CERMNG vice I. "Manl- " " poop]. would, 95" at a but and†I been mun [I] 'rhteh I)“ MID Ite Tho only -thq ride. this. .3. on on. nun " the " y“! reu6. a and l, and m! ot 'oaeSt [110). as do om " to mm on- m at " 11‘. aatr h. If try wrt " I! mm - all. WATCH Oli GERMANY ENDS BUT NECESSITY REMAINS T0 CLOSELY CHECK HUN Germany Has Not Yet Learned Her Lesson and is Still a Menace to European Peace. AMERICAN PRESS VOICES OPINIONS THAT MEM- BERS OF LEAGUE OF NATIONS COULD NOT EXPRESS. The league of Nations on February the first assumed the offices of the Interallied Military Control Commission, the duty of which body was to keep an eye on Germany and see that she did nut "rm herself to the danger of Eumpeean peace and in con- traverttion of the Treaty of Versailles. This change of method removes a source of irritation to Germany and she will not be moi. F, . v: by outside investigation until some nation draws to the attention of the League that Germany is once more producing mun- guns or training more men than she should. The tiiaarmatrttrttt will»! enter- ed mm by Marital Foch, of France. and Allied and (Harman rare-onu- tivos, contain: these provisions. to cording to Wilbur Huron. Park ooh Mpondent of the New York Herald Trututto: byt membership The Maui 0d Info by "Th" Gormans agree to destroy (murmur ot olghtyelght tshelter--- twelve at Kunlrln and Bloch“, and twenty‘two at Koetrigtsbrretr. These must bo dommsbed within tour months from February 25. Germany pledges also that no more form will be built wide from thou the Allies already have discovered. and (Int it others are unarmed the will destroy turea other them "The atrroomertt will create 1 do- mmuu'ized German border from Koe- numbers. on tho Baltic. along the Polish, Czechoslovak. no Aachen tron-Hots. to the Rhine, between a line od forts and the polttieal {mists no Ionicwonl will he allowed except as ext-ted print to 1919. Rmrdlng war materials. Downy an.†to enact a law resuming 11mm and forbidding ttto manufacture of forbidden articles.†Besides the millions of dollars' worth of mnnitkmo destroyed, the "van your 011319000 ot the Control Com. mission. an tho New York World. cost Germany about $12,600,000. But. points out the neighboring Timon: "Prolongatlon of Allied military mn- tml has been due in the first place to Germany herself. There has been de. m over the question of tho Security Ponce, 150,000 strong; over Miiitary training car-Hod on under the guts. ot athletics; ot hidden "ore. ot am; and, latest of an, of alleged German “Clones in Russia tamed tit manu- facturing poison 335. But whim these things any have .ignifiestttety for the “to ot ('an temper. n In difficult to no how they raw cttttstttutes a. sort. om that.†ttnt the other bane, “ya the Times correspondent in Paris. “he would i) u: til-comma: optimist. who believed the 11815110 ot Nations was going to. control (may militarily. u the ALI â€on erred to do." "Germany today is, on nrmrd Sm. possum; the musm' to again within . brief period 9:“. - everything for making I" ex- am battIMhipo," agrees I Benn cor-j madam ot tho New York Sinai "There h p}.‘nfy of "Memo to show) that "ct-C..'" Germ-11y b stronzari than when "t, hum-alum) Commlulon m in work. seven year: uo."| “his: tro Paris mrrmondont of The, tmttiss tres Paris correspondent of The Chi-clan Science Monitor. Tho tttet b. declare. the Providence Journal. char "Tho provision In tho Vanilla mu for supervision has limply groves.) unworkable. to far " the Al- lied representatives are concerned. Mar any more substantial mung vi] to lulilod by the Leuno ot Na. than remains to be new. But than - nothing in the cxperionco than hr -eaned m" German armament control M lends any pram!†prom!» to the Man. _ - 7'7‘lt in this acme of {utility thet 3 .. “mi no You cure? M1803 also. doubtles- unkel the Allie. 52m: go'imum. I m over 'Ae job to lantha- l‘oncy.£ .. ‘Well, maybe you know month“: ' sooner or later. apple cart. this body of 150 the armies ot Ger. It has been an embarrassing thing for several years for them to confess that they possess power of inspection only in name, not in fact. In every direc- tion in which they have turned they have met with a stubborn German re- fun! to meal the fact... "Germany mar violate the new agreement Into which she In Just on. terlng, and still not Incur as much In. tayrttatlonal ill-win us she did when she broke the Belgian treaty. But it who should try to violate it, and strive by various mean: to regain the military supremacy she held in July, 1914, she would be preparing the way for an- other day of reckoning for herself even more (“autumn than the one which led to her present circum- mum." Tales Recalled by Inventor's Birthday. The following $ntoretrtintr and amus- In; tales are recalled by the recent birthday of the father of the electric light bulb, tho phonograph, the photo film and a hundred other accepted we sent-day necessities. That Edison is fond ot a Mat himself fs indicated by his reply to an in- quirer an ot why he had not produced an death: help for the dad. Hi: ro. ply was: _ "Too busy. A lot of time u wasted in listening. It I had one of theta things, my wife would wnnt to talk to mo all the time." balloon tells of his trlwls with un. trained 'tashrtanU. "At one time, in mnnocxiun with certain experiments, a tub had been tilled with soapy water. into which hymen had been intro- ‘luced tor the purpose of forming large bubbled; 'One of he boys, who was washing bottles in the place} said Edi- 4ort, 'had read in some book that hydro- gen was explosive. so he proceeded to blow the tub up. There was about 'wr inch-ye ot soap in the bottom ot ho tab, fourteen inches high; and he tilled it with soapbubbfea up to the bri m. Then he took a bamboo tUh-pole, put a New ot.paper at the end, and touched it oft. It Now every window out of the place.‘ .. Most people know that the tttat thing ever repeated on the mino- phone were he words, "Mary had a lit- tle lamb." When the newspaper re- ports of Edison's invention reached tho public doubt was out upon it from all quarters. Many suspected fraud. Among them seems ot have been the Rev. John H. Vincent. 3 Bishop ot the Methodist Dviooopnl Church, who was invited to test the instrument. "The bishop talked into the recorder at top speed a long collection ot proper names from he Bibtle. When these had been correctly repeated by the mumâ€. ho announced that he was now convincod there was no deception. since not. another mnn in the country mum recite the selected names with an equal velocity'." Edi-on Learn. Oomothlng. Burial the World's Colombian la. position at Chicm in 1893 Edison wan naturally interested. in everything he saw in tho electrical line. One dny he happened to see an electric belt con- cern, a belt you put around you nnd which was supposed to cure my ail. ment. Edison went into the oMeo and the very pert young lady immedintely inquired what the could do tor him. '. 'Won.’ began Edison. 'l wanted to know how those belt: worked, and I thought 1 might learn by coming up here.' "'Certainly," said the you“ lady, taking up I ban. ‘You so. the cur- rent of electricity goe- trom the cow per to the zinc pine. and then----' "'Jumt a mement,' an Edison. politely. 't don't be†very won at times. Did you say the current went from the copper to the zinc plate t' saying .. '11:: one moment." itstorrttptsd Edi- son Iain. Let mo understand this. You any it (on from the copper to the all"? “'Yes. sir. it {neg from tho copper to tho gine.' _ " 'But do you hmJalvrays thought it wont from the zinc to the oopw.’ 6t 'Wdl. It don't.' " 'But no you cure? Edison QM. I certainly did. Thea, an I wan The Amateur Experlmentert EDISON BMR The Blshop'a Test. electricity than I do." snapped the girl, as she threw the belt down and glared at the 'Wizard.' " ‘Pel‘hape I do,’Edison admitted, and he turned and left the place." Tho Innocent. Edison has a good stock ot anecdotes about the old Pearl Stmt station in New York (the tiNt commercial eiec- tric central station to be established in the HS). The station's tirnt super- intendent turned out to be incompet- ont, and his place was taken by Mr. Chinnock. Edison describes how somebody asked Chinnoek:- " 'Did M r. Blank have charge of this station? " 'Yoo.' "'Did he know anything about run. ning a station like this? " ‘Does ho know anything about run- ning a station like this? echoed Chin- nock. 'No, sir. He doesn't even 5113. THE CURE OF CANCER poet anything! " The full extent ot tho ravages ot the disease is only realized when it is con- sidered in relation to the deaths from other causes, and the public are prob- ably unaware that while in the past twenty years statistics show a sub- atantial reduction in the general death- rate, in infantile mortality, and in the deaths due to tuberculosis, the-death- mte from mnoer has actually in- creased by 20 per cent. And yet there never was a time when more people Were being cured ot cancer by surgi- cal skill or when more attention was devoted to research into the mystery ot its cause and methods ot treatment. --4Hasgow Herald. Would Be One Too Many. “Why don't you get married?" "Too expeturlve--1 belong to two sparring clubs now." The human race is divided into two classeswtbose who go ahead and do something. and those who sit and m- quire. "Why wasn't it done the other war?" Oliver Wendell Holman. Great is truth arid mighty above all thintm.--Old Testament. Every muscle of the body, nave those of the left arm, is constantly in III. during a strenuous game of lawn tennis. Even the left arm receives sufficient use to keep in form. WHY 8T. LAWRENCE SCHEME APPEAL' TO U.8. This map ahows the two greet spring wheat and winter wheat areas in the United States and the increased cost per 100 pounds since 1914, of mov- ing freight from them. The figures appear in circies and reach as high as 19 cents. The map also shows the saving per hundred pounds expected from sending the grain by the St. Lawrence prolect, working out to 11-10 cents per 100 pounds. The alternative scheme. from Lake Ontario to the Hudson. would effect . saving ot from 8 to 14 cents per 100 pounds. NORTHERN ONTARIO LUMBER CAMP An outgrowth of the great lumberand the camps are wonderful» organ-tation an the Ion skip over the (mm interest ot Canada. Tho tuum'oorpora-ued for the winter's work. Wietter,surfstre on dado drown by splendid done that hamtla these {amt traeta,htrstead ot being a deterrent, ttuMtatmutorscs. Tho men are well looked sometimes " he an a Eurapoontho work ot the lumherman, the snowotter, well hound And wen ted N nuts, are thoroughly we)! equippedarroviding " my menu ot tmtmrpororslt paid and tho life is bedthtul. Do'ero and Why'ers KEEPING MONEY IN TIE FAMILY A Practical Demonstration of Productive Imperialism. EMPIRE MARKETING BOARD SPEND MILLION POUNDS The Imperial Marketing Board es- tablished after tho meeting in London ot the Imperial Economic Commission in 1925 are certainly following along lines which should develop trade with. in the Empire. The Empire Marketing Board has " its disposal a goodly pro portion of tho Million Pounds voted the larger parent committee and we are in receipt of a later containing tho copy of an advertisement paid tor by the Board and appearing in the Bri- tish pm, as follows: "I send you herewith some evidence of the work being don-o by the Empire' Marketing Board to further the “is of Canadian produce in the United Kingdom. The enclosed adverisoment has been inserted by the Board in the principal newspapers of this country. The letter aoconrpanyirtg tho above tuhvortitseantmt in given no it is ot great importance for us all to know just what is going on by way of the cultl- nation of trade within the Empire. We should any that the Million Pounds mentioned wag voted by tho Imperial Parliament for the purpose outlined. becoming scams, and in the orchards of Australia and New Zealand the apple har- vest has yet to begin. But now is the time for Cana- dian apples. Ask for them! In the grey winter months you’ll enjoy this superb fruit, ripened, colored, and mellowed by the golden sun- shine of many a long Cana- dian summer day. "You can eat Empire ap- ples all the year round. Just now home-grown apples are British Empire apples are unsurpassed in quality. They cost no more than foreign. Puy them from Canada now, and so "keep the money in the family" for the benefit of your own people and your own friends." (This advertisement was illua. trated by cuts and occupied a quarter ot a page ot ordinary newspaper sheet). As you will no dubt know from re Buy CANADIAN APPLES One of the World's Greatest Non-Metalic Storehouse: Traversed. Article Ii. Last week We proposed the develop ment of a new Tramrontarierrotrd run- ning anon; the old Monck trail from 01-min to Ottawa via. Cobocouk, Min. den, Gooderham. Wilberforce, Ban- croft. Combermere, Renimw. hence to Ottawa. We are proud to be the Brat to make a proposal in the press and that the member for Victoria. in the Provincial Parliament (Wm. Newman, Liberal) has - tlt to father the idea in the local house. In last week‘s ar- ticle we pointed out that tho trcenitt beauty and tourist attractions would warrant the expenditure. but this week we wish to enlarge upon other possibilities ot the district traversed to show that the improvement of the existing roads at an early date would be in the best interests ot the Pro- vince at large. WILL REVIVE DISTRICT. NEW TRANS-ONTARIO ROAD nn POTENTIAL WEALTH Ideal Vacatlon Grounds. In Htr1iburtott and North Easting! counties there are in excess ot two hundred named lakes. Borne of the“ are quite extensive and all abound with game titsh of all kinds. The watershed la in Coral!!! Township. trom whence streams and lakes tlow three ways, to rthe Ottawa, to Lake Ontario. and to Lake Huron. These stream are teeming with speckled trout. (Last season, early in June, we new a catch with some of the individual speckled beauties weighing a pound and a. half). The elevation ot the whole area is greater than Muskoka and in one lo- cality at least we know ot spring. that are impregnated with radioac- tivity. Surely an ideal summer tour- lat paradise and unquestionably a. health resort unparalleled in the Pro- vince. but at present much too inac- oeesiblo. Section Backward. l A trtaree at the map of Ontario dis. 1 closes what a “no man's land" this dis»i trict is. No towns from the Minder:- Haliburton line over to Bancroft, a. few scattered poet 081060 and general . stores known by such names as Ched- der, Gooderham. Torry Hill, [module and Wilberforce. The population ot the whole area traversed has been steadily diminishing for the past thirty years. In days long past the old I. B. and 0. (lrondole, Bancroft and Ottawa) railway was built to accom- modate the lumbering industry. rtl day only a tow Isolated eawanills mt operating and none ot them is of am" great moment. The dhirict is so mori- bund that a tri-weekly service on the railway in BuMcient. (The natives say that the brain leam Bancroft on Mow day and tries to get to Haliburton and, beck betore Saturday, hence it il termed a "try weekly" service). With such rail accommodation and to and woods it is little to be wondered that the section in not progressive. 1 Great Mineral Wealth. 3 It has, however, been known tor years to our Geologists that an. tree is one of the greatest. if not the great- eat, storehouse of nonmetalic mineral wealth known In tho world todsy. ports published tron) time to time, the Board was established by the British Government on the recommendation ot tho Imperm Economic Committee with an annunl grant ot £1,000,000 (in the current fittaaeitU your 3600.- 000) Its function in to stimulate the consumption of Empire products in tho United Kingdom. A general my vertiaement drawing the attention of the home public to tho importance of Canadian trades to the Empire wag in. :uod at the end of 1926 and it u in- tended to issue advertisements ot vari- ous special Can-Adan mnunodities on tho lines of the onelooed at appropri- ate masons of the year. “In carrying out its publicity can» pawn the Empire Nuketing Board seeks to work in claim collaboration with the oftkial rtrpreaentatlvea cf the Canadian G'rrwyrtttttrtttt in this country. I Commercial Pmihiiltiea. The purpose of this article in not to give a treatise on non-metaliee, but we must for a moment consider how much the industry of Canada and thel world really depend. on the very. minerals that are located along the' lloontact ot the igneous rocks with iiii( limestone deposits, There are mine. GC'l','S'i industries with a total capi- taliilation of over 240 million and with a total annual output ot over 144 mil. lion wanting in Canada in non metelic minerals Alt ot these non- metalica are not found in the portion of Ontario served by our proposed road ‘but the tigurms for the particular niin< ierals found in that. area are of such aI :nnture an to demand attention. As the market price on moat of these min- erals titgctuatei, the value in dollar» in ‘not given in the available literature {but the annuities ot minerals used in iCanadu in the milled form is as fol- le: Felspar, 4,000 otns; Floorspnr. i4,005 tons; Barytots, 3,538 tons; Mica. He! tons; Calcite, 14,582 tom; Talc, i3,000 tons-g Graphite. 4,790 tone; or a total ot 37,506 tons ot the mine-rule found in quantity and of the bee-t. qualities in the area described. An average price suggested as washable! by an expert would indicee a business Ivalue possible to he developed _ii';') now nonexistent of upwards ot several r,ltniuiors dollars per your. Shipmenie‘ not mail mined producet no reported ..in our export returns for "" (last ,ilxurea awn-liable) or graphite. mica, i abrasives. telepar and tale amounted , to over $1,363,000.00. The dinere'nve [between “milled form" and “tough r mined" in every instance mean: great t increase in value, and. what ia more i important, the employment of more - labor in productive tttNMitatsho industry. _ Give Inhabitanta chance. t Bo we can take it u conclusive that "the development and improvement of . the new Trans-Ontario road would ' mean an added attraction to our pro- r ', viniclal touriat business trom the . United States; would provide immedi- ' ate earning facilities for a feat dwind. ' ling but basically splendid population; I Md supply a new summer market Lion- farm products in the diatrict and t‘iivould-iiuti-act attention to the mineral potentialities that would be bound, in the near future, to add substantially PM, Btmrir, onions. tale, mics. molybdenite. met, graphite, Fallon qrarttt, dutomaeeouc Mk. beryl, m hull. marble. and mditttn-boarhtq pos- not!“ have all been discovered and It. In laying quantities in thh part of Onurio's "mid.Hiaterlaad." We do not for a moment suggest that great development will Immedluon occur upon the advent ot n new improved highway through the district, but we do claim that by the building ot such a road the region will become known, and once known, its. latent possibili- ties will not long be allowed to stand MM. If. this attractive potenttally weathy country ls placed within our moons ot the tourist it will not be mmy you: until the wealthy motorist, tirttt attracted by the memtlon poc- 'ribilities, will become interested In developing Industries that no " tho moment waiting for the vitalutns touch of capital to spring Into vqrito bolus. to our Pro-anctaJ. wealth. Taking thus thintts all into consideration w. do not mum to urge the Highway: Department to lnvesdnu our pm trad It bu further to rely on the " Meta at produce" in 00m. Al the nutter is one of M itrtporsnms to the Dominion. I trust you will ttmt - to refer to it in your columns." If " were only pouiblo to have our Canadian Advertisers candidate and: publicity in Oren Britain and In." the same appear with the publicity which is run by he Board as above, from Mme to timo, " could not but greatly stimulate tho buying of Can» din: product. in the Muumr land. Wiekham Stood 1n um Leadon Re _ "I ain't “on n papa: for 11mm dawn View of Revluu: No man an know, o pmcisdy “hither Germany in tendfu.. There are in her midst (omen making f-TCT/ri-TLT- for Weave and progress through iniar- l tiii-ar] “7. I. _ " national concord. Thm force. (“cannot ' - V I i, t , yet be called predominant. though they I A) . j:: h 'i i appear to be gaining atmnxth. 0n the p I? (I. I I other hand. there are force- woddn; , " t_V,1?’ ht I diametHearly opposne din-cum, 'tt L'TT7 openly and secretly. They may or may I l" "sl(sc:i,oa"-1 not be losing ground. Between them' . a "pttv- g\ in u m or luxely uniformed, highly I h m fl 'C)" sen-mu "patriotte" opium: cad reel-g t - has. what no Cam-u Gowrnmem can 2 word to than. Tho future ot $1qr. Drawe Nothing tbetter. may and, wimp-a, the Mun ot Eur- '.uek's a TI'f "Pt: but. Pt mu Boon Time. Baoeb.u--"Herttuttt, I'm sun meow but it win be â€me to out up m1" one. may be detormimtd by tho way an. ma- ot opium and mun; in- dunu. or " led to than... to the on. “do or to tho can. illilll8hWS FUTURE usuovtl TORONTO "A notwork or lam air oo-munt enttttau-mrrvoatle.attttu-s poo-t It would nuke tor unity and strength; " mum up an mu- m; a would Mn An Empire-w!“ “new: Industry. whlch would ho " cant-ch00! forum. I mum at mam tor (on: ot thou-n.6- at skilled works". and I renew. of tho right kind to tho Royal air We." write: Load Thomson, C.U.FI, Air Min- later in tho Labor Gm'emmenl, In tho Evening News of London. "All the» ndmntae should In ours; that; It nothing Mastic or [m fetched In " uncommon: ot our op- portunity. Everything that . aor. omment can do has been done, 1- ho In; done, and will be dono to {umber Mutton. "We luv. be men and the machines; our datum. Mom. and mechnuiu can not. am: hold the" own with than of w other country; our on- glul no the beet. Wu have not tho money; then - wu c time when capital could not be found tor a good Investment. “What we need now In mainly Wham; marked and amen-d disposition tow-rd. Hutton on the put to the mph. It my be variou- Ir tannins! by Wain, seltdtttomat, or inclination. or. preforasb1y, by a three: ta product I. what mumaru -- the - Mk." “and!†an men c po.itiver ad. vance In “to! mean admin-gs 1 human. The man who nun-10d won in (mm. of areratch In overtaken and beam: by tho man who gunned well behind cm. It is qtagnina, will. and "ill which teh; not tnttUI position. Sometime- tttoutward knowiedm of shaman produce. We“. Marius. mot-Ha. “I In well _ lean win "any," an the tar-lam tnatv--aho mu born with I wvor muon in his mouth. the In: who I- this to have u unlwr’ our cum “I In In: behind. I must ., for an 1 am worlh," any. tho Mahmud but hmddcapped mun. And ttodoea- mad he wins. The hiatory of success a long and Mada-Ling record ot the triumph of will over cireutnatataoe---ia unduly Um Ishtar, ct handicaps. Stanley. tho cr plow, was mrod in n workhouu; â€unions, the miller ot Africo, WM . little "planer" In a cotton mill; Mark Tum wan I river pilot; Thoma Prim a mu Mun-ulna autumn. hard " a. Hummus: to build the Pullman Home in which, later, h. at; Mon Burns wu poor all m. Gm. m In. in the uuvmwnud king ot Scotland. It I. eternally true. To the 3mm; Ian! unruly lo a Word emu“ mom tho dim. Thing: much motiveâ€. m 011le that hlndor. To than who not (hemme- to attatn, hut-moon act ll 'rtrurs, Incentives. can“ - quicken" -- “thou. 1»th their companions aâ€. were cllnnblu upward In tho Mt." The haul. in not chums to am strong. tho victory to tho M; bumm- ona. Not only do those who 1mm rid“! enter haror into the Kingdom ot Haven. but ottoa had" iuto the km of mountains. The (rent names upon the scroll or tho world‘- hmory, its moulds†of men. it: laden of and mum, its in. cpiron of and)†NVolutions. Ila un- told†of epoch-making pulmolphloa. m N'Ollofl of mighty new“: in toe tun M An and Selene. and Morals- . the†but morally been cradled tn tho mum of “unity. In the WW the (rent quantum in said: "Who are thus umyed tn whim robot?" and the answor comes. “My. IN thor that can» out of groat ulbm." o to "r1uB1o tum: gnu oddot, to moot enemies annulled! To In enUn‘y “one with them, to and how much one can standi To look “We. tarmac. prison, pawl-r oditmt, (no to has! To be (Mood . and! Iohlnd the Tlmeo. TM ammonia! crude: In! lwen out“ to unit: f tttt .2qu (mm for the night on we} ot the effect: of a hen" nil-tom on tho “NV-y. At M! the new morning the storm mu mod. A. the “1mm. can. from the kitetteet bearing M. or- der that (rum "mm! to her and r9 mum: "What 3 terrfbt. 'ttortts.' " o.s.via!utr loch "to n ttood." "rhe an?" "Tho Moi. You've mm of 1110 ttood. and the Ark landing on Mount Mun, suretr'." "Ntt, Int-tor." returned tho wanna. Dawn Nothing Sober. "net's a good m. but too much of a â€on Why doc-'41 he dttqt . sober 950th?†"IIE MI HABIT" They van excl-4min. with “In o f -. “m . i E-rar) E3] 7 i ' ' _ F _ sr,),'-,,?,"'):,',?:'" I i ll,ki,"si'i" / " g I C), LIA“ h i 5 .R'4lCr. '-rr7)iffesr'I --"' tdl ’ I 3/;"z Our Handicaps. he new; ‘nv l