OCR Text |
Show GOING BACK INTO THE PAST ' Men of Science Sekln,o to Discover Facta of Life of Five Million Years Back. Out In tho ise'ada desert the pro-fcosors pro-fcosors have been prying Into the secrets se-crets of 5,000,000 years ago The dlccovorles are said to bo most Important by those who are interested Tn prehistoric relics. Tho learned men put tho discoveries at tho mlo-cene mlo-cene period, which is some 5,000,000 jears czo Among tho diicoverlon li an nnto-dlluviaa nnto-dlluviaa fleji that 1b eighteen foet long. What a whoppor of n fish liar ( tho prehistoric man muet have been whrn he went back to the cave and told tho family about tho "big one that jot a vay' i And the, horue ioco of that day mutt have been a pccnlinr ppcctacle. . for tho equine specimen unortrthed , hitB throp too? on lt$ feet and is ahout ' the sir of a large dos ' Five million years Is (.oo big a ilisht ( of time to asl' own our fancy to ( ooy?r Trips to'Muis and Ik1U to j tho irian in the rn,oon are v.ithln our I raugp. hut when onn lr anked to go ' baok io the ral br-.cli-actlonary period ' of the world, we have to draw the line, especially when ve loaru that wp haio lo. deal with three toed horj$C8 and eighteen feet Ions minnows ' And yet wo havo to wonder at what manner of a woHd it wns tlioo; wo have pnrforce to rrv'to pcoph lit wttli humen beln$ and 'ii unltnals of lta earth the mm and .ic air; 'jf t'ye to wonder wntur ihov. too, wero ! bothored with r'"ldentia.l andidotPS whether the women dem'ndr J the right to vote and whether prck a L-oo clockings were JuBt comins into 3tvlo. And, by the way tho professors found a dinosaur there tco We never nev-er saw a dinosaur and never hope to soo oro but ono was found, so lot It be recorded. Well, after all, 5.000,000 yoars ago Is some tlmo! Proper Gymnaotlc Vork. Every person who has received gjm-naslum gjm-naslum training la aware of the fact that an exercise hlch calls for painful pain-ful effort on the rart of tho beginner j ic often porformed almost without any conscious effort at all after a certain cer-tain amount of training hns been received re-ceived Again It Is perfectly well known that brute s njth alone does not make a gymnaGt, and that even a simple oxcrclso mny offor great dlf-'flculty dlf-'flculty to a muscular and well developed develop-ed individual who has not been trained train-ed In lho gymnasium The explanation for this Is made plain In an article by Professor du Boi3 Roymond In Die Umschau, who points out that one of the esBcutlal functions of gymnasium work is not bo much to build up mce-cle mce-cle as to train nerves and nerve groups to vvork in proper unison and co-ordination |