orld Under Water Fland alone ab C all sin. as wheno it t wit t€lod val «* AO¢ WBR iln dives, mer tham came to iwell was it I gave water an obies _ to sharks, new but es _ had ted _ the d _ place a eB been Li 0 , t ut hy host 10 Fan HY i2 t y h che the n a lt IEC] (k of of Teacherâ€"*"Can you tell me what Australia is bounded by, Tommy?" Tommy â€""Kangaroos, sir‘!" ‘A mighty queer _ man stopped bere the other _ day," stated the landlord of the Petunia tavern. "He didn‘t have anything to sell to our merchants, ho wasn‘t trying to inâ€" troduce valuable _ literary works to the few persons in the community of auMicient culture to appreciate ‘cm, and he quietly told everybody who inquireg that he did not wish to buy land HMe sat around here gn the office some and read a book. and the rest of the time ha strolled about in town and looked at things in a casual sort of way "To one gent who asked him if it didn‘t look righ; smartly like rain off to the south‘rd, he replied that it did And when another inquired if he hadn‘t met him some‘rs, he ansâ€" wered that it was quite likely, inasâ€" much as he had been there several times. _ When he got ready to Ieue‘ he simply paid his bill and departâ€" eg on the two o‘clock train, Opinâ€" jons are pretty evenly divided; some of our leading citizens think he was an inspector of some sort, and othâ€" ers believe he was a spÂ¥. \ During _ excavation â€" work for the Welland Canal, a thin seam of gypâ€" sum was exposed. It was of high quality, but too small in quantity to be of value. A private company sought assistance from an expert geologist, who, from their fossils, identified the A slory of "mineral detective w ork" as related by Dr. Charles Camsell, Deâ€" puty Minister of Mines, in an article for the Professional Institute, will be of interest to Scouts in general, and in particular to those who are workâ€" ing for the "Miner‘s" and "Prospectâ€" or‘s" proficiency badges. Your Scoutmastor will be delighted to hear all about your Camp Site, so don‘t forget to write and tell him alt about i. *°% T"Ccommend that every Lonie who lives in the country should make A camp site of his own, perhaps in the bush on his own farm, where he can spend his leisure moments, sleep out with his dad or brother or some of his chums, and be near at hand to take part in the daily activities that he is called upon to perform at home. At this "Lonie C: .ap,., he can practice his woodcraft, make all the "gadgets" used in a regular camp, and have a real heap of fun, ce your Scouting in the fresh air. Some of you will be lucky enough to attend the Lone Scout Camp, or some other camp, but others, who maybe have to stay at home and help on the farm, will have to arrange their own camping plans. "Out of Dsors" It should always be that Scouting is essen doors game, and in the opportunity should be tice your Scouting in i in Many Lone Scouts wilt be heaving big sighs of reliet at this time be cause of the thought that "School is Out" and long weeks of vacation le before them. ‘Those examinations are Aall behind us again for a while, and we congratulate all those Lonies who have auccessfully graduated or passed into a higher form. If ther® MNC MBÂ¥ Who AlA mat malks Un recommend | that Mincral Detective Story Suspicious always be borne in mind % is essentially an out of and in the holidays every Dsors" Scouting any who did not make ose which you will if you are going to â€"AWITH THE ~ 4\ y# seized to prac NESCOUTS YÂ¥ A man‘s reputation is what his friends say about him. His character is what his enemies say about him. True courage is not incompatible with nervousness, and heroism does not mean the absence of fear but the conquest of it.â€"H. Van Byke What is known scientifically as the precise level not of Canada now covers the Dominion and a maze of of figures is\ required to represent the clevation above sea level of the various localities indicated. These figures are carefully computed by the Geodetic Survey of Canada, Deâ€" partment of the _ Interior, and are based on mean _ seaâ€"level obtained from five tidal station, namely, Yar. mouth and Halifax on the Atlantic coast; Father Point on the gulf of St. Lawrence; and _ VancouyvEr and Prince Ruper; on the Pacific coast. The figures are necessary in the layâ€" ing out of towns, the building of bridges, engineering â€" and {frrigation work, and they also serve as the basis for all other survey measure. ments and computations, Why not write today and find out all about it? You will not be placed under any obligation.â€""Lone E." The Lone Scout Organization proâ€" vides an opportunity for boys between the ages of 12 and 18 inclusively, who otherwise could not be Boy Scouts, to enjoy all the privileges of Scout Training in their own environment, Lone Scouting is mainly designed to take care of boys who live on. farms, in small villages where there is no Scout Troop, or in rural localities. Full particulars regarding the activiâ€" ties of this organization, which is a branch of the greatest "Boys‘ Club" in existence, covering the whole civilâ€" ized world, may be obtained from The Lone Scout Department, Boy Scouts Association, 330 Bay Street, Toronto\ one of Europe‘s experts in fAlying and gliding in charge of Stephen deNHo'rthy, oldâ€" est son of the Regent of Hungary, and Mohammedan, Hindu, Chirstian and Budhist Scoutmasters took a tenâ€"days‘ training course together in perfact harmony and good will at a camp near Colombo, Ceylon. All joined in the morning and evening prayers of Robert Louis Stevenson. Another International Scout Camp An international Boy Scout camp to‘ be known as the Badenâ€"Powel! Camp has been established in International Park, Beaumont, California. The camp is sponsored by the Beaumont Rotary Club, and is open at all times to Scouts of any country. World Plane Model Show For Boys . The glider and airplane model disâ€" play at the 1933 World Boy Scout Jamâ€" boreo, to be held in Hungary, will be OU A drill hole was made, and the preâ€" diction was borne out. A seam seven feet thick was located, and as a result Applying this information to a geoâ€" logical map of the area which had al ready been made by the Geological Survey of Canada, it was predicted that if the company would drill to a depth of 90 feot at a place called Wilâ€" ow Grove, south of Hamilton, at least 40 miles distant from the point where the original discovery had been made, they would locate the &ypsum bed, and that it would in all probability be much wider. layers of rock above and below the thin seam of gypsum Canada‘s Level Net An Opportunity True Courage By BUD FISHER Reputation mutt, mere is A'LADY 19 ?KAY. see You iN TLL G0 || tTrie Receptiow RIGHAT Room L wl . A t‘ (al ’w To es ‘Cal. t ‘.\ . . _X wi**** p~S ’T e \,\"â€" e A‘L"‘ @ e 4 1 Q 7 o hil C\T). .. Ag > -*, @ * e C AHIP Pinr .4 ‘ \ e a i 7 i\ â€";' L N \ \\ :\ \\\, \ * y 9/ W\ \\\\\ \L‘.‘\‘\‘,"‘ ~_ OB sttuiamas \"\\\"“'\\â€â€˜ < U un /7 pu M TT M <<â€"â€" e Mormamigings \ [I] il*?“!lzs‘;'.‘ ‘ <Â¥" _ . 5',"‘1""“ â€" NS 1 g ."*">% \m"i >3 P & â€" l 9 o * Q * T *A aane Esdintr)y)};. as~» ~<<a s es s i k z: ~1~ ___ _~_km‘ 36 it out under him. "I am come down to deliver"â€""Come now I will send thee"â€"both of these statements are true, Moses took the measure of the task laid upon him and realized that i was stupendous. He was to appear before the great and mighty Pharaoh with the demand that his peonle should be set free; he was also to quicken the desire for freedom in a people already somewhat inured to slavery, v. 11. "Who am I that I should go?" he cried. Like most of the great prophets, he shrank from his task. It was not that he was without sympathy for the nproject nor that he was cowardly. His wavering came from comparing is slender persona‘ resources with the magnitude of the undertaking. He was met with th» promise of divine nepâ€""Certainly i will be with thee." Moses was furâ€" ther assured that doubt would pass into certainty, and faith into sight when the Israclites, finally liberated from Egypt, would worship their God on the slopes of Mount Sinai by which he was standing. This mountain was regarded as God‘s local habitation: hence it was peculiarly sacred. 1 II. THE NaAME or® cop, vs. 13â€"15. ‘ Moses raised yet another difficulty when he suggested that the people of A revelation of {«al now broke upou him that not on!ly ccnstituted him a leader of his people, but opened a new and glorious epoch for Israel. I. A GREAT COMMISSION, vs. 10â€"12. God had made it plain thta he was wleeplessly watching the evil plight into which his people had fallen. J am come down to deliver," v. 8. God, however, works through human azenâ€" cies; Moses was the one chosen for this crisis. "Come now I will send thee," v. 10. This i the paradox of the divine operation in historyâ€"it was God who wrouzkt the exodus out of Egypt; it was Moses who carried l INTRODUCTIONâ€"The great men o the Bible traced their lifeâ€"tasks back to the will of God. They were distinctâ€" ly conscious of a time when they reâ€" ceived a call from God to their work. Usually their call came in a vision of God, followed by a commission from him in which the nature of their task was unfolded. So it was with Moses. He was tending his fatherâ€" inâ€"law‘s flocks in a lonely part of the wilderness close by the slopes of Mount Sinai or Horeb, as it was someâ€" times called, v. 12. At the time, he was probably nrooding over the opâ€" pression of his countrymen in Egypt. "A great sight" (v. 3) attrac‘~i his attention. A desert bush or shrub was burning, but was not consumed Travelers in those parts inform us that "certain small bushes of the desâ€" ert emit conmbustible gases which, when they have given off in sufficient quantities, are ignited by the great heat of the castern sun. The flame plays round the branches of the bush, which, so far from being injured, apâ€" pears to enjoy its baptism of. fire.‘ But to Moses this was obvious!y no natural phenomenon; to him it was a sheer marvel; God was in the matter. Little wonder, chen, that he heard God calling from the bush, "Moses, Moses." His great hour had come. ANALYSIS. 1. a GREAT COMMIsStON, vs. 10â€"12 II. ThE same or Gon, vs. 13â€"15, II, a Gr:Eat man surinks, 4: 10â€"12. July 10. Lesson IIâ€"The Mosesâ€"Exodus 3: 10â€"15; Golden Textâ€"Certainly with thee.â€"Exodus 3: 12 Miss Heather Thatcher, famous British actress, returns home after a brilliant success at Hollywood, where she starred with Robert Montgomery. She was presented with roses at Waterloo station. Hollywood Applauds English Star _OKAY. T‘LL GC RIGHT Call of 4: . 10.12. will be "England is still a nation in the making."â€"Sir Banister Fletcher. A child‘s wan face to kiss at night, A woman‘s smile by candle light. Though meagre fed and sorely lashed, The only wage Love ever asked. One commentator has counted four difficultiecs raised by Moses in conâ€" nection with the task assigned him. His shrinking from his Godâ€"given cominission may be taken as the meas ure of the seriousness with which h> finally assumed the work. The diffâ€" culty here raised refers to his lack cf persuasive powers. The art of fluent, persuasive speech would be needed with one like Pharaoh! v. 10. God, in reply, reminded Moses that man‘s facu‘ties all find their source in his sovereign will, v. 11. Not only wili he endow Moses with the gift of speech, but he will suggesi, as occaâ€" sion arises, what .e whould speak. "I will be with thy mouth." God will so inspire Moses that the words of Aais mou _ will be the words of God himâ€" self. A Day‘s Wage Love wore a suit of hodden grey. And toiled within the fields all day Love wielded pick and carried pack And bent to heavy loads the back. mission. They would demand his creâ€" dentials; above all, they would ask regarding the name of the God who had sent him. In that day there were lords many and gods many," and each had its own proper name. How was Israel to know that it was not a faise god who had sent Moses? One would expect God to have answered, "My name is Jehovah"; this was the proâ€" per name of Israel‘s God. In place of saying "Jehovah" God answered with an interpretative phrase which, in the Hebrew language, sounded somewhat similar to the name, Jehovah. The significance of God‘s answer is nut realized unless it is translated, "I will be what I will be." Profound depths are disclosed in this phrase. God‘s selfâ€"manifestation is not exhausted in the past: he is the God of the future. The future alone will be able to unâ€" fold all that is in tte fulness of his being. All this may have been very mystcrious to the shepherd, Moses. but God met him on more certain ground when he assured him that he was the same God whom the ancestors of Israel had had to do He was the God of the past. As he had been with the patriarchs in the past, so he would be with the people of lsrael now and ever. These grac: us ideas would always be essociated with his name, v. 15 III. a GREAT MAN SHRINKS, 4: 10â€"41%, Israel micht be incredulous of his "I offended George dreadfully." "Have you made up?" "Yes, I succeeded in getting him > ask my pardon." â€"By Margaret E. Sangster Circumstances Fashion thyself according to the circumstances of hy lot. The men whom fate hath made thy companâ€" ions here, love and love them in sinâ€" cerity and truth â€"Marcus Aurelics. A Child‘s Love It is a sweet thing to enjoy a child‘s love. It is so spontancous, full and free, so outspoken and conâ€" fiding, so natural and tender that it constantly reminds cene of love of Heaven. To enjoy once in one‘s life the pure gushing of a child‘s friendâ€" ship is to taste of a sweetness aever to be forgotten. The memories of such an enjoyment _ linger around one‘s heart like dreamy soliloquies of a past existence in some abode of purity and beauty. To lose them would be to lose islands from the sea, oasis from the desert, They: are types of what friendship should be; symbols of what it will be. They are the flowers of Heaven, sown on earth. They bear the fragrance of the skies. The beauty of God‘s Kingdom sparkles within them, and the love _ of our_ Father‘s home breathes from _ their pure young hearts. The cattle in some 60 herds, abou!t 2000, on farms _ near Guelph, were treated by woetting their backs with a warble killing wash. The warble grubs were killed while still beneath the skin, between March 1st and May 24th, The dead grubs witherâ€" ed up and were ejected through the hole in the skin in less than two weeks. _ The holes in the skin rapâ€" idly healed. The cattle treated were saved much soreness and irritation and it was pleasing to see the way the badly warbled backs cleaned up. This mean; a saving to the cattle owners as the period of torment was very much reduced, and the cattle relieved of much unnecessary sufferâ€" ing. A warbled back is a very pain{ful _ condition. If the _ cows could talk they would tell us in forceâ€" ful words, of our neglect to control the warble fly. _ Either derris powâ€" der or pyrethrum powder mixed with soap and water, at the rate of oneâ€" half pound in either case, with one: gallon of water. This _ wash isi brushed on the back of the animal, over the grubby area. _ An ordlnnry‘ dandy brush is best, as the stiff bristles, will uncover the grub hole, and perm t the liquid to soak in on top of the offending grub. With the grubs all dead there can be no flles. And in I went to beare the birdes song, Which on the braunches, both in plaing and vale, So loud sang that all the wood rong, Like as it should shiver in peeces smale, And, as methought, that the nightâ€" Ingale With so great might hber yoice gan out wrest, Right as her herte for love would brest. â€"Geoffrey Chaucer, "Poems." wall In compace rounde, and by a gate small Who so that would might _ freely gone Into this parke, walted with grene stone. And by a river forth I gan costay, Of water clere .as birel! or cristall, Till at the last, I found a little way Toward a parke, enclosed with a When that the misty vapor was agone, And cleare and faire was the mornâ€" ing, The dewe also like silver in shining Upon the leaves, as any _ baume swete, Till firy Titan with his persant hete . bredo Againe the Sunne, gold burned in his sphere, That doune to hem cast his neames clere. Had driea up the lusty licour new Upon the herbs in the greone mede, And that the floures of many divers hew, s Upon hir stalkes gon for to sprede, And for to splay out hir leves in Warbles Dry Up A Summer Day It was past midnight. "I wisn I| . (]%% had money," droned the bore, "I‘d 5 and 8'5" travel." _ "Well," said she, renchinsl ed only 3. for her purse, "how _ much do you containing need ?" F of 1.2 ll\“ Maine Has Cast Iron Bridge Bowdoinham, Me.â€"The only cast iron bridge in New England and one of the last in America spans the Cathâ€" ance River here, Residents of Hendaye are flocking nightly to the cinemas at Irun to such an extent that the program is made up nearly exclusively of French films. The TMhain reason for this is the price. At Irun, and even in San Sebastian, they can see a good show for 1 franc, while at Hendaye they must pay at least double and often as much as 20 francs. 4 French Cross Spanish Border To Find Cheaper Film Shows Madrid. â€" Thrifty French, living near the Spanish border, are getting in the habit of crossing the frontier in order to enjoy their motion picture shows economically, according to the newspaper "El Sol" here. Persons on remand in Brixton Prisâ€" on, London, are now given a furnished cell, with an iron bedstead, and can have, for one shilling a week, the serâ€" vices of another prisoner to keep the place tidy. "Remands" are also allowâ€" ed to smoke. Coal amounting to 140,000,000 tons is burned every year in the British Isles. The resulting smoke and soot is largely responsible for damage to public buildings which has cost nearly £60,000,000 in twentyâ€"five years. Among the pensioners of the Lonâ€" don United Law Clerks Society, which is one hundred years old this year, is one member, aged cighty, who was pronounced unfit for future work and pensionedoff thirty years ago. Naval chaplains in the Royal Navy number @ightyâ€"six; sixty seven are Anglican, ten Romen Catholic, and nine Nonconformist Their saltaries total up $210,000 a year. Twoâ€"thirds of the people convicted of crime in Gt. Britain during 1930 were less than thirty years of age; twoâ€"fifths were still in their teens. The total number of convictions was 56,167 Eggs are now being proserved by treating them with carbon dioxide and nitrogen; by «this means they can be kept for twelve months and still be indistinguishable from the new4daid variety. London Underground cost $60,000, | troduced are promising. _ Reported Boys of toâ€"day are taller than u:o-e' analyses of biologic materials for iron of a previous generation; even young-l must be critically examined in the sters of eight are half an inch ullerl light of the analytic method employed, than were the boys of that age twenty: and some of the results in the older years ago. ' literature have been di xarded bocause Eegs are now being preserved by af i,nprobahl.e “"fll’“c values, . Ac treating them with carhon dinxida ang | COrding to this reviewer, the iron con New summer outfits, including jackets, waistcoats, trousers and caps, for the 4,112% men employed on the London Underground cost $60,000, New sets of fingerâ€"prints and new records of criminals are added to the library of New Scotland Yard at the rate of about 20,000 a year. Insurance policies held in the United States are worth $840 per head of the population, in Canada $640, and in Great Britain $265. Each one of London‘s great "luxury" hotels costs about $25,000 a week to run, while the guests spend anflhing from $125 to $250 a week. Letters have been sent by rocket over a distance of more than one mile from the top of an Austrian mountain to a village below. To show a profit a 50,000 ton liner must earn $3,000,000 a year. Each day she is at sea such a vessel costs $9000 for mere running expenses. The height standard for London Metropolitan policemen is now 5 ft. 10 ins.; this is an increase of one inch on last year. Workers among the ancient Hittites and Assyrians enjoyed a fiveâ€"day woek 4,000 years ago. The man strength of the British nayy is, normally, about 168,000, inâ€" cluding all ranks. The highest price which the British Museum authorities have ever paid for a book is $7,500. Some 1,200,000 persons visit the library of the British Museum every It Pays To Advertise. ONTARIO ARCH "It is customery to allow a sonsidâ€" ecrable margin of safety above obsorvâ€" ed requirements of the various inâ€" organic clements, If this margin is estimated at 50 per cent. it would make a standard allowance for chilâ€" dren of this age of 0.48 mg. per ikloâ€" gram, or 0.62 mg. per hundred calorâ€" ies, or a total of 8.2 mg. daily. ‘Thus the most careful investigators in Ahis field are in essential agreement i0 the iron needs of the preâ€"school ghild. One cannot depend on w§#k @lonl for â€"n adequate supply of iron. T i% hy the diet chosen thould be i to include, as ¥¥ffy quppoper, ous amoupts f hre | "The most recent essay in this imâ€" ‘ portant field of research comes from the University of Minnesota, where Leichsenring and Flor have conductâ€" ed typical balance experiments in which the utilization of iron at two lavels of intake was compared in healthy children ranging in age from 36 to 56 months. This is the characâ€" teristic preâ€"school age. The results of the food analyses indicate that the 'iro- content of foods may show conâ€" siderable variation from the most |commonly used figures. | â€" "Careful metabolism studies with | respect to iron were subsequently | made on one child, a girl aged 2 years | and 7 months. These showed that, on |n daily intake of 4.64 mg. of iron, a negative balance of 1.10 mg. resulted ‘The authors have estimated without | further evidence that 8.50 mg. would | not only be sufficient to bring about iron equilibrium but also allow for ‘\growth. This figure amounts to 0.76 mg. of iron per 100 calories of ingest=d food, McKay has reported an averâ€" age of 8.17 mg. of iron in the diets of |pre-schvol children in private homes, | as compared with 4.37 mg. in the diels ‘ of children in an institution. containing 8.25 mg. of iwron an average of 1.2 mg. was retaincd daily, whereâ€" as on a diet containing 6.5 mg. of iron 8.2 mg., or nearly three times as much as during the period of lower iron inâ€" take, was retained. . The observed maintenance need of the children in this study was approximately 0.12 mg, per ‘ilogram. (n the basis of body weight, according to Leichsenring and Flor, the nlin‘,enmce requiremeat ?S the child is similar to (hul of the adult. _ The iron requiremert for growth, as observed in this study, was approximately 0.2 mg. per kilogram. "Diets that were planned to contain 5 and 8.5 mg. of iron actually containâ€" ed only 3.25 and 645 mg. On a dict | iron is «relain d. _ Distributed over , bwenty years, this amounis to an actual daily growth of 1.8 m.z. of iron, ' "The adult has the opportunity for such a wide range in the choice of his food that the problem of his require ' ment of iron is perhaps nol quite so : circumscribed as that of the prowing child, whose regimen is dictated im ‘ larger degree by those who provide his i less diversified sustenance, Until reâ€" â€"cently the only modern balance obserâ€" vations in childhood relating to the iron requirements have been those of Rose and her collaborators at Teachâ€" |ers' College in New York. Considerâ€" able surprise was occasioned several | years ago when they reported that 1 even in dictaries that might have been considered perfectly satisfactory the daily inclusion of o egg yoke per child resulted in better development and in slighily higher hemoglobin figures. ‘ tent of the body at maturity ! culated at about 4.5 gm., more : most of which can be accow by the blood. Between the 6 |lwenty-ï¬rst years (the latter | token for convenience), 4,000 ir uch is needed sor maintcnance and for growth and how are those roâ€" \quirements affected by diffe~â€"nt condéâ€" tiuns. Does the amount of .ron in 'the food have any influence on | New York.â€"While the role of iron , 1 the maintenance of health has long | been recognized, the possible particé~ ' pation of the clement in biologic reacâ€" tions has only*ecenti© become clearly r.vealed, according to The Journal of | the American Medical Association. | *"Today we are justified in assortâ€" ing that iron is an essential dictary ! cunmstituent, not »«aly for the producâ€" : tion of bloo@ and muscle hemoglobin | but also for necessary componâ€"nts of all cells," the writer says. â€" "That is | why its availability in foods and its \ metabolism in the body command pare ticular attentionr. It is merely necesâ€" sary to mention some of the questions i that come to mind in this connection i order to realize the importance of the subject, How much iron is in the human body at diff=reat ages* What | are the availabls sources of iroa? How "The answer to such problems is complicated by the analytic difficulties that attend the chemical investipation of the distribution of iron, A recent writer has well pointed out that the estimation of iron in biologic materâ€" ials is a difficult undertaking, because a rapid and accurate method still reâ€" mains to be attained, although the reâ€" cent improvements that have been inâ€" troduced are promising. _ Reported analyses of biologic materials for iron growth Preâ€"School Child Needs Lots of Iron [ iwron in th n in prival 4.37 mg. in institution. 4,000 tribut unt es . with quently 2 years that, on iron, @ @1 ind 14