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Show EAST SALT LAKE TIMES, FRIDAY, JAM' ARY 11, 1924 Women of Tokyo Sew for Quake Refugees &DOYS iif the ancestral furius uf inun'a remote predecessors." The n'nu tuns of fossils Include: Twenty-fiv- SCOUTS (UiiuutisttJ hy lu Nuitcn&I i , nm ll gf i of Air.i : is I scouts are ilino.-au- r eggs, the lint s all stages of utuj's Tlii Is a f"i'iii .'iicstral i.i i:ic frilled, Iinrni'il i!i.:i.ii!ii-uf Auiri i. a. Thu i gg are fumi l s ri'it!!e. A s . ll nf tl.u largest known-- u Hi:iii.!u.,i a runt lijunii-lis.1 I. alniiit thirty fuel long, all!: a J.nv of about (wo feet, ; i In di-- , s SCOUT CAPTURES BANSiTS Tliut e ever iiix nvuru.l. Sun-niskill. s i of I r. .! ; flesh-eatin- g 1 . ! Wuri:ers fur I'ummuiiil v luv. :i . . Is shown iu l hi recent i turn uf Scout John V;itkvis i: ,.,:se dei;b!:i who, after an ciciur. on foot. trolley ear uml ai'. trailed three burglars uml lat .. j the anus i uf two of ilium. the Scout Watkins first learm-bandits' activities wlieu Moir. r.iU-u- , proprietor uf a drug store wi.. ,i the ft mi ins hoy was passing, rushi-shop, sluiiitliig lie hint buun riiiU'd, s'.. 'us a Philadelphia Journal. "The men linil uuturrit ihu u ir mill h.i taken JJO fruin the pro; luiur'a 1 Uut ana a gold watuh an I rlmin. T! ey tliun lorced the druggist m tha m sun lug articles ef uh.ihi.u so: Above Is pictured a group of Japanese women who are giving their spare l. me is The from tlie curii rugis- Kwaiinuii Asakusa of the Tokyo. tetnplu. iv'.iar, took in temple the great park their refugee friends. The women gather ' r. the wore, on the run. Tha sacred to the goddess of mercy. scut noiiii'd them first u they I :tsud him, and a few imnuuuts later wl.en t'olicn emerged uml QUEEN OF MIAMI FETE ' what had occurred, the buy sorted in c so.. i vi. at 'I'niiar In the Mom 'ins ut Uinta ui.umtuin in I'tali. Twelve hl.uMs of Tltunnlhcrcs, on Hi.' . d i,r , . flhoto. by WfnwiW' ' j j Had 2,500 Offers; Picked This One pun-nit- . 8 j , , . Miss Olga Enamorado, daughter of General U Enumorudo, consul gen--1 era! for Cuba to the United States, was chosen Queen of Beauty for the New Year's Fruit and Flower festlvul at Mluinl, Fla. Miss Ennui-ornd- o Is here shown gathering some of the fruit for the festival. CLAIMS HUGE ESTATE uncu he nearly caught up to the bundils, but helpless to do anything single handed, kept them in night uutil lie would see a policumim. At auot lu-- point In the chase W.itkins Jumped on the rear of a passing auto- mobile. Sighting the men bearding a trolley, the boy Jumped from the unto and tiling on book uf the ear until he saw two policemen, to whom lie railed. They boarded the car and Watkins Identified two of the burglars. Tlie third could not be found. On the floor of the car, near where tlie men had been seated, the police found tlie money and two pistuls. Tlie burgiurs were taken to tlie hi! Ice sta-- ! lion.'' Scout Watkins recently saved the lives of three small children wiien a team of horsea attached to tlie wagon lu which the children were riding, be-- i came frightened and ran away. Watkins Ienped on bark of the wagon and, grabbing the reins, brought the anl-- I mats to a stop. ' CAUFtSUfIA'6 Do They Belong to Humans of the Neanderthal Period? By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN BABES are tramps these days. All over the world white men are digging-Theare not searching tor pirates' treasure or for native gold. They are digging for information about tlie uge of the world, about tlie age of man, nlmut the evolution of the human race. They Archibald Turner uf Bourne, England, asked a newspaper to And him a wont to know where the earliest InLie selected Miss Lilian Snape to be his wife, and received 2,500 offers. I are. and habitants of America came from. And here brlile, they when lie arrived. They are trying to And the cradle of the human race. They are hnieful of uncovering the missing link." They ore anxious to know how far back recorded history Information wanted. might goes. be a sign on every camp of diggers. Science wants to know. Let the diggers And the mntcrlal and science (a hopeful of reading It. Astonishing finds are reported at frequent Intervals from nil over the glotie. Rome of these finds throw a monkey wrench" Into accepted scientific theories. All of a sudden everything Is upset and the archeologists, paleontologists, anthropologists, ethnologists, and all the rest of the scientists have to reconstruct thrlr theories nnd go to digging more Industriously than ever. The Santa Barbara skulls appear to hare had more or less of this monkey wrench effect. These skulls are supposed to lie those of pnleolltlilc man which is to say of tliun of an age nf early stone Implements. IJiIs would make thise skulls very, very old. It is thought they were found in strata ""0"0 ,,ld' And HOME OF BOY SCOUT HEROES Bt completely upsets the apple cart, so r:,r "" Pn'vlous theories of the age of CostiiOpoIls. Wash., has good claim -of America are c-First H'' to the name Home of Boy Scout , Heroes." Within n period of four ,k,d rrvn dug up hy Ur, days two boys recently mude heroic F. Harrington of the Smithsonian rescues In the Uhchnlli river and saved lives. Scout Burton Keegun, thirteen 'nstltiiHon. He found them In Burton Is oue of the life savers. Mound, a small hillock iihout NX) feet Jean DInnnt of Pari, (lie world's foremost artist on liaiiinicrrd mcliil, lias years of age. ack from the ocean bench near Snntn to tlie story of three witperfected a form of enamel which la said to he everlasting. Ills method Is suit I According Itarliara. fill if. He tentatively idea swum half-wa- y across nesses, Keeguu to lie rhut of ancient Egypt. In the nhove picture lie Is seen at work at hla Seanilerthnl or Cm- ,,'od ,n the river uml rescued a forge. nil the scientific Magnon. Whereupon rrlppled lad mini had become weak- world focussed its attention, temporaened In Hn attempt to awlm tlie river. at least, upon Snntn Barbara. Keegan was standing on the dock rily the words. Santa BarImmediately when the younger lioy, who had Juat reached midst renin, suddenly felt hla bara man." wen horn. Why not? We Neanderthal man, tlie 1llt- strength leaving him and culled for have the man uml the Heidelberg man, to h'wn help. Tlie scout immediately Jumped Into the river and reached the lad as ln' nothing of the Jain man, plthecan-h- e wns sinking. Keegan started to ihmpus erect in. r.iwslhly older than Santa Vn" 1,ni wlm toward slniro with the boy. He fln5r t I,rove oldest of the exhausted before he reached ,ira ,n!in 'vl" ,,d h" rest the end of his long Journey ami sev-- : l,,f '',!l miin Is dug up. blcr ll,l,d The eral oilier hoys helped him. The cliff dwellings In Mesa Verdi in a crippled lad w National was park nnd In several national the! lie when oil condition placed In Hie Southwest are relics monuments adbank of the riier, but first aid ministered by his scout rescuer re-- of n prehistoric race, whose origin nndThis race apparvived him and he was taken to hla end are unknown. Its cliff dwelling h(inie. Tlie second hero, Scout Mila ently abandoned Luke, nlso reci:iil a drowning person, about 1.NHI years ago. Jess, Nusbanin. superintendent of Fred Kiiffelson, from the Chelialis when the latter fell off tlie rnsinopulls city Musn Verde Ims recently unearthedund artificial reservoirs bedock. Perfects Everlasting Enamel I j Gregarlo Carmlehael, a Filipino hoy i who has Just arrived In the United States, comes to claim an estate of f $00,000,000 left at the death of hla fn ther, an American soldier, in Okla homn. Oil wns found on the lmid nnd i money la now pouring In. It Is likely t that a court straggle is pending to j settle the lad's Identity. "s NEW HELMET FOR FOCH i i ) ' France Honors Three Clowns ' e : j j civiMoved to bulling io u nineti older lization than Unit of Hie cliff dwellers. These may date buck to 1000 B. Ik, or : even to un earlier time. Ir. O. A. Turney, fellow of tlie Royal Geographic society, has recentArts., two ly found near Humboldt, human skeletons, which lie thinks are those uf men older tlmu any race In the Southwest. Tlie Mayas of Yucatan, the Ar.tecs of Mexico and tlie Incas of Ieru were old, old civilizations. But If 1rofemnr Harringtons tentative lilimtlfientliin of the Sunta Bar burn ninn as Neanderthal or stands up under Investigation why any other American finds are young lndieil hy comparison. n This helmet, inuito liy liniid of cup-'er and silver and surmounted by the cock, has been presented to Three noted clowns, the FruteUlnl brothers, have Just iien derornted hv the Marshal Koch of France. It Is the French government, receiving tlie "Culuies Aeiideniiiiies'' from Hie minister ot work of France's most noted metsl public Instruction. The) are here seen Interviewed hy a Baris ! ; j J artist g ut TLAIT d Cro-Magn- n well-shspe- d i j A ! TAltDIini&l, extinct fuiully of huge luustN first (Uncovered In South Dakota. One complete skeleton and parts of other skeletons and skulls of rhinos proses similar to those of eastern Mo For Hie people hraska. musters ns the Nennderthalera According to Mr. Andrews, the enttra of Europe 29,000 years ago or even mammalian fauna of this period U earlier. Identical with that which practically hns Irnfessor Harrington, however, ranged through Utah, Wyoming and been led to think hy further InvestigaSouth Dakota In Hie middle of the Age tion that his first tentative estimate of Mumninls, except for camels, which now that believes not will stand. lie are found only In America, anil for the owners of the skulls ronmed the horses, which appear to have been coast of California at a period prob- more abundant In America than la ably S.000 years ago. Characteristics Asia at that time. not possessed hy the Neanderthal nnd To geologists these fossils constltuta men have been found In convincing proof of a elose land com man Bnrbnra Snntr skulls of the the neetlon between Mongolia and tha after closer study. Doctor Harrington Rocky mountains In the early age of said. , mammals. Scientists who florkPd to Santa BarSo the theory that America was Doctor Hurrington's bara confirm from Asia teems reasonable statement, however, that the skulls peopled to Mr. Average Man provided do form a connecting link between the enough man antedated the AmeriAsiatic the ancesmodern Indian and his original can man. tor In North America. The hones and When the whites discovered Amerthe strata of enrth In which they were less than fire hundred years ago ica beknown Imbedded are of a type not found the Inhabitants of the they fore to scientists. rude nnd warlike, subsisting To determine more definitely the nge East by the chase, scourged by pelargely In which formation of the geological nnd low In the scale of famine riodic the skulls were found, a topographical Tlie most effecixdltlcnl organization. survey o? Burton mound has been were tlie Iroquola, relorganized tively n Smithsonian made by survey pnrty newcomers to central Sew to determine the orlclnnl level of Hie atively In the Southwest more civiBut York. A new ancient Indian settlement. lized tribes of agriculturists, herdsshaft was then sunk to bed rock. men and weavers lived In settled Samples nf the composition of each towns with Close-kni- t community ornrnliiui wen taken and forwarded to Some of them occupied ganization. tests for Institution Stnithsnnlnn the huge pueblos. by geologist there. Still further south In the heart of Where wns the cradle of the human Cortex found In the Aztecs an Mexico was America wlmt peoples race? By more even advnnced civilization. They originally settled? Very Interesting had temples and priests, kings nnd of make this which digging questions nnd architecture, an aristlie scientists one of the most fasci- slaves, arts a confederacy of states and a tocracy, nating of pursuits. descent for tlie crown. Even The third Asiatic expedition under regular of on ancient Old more suggestive Hie Museum American of the nusplis like Hint of Egypt, World civilization, anil Asia Magazine of Natural History wn the Inen kingdom conquered hy hns recently returned with nine tons nnd his followers on the west of Important fossils. Thla expedition Bizarre South America In what Is of coast desthe was primarily investlpitlng, and Ecuador. now Beni erts ef Mongolia, with the belief that era The assigned to the usually it was that found lie would proof there In Europe Is from 19.IXX) to race hitman tlie the cradle of that ago. It Is Boy Shipman Andrews, lender of the 90,(NX) years entered Europe from the east, that furtner convinced Is they expedition. Asia. Is It stretching things to exploration of this region will con- from Hssuuie that the migration firm the theory, lie says: We an confident that there are divided, one branch going west to formations in that country which will America? were Incidentally, these reveal the secret "f iniin's earliest orwith we folk, formations these expert presentable and igin, to uncover when we go into the region head, equal in cranial cnimclty to our Henry Fairfield Osborn. His again. We have found no direct evi- own. dence yet on human evolution, hut we noted American paleontologist, soys of l.nve indirect Indication lending to them : "So far us the imiitul power prove that central Asia was the cradle of these men Is revealed bv their of the human race, and our search will Iiniln structure, they were quite jbe continued to find the fossil remains pablu of higher education." BOY SCOUTS AID COMMUNITY valuable community good turn was recently performed by six troois of Ogden, Utah, in fighting s Urge forTlie mystery of the "inuffled dram" hn est fire advancing In a r any on some f the ruffed grouse or partridge . of miles hmi the city. Within one hour observations the bv ,lirw after n distress csll had rearhed scout ,in ornithologist. Edmund J. Sawyer. headquarters! the boys were ou their in a bulletin of Hie Boosuvult Wild wny, armed with shovels and axes. f Forrtl( Kx'rlmcnt station nt SyrAt S:3 p. tn. tbs scouts rearhed the Hint long hy ifum? N. Y.. declare fire area, and by 10 p. m after heroic ,t,B ln a f,in.t blind he discovered conflames under work, they hnd the a t the drumming eound of this great trol. The boys then stood guard ts me Wr(, produced by merely strtk-pI out any stray aparkn. Ua wing th( ,,r WSTFUJaiTAffT' i It Ims been thought h.v some that the bird beat It sides with Its wings; other have thought that the breast Still others have formed the drum. advanced the theory Hint there wns some peculiar development of the body plumage to account for the noise. Sir. Sawyer, however, say thst the outward nnd upward motion of the wing In striking the air Is practically the ole cause nf the sound. The grouse, he notes, generally picks out a hollow log for Its concert platform and turns round and round on It be fore beginning to drum, but almost Invariably face jn Hie saiae direction when drumming, lie believes that the drumming closely corresponds to the s!nglng of other bird. All That Was Necessary. The young man was fondling her right hand. "A nice diamond." he said awkDiamonds are beautiful wardly. stones, hut on the other hnnil " "Oh, Jack," she murmured, ye make ire so happy. |