â€The only can; sotnr;nea pom right: “he! to their .Yate?t Two hunted mug. hare been added to the 01mm Hutor" â€stem. while payment. have been made by th- Pro, “hoe to the Minimum!“ toe road purpose. ot narly‘soven million doi- mm»: mlmv ttortttal. The new Ontario Num- In: Board has cumin-l the Fruit mud \‘ngauhla Growers‘ Markets Board and H vying special ittteatthrv. to grading and marketing several im. Portant farm product). Wm: retard to Hydro, it In point. ed out that ttt the rural put: of my momma the demand for power called (or the construed“ ot our twelve hundred miles ot new traumas!†line, to supply nearly 3an â€mad additional consul“ attd that by uni-ring the new of the 01%! River it cuts Full- " important addition, "can only mutant to the great Khan development. has been made! h mtg: tunings. _ {fun ttvo tite prank Ln»- last week the Onllrio 1 tteqs wan Ano'n â€0099+.-. >o»mmm "umu H r»:~m.v'v um 'mnaod to nth-ml I'm Pub-nu Night of the 99th Toronto Troup. One ot the new on m proxy-gram» was an Ittutattott ‘1)" PIN Scene". The Scout- .mot asked “Lone E" to say A few words. and he told the boys and m Luau mm- " about and malt Inhale-I and dun work Ms! they are a sum: way that " published week by we. ate the Mtoreqt ot the who live m the can" Am att an: A far your: later the lame gentle- man was responsible for the crank- auon ot the Lone Scouts of Anetta, whose mm.- "a s'milar to those of m. Lone Scouts ot Canada. Lou Scouts of minimum" We we very tad 12mm! to notice that arrangement.» hut- been made for a bone Scout (Toll'".n " appoar Ia the "Saskatoon SLrE'Lwnnlx“ in a sinus: way that (my column is published week by wan, to Illumi- at- tne mteres: ot the Lone Beouta who lire tit the country districts of Baskutchse,saa and who are M91 more "r1ct,'-rtyd than the 0mm. he VII . Scout In could not Beeept â€words for hrs Good Turn. Mr. Boyce "a no numbed to and a boy who would not {any {an that he started to enquire who . than BOY SCOUTS could be . When he loomed all about our movement, ho sun so impressed thorns mm the idea but to the United States and organized the Dov Scouts ot America in that country. T a u Count On arrival at the hotel Mr. Boyce proceeded to hand a "tip" to his (IMO. who rotunda it than; that __ --. - -. ua W ("faded to his hotel. bit tho boy volunteered to like him ‘hu, ttaw m been brought up In tturmetmrirtu and knowing every launch Ind street. -e-%I. .W“. Villa In†have “complained during that time. The Boy Scouts ‘oi‘America ward ON“ in 1910 by“ Ute Wil- lin- B. Boyce sad the nary is told that he was in laden, “III. on foggy winter any ad {managed to get loot in the thick fat for which London is Bo ' . rm “and u ,..m poitued out in the speech 'm- Throat that while agricul- prmmcuon was unnamed " 3 lo"! the ftrtarteiat mum was "0tt$td "tsur/ua other member: ot a. Brotherhood in conm u! h“ t 1 to ha ll " interest dauon In; 'or, l th Our Amman aka“. The Scout: of charm" "e Ptt celebrated mm t and um I) the mu 9r Inn-am" " mmer Cream“ to ma Louie: _, A: â€my and ceremony , Immature not under WI] and the Mn hem ot bus!- 'w arm-ch from the Throne delivered by Sir William m: Juries of Ontario. 1 vvmr-wme on mortgage. . "an " I'M?!“ brought out . n'vmx- Which all pro. mmr , ml: be heard bo- tv Judge who will have all lands whether addmollll " allowed on either prim t will 32m be introduced Ming ot the Old Ago Pell- at which the Federal Gov- to my seventy per ceat.l which it I. chimed um} ma! saving u? on.» mzlllon I thottsand Minn 'a the' 1 nitaq handy-a1 thousand ' municipal). I "amurt, m be lnrxud'vwnl is“ trtta'tamation ot tho On-il r .tttd Mattie!pai Boll. I uraau ot Municipal mr. -r sum-h powers will tre ', war-1 to govm mace. muzumiea which are 1-- â€VIRGINS procaritttts Mancini alum! the Louisa Conmtnlutng than nroeh Whitt they and "hed u be e,1CWj..t1TrTmi: -cp41i'iiie'j'.ifr the trplea. doing. The 'ttttted State. their twenty. " 'ttitt with World Wldo /fsl'i?eytlijijiitit,.i' 599th Troop were very Interested and at“. uhed "Lone E" to give their very "my. but white: and Sconty regim- to with all the Lone Scouts ot Ontario. Bo With It!" they are, babies! Fr than 'vrthdar3arieurigr .. ther The Lone Scouts ot Ontnrio Join “an. with all Scout: the World over in were wishing "Many Happy Return" to Wil- our Chief Scoutl Lord Baden Powell, told irho eeiebraten his 75th birthday on , one on; 22nd February. d to. How Scouting mm “Goodwin ntith,; to' All Men†_ be, Most of you know the dimcuity 'boy which is now being experienced in har. India, And you here also no doubt polls read; ot the, dimcuit caste lystem and which forbids a member ot one Hindu Caste to be in any way inti- . mate with one ot another 0853.6. You or: may also hue heard Mat there is the: no love' lost between the Hindus and com thLP,tetmt.darts in that country. I Mary Pick-furl! mnounces her inten- ’Ziun '0 have Hi leading mun in her new pirt'n'n mm“ young actor who is .srre:"ra.tiottl huv unknown. It is her hope Iin: the one selected can so on, by Virtue at mu opportunity. to star- dom. There's u, doubt that her own; qtar will twinkle a mu. brighter tor) this happy and generous thought.-- The Cht'lstiaa Scienco Monitor. I Barn owls, long-cared owls, red- ahouldered owls, hawks. red-headed hawks, sparrow hawks and screed: owls destroy rats and mice and should he meow-aged and protected. Amen: those present at the Shanghai I!!!) an blown Rmixlulazdiar A detachment w". hurried from Ron: Kong are, addlug to me iateraationatUA ot the hummus! an"): "Howdy, old man.' Have you re- covered from your accident?" "No, not tally." “Why, you look as well as ever." "Yes, but I owe the doctor tttttttm dollars yet." Ma r _ _... _ . .. ru-‘umIlIIK "lt'Ulat "WI "He came and sat in a Seat facing wnd vno ,' ' baked siirsvra "mu '"rithe mantelpiece. His Portrait-was all mâ€: a? 1': Yit' a itut although I hanging on the wail by his right aide, may :rizhv “cw Mt them lo "T'eund mine Wtug placed on the than: “nil Caeir nun rl'our'ties, the Boy against the wall on his left side. Sewn town ali It?“ 'l', tteede a“diWhile having tea Arnold was very cages and “PM to M if assistance silent and his eyes were looking in a manner ot Which ue “'1' rrcsrii)ssifil1.tnat,C.i at the two' portraits. He Are You a Scout? -ilp.myi,ried looking in silence while If M} livo in u ‘1“an “mu: .\."wr~e,drinkmg his tea. At the end of the were» is no Scout Trr, q. qr r' x. a half-hour he had for his telt he look. llurnl Route too far an“ [mm â€.1; t.1,onet,more at b.ot.h portrnlts; $391.1. “are“ Troop, peria 94 you ssould mung his eyes on his, he sand, ‘I don t szlll like to be a Scout? Why not care what they say._l am . 'ef1r.,e.'t.1' be 1: Lone Scout? It you are be-, I unrusure that he did not lite nu tween the ages ot 12 and " in- portrait, adds Mrs. Bennett, naively. elusive and would like further pant-i * . . . culars liiiti, to the Lone Scout Do-i Arnnld p'.1ttetitr.-1iy., yfiet-,yy) partmant, Boy Scouts Associatlon,‘ a Passion for Punctuallty. , year bu'l T",it Pav Street, Toronto 2. l fye he met his wPt-:0.urie Marguc<i We shall be glad to hear from you. we Helmrd. A ?arisienne-U sur- "LONE lu'" prised his friends by telling them that he Wag engaged to an American girl. "CCCrCr""""""""""""rTT" He did not marry her. - "She was never on time. I could Pt2irTgr] [not stick it," he later “mini“; .5 with their own trouhl Scouts forgot all abcu caste, and wknt to th in a manner ot which ' ot ull castes. Muhammadâ€: and Sikhs. and the most remarkable thing ot all In that the "outcasts" in Indi': are the lowest posslblo clan in in social settle, who pen fovrrs t' ' -.. at dacradlnz menial tasks and Vito i'l" MURPG tiowra Mott by all or'eyr l'lvlia'd, Bu: although T -- --. -- “nu-ul- Ther’eto'ne the new" that Boy Scouts from 'the Government High School at Ktaror-paeea, Fund», In. dia went to the assistance '0! n colony ot "outcasts" whose huts‘ caught Bre in ot great interest. AH though they had to carry water from a Well some distance away; they soon got the fire under Conn tho], and a small girl was daringlr] rescued from one ot the nmingl hats. The Scouts included Hindus.I :- giiit . . , It, 1 the Bor, creed, and assistance, are proud. (Cliy to carry it through the l book, which is very long, nearly hundred pages. I "He would buy. at times, 'I w I the deuce I had never stark“ Indian Troops Join " . --""vb. u: me man It was , a good thing for her he had given her Lp," says Mrs. Bennett, "for she mar - ried another man far better suited t: her than he himself was." . O t t Like the wife of Joseph Conrad who rescued many of her husband's orig- inal manuscripts from tho waste has ket where he had thrown them as P1ueress---they were afterwards sold for s goodly "m-Mrs. Arnold Ben. nett retrieved from s similar recep- tacle “the manuscripts of articies, even of a book just published,†writ. ten by her husband. She admired his handwriting and was interested in his hobby of classic caligraphy. Discov- ering this, Bennett nrmegd a sur- prise for her. l Just before ha began his best known story, "The Old Wives' Tale," he told her he had decided to write it in printed characters, so that she might ham it. "I could scarcely believe it possible," Mrs. Bennett says. "But what he said he would do he did. He had the tre- ' mendous patience, energy and cape. l city to - it through tho wind“ ' Mrs. Bennett. "He emphasized to me a good thing for her he h cp," says Mrs. Bennett, " i . "I remember having "rim," recalls Mrs.. B, .intimate book "My Ayr land I was looking f (joy of pouring out tea I Some years ago Arnold Bennett and ‘his wife--. charming Freuchwomgn '--itad their portrait; painted separ- ntoly, by a "modtrd painter," The day elm. when the picturss were on view in their London house. The eventwa: celebrated by Bennett coming home} for tea-tea for two. Quite an event, for he rarely had lunch or tea at home‘ at the time. _. tron Hons Kong when things so: sk in intonation Bl settlement. . . the German puck-chaser. 4 to..i, their stiela. but the Cantu-i- In Reminiscences This end t the two' portraits. He akin; in silence while tea. At the end of the bud for his tea, he look. ', at times, 'I wish to never started doing Leer-.---.;', bicturesque niemben ctmaduaumintu'rhaotturh,L- 1, but the Canuckl irrovei too on time. I could later explained to r Arnold Berinett"/ " forward to the ' tea for him. ot the rink in wing a good tea for I.‘ Bettlett (in her Scrap" in China that it W; whble seven . - v-.. -hqhrd% IV "I was going through my , letters half asleep in bed," I "when I became aware that reading something of singuh eaer- ttnd wts--when I came at the envelope-addressed by I knew well to a man who h: been stopping with me. Most of us have opened a letter that did not belong to us and have suffered more or less embarrassment u a. consequence, but hark to this confession by Fond Mada: Ford: l "Wm a Perurituct' "It appeared that, being a neutral, he had come to Englnnd to take a course in modern English Literature at London University. the liveliest, When Canada. cénquered . The German lads were clever with ot Sikh native when 1mm "The other turned to me," chuckle; Ford, "and, with all the signs of agony and an explosion of P's like the unsilenced exhaust of a motor bicycle, at last brought out: I They continued like ' stop at which the South out. "link know what I "I'm a P-P-P-P," grasping at his throat in the struggle of n hopeless stutterer. "I don't care what you are," the South African shouted. "You may be a Pacifist, or a Papa, or a Potato. Trower, but your king and country need you." The civilian repeated: l "I'm a P-P-P-P." The young man tone dark eyes and exclaimed: "You ought io join young man like you. in khaki'."' Speaking of stammering recall: a. story told by Ford Made: Ford fin his reminiscences "Return to Yester- day"). During the World War, Ford, returning home from the front on leave, got into a railway earrings in which a South African soldier and I civilian were seated. Suddenly the South African turned on the civilian] and exclaimed: and sat ddwn jrczauvea in the Five Toma. Then they were much entertained. At one big dinner party at Stoke-on-Trent Town Hall, Bennett was called on for a speech. The more he declined, the more insistent became the demand. Mrs. Bennett was on pins and needles, for she knew that under stress of emo- tion her husband stammemd. How. ever, up he got and, taking a fountain pen out of his pocket, and showing it to the company, he said, "Ladiea and Gentleman, I don't speak, I write," nh.l “A; _a___, Not Ions/after he war married, in Paris, Arnold Bennqit took his French bride over tlt' £33th to Visit his The book totrk id; Jxaiur eight months to write. it that way. it L, to be dono, hard "ft is!’ He stuck to it." _ Chin and here they much tor them, gught to have Bed by I lady who had just h my morning bed," he says a that I was singular dell; came to look] rolled agonized up too: a lusty Why aren't you that until a 1 African got God 019090 in {hr-tone, tho‘nnlmul, and “In. in A' German Think“; . . H -......u-uu. all l tomst-rtiamrettt, Bethlehem, le',,? Amr, Belt, his, N Adv and Im- a11ah--.uh man Christina than Modems. With than exceptions, all tom in the country lbw . clou- Modem mljorlty. in most cues mom than the combined numbers of the twal, other faiths. _ 1 -_-- w. n‘vrul-WII Jerusa1em.--.The provisional list of totals of the urban population of Pal. estine. published by the Superintend- ent of Census, shows the Jews to be in the majority in 'ltrysajeniwreve, they number 51,416 out of a total of 90,407. The Christi-ml have yielded second place, which they hold in the 1922 census, to the Modems of Jeru- salem, who new number 19,735 u compared with 19,180 Christians. Six ‘m- l7__-7 _aq - -- _ 7 Jerusalem Difertnt RISE? ii' Frank Harris gives an amusing tte. Icount of Bernard Shaw’s wedding to Miss Charlotte Payne Townsend-in his biography of G. B, S.-which he says was given to him by Shaw him.. self. The marriage took place at th/s, West Strand (London) Registrar's office on June I, 1898. Shaw was c; e.rulehes-rreeoverintr from an acci- dent-and "wearing 5 jacket which he swears his crutches had worn to tags in the armpits. Graham Wallas and Henry Salt acted as witnesses." I - -'"-eMF__ "nun; . um. , WE!!! I half an hour later by train up to Lon- I don"-Ford was living at Winchelsna, some sixty miles from London. "t got some envelopes to match the one I had opened. Then, " one of my clubs " imitated the address of that Itttri) on those envelopes. I managed ttti last a fair likeness. Then I postedl the letter to my own house in that envelope. I had thus the London postmark. Then I returned to Wim. chelsea, and, u soon as the letter arrived, I forwarded it to the ad. dressee." _ done bat know what I did. I went L-‘l --- l . . ‘ V Students of folklore trace the groundhog proverb back to Germany,‘ where any hibernating animal, pry! fernbly the budget or the bear, looks for his shndow on Candlemu. Since. Cnndlemu was feast day with the Romana long before the Christian era.’ ‘we see how hard it is to uproot old beliefs. Some two years ago J. o. Frank of I the Wisconsin State Teaehera' Collegeyl made a study of weather superstitions: l among school chiidren in the Fox _ River Valley, Wis. Although this 'el, the twentieth tentury and there is an 1 active Weather Bureeu, Mr. Frank! 4 found that country people still believe _ t not only in the groundhog’s powers of f THE GROUNDHOG AND HIS SHADOW When Feb. 2 came the old ground.. hog superstition received its annual meed of ttttention. That the creature. otherwise known " the wood chuck, should look for its shadow on Candle- mu (Feb. 2) and, if it sees it, return to its hole, convinced that there will be " more weeks of Winter, is tt ire- lief hoary with age. - -. ,-V......., 5..“ us one of the most valuable critical studies of what hnppem when the earth shrugs her shoulders, u it were, 1nd assumes a slightly different pus- ture. The Santiago disturbance seems to have been lunged a.most to suit the convenience of these specialists. When they return they will probably give Vening Meinesz of Holland, an aa on the measuremgnt of gravity. for the exprels'purpou of studying the creation of mountains and hence of earthquakes. At the head of the ex- pedition is Professor Riehard H. Field of Prin elon. Associated with him are distinguished physicists and geolo- gist: from the universities of Glasgow and Cambridge, scientists from the, governmental staffs of the United; States and Condo, and Dr. F. A.l The Sammy) quake comes at n time. when tn international "ientifle expe-g ditiog finds itself in the West Indies _ Earthquakes are evidence thatl _ mountains no still being formed. Just what the rocess is, science is still an- able to explain with certainty. It wu formerly supposed that as the earth cooled and shrank eons Mo it pucker- ed and produced such rouge; u thol Andes, Rockies and Himnlayu. Tint theory is now mended " inadequate.! The earth is cool, but mountain build-' ing goes om . all. Ila- IaI-I-V'V“"" __- Netw Supply Souroea - How infinitesimal u are swimming mucosa“: ca W wood ' Measured tl'd'd'ld'. every prospective c... ---o------------" toner with, “LI-m- bot-8?" "tetatir. "Clean than?" It is not account] The tremor that shook Santiago de forecasting, but also that rain is aura for one to visit one of the bootblack Cuba recently draws attention to a to follow“ a dog ora cat eats CYS", ennui-laments m the can†or the region of the earth ztearlr ll ttttataltte it a snake dies on its back, of if ' town tor a shine. nor is it ttecetst9 as Japan. A tseiomto1ottleat world lur- toad or a spider is killed. Heavy fur to interrupt one'. My...†or amn- vey has shown that quakes are asso- " "numb, thick husk: on corn, ex- noon refreshment. For the mm“. elated with the deeper parta of the ceptionally heavy walls on muskrat bone" are a part ot the sidewalk tang m“ " with land mgiotu that Were houses-thee, too, are supposed to in. Bad they conduct their business " once the bottoms of deep seas. What dicate . hard winter. Dr. C. C. Ab- 'nesth tho tables while an intormat ‘is known " the West Indian Deep has bott of the Smithsonian Institution chat or perhaps a tre, . ms businose die been “especially pro1itie producer of hated the muakrat-houae theory over l cut-ton soc- Von awe. While the earthquske and volcanic disturbances. a series ofwintezs and found it 3|le ' price ot the sums is ouly twottty-tim For thus Tttye.the United Ata.tes wanting. ttenum-tttout two t'etttti--e tin oe Coast and Gsodetie _Survey mamtaxns CORTEZ EXTRACT FOR FA- 100 per cent is generally experttvd. a treismo1ogteal station " San Juan, IGUE f . F Guam Porto Rico, one of a string of stations T . I th" n a amoua F extending moat of the way from Ever since eodihsh swam in the sea; Although the Cauadl..n txnrthueat Maine southward. mothers have baton fudino tholr ha. Mounted Police. and that lmdv's " pu m the stone, drama tk I, ma wake. in an 'Ni-- Segregates Population , -- _-.. mm ox memure. the dynamic - m f?yyf,v..T.A? my 12,Fgt 1:4!!! "MItig,iisiii'ii';) ICt.tt thte m: .3 'a'adl' 'bi' tiiisksii' 'alle {wit . Kerry "mm hare existed in Ireland from “not. tines. The Ken-19a m u Minot krona, Ill that are left of an - new, Tttlt.. Th. other- In" ...._ __, c. '-'- -.-. - _ - mll'uli l 1 Numerous tests indicato um In; sink. over Imus . greater distance than about three-fourths of it. 1mm] No nuke cm teegr completely " the ground from it: can position. I "As far as this year': earned," any: the pub] tracts cannot wait for Contact». to be held July. Prompt nction is _ Rattlesnake, St") a“. I:.':".".'!.'., we nations of the world an 1 m is hoped an agreement may bel related to one another. made to the advantage of the British m. _ - _ - - coal industry as well is of the ship-I my. of Sun Equal owners. Large expansion of British‘ Thu of 466 an Moom coal exports to Canada is possible and Washington.~0n a'cleu: dav the " British coal-owners. sssistcd by ue- noondsy sun riding. 4B5 000 .timu Pretfurtion of the pound sterling, can as much light " the full shoot: at it. now successfully compete with United zenith and needy 120000000 um. States in price, there is no reason why more light than all a" iirii' in the this exchsngs of commodities should sky on s clear nigh: meteorulo . d not be eifeeted to the advantage of tables of the taiiiii',uC' suing-c both countries. _% ' The trade publication saya: "A tim- lber merchant! group in London which has been buying soft wood from Rul- I aia has decided in the interests of Imperial preference to abandon this year's contract for 450,000 standard; "It is therefore necessary to nego- tiate the purchaae of this large quan- tity of timber from some other source. It in understood it is intended to place the order in Canada. Loy1orrrr-Aeeosine to The Ship- ping World, a situntion bu developed favoring u profitabU deal with Cnnadt whereby Great Britain would ex- change British ml for Cnmdknl wood. Britain To Buy Canadian Timber Before mun cm be "nus converted into a superman tho organic chemist l must devise I chap, effective way of extracting hormones from tho ndrennl cortex or of producing them lyn- thetieallr. At present it takes 1 tom night and the adrenal: of about 800 cows to make . teaspoonfut of extract. A dose is therefore worth 30m. thou- sand: of dollttrs.-wa1demar Kaempf- tert in N.Y. Times. Mm", - r..- scribed by physicians in cases ol.ex- cessivo muscular fatigue, depression 1mg possibly overwork. Cortex extract is a restorative. Bra. Britton and Corey found that dogs that tire after an hour's cumin on I treadmill will run two and three times as long after I den of the ex- tract. There is every team: to believe that the extract will ultimately ho pts. ......:t....l L- -K, . . . Cortex extracts speed up the bodily functions. After hung received small doses young rats become mature in one-third the usual time. If the re- sults obtained apply to human beings. children of ii would be able to become father, and mothers. _ _ . L. Corey of tho University of Vir- ginia’s Medical School. They have shown that corticin makes mate chemic-I fuel available through the blood stream. The adrenal: are about as big " I fifth finger each And lio nou- the kid- neys of .11 higher animus. From the outer skin or cortex hormones In ex- tracted culled eortiein. The†hive properties .little short of tniraeutouc What these properties In bu been disclosed by Drs. Hartmann, Swingle‘ and others in curing Addison's dis-J ease, usually regarded as fatal. l Them In: been a similar supersti- Lon about the flesh cut from "rioug I parts of an animal. Ancient union 'wero convinced that they mplntainad and increiled their tttthtitig power: by eating kidneys ad the meat that lies near them. Why? They knew no- thing about hormones. T Yet their u. lief is now 4uatitUd in the light ofte- cent studies which have been mule of the "renal glsnds. We still speak of s man of "kidner"-Hutd with nes- son. ‘ ONTARIO ARCH TORONTO _ - -.ei- - vow". Prompt action is necessary." my (in Length? pyWeation.) "g trade in con- the ImperiQ; " Ottawa in -, wulClI [I w mm as much light u come. from the mrmoon. _ a amounts to 01:05“ 'teiatlt.ftiiii at a {not audio. - - III-Hum , d a (not “Mk. "H" . A Bow unit of measure, the dynamic “he“ (luckily ..._,. - "' “2'- w 3.600 foot candles. m Mutilation that: tho full moon " it! zenith. u on†tuc- hmdms on “While. which in 10 time. " much light " M...» - The unit meant. for tho rel-tum illumination intensities in the foot cundle. that is, the amount of illum. ination received from 3 Mandard and]. u foot any. The “and†sun, it, h etietatu, has " intensity " the and.“ of tht tag-ti of 9,600 {out can“ 11.. 'lta..ecLiiL' - V _... - unu- night, metforologieat table, of the Smithsoniu Institution show. These tables have just been reviled by mutual scientists at the United State. Weather Bureau and Bureau of 8!“th for the tttth time in so "am.' The unit menu. for an ..ur,..,. "ha......-. . Washineta..% noondly sun :11 In much light " zenith Ind and â€1-..-.. v. m I unsung in full of surprise- and certainly teaches on. yet another huon of how elooelr the unions of the world no related to one mother. _ ~â€" vv-J WI"““' (Gama "nett" (nico, jolly) cum. to Germany vie Prue. from the [an "nitidud" "Burmte “I shoutad by the Russian million in 1783, who had robubly learned it from the Tutu-a. The word “but." (lute) comes even from Arabia when "Al'ud" Wu " instrument undo of clay. Mmy be. lieve the Word “anion" to be French. But Reimnnn maintain; that it come. from the German word "Nat" (hum. So the mastication of tttteg 11mm il full of :IxrnI-i-A- ‘*’ Got-mm , i/ I correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor. Hum Reimuu trace. a few words of the German llama! back to their origin, in an article in the Berliner Morgenpolt m begins with the word “brav†(have), which he shows to be ttd Greek origin, coming from the Greek "barium" Wild. defiant, eftieieetty. The German word "Brief" (letter) ie the ban "breve," and the German word "Dame" (lady) the um. wool "domim," which later became “do-- na" And entered the French ham u "dame." The English word "NU. ioneble" in aid to hue produced the popular German . expression “rah" (elegant). tetc maul-n fm-_, .. 7 _ The GexmnnԤ;:é c: the latin "breve," ITrd "Dame" (my) -- w v "em-.. . m In Every-thy lemlnry Many persons would be utonishcl at the wealth of foreign words that has crept into their language, write. I correspondent of the Christian goinnn- "A-:‘ -- Many Eoreiznfword. Found Spam '"' sun mttiatteg M5,tntt [ch light " the full moon f and and: 120,000,000 light than all the sun _ n I clear night, meteorol A: AL, - " _ - Puma can. Although the Can-mun Norman-t Mounted Police. and that body's " ncloncy " .known throughou! the world, tho Bullish Candi. Civil, or , GlilnpoaofSpain b. tn - then In uro’lo In I all. am in the [ammo vicinity. wear In: nu cttnraeteristitt out! of Boned. buck 0mm, carrying the tool- ot " all!“ in t uttered wooden box, “I questioning every prospective mo- the _relatam I expreuiog PT popular on. lam!" to the last â€ceded "Never In. [hob “The new; 0. P. M. (1 Joseph P. h. “In l927, Kuhn “the “Chm. My h.- -$ayttt, "The “Mn 1'! I. man â€I!!! “24 d by Run aperteum he: I "Ther - Mtt m norm] p “Women 1, tr With mu: when. u Chore?» -ll, ',' new "Bt cr Beyer: Pt"' u Geo; . “In Chm In! In War l “Th work. It: by Ki Curm- Clea V new" med "1qu "os " lay†ed pla Pet Tenn About or on (on o bte fa: Inge l Ipp. in. In! tour Inkn. mu! duo‘s Glow of I. of tl the lite Chip “no Inn could ‘1 Ind the d was at metal a has. Wtr, from he - to nun vm be Aer Quinn. ta/ “I no. you it "TUatool" Lights ti - Indium Highways I“ Knee Ion: ed“ 'istltrtent , an“ May“: Vi: Found i “it D The ma tt " I ll There din the the ll H. Wiegtn ll In L000 Doe k, pm tt K