: Antarctic Glossary TEaAct ol at e im om in And just suppose that the Salvation Army has to call a disarmament conâ€" Chicago is described by a newsâ€" paper correspondent as an Augean stable. This is the burg that, puts the "Aw, Gee!" into Augean. _ I always think one of the great charms of my sex is that the best of us remain boys to the end.â€"Premier Stanley Baldwin. As to the exâ€"Kaiser, phrases such as "cowardly braggart," " his not very courageous soul," "insane prejudice," "his upstart monners," "Jesuitical and adroit â€" sophistries," "Shallowness," "presumption," "arrogance," "a tenâ€" deney to brutality," "the actorâ€"Emâ€" Peéeror," " swaggerer," are sprinkled throughout the pages. The sketch is an appalling indictment of the exâ€" Kaiser. ® "He accuses "many of the Hohenzolâ€" lerns of caring more for their power than for the love of their people, and declares that it was ‘this scorn for the German character and people, this deâ€" liberate cutting themselves off from the heart and pulse of the nation,‘ which was the ultimate cause of the downfall of the dynasty." ~ f "Herr Eulenberg tells us," says the Daily News, "that in his biographica! skeiches of the leading members of the Hiohenzollern family one of his objects is to strengthen German naâ€" tionalism or pride of race, in which, apparently, the Germans have often been deficient. By this, however, he A German Treatise The week of the exâ€"Kaiser‘s birthâ€" day celebration saw the publication of the English edition of The Hohenâ€" zollerns, by Herbert Eulenberg (Allen & Unwin, 18s.) war. He might have occupied public positions in other countries without bringing about any catastrophe. But unhappily he occupled the position in which his temperament was & standing danger to the world. "Ho was a complete amateur in everything, but he ruled a nation that was more industrious and thorough than any other,. This actor, posing in one historical character after another, was at the head of a people methodiâ€" cal, powerful, highly armed and un eritical. There were worse men in the politics of preâ€"war Europe, but: there was no man so grotesquely m-‘ suited to his position. I "He was & dilentante llflng to be the arbiter in art, scholarship, letters and religion, as well as in politics and "He saw Europe as a stage on which a few men played leading parts, and he could not bear to think that there was & single hour in which his own part was not the chief part. 2000 CBDLOT! SUSpPECICC [hat others acied on the impulses that prompted him. He built up a legend that King Edward had changed the direction of our foreign policy, thwarting his own -l.%l because he wished to purâ€" sue ~private quarrel with his d th D in an by â€"London Daily News. The exâ€"Kaiser William has just céleâ€" brated his 70th birthday at Doorn. He has been surrounded by many of his relatives, but so far as Europe is concerned, and Germany in particwlar, the phrase which has frequently been used by the newspaper correspondâ€" ents, "Indifferent Germany," also sum« up the view of the rest of the world. M tr f the "Apart from the closely edited mesâ€" sage of congratulation from President Hindenburg and the familiar patriotic displays of the ‘Steel Helmets‘ and other warâ€"veteran bodies, Germany‘s attitude, like that of other countries, appears to be one of amused toler ance. The fact is that the exâ€"Kaiser is now not within a planet‘s distance of being either a public danger or even a public nuisance." "The real object of these Doorn celebrations, together with the careâ€" fully engineered echoes, is, of course, to test once again the feelings of the German people. The result must be disappointing to the exâ€"Kaiser and his immediate entourage. Recent Birthday Festivities Fail to Arouse Any Great Public Sentiment Europe Views Why this indifference? Perhaps the anchester Guardian is nearest the ith when it observes: "The case against him . . . is that occupying a position in which sober d careful behavior was demanded the interests of his nation and the ‘crests of the world he gave the n to his impulsive and excitable of fifty he could ‘ribing himself as he Lord inheriting his grandfather‘s It is difficult, indeed, to say of n who remained so much of a how far he was an agent and far a victim in this tragical seâ€" e of events. His want of balâ€" his undignified vanity were all haracteristics of a snoilt child A GERMAN VIEYV iven ego.sm d ti fifty ispected ti 1am Palace. At the uld make a speech ( as the instrument ting a erown placed er‘s head, by God‘s e choscn instrument at ‘70 Man never fastened one end of a chain around the neck of his brother, that God did not fasten the other end round the neck of the oppressor.â€" Lamartine, We still have the more delicate part of our work before us.â€"Primo de Rivera. AWe ORCCRe A¢ . e * 4 ‘It the car @eswitigend t& roll forâ€" ward or backward when the brakes are released and it is standing on a slight grade, the indications are that the. brakes drag. When the streets are slippery there will be no strain on the steering gear if the wheels are cut all the way to the left before @ulling out of parkâ€" img space. ,%4> w m _ k Th wheels of some of the newer cars spin if the streets are slippery beause of increased power under the hood. Keep the brakes partly on if you have trouble starting. on If you use salt to keep ice from forming on the windshield, be sure to wash off the hood and cowl carefully and watch for rust at joints and hinges. A little dry snow on top of ice is especially hazardous, because it fills up the depressions in the tire treads and makes the tires less effective on the ice. If cranking with the choke out beâ€" fore using the ignition be sure to pross the choke button in again when ready to start the engine, otherwise the cylinders will flood with raw fuel. When parking on a slippery spot where difiiculty in getting away may be anticipated, get the right rear wheel close to the curb so the wall of the tire will obtain traction against the curb itself. Hints to Drivers Dr.Williams‘ PINK PILLS Is your APPETITE POOR? Start today to improve your appetite. Buy Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills from your druggist‘s or by mail, postâ€" paid, at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ontario. Send for free bookâ€""What to Eat and How to Eat". my appetite was improving, that the headaches came less frequently and that I was not so easily tired. Now my started taking Dr. wm.’ Pink Pills I soon noticed that explains the successful un;: Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills in White, of Parry Sound, "and when I sat down to a meal I felt I did not want to eat. A doctor told me I was anaemic with his medicine. typical example;â€" PBRHApsbya.....- ing or other means, you have "“"Minadumm of appetite, heartburn, sour "A HOUSEHOLD NAME IN 54 COUNTRIES" are symptoms that $â€"14 "A Cbannel Tunnel can do nothing to open the markets of Europe to us. Even as regards Northern France the commercial advantage of the tunnel is doubtful, and in regard to most other places there can be no advant: age at all. Some of our exports to _ "The tunnel will inevitably be very ‘t)l:;::x.absl‘:r;:t;mchimera and an econ lexpenslve. Estimates of the cost of | # {lts construction vary enormously; but F *b 6 Bm . it is pretty safe to say that to pay ;interest on its capital costs and allow BAK'Bz' NOT GAIN]NG? for the cost of upkeep, repairs, ventiâ€" l"" lation, and so on, â€" will have to earn o_ms_ Dmnon at least £20,000 a day. The toll| Babies can‘t gain when souring | charge will therefore have to be very waste in a clogged digestive tract is highâ€"say £500 per train, We do not forming gas, making them colicky, ‘suggest that these figures are accur-llconstlpated and niserable. Just try iate, but certainly they are in the the method doctors endorse, and milâ€" neighborhood of the truth. Probably |lions of mothers know, and see how ithe actual costs will turn out to be a|your baby improves. A tew‘irons of good deal higher,. At any rate, it will| purelyâ€"vegetable, harmless Fletcher‘s not be a cheap thing to send goods;Cutoria makes the most fretfv‘, through this dream tunnel. ;feverlsh baby or child cemfortable in l "After all, we have no very enormâ€"| & jiffy. A .ew doses and he‘s digestâ€" ous trade with France and are not ing perfectly and gaining as he should. likely to have. We buy her Bordeaux| To get genuine Castoria, look for the wine in increasing quantities, but that| Fletober rignature on the wrapper. "After all, we have no very enormâ€" ous trade with France and are not likely to have. We buy her Bordeaux wine in increasing quantities, but that will naturaily come to us more cheapâ€" ly by sea to London or Southampton or Bristol; it will never be sent via a Doverâ€"Calais railway tunnel. Even in London we get more coal from Northumberlapd and Durham by sea than by rail. "But what about the goods? Well, on the face of it, of course, there should be a great advantage in being able to send a railway truck from Sheffield to Basle without any transâ€" shipment; but it is to be feared that even this advantage may prove illuâ€" sory. Enthusiastic estimates which we have read of the economy of through traffic seem to be based for the most part upon ignorance of thg econom‘!c factors. * "In fact, no doubt, the danger would be negligible, but the sense of danger would be intense. We cannot think that the tunnel would be a very popuâ€" lar passanger route. At any rate, no wide popularity for the underâ€"Channel route can be foreseen as far as ordinâ€" ary passengers are concerned. A doctor would hardly advise anen ovs patient"to use that route; even flying might involve less strain. do not know. But of this we may be certain, that a great many people who are afraid of the sea will be still more afraid of the tunnel. Tunnel v. Voyage "It is unpleasant enough to have the Alps. What will it be like to go through a twentyâ€"five mile tunnel unâ€" der the seaâ€" a journey of say forty minutesâ€"with the knowledge that the tunnel is mined at a dozen places and may be blown up by any accidental derangement of the electrical apparaâ€" tus on either side of the Channel? "The project must be considered purely on its merits as a means of communication in times of peace. The tunnel ‘would naturally b6é used both for passenger traffic and for goods traffic. As for passenger, the idea of getting into a train at Victoria and arriving at the Gare du Nord without having had to move from one‘s seat except to visit the dining car naturâ€" ally has its attractions, especially for those who abhor being ever affoat on the sea. | "But are such people very numerâ€" ous? Are they more numerous than those who in normal weather condiâ€" tions find the brief and invigorating sea passage the most pleasant part of the journey? Perhaps they are; we do not know. But of this we may be certain, that a great many people who are afraid of the sea will be still | There have been many scores of articles and leaders in favor of the Channel Tunnel during the last few weeks, and the above facts and figâ€" ures are significant The "News Statesman" is, however, a keen critic, and we give some of the arguments it uses. There has been so much written and said in favor of the Chanâ€" nel Tunnel that opinion in the other direction is worthy of note. The "New Statesman" says: Abroad, absent or ill .............. 4 Provincial Press For, 61; against, 9; neutral, 9. Peers willing to serve on the Com mittee, 51; Commons, 152. â€"Daily News. A Spirited Attack on the Channel Tunnel Scheme > The Channel Tunnel Position _ The latest figures show the attitude of Parliament and of the Press toâ€" wards the proposal: Peers Always Two Sides â€" to Every Question Against Neutral Abroad, For the scheme . EOSE | s1susisrcersere‘s Neutral ........~.2.. Abroad, absent or For the Commons scheme ........... absent or i11 . 20 Per Train 17 108 201 115 56 30 12 It is often assumed that party serâ€" vice is given always with a view to some reward.â€"Mrs. Alvin T. Hert. Minard‘s Liniment for Grippe and Fiu. In former years the people used to turn out for the opera; but now they | The Englishman (Calcutta); It is not India tha« is "disaffected"; it fs some five or six million educated and |halfâ€"educated Indians who are useful pawns for a handful of cleverer and jmore experienced men to play with in the ceaseless game of profiting at each other‘s expense. As long as that game continues, so long will the developâ€" ment of a national outlook in this country be delayed. When India learns to think @s a nation she will be in a position to say whether sze will be of the Empire or not. Until then, the less there is of this disinâ€" genuous nonsense about independence, the quicker will be the rate of progress towards the goal of seltâ€"rule in whatevrer form it may eveptually come, ‘"We certainly hope that none of the taxpayers‘ money will be risked in so chimerical an enterprise. . There !are plenty of sound sciemes of naâ€" | tional development which will require | substantial Government support, but Ithe Channel Tunnel is not» one of them. _ It is a chimera and an econâ€" omic absurdity!" Babies can‘t gain when souring waste in a clogged digestive tract is forming gas, making them colicky, corstipated an1 niserable. Just try the method doctors endorse, and milâ€" lions of mothers know, and see how your baby improves. A few frops of we have assumed the lowest p(;sail;l; cost, and even at that the project seems to be utterly uneconomic. "This, and not the military obstacle, is the real objection to the Channel Tunnel scheme. â€" It is hardly possible to imagine that it could pay its way. Estimates of its probable cost vary from about sixty to about a bundred and fifty million pounds. In such figures as we have used in this article Switzerland might perhaps use the tunnel route, but to all other counâ€" triesâ€"even Spain and Italy, for exâ€" ample, the sea route would remain the most economical. Why â€" should Rorksbire and Lancashire send their fabrics to Holland or Germany via London and Calais, paying the high tunnel toil, when they can be shipped from Hull diregt to Hamburg or Rotâ€" terdam ? ‘ alss Ruckart, famous fancy skater ered lake at St. Moritz, the European w it all over a Broadway chorus for biev. «‘Disaffection‘" in India M Can We Canadian Girls Do As Well? the European winter playground chorus for highâ€"stepping. BUT NOT SO EASY AT iT LOOKSs fancy skater, cutting some cap best .'El known to medical science is Phillips‘® Milk of Magnesia It has clans in the 50 years since its invenâ€" The correct‘lev';/u an alkali, which neutralifies s instantly. And the « What many people call indigestion very often means excess acid in the stomach, ‘The stomach nerves have been overâ€"stimulated, and food sours. any Automobile stocks may jump, but they have mbthing on pedestrians. ' Reparations Philadelphia Ledger: Legally and politically, the final solution of the reâ€" parations problem is entirely a Eurâ€" opean affair, The European nations, inrluding Germany, must come to an agreement as to the total to bepaid, the metaod of payment and the means of assuring execution of the contract. in these matters the United States can have no direct interest, . But the settiement will mean more to the Uniâ€" tod Str:mes in financiâ€"! terms than to Baby‘s Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Baby‘s Own Tablets Should be in Every Home Where There Are Children The perfect medicine for little ones is found in Baby‘s Own Tablets. They are a gentle but thorough laxâ€" ative which regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach;.drive out canâ€" stipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fever and promote healthful and refreshing sleep. it is impossible for Baby‘s Own Tablets to barm cven the newâ€"born babe a they are absolutely guaranteed free from opiates or any other injurious drugs. _ Concerning them Mrs. Earl Taylor, Owen Sound, Ont., writes:â€" "I have four children and have , alâ€" ways used Baby‘s Own Tablets, 1 am never without the Tablets in the house as they are the best meCicine that I know of for little Ones." A PERFECT MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES other nation involved M on the iceâ€"covâ€" ss Ruckart has WhenPain Comes clans for 50 years in corsecting excess acids. Each bottle ecntains full dire> tionsâ€"any drugstore. _ One spoonful of this harmless, tasteâ€" less alkali in water will neutralize inâ€" stantly many times as much acid, and the symptomé disappgar at once. You will neve, use crude methods when once you learn the efficiney of this, Go get a small bottle t txv. Be sure to get the zenuine Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physiâ€" Our position is that there is a good fiveâ€"cent clgar. _ But the retailer in sists on getting two bits for it. Judged from every standpointâ€" safety, ease of harvesting and marâ€" ketingâ€" there seems very sound reaâ€" soa for expanding the acreage of barâ€" ley in Ontario.* Minard‘s Liniment prevents Flu, Experimentalists recommend barley on account of its safety, It is one of the surest cash crops that a farmer can grow, they state, Professor W. J. Squirrel, of he Ontario Agricultural College, pointing out that in tests covâ€" ering many years barley can be sown later in the spring than either oats or wheat without any serious loss in yield. In a late spring, therefore, one may safely sow this gain after all chance of success with others, save buckwheat, would be lost. But that is not all. Barley seems to fit into: the most precarious season, because not only can one sow it late but one reaps it earlier, earlier in fact than any spring grain. This means it is a safe crop to sow in a cold, late spring, ard also in a season when the fall rains set in unusually early, as they have a habit of doing in this provâ€" ince. Thousands of acres of oats were destroyed last year. Had this land been sown to barley there would have been good returns. ‘This crop is one of the best in which to start clovers or alsike. ~Unlike oats and wheat it does not stool out to the same extent and smother the seeding. Getting down to the straight dollar and cents advantages first, the offiâ€" cials mentioned above and the builleâ€" tin quoted report a good market for barley. It ca nbe sold Tor feed, seed or malting purposes. As a feed it has ‘no rivals and few peers, and on this account it commands a better price than oats. Last year the demand for seed barley of the right varieties \could not be filled and imports had to be made from outside. ‘This spring will witness a similar condition with seed barley in demand in every provâ€" ince. Of course, barley for seed must be pure, free from oats and of some sixâ€"rowed variety â€"uch as CA.C. 21. The same requirements are essential if the grain is to be sold Tor malting purposes. ‘The old mixture of a lot of oats and an uncertain amount of barley will not do for this purpose. Straight barley of & sixâ€"rowed variety like C.A.C. 21 is what is wanted, and if this can be secured a premium amounting to about 7¢ per bushel over ordinary feed barley will be paid. At the recent meeting of the Ontario Seed Growers‘ Association, Ontario farmers were assured of a market for malting barley amounting to about 2,500,000 bushels annually, 177.7 acres have been devoted to the production of oats as against only 34 acres"to barley. And these figures are secured from the same bulletin which makes it clear that barley outâ€" yields oats and is worth on an averâ€" ’age $4.50 per acre more. It is probâ€" ably on account of this somewhat perplexing situation that the Ontario Agricultural College proposes to conâ€" duct an investigation of the reasons underlying the prevailing popularity . of oats over barley as a farm crop: in Ontario. J Barley was under discussion at practically all the farmers‘ meetings in ‘Toronto this month, and particuâ€" larly so at those which had anything to do about crops. There is no doubt that the acreage of this grain will be greatly increased this year and, acâ€" cording to John Buchana, of the Onâ€" tario Agricultural College, and T. G. Raynor, of the Dominion Seed Branch, to quote only two of a dozen who might be quoted, there is every justiâ€" fication for the proposed expansion. Statistics gathered by the Ontario Deâ€" partment of Agriculture indicate very clearly that barley outyields oats in pounds of feed per acre in a normal year and that, generally speaking, its market value is considerably higher. Moreover, barley is a safer crop than oats and has at least one more marâ€" keting outlet. Notwithstandin these advantages, in the past for every‘ 1,000 acres of cleared land in Ontario, Experts Point Out That Marâ€" ket and Feed Value Higher Barley was under discussion at practically all the farmers‘ meetings Barley Entitled to Bigger Place ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO properly, let the body poigons pars off n ‘I:’ tocl-‘lllto. Thousands of woâ€" uring the past half century, have @iscovered that Warner‘s Sofe Kicney and Liver Remedy help». Originaily a doctor‘s prescription, purely ve.ctable, pleasant tasting, safe, it costs little. By #tarting to take it now, you may ward Off iliness and worryâ€"@et a trial bottle from your W today. Note your improved | a ite und freedom from restless gleep. Warner‘s Safe Romocics Co., Toronto, “’!.. 40. Ne Warner‘s Safe Kidney l“l.! trouble is responsibic many of the ills women dread a: time of life. It often Causes sallow wrinkles, robs Wwomen of the heâ€":t» m of youth, makes them look and Old. Bo keep your kidneys functic Warner‘s Sate Kigney n Remedy helps preserve yo toning up kidneys Women! Don‘t Dread Midde Age Is a Great I‘reventative, being une ol the oldest remedies used, Minure s Limment has relieved thousunds of cases of Grippe, Bronchitls, Sore Throut, Asthina and similar diseases. 1t is un Enemy to Germs. ‘Thousands of bottUes being used every deay, For sale by all drugrists Minard‘sLiniment F L U x and general deniers, .. Tinard‘s Liniment Co Ltid, Yarmouth, N 8 The indianuapulis Cancer bHos Wianapolis, . udiana, . has . putd booklet _ Whach Glves . duterescn about the Ca se of Canoe, a wha. to do for pain, bleeding 0 A valuable *Ulio In the madsags auy case. Pite Sor 1t to day . Ing this paver. zsc In stamps or coins bring you Five High Toilet Preparations (trial sizt return mail. Dept. W. @RRisStmine 2206 â€" Northampton Buflalo, N.Â¥ Box H75, SRIDGEBURG oT. caNw main on the map must pray that it forever remain unthinkable. It does not call for much intelligence to enâ€" able one to know how, in the evont of war, this country would be smashed and torn by the contending forces, andg no matter what happened at sea or anywhere else this devastated country would emerge smashed and broken and no longer British, Of that th : could be no doubt. . , . All the fine dreams of Canadians as a people now indulge, of going on as a great and free British country, would be over and ‘~mne with in the red glare of war,. ‘The one supreme foreign inâ€" terest of Canada is to build and proâ€" serve the greatest goodâ€"will between Britain and the United States. Toronto Star (Ind.): There is altoâ€" gether too much being said about the possibility of a war that every body declares to be unthinkable, It should be unthinkable. Every Canadian who wunts British North Americ B ARKED ROCK ©ocKr qualified Record of and Registered Breeders. est hish laying strain. Un $4; Pedigreed, $5, $6. 25 ye Hatching E(g Chicks Row Farm, Cainsville Ont Claims Many Victims in Canad; and sbhould be guarded against &2 Victor‘an _ Stam Winekel, 855 Helsize suuee c 03220 CUIEIRe Chamberlain Lebsrcis® TORONTO (3) Free Book About Cancer m e e s TONE INDIAN Beril4 CS t Can 2 2. TAELA ISSUE No. 9â€"‘29 and Liver Remeds The Unthinkable War PEMALE HNELP WANTED 75¢ and 40¢ WaANTEp Canada‘s npedigreed Clark EARLY A. NVan nto, Ont. ng re $3