, what are known as skin tests have been used in an effort to find out Just what food or foods is causing the trouble, but this system is not" used as much as I formerly. What is known as the "nutrition experiment‘ gives good results. It consists in keep out of the food in- take the special food that is caus- ing the troubie. m order to find the exact food at fault, animal proteins- veai, beef, pork, cheese, eggs and milk—oniy, are given. If the patient improves then these animal pro- telns are kept out of the diet, and the vegetable proteins-beans, peas. and bananas-are used; or if any fruit or vegetable peculiarity is suspected, the fruit or vegetable in question may be added to the diet. I have spoken before about Dr. Urbeck, Vienna, who suggests that as the patients must eat certain foods-eggs, break, meat and milk —even if they do cause trouble, he can be accustomed to the offend- ing substance, by taking 5 very small quantity of it an hour be- fore he eats the larger quantity at meal time. These small amounts oi food protect against the strong re- action-itchy skin, rapid heart beat, cold in the head-that is otherwise certain to develop when the larger amount is eaten. This is much simpler than by in- jecting small quantities of the off- ending food into the skin, which method sometimes causes consider- able shock to the patient. Dr. Urback states that the small amount of egg protects only against cos. and not against milk. the meet only against meat, and the like. So if you are subject to ‘food allergy’ as his is called, it would be worth your while to watch for the offending food or foods. Biblical Cities Uncovered (Toronto Globe) Sodom and Gomorrah, two an- cient cities associated with impor- tant Biblical records, havc been discovered by excavators near the north shore of the Dcad Sea. ac- cording to reports by archaeolo- gists of the Pontifical Biblical Iri- stitute of Rome. Two Jesuit workers, Fathers Alexis Mellon and Robert Koeppei, claim to have unlocked another secret of the ages and brought further‘ evidence in support of the records in the Bible, as has happened through the efforts of other modern exco- vators. Onc of thc important statements now made is that there was found a curious rock forma- tion about five Icct high which ic- gend associates with Lots wife, who, the Bibic records, was turned into a pillar of salt. The location of the remains of these twin cities has been a mys- tery, while their fate has long been a subject of hot dispute. The ruins now found are of intense in- terest. and importance. revealing an advanced state of cultural civi- lization in the peoples concerned. and will be of much value in fu- ture studies of the scriptures and of civilizations long since passed. "Death comes to every city as it colnes to every motif-Sir Arthur Keith. "I discovered while I was still very young that the world wanted to laugh but I found later that laughter has to be forced out of peopZeP-Marie Dressler. murder. If the whole roxcc of the State be not thrown into an effort to bring to heel those responaibi for an awful crime; and if gang- dom be not ruthlessly mated out, than well may the people of the United States hang their heads in shame. 'l‘i1e world awaits a re- spoaoe to this challenge < ~ '- er of Babel, but twenty. Notthat this discredits the stories of the Book of Genesis. Quito the re- verse, for it was one greaterflood that was remembered by interje- nerations, Just as Toklo or San Francisco remembers one greater earthquake out of many. So it was true, doubtless, um. the immi- Tower of Babylon itself stood out among the buildings of lesser cities as the Empire State Building dwarfs lesser skyscrapers; With every new factunoovered by such excavation in Bible lands stories of that Book. once obscure, take on new meaning and interest. There can be no doubt, for ex- ample, that these lquare, many storied towers of burnt brick, one of which is resailed in the eleventh chapter of Genesis, were attempts of the early Babyionians‘ to imi- tate mountains. The gods of the tower builders had been mountain gods, as these builders unquestion- ably had been mountain people. Therefore it was fitting that these gods be worshipped on the highest places available. In a fiat land which had no high places these had to be constructed, Still more significant is the light shed by modern discoveries on. the Bible's story o! the confusion v of speech. There now is no doubt that the first civilised inhabitants of Babyionia were not thetower builders, but were a peoplecoming from the east and speaking a lan- guage similar to the later Sumer- ian. With these first folk there blended, either by invasion or by peaceful penetration. another na- tion of Semitic race and different speech. These second comers probably were the mountain folk who worshipped hill-top gods and built the towers ea artificial hills. Connected with the, tower-building. therefore, there must have‘ been many real confusions of speech between the two races then in the land; some dim memory of which survived to later ages and inspired the story of sudden confusion which stands today associated with the tower. The Black Dragon (Toronto Globe) The murder of Premier Inukai cannot be described as a. aurpflse to those weii informed of developments in the Flowery Kingdom. ‘rile act- ivities of the Black Dragon Society, or the Blood Brotherhood, have been too widely revealed to permit astonishment at these movements. It is no secret that this organization forced the Japanese Government to extend its military operation; far beyond the intended limits in Mari- churia. It is even more evident that Japanese nation to launch the large- scale attack at Shanghai-an attack which threatened. at its moat crt- ical stage, to precipitate another world war. The murder Premier and the subsequently et- temptcd Fascist revoiufon in Japan are of obvious significance in rela- tion to the recently concluded peace with China. The facts speak for‘ themselves. when Japan found her- self embroiicd in tho Shanghai ad- venture, the Brtish Empire and the United States both warned Japan, in friendly but plain terms. that the aggression was Tkely to plunge the world Powers into a tragic conflict -uniess speedily terminated. A great Japanese patriot and states- man, Junosuke mouye, earnatly told his countrymen that. the Shanghai policy was the road to national ruin and international cat- astrophe. Within a few hours oflhis speech he was murdered by the self. styled patriots. . Throughout the Shanghai battle. it was obvious that there were two elemen‘ the same organization forced the - of the Japanese ‘ in Japan clamoring for- 0! whhieled sounds the tale com- , plate. Low prayers and musings sweet- A sea before m ‘Ihrone is spread: its pure still . ‘ha. Pictures all earth-scenes as they p“, We, on its shore, Share, in the boaoln of our rest. God's knowledge, and are ‘blest. —J’. H. Newman. Notes-composed when Newman was twenty-eight- aupremacy. The first of these, re- presented by the slain Premier. was determined to aefesiiiifi! JIM!" right; in Mauchuria and China.‘ It wds willing to use force to induce China to aid the boycott, but was world depression to seiae territorial spoiiain the Far East. S.A. M¢Donald (t. Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Retail price 50c per lb. 5°!!! olllyin Rod airtight Packages. not willing to take advantage of the = The Blood Brother-h vd, the Black Dragon Society, or the Japanese haoilti-eali the militariet plottlrr by any such name-made no secret of their own aims. They considered shanghai as the jumpiiiroff place for the conquest of the whole Yang- tae Valley. liimeral oratione deliver» ed over those officers who fell a‘ Sliang‘ ‘, ' ‘ these ambitions The slain Premier had lust finalll eluded peace with China. He had strained every nerve to conclude such peace in the face of great diffi- cultiea. veil within a. few days o! the conclusion of such peace, and the commencement of withdrawal of Japanese troops from Shanghai, he himself is slain, and mutiny is launched, with revolutionary inten- tion, by naval and army officers. In view of the close censorship clamped down on news from Joplin it may be several days before the not result of the murder becomes known. But the critical nature of the situation is obvious: Wlllilllll's' ./ KID N Ev; One of the beat preventatlves I known for SMIIT or RUST 0N GRAIN rolllliull a olrclp but ‘thoroughly er. feotive remedy. Grain growers would be wise to act promptly, in order to have seed m- Dilly treated before lowing. One pint to every 40 gallons of water. Full directions given with every order. FOR SALE AT 1 THE 2 MAGS DRUG STORE It! Great George Street All Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. a ‘mm AAA gm‘ a.‘ LAAAAAAAAAmAQQAA“ vvvvvvvvv vvv t’ McGILL . vulva: H0 N. uld be modern made earl . For all in ea- aho eealp v norm. ylcroljilii: goiuzc: I n“ A" n o1-»- MONTREAL ou o lvn as anon sraaracoirxnanuynuggogdqgotzn ‘ Application Iaeaatlr. enlarged filepnei building, I'll.‘ Ilr women at dent and nea-realdele neon: o: am i’ tiiirwt-illiiii ‘."......'...'.‘.i‘":’.';' "“‘i.'..‘ dwelling in Canada Doytlu-knovvwhattime yours will be visited? BePreparedl Insure Now ilYllllMAll t“ 00., lllillu The Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. l. Offices Lower Queen Street» Charlottetown i- WANTED We are buying Seed Oats Seed Wheat Seed Barley for CASE or in exchange for other Seeds. Bring samples of what you have to sell. Osii at Seed Store. Garter & to. LIMITED , SEEDSMEN seen clulllf We deal m all grades lnll sine but in one qoaiity—i-hat ll. tho "l! best. That ta why so mlliy 01°" customers ieiva their coal needs en»- tireiy to us. 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