Inc. &UMMY fetxi OMAHA. fcUNUAY. JUNt 18. mV The Sunday Bee MORNING EVENING SUNDAY THE KB PUSUSHINO COMPANY WLSO B. UfPUg. PvMMkw. . Sag WES, Gee. Mmw, Mixau or thc auocmtco ratis tie Antrtim rna. ef vtu TW Bee to MkVi to DM kiHh wmnmnn W 411 mm wmh an4iu4 te m M MUM. Mu4 to Uue Hi 4 eue Mm tout M M'HH SeMe, AM fUM m lajewmnia m mm mini Met average (lrlUw el Ta Panes Bee, May. IMt Daily. .... ...72,038 Sunday. . . . .78,642 S. BBEWEJt Caml Meaner EXM HI S. ROOO. OnalMM Htoqti Inn ft aJ aebacriWd Mm mm tale M day f Jaa. less. iseaii w. n. quivar, neaery nw tW Oeuke km mtmhm et tm Amu tow ef CUmlMleea, In) HMUM mimmtu m muUim , M4 Tm Ml inwlw It N BEE TEIXPHONEJ privet Bm Isefcaage. Aik far tte DHit . r rH Wealed. rr Ws Cells Afur 1 F. M.i A?",w Mltorial Deeartaeat. ATlealie 1(11 r lt. 1000 omcu W.I. AMm a.J 1. C. Waffs II kotl ft. Bmiia Side . - 4111 B. ttb St Kew York IM Fifth Atkh Waeklagtea . 421 Bur Bld. Cbteage ITS Stage Wag. rail, nanee jb ae mi nenen THE DESIRE FOR MORE. , There are certain part of th world, notably ia Africa and th South Seas, whert the nativat have ao law wants that neither labor nor business can ba aaid to exist Ona need not endorse every phata of modern industrialism in characterising such an effort leas' life far from idyllic. Salesmen for the international trading concerns 'male no impression there. Shoaa and trousers are superfluities, and they prefer' the tom-tom to the talking machine or saxophone. There ia a factory run by a presumably Christian gentleman in Eng land that turns out gaudy idols for savages to wor ship, but for tha most part, they ask nothing of civil ization but to ba left alone. Fortunate it ia that the civilised world has greater wants than these. Were man to revert to doing without; the entire baaia of modern Ufa would ba swept a, way. To the limited extent to which the buyers strike, unemployment and wage reductions cut purchasea of goods, the standard of living and the progress of man baa been set back. ,. From thia it appears that the salesman ia tha man of the hour. , It ia he who will lead mankind to de sire more and better goods, start the mills on new orders, give employment to thousands of men and women and generally speed up the circulation of money. Sir Charles Higham, perhaps the " outstanding figure among the army of men promoting sales, de clares that the world today can be saved by just one thing business. He is now in America, attending the convention of the Associated Advertising Clubs of the World. ' "Advertising," he maintains, "is the greatest re formative agency in the world. It has made us hy gienic, it has made us tidy, it has dressed us well, it has given us the love of the beautifuf, it has decor ated our homes, it has educated our children, it has raised to a higher plane our whole civilization." Call it advertising, call it business or salesman ship, it still remain? true that one of .the distinguish ing features between backward and forward races is that the latter have more wants and are constantly increasing them, partly on.' their own initiative &nd partly through the solicitation o people with some thing to sell. '. MEMORIES OF A FULL LIFE. v An Omaha woman celebrated her ninety-fourth birthday Tuesday. . She is the oldest resident of the Old People's Home, oldest not only in years of life but in the years of membership in that interesting group whose average runs well past the allotted three score ' and ten. "'' ; For nineteen years, a long span of life in the mind of a high school youngster, she has lived there, but for her that period of but a fraction of time.' Twenty, years she lived in;Irelarid, then she. immi grated to America and for more' than' twenty years she lived in eastern Pennsylvania, watching and par-' ticipating in the stirring everits of the civil war period. -.: ' , -.:-s-. .''.'-, - -w.:'-She .came to Nebraska early enough to knew something of pioneer days m the great west and she , has remained in Nebraska long enough to see its prairies criss-crossed by railroad and automobile highway, its skies a pathway for the air mail, its atmosphere a vehicle for wireless telegraph and : radiophone. What a wonderful recollection is given to men and women .who have such years of exeperience to look back upon! It is a habit of younger folk to pity the old, to sympathize with them. , Yet the old need never fear an idle hour. Always they have a store of memories to recall,' a great part of which must be memories of happy days, memories of good will and of. cheer, memories rt the wonders worked by toil and invention, memories of the world's advance ment day by day to new heights of achievement. That is a pleasure which only the years can give. given credit as the food highest is vitaaines; torn, atoes sad lettuce also rank high. Actual experiments In feeding both animals and' humans appear to demonstrate tha truth of theaa ((alms. llany persons have noticed for themselves that they feel better with certain articlee in their diet than without them. Heretofore something like instinct or taste encouraged the consumption of fooda rich ia vital qualities. With tha aid of science now many of tha evils of malnutrition and a good part sf .the teeth troubles may ba eliminated. No ona has seen a vitamins, any mora than on has seen electricity or sound waves. Simply judging ty results, inferences and conclusions ara drawn that few are skeptical enough to question. A great deal of life consists of taking things on trust This is Indeed tha golden age of faith. . THE POWER OF A GIANT. -Being a Hottentot is not half so funny as it sounds. A remarkable story of how a rebellion in southwest Africa was put down makes this clear. ' The rising was crushed by English aviators who spotted the natives from the air. and scattered bombs upon them. , One band of Hottentots sat warming themselves by a fire in a mountain gorge. Ten of them could have held an army at bay in this fastness. But from above the airmen dropped bombs and opened machine gun fire, killing scores and setting the rest to flight ' .- "V,. .'iv Colonial administration thus is simplified by science. J Civilized man can be' sure of his might Whether or not he is in the right - The most disturb ing part of the situation is the thought that what ' can ba done to backward peoples can also be done to forward ones, until the whole race commits suicide. The seeds of destruction can only be kept from ger- ' rainating by an aroused human conscience. THE AGE OF FAITH. Those parsons who will believe only what they Bee have a hard nut to crack in .those mysterious food properties known aa ntanunes. Science de clares that these exist bnt what they look like or of what they are made ia unknown. They do not re spond to chemical teats. Yet theaa invisible factors of diet hava been classified into four divisions. . The first wbich occurs in milk, cheese and yolks of eggs, is declared to prevent night blindness and sore eyes among children. ' The second, whose lack lowers human vitality and makes the body subject to infection, comes from milk, husks of grains, leafy porta of plants and spinach. Milk, citrus fruits and potato skins are listed among the third class, which prevents scurvy. The fourth vitamine, discovery cf which has.recentljr beenjmade by DrE. ,V. Me Gollum of 36hna Hopkins university, protects bone growth and prevent n4ckets Theaa are said to exist fa milk an tha leaf y parts of plant, Cabbage is , . WHY NOT A PAGEANT HIGHWAY? Among tha western cities adopting the custom of outdoor drama is Okmulgee, OkL In a park where great trees overshadow a little stream Shakespeare's sylvan comedy, "As You Like It" will ba presented. This 1s tha third year that a group of earnest women, tha Shakespeare club, has bscked a civie enterprise of this sort Omaha, this fall, will do something of the sort when a pageant of Nebraska will ba put on by the school children as a part of tha festivities of Ak- Sar-Ben. This is a good beginning, and if some civic organisation will only take up the movement enough community interest will be forthcoming to give it backing. It would not be difficult to find a natural' amphitheater the great ravine in Hanscom park, with its high slopes forming a bowl, offers one possibility. St Louis has made aa institution of its outdoor opera, and Indianapolis has its outdoor players. Cali fornia ia a leader in thia direction. The suggestion of Dr. H. B. Alexander of tha University of Nebraska that a number of towns along ona of the main tourist trails arrange a series of fall festivals to enter tain and attract motor parties and heighten tha com munity lova of beanty is worth pondering. WELL DONE BY THE SUN. Ona does not hava to remain long under tha glare of the summer sun to ba impressed' with its heating qualities. The cost and the wood with which mankind warms 1 itself 1 in winter are but storage houses of these rays. ' HoW to make use of the solar heat mora di rectly and immediately ia a problem that ia engag ing science today. Dr. C. G. Abbott assistant sec retsry of the Smithsonian institution, in fact, is now on his way to Mount Wilson, California, to make- further experiments with his solsr cooker. The official announcement runs thus: This device for cooking, using only the heat . of the sun aa fuel, was brought to a considerable degree of perfection last year, all the cooking for. the field party for the whole season being- done witn it. The apparatus consist of a para bolic cylindrical mirror with a polished alumi num surface which focuses the sun's rays on a tube filled with mineral oil which communicatee with an iron reservoir in which are two baking ovens of different temperatures. ' The circulation , of the heated oil produces a very high tempera- ' ture in the ovens which is maintained for several ' hours even after the sun has gone down or ia covered by clouds. With . this cooker ' it was possible to cook meat, vegetables, bread, cereals, etc., and to can fruita and vegetables and make preserves. This ' yearit is hoped to even further perfect the de vice so that higher oven temperatures, and more prolonged periods of heat storage may be ob tained. This sounds a arood deal like maeicT t 1at one reads of it in the shade. But out on the streets or in the fields, wherever the rays beat down -unobstructed, it is easier to fancy the coming of the perfect fuel. ;rt . . -': NEW RESPECT FOR THE DEVIL. -Disbelief in the devil as an actual being. horned, tailed and pitchfork in hand, is rather more prevalent than once. That only adds to the contrast of the rise of black magic in Europe. In stead of fearing the devil, these rriore or less de ranged devotees worship him. ;,v ? . In Paris, it is said, a small set of wealthy per sons have set up an altar over which the "black mass" is said. Several of the flock claim to have seen the devil there and to have talked with him. Oliver - Maddox Hueffer, who exposes some of these indeeent rites, says that it is an expensive mat ter to become a devil worshipper. Neophytes are required to pay the high priestess 100,000 francs, and every time one attends the services one has to contribute 1,000 francs toward the expenses of the temple. The congregation is supposed to number about fifty, and blackmail has added vastly to the cost of their affiliation. , ; ? The shock of the world war gave rise to some strange cults, but this is at once the most ancient and the strangest of them all. The devil, in' one guise or another, has always had his followers,' al though not always has the affiliation been ackuowl edged. It is frequently 'said that one may be a Christian without; joining a church, but how much more true is it that one may be a devil worshipper without meeting over an altar in a blasphemous parody of religion. This abnormal cult in Paris, even if it did away with its admission fees, could not gain open allegiance from any large number of persons. Their worship Ms in secret, just as all that is evil loves the dark, and it is to the credit of mankind that it dare not risk the fresh air and light of pub licity. - . " . WOMEN AND CIGARETS. Cigaret smoking among women is becoming more general In' some circles, it is said, the girl whose fingers aren't slightly coated with nicotine is a bit out of style. ' ' v , If 'cigaret smoking was a passing fad among women the sterner sex would probably smile indul gently, make some fscetious remark, and start talk ing about the weather. - But the male cigaret smoker knows how easily it is to get the habit. Hence he is apt to tike the matter seriously, and object When an indignant women retorts that "if men smoke 'em why shouldn't we?" he is apt to make some seemingly weak reply, such as, "Well, it just doesn't look right, ihat'a alL ' It isn't womanly." Yet weak aa it may seem, this reply has much merit If men were to start powdering their noses between dances, or applying rouge to their lips in public what would women ssy? After gasping in dismay and spluttering indignantly, they probably would explain their indignation by asserting, "Well, Ity just doesn't look right it isn't manly." ' - THE-BEE2 oo; Perhaps the New York telephone company will succeed in abolishing "hello," but there will be nothing gained if it la supplanted with that expres sion which in spite of all sounds so supercilious, the "yes" that comes grating over the wire Or some might resort to the English fashion of saying, "Are you there?" ,.. - - The prince of Wales seems to have the unhappy faculty of arriving in one of his family possessions just when unrest , is at ita height. . London is now said to ba apprehansiva for his safety ia Egypt Burris Jenkins, known to novel readers as the author of "Princess Salome, to others si a minister in Kansas City, and as a newspaper editor, has produced a highly colored romantic novel ot old England, I he Bracegirdle." Cavaliers swagger through these oases, swsrmina about Mistress Anne Brscegirdle, the idol ot the stage in the 17th century, Kidnaping, duels, intrigue and ro mance are mingled here to make a stirring tale. Fublmhed by J. B. Lip pincott company. "The Old Nest," which first ap peared ss a moving picture, has been issued in book form by Harpers. Rupert Hughes, the author, here de parts from his flapper stories to tell the simple tale ot home ties. . "For What Do We Live?" is the title of a little book of philosophy by Edward Howard Griggs. Start ing with the maxim of i'lato, that "the unexamined life is not worth living," this popular extension lec turer examinee the influences affect ing conduct and idesls and finds the great realities to be growth, service, love and wisdom. The Orchard Hill Press, Croton-on-Hudion, N. Y. 'Japan's Pacific Policy." by K. K. Kawakami, which has just been pub lished by E. P. Dutton & Co. is a frank discussion of Japanese policy as it may effect the United States, by a penetrating writer who earnest ly desires a permanent peace and un derstanding between these two coun tries both of which he knows and loves. . The author received his early edu cation in his native country, Japan, but had his college work in America. He has done journalistic work tn both countries and has published seven books in English and four in Japanese. He has contributed to the lorth American Review, Ihe At lantic Monthly, the Review of Re views, the Nation and other journals. Ihe result of his associations in this country are shown not only in his understanding of the American viewpoint and his knowledge of what Americans desire to know .about Japan's policies, but in the very style of the book itself. In spite of its solid substructure of knowledge of political science and economics, and thorough acquaintance with the intri cacies of the present diplomatic situa tion, the book is written in such an original and readable fashion that the . ' slang addict would call it snappy, R. F. Pettierew. former United States senator from South Dakota, is a rugged political figure who more than once has stood out against the buncombe and pleasing political fic tion that is so plentiful in our nation. He tells the story of American pub lic life from 1870 to 1920 in his latest book, "Triumphant PIutocracy."rFew popular mois are spared not even Vy., a. Bryan .escaping critical and disapproving analysis. He is espe-' cially .bitter against lawyers in ooli- ticS, and has much to say also con-; cerning the. influence of the banks, railroads ' and trusts. Hfe! closing plea is for a readjustment of eco nomic life. Altogether, this i5 a revo lutionary book, especially interesting inrougn tne tact tnat its author has penetrated so far into the inner cpun- Child Pickets Explain Drive . to Free Fathers From tha Philadelphia Publlo Ledger. A Public Ledger corresoondent stopped today to talk with one of the two pickets at the White House gates noidmg banners reading: "Mr. Presi dent, must we hire high-priced law yers ' to free , our father : from prison?" . Today's pickets were two feminine figures, both of them, at first elance. looking like 12-year-old girls. ;; one or them, Mrs. Dora Plahn. said her husband was Charles Plahrr, now m Leavenworth prison. "wnen was he convicted, and hat for." she was asked. "In 1917, because he made . a speech, not against war, mind you, but at a meeting, saying he thought men who worked ought to be able to make decent wages while there were so many making fortunes out of the war. He was arrested and convicted by Judge Landis of Chicago to eight years in Leavenworth prison. "But think of it,' all the German spies and people who really did harm against the country during the war have been freed," she insisted. - '. And my husband was an American citi zen, and his father before him. i He said nothing that could harm any body." . , Further Questioning brought forth the information this was an I. W. W. case. Mr. Plahn had belonged to the organization for 11 years. H was an ironworker, but in the dull summer season used to go out to work on farms in Minnesota. His wife said she is now support ing herself by -doing sewing In Chi The other picket's name was Al- bertine Reeder and she was a girl of 12. She said her father also was in Leavenworth prison and tha her mother was working out by the do in Oklahoma City to support tier ana her younger brother. The child was pale and almost all in with the heat which sizzled on . the asphalt side walk. . She was a serious-minded little girl and seemed to know a good deal about her father's case. "They call it a tenant-farmer case." she explained, -pecause my father tried to organize the tenant farmers in Oklahoma, and they were afraid they would be like the x. W. W." "Was your father an American citizen?" she was asked. "Oh. yes." was the prompt reply. "and hla father, and way back, -1 guess." There are now 98 political war time prisoners for whom their fam ilies and friends are seeking release. There were 11 3 when they first came to Washington . to try to see the president.' but a number have been released because their terms were up. Mrs. Plahn said some or tne sen tences had been shortened by Presi dent Wilson, who commuted a num ber on April 22. 1918. bnt that noth ing had been done ince. The cases are still In the hands of the Depart ment of Justice, which is expected to report to the president on pardon cases. . ' Only about IS of tie wives or children of the prisoners are still ia Washington, the rest bavin return ed to their homes. eils of government. It is published by the Academy Pres, 112 Fourth svenufj rsew York City. Anthologies have become of tale quite numerous, but an entirely new cross section of poetry appesrs in "The Little Book of Society Verse," wherein Claude M. Feusa and liar old C. Stearns have collected the sparkling bits of literature dealing with love and life in light vein. Rob ert Hcrrick, Thsckeray, Dobson, Thorns Hood and Swinburne here fraternise with Oliver i Wendell Holmes. Arthur Guiterman. Bret Hsrte, Thomas Bailey Aldrich and Sara Teasdale. ' Houghton Mifflin, publishers. "SEIZKR OF EAOL.ES" by Jiirm Wllltrd S hull. Published br Moug hloa-Mlf-flln Company. This is just the book to give a boy a vivid understanding of frontier life. Everv Kay Ideal an InA'ttm J - - j J Ht. . V. U ,,VI IHU the author's tales of Indian life have always been popular with boys. Little Dftor th h ' - w vi tea is-t an Indian boy, ambitious, honest and daring. He wins the position , of Seizer of Eagles after many hard ships, a position of great honor among the Blackfeet Mr. Schulti is himself an Indan by adoption. In his book he uses many actual expe riences' of his frontier days for his character work. Stories of China from tha mat rt vision of a missionary are presented Lena jnnmrA T!thr Tha .l..ma is illustrated by photographs taken by the author. It is published by the Abingdon Press. "The Marriage of Patricia Penner. day." by Grace Miller White, is a story of the stage which is turned by a strange murder into a thrilling detective story. The heroine leaves Broadway success to become lead ing woman in a western stock com pany. Published by Little, Brown & Co. - . ' , A jolly little story is "The Ven tures of Polly, or Being Married." by Dorothy S. Day, published by the) Stratford company. ' - Girl oj 11 V Put Aside Dolls to Study Law Tram Ik Vtw Tors Worl. Being proclaimed a "BredlsV hsan't made 11 -year-old Roale Reeve seir-coqacioua and priggish yet. Itoatl and hap twa alatara. Birdie. I t, and Klorenca, II, hava come to new Torn with their father, Fror. Thomaa L. Reave of Chicago, who naa oaviaan a ayktem of education of which they ara the nroduct and the advertisement. Itoale la aald to nave leaped, after ona year of In struction by hla method, from the fourth srade of an elementary school to entrance at Western university, London, Ontario, where she has bean studying French. Spanish and chem lairy for the lat year, and to be Manning to start the law course at Columbia next fall. Columbia professors say one of (he entrance requirements to the law course is at least three years of col lege, and also that the rules of the law school exclude women to say nothing of little girls. Prof. Reeves was out of the city, and tha girls said they didn't know about arrangements, but they con firmed the stories of Rosle's past achievements and are sure she la somehow or other destined for the law. ""Why IawtM "Oh, Z guess I might as well be a lawyer aa anything else," observed Roale, broad-mindedly. "I thought I'd Ilka It because I like to speak In public. Speaking at the bar would ba nice. Tea. I've been In court rooms and aeen casee tried.- I know how It's dona." x Rosle laid aside her dolls two years ago, aha said. - That, as It happens, was the time at which she began "the method." "It's a kind of shorthand." aha ex plained. "It makea ua fluent In Kng llah, and then we can understand anything. - I took languages at Western university French and Spanish. It isn't bard; It's just like playing games." Rosle and Birdie were playing a game while she talked a game of chess. Chess Is part of "the method." and so Is typewriting, and so la a special dictionary with lists of words arranged according to various ' clas sifications. Rosle helped compile the dictionary, and Its M.ooo words are now supposed to be filed away under her bobbed thatch. ' These are the things that hava taken the place of the dolls. Roale seems to find them a satisfactory substitute. She is bright-eyed and brown-skinned, and she. swims and tears around on roller skates, and is to all appearance as normal a little girl as any who have trouble with their spelling and can't remember whether seven times eight is fifty three or sixty-one. How t Dodge the Danngeir I the ;;'; M Swimming Jfflle "There are dangers as well as pleasures In the 'old swimming hole that should be observed by every one seeking recreation at the beach and bathing pool this summer," says Fred M. Rosseland. chief of the nub- Jic safety division of the National Safety council. In urging the swim mers of the nation to exercise spe cial caution during the present va cation season. . "It is estimated that 7,000, and more, persons drown in the United States yearly. - Every summer brings with it an alarming, toll In deaths from drowning chiefly through ac cidents to persons who are not fa miliar with a few simple rules. Lack of knowledge of resuscitation meth ods is another cause of loss of life which might .otherwise have been avoided. "Fundamental in eliminating deaths from accidental drowning is the fact that every bather should know how to swim. Many persons who have never taken time to learn to swim come to disaster when, in seeking escape from the hot weather, they fall into treacherous holes and drown before help reaches them. The 'rock the boat' pest, would have fewer tragedies to his credit if more of his victims knew how to handle them selves in water." . Following are the rudiments of water safety which every swimmer and canoeist should keep in mind: , SWIMMERS. Don't swim on a full stomach. (Wait at least two hours af tejr eat ing.) , -, Don't swim if overheated. -Don't swim until exhausted. Don't swim If you have heart trouble. V . Don't dive without accurate knowledge of the depth of the water. -. -, , ' Don't struggle if caught In a swift current or undertow. (The force of $he current will bring you to the surface.) ,' Don't wade into the water With the arms above' the head. (Tou will not be ready to stroke If you step into a hole.) Don't lean backward when wad ing into the water. (Always be ready to fall forward.) Don't fail to learn Red Cross lifesaving and resuscitation meth- THE OR. BENJ. F. BAILEY SANATORIUM Lincoln, Neb. This institution is the only one in the central west with separate buildings situated in their ' own grounds, yet entirely distinct, and rendering it possible to classify cases. The one building being fit ted for and devoted to the treat ment of noncontagious snd nonmen tal diseases, no others being admit ted; the other Rest Cottage being designed for and devoted to the exclusive treatment of select mental cases requiring for a time watchful care and special nursing. OULBRANSEN PLAYER PIANO Wationalbffrfcd randed in the Back, $495 The Art and Mime Store 1513-15 Douglas Street ods. (Be capable of saving your- ' self and your companion.' ' Don't cry for help In fun. (Tou may some time need help and not get it.) .' : i . Don't go in swimming alone un less you are an expert. CANOEISTS. ' Don't go canoeing if you can't swim. It is not necessary to pull Into the waves back of a steamboat to : show that you can handle a '-canoe Paddle quickly to the shore if you have a passenger who thinks It funny to rock the only founda tion between you and death. ," It might as well be repeated for the millionth time be satisfied with the seat you took when you -aarted. If you do- capsize, don't try to climb back into the canoe; not many can do it. Do not grab for anybody's neck. . When the canoe rises. Just lay your hands on it and' rest. A paddle will do Just aa well. By holding the paddle before you in the water you can keep afloat until help comes. ., Keep a cool head. If you can't do this, stay out of a canoe. , Canny, to Say the Least y "Tou say he is conservative V ' "Conservative? Why, when that fellow, began to read about the pay roll robberies he 'reduced wages in hlis factory." Life. ' . X-oelslor! . The bootlee-eers' armv America's x x x-peditlonary force. Llfe. "Hand Troubles" Are Unheard of Because the hand is always free. Foot troubles are common, because in ordinary shoes the feet are ham pered in their movements, iheir freedom is restricted by the un yielding sole of the shoe. The muscles are cramped by a last that does not fit. But your feet are aa free as Nature intended in the Cantilever Shoe. The shank is flexible. There is no steel "shank piece" in Cantilev ers as in most shoes to check the play of the muscles. With every step, the shoe bends as the foot bends. ; The muscles grow, strong, enduring, healthy, from the exercise of walking. Thus Cantilevers strengthen weak arches and pre vent and correct flat foot. x The last of Cantilever Shoes' con forms to the outline of the foot. The bones are not pressed together, as in an ill-designed shoe. The muscles are not pinched. There is plenty of toe room, and the toes lie in their natural position. . Cantilevers are smart lookingand they add to your appearance. They encourage graceful carriage. The heels are fashionably low and broad. Change to Cantilever Shoes this week and enjoy their refreshing comfort. . All guesswork eliminated; every shoe is now fitted by X-Kay with out extra charger to yon. -Sixes 2 to 11. Widths AAAA to EE For Men and Women HOSIERY, SPATS and RUBBERS a Sold in Omaha Only by CANTILEVER SHOE SHOP ; " New Location 1708 Howard Street OppotiU Y..W. C A.BaUdiag 4 Wnta or Ft booklet Scionco ayo FJobrocka Find ' Confoundo Bryan frem the Slatfle Meaikly. At the recent meeting of the Na tional Academy of Sciences la Wash ington Dr. Henry Fairfield Oaborn announced the discovery of a tooth giving evidence of a prehlatorle and unknown apeolea of anthropoid Inter mediate between Ihe ape and earlieat man. This 'discovery, made, by Harold J. Cook of Agate. Neb., In tha middle ot Pliocene formation of that state, In addition to being Im portant scientifically, ha a a timely Interest because of the atjaeks that during tha past few montha have been launAed at the groundwork of eclenee through the seal of opponents or tne racte or tna evolution or man and haa a dramatic or comlo-aspect In that It cornea from the home stats of William Jennings Bryan. Worn by use when Ita owner was alive, and worn by water In the cen turies ainee, thia tooth matches no known tooth of ape or man, modern or extinct It la very different from the tooth of the gorilla, the gibbon or orang. It is nearest to that of the chlmpansee, but the reeemblance la still remote. Nor does It resemble very rloaety any human molar, al though It la nearer to the human than to the ape type of tooth. Dr. Oaborn claaalflea It as a new apecles and genus, and names It Heapero pltnecus haroldcookll, which, being translated back from the biologist's Latin, meana "the anthropoid front tha west discovered by Harold Cook." The fossil wss found In the upper phase of the Snake river beds, asso ciated with the remalna of the rhl noceroe, camel, Asiatic antelope and an early form of the horse, now ex tinct In 1101 the American Museum of Natural History received a similar tooth, but It waa so water-worn that It could not be aafely identified. But the new specimen looks eo much like the other that It may belong to the same apecles and gives hopes that other parts may be found In thia field. - The remarkable feature of the dis covery lies In the fact that hitherto no specimens of anthropoid primates, ancient or modern, hava been dis covered in America, although they re common In the old world. It Is possible thst this Nebraska tooth will opn a new chapter In geological history which may throw light on the vexed question of the origin ot man. ' According to Dr. Oaborn, the ani mal la a hew genus of anthropoid, probably one which wandered over here from Asia with the large south Asiatic element which has recently been discovered in 6"ur fauna by Mere u a very Unusual Opportunity for a rammer kerne at Lake Okoboji. See my ad ia this '-'paper under elauified column I tt j.i 1 Drs. Merrlam, 01 a ley and others. Dr. Oaborn and Dr. C. A. Ra4 of the American Museum of Natural History, alao presented evident to . the academy that man eulsted be fore the great Ice Age, which la a new and very remote date for the antiquity of man. The recent dis covery of Tertiary man near Ipawloa, England, known aa the Foxhall man, led Prof. Oaborn to vlalt the locality anS to make a very eareful atudy of the animal life which eurrounded thia mm. I'nlike the now famoue "Cave Man" of the mammoth and reindeer period, the Foxhall man waa surrounded by relatively primitive maaiodona. ' rhlnocerosea and saber toothed tigers; also hy two klnda of elephants, tha stralght-tuaked and the southern elephant. Thia waa long before the Ire Aae, when Eng land, even in latitude hi degrees, was enjoying a very mild climate. Sine It Is known that the Foxhall man waa capable of making 10 to It different klnda of flint implements, of providing hlmaelf with clothing, and of building a fire, he sets a new and very remote date for the an- i.itu man. because ha ia aaoa- rated from the Recent period by tha whole stretch of Quaterny time, or the Ic Ag. ftcisntlflo men hava estimated the duration of the lee Age from 100,000 to TOO.flOO years, but Prof, shorn la Inclined to adopt the Intermediate estimate of SZ0.000 years made by the German geologist Albrecht Penck. The Foxhall man Is at present known only by the flint Inatruments that he has left behind. Unlike Pithecanthropus erectus, the Hetdelburg man. the Plltdown maa and the Neanderthal and art-loving Cro-Magnon racea.' parts of hi; skeleton have not yet been revealed to modern eyes. 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