r? RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF ') f 1 f ' V - VM ' Bk cf 'Mm fmm h OMKWI1KKK In "Dnrkcst Afrlcn" Capt L. H. Stuvoiifl of lCtifslimil Ih senrcliIiiB for tliu prehistoric inmihtvr whose re ported existence hns been disturbing the sclentllle world more or less since 1U0H. It Is supposed to he some sort of a dlnnsnur. Inasmuch as the dinosaur. Is a fifty-foot lizard that dates hack to the "Ape of Heptlles," which antedates man on this earth by anywhere from CO to VAX) millions of years, he scientists are naturally saying, with the country hoy at the cir cus nt flight of his first hippopotamus, "Gosh, there ain't no slcli nnlmlle!" Still there was such an animal once. And people are saying tlrey have seen such an anlmnl iow. Hence Captain .Stevens' expedition to Africa. s The earlier reports have been corroborated by tvo ItulKlnn lilK-Kftiue hunters, who report sighting n huge beast of terrifying proportions "and at tributes. Mr. Gapelle. one of the Belgians, says tils party caught a glimpse of n huge beast rending 1iIh way through thp Jungle verdure, which dolled zoological analogy. He says It was In the general hapo.of 'a lizard, probably fifty feet long, with n thick tall like a kangaroo's, n hump on Its back, and n terlfylng born on Its snout. The monster was covered with scales, which were colored with Sreat blood-red spots from which radiated pale green Btrlpetf. A well-known English naturalist and collector, has written to the press that there Is every reason to believe there Is such an nnlmal living In the heart of the unexplored Jungles, If not great num oers of them. During his Btay In Africa he heard the story from so many different sources, ho says, .that he Is convinced there Is some truth In It. "Fifteen years ago, when collecting In the Transvaal, I heard an Interesting story of a mon ster, half snake, half benst.. My Informant, of the (Uiodcslan police, who patrolled near Barotselnnd, oald he had approached wltlffn a hundred yards of It while It was lying asleep on the border of a swamp. It wns, he declared a handred feet long, ind Its strange appearance so frightened Win that It nwakencd and glided Into the swamp before ho could raise his gun. It traveled noiselessly and with great speed. , "The country round about was quite unex plored. My friend told me that I was the first to whom he had mentioned the story, as he was Afraid to tell his comrades hecauso they would nave laughed at him. "Once again when I'was on the French Kongo seaboard I heard fearful Rtoiies from the native hunters of the monster. I also heard the samo stories on the way to the Belgian Kongo, where the present so-called hrontosaurus Is supposed to (mvo been seen. When you hear stories from threo or four widely different sources I believe there ls some truth In them. You must remember that If you travel to Fernan Fnz and Sette Cnmn and go up Into the Interior, most of the country has never been explored. What creatures live In Its vast mysteries we do not know. Whether the so-called hrontosaurus Is a prehistoric survival or not I would not care to say. I firmly believe the crea ture exists, but I believe It Is an unknown creaturo of more modern descent. "Tho hrontosaurus, or whatever tho-strongo creature Is, makes use of Its leijs and Its body tt glides. I should Imagine It Is a very' dangerous creature. But that It Is not nil n falry-talo I am certain. I have hecu there, and I have talked with natives who will not; pass a certain boundary Into on 'evil land' hecauso of the huge monsters which live in Its remote solitudes." Walter WInans, nn American living In Lon don, the pistol champion and a hlg-game hunter, also believes In the existence of this creature. "The late Carl Ilagenheck told mo before tho war," Mr. Wlnnns said, "that two of his travelers, on different expeditions nnd In different yenrs, had seen tho hrontosaurus In swamps In centrnl Africa. I do not think it Is impossible that somo of the prehistoric animals have survived, and when Bovoral explorers have noon glimpses of what they" think must ho such animals they aro most prob ably right. It Is not ns If some one not used to recognizing them Instantly saw wild animals for tho first time. Thoso men are always on tho lookout for new species and know nil tho animals by sight. "It Is posslblo that tho sea-serpent Is one of these so-called extinct reptiles, nnd that the dodo may still exist somewhere not yoj explored. Tho quaggn, too, which existed until n few years ago, may still live in somo unexplored part of Africa and tho mammoth and the cae bear still wander In Siberia." , Mr. WInans went further to satisfy the Eng lish public nnd drew an outline of whnt this nnl 'mal probably looks like. With that picture, which nppoarcd In the Evening News, he appended this bit of descriptive argument: "Tho scientists draw this benst standing on Its legs, ns n mammal would. Now no mnmmnllan anlmnl has the cninhliiifd heavy tall and long neck this anlmnl has. A knngaroo has tho heavy tall, hut It Is built very light In front, with only short rudimentary logs. It uses Its tall ns a third leg. In combination with Its two hind legs nnd works on a tripod so formed. Tho giraffe has a long neck, hut It Is built light behind, and Its tall Is' so light that It practically has no weight In com parison. The giraffe carries its hend high so us not to put a leverage on It. "Now the hrontosaurus Is heavy both fh tho' tall and the neck, which,, besides, are both very loug. If It stood ns tho scientists draw It, the tnil tud neck would "rtntlunco It iud a slight puff of wind from the side would blow It over. It Is ridiculous to think that nn nnimnl n hundred feet long would flavc legs close together In the mid dle and have threo-nunrters of Its length sticking out In front nnd behind unsupported In the nlr. My Iden Is that the hrontosaurus wns a reptile, practically a crocodile, -with a snake-like neck, nnd not n mamma!, tlmt It carried Itself ns a crocodile does, that Is, crawled on Its belly when on lnnd nnd did not walk on straight regs. "I think It crawled with Its neck drawn back fi.0 as to strike like n cobra nnd most likely had poisonous fangs. In fact, It wns n big poisonous lizard, and that It was brilliantly colored, llko them, and perhaps 'discharged poison through Its Bkln like a toad when Irritated. ' "The best, weapon to shoot It with would be the magnified' Mnuser rifle, such as tho Germans used against tanks, only with nn explosive shell Instead of nn nrmor-plercer. If I were younger I should he off after him." Anyway, tho monster Is sufficiently real to have set the scientists disputing about his possi bility, his Identity nnd his looks. They call hlra nil sorts of names hrontosaurus, trlceratops, bro alosnurus, tylosaurus and so on. One expert writes to the press: "The nnimnl In question can not he a bromo surus, If the Illustration In H. G. Wells' book, 'Outlines of History,' nre correct. I The Illustra tions show a very different creaturo from tho de scriptions In tho newspapers of this one. Whnt this one really appears to ho Is n trlceratops, only that nnlmal has two horns." Another zoologist heaps scorn on the entlfe Idea, asserting thnt whlto ho believes there nro undiscovered nnlmnls living In the hert of Afrjca, he doubts that n dlnosnur or any other primeval beast exists anywhere today. Ho writes: "The period In which they lived Is Incredibly renioto ns man counts time. Their bones are found In the strata of tho Eoceno period. Tho hrontosaurus was remarkable for his very small head and smnll brain cavity. His whole skull was no larger than his neck bone. Tho name means 'thunder henst,' nnd one species wns well over fifty feet In length nnd weighed probably twenty tons or more." The evolution of mnn has been n long process so long thnt tho geologists nnd other scientists 1 prefer to dodgo the question of the millions of. years Involved and reckon In eras, nn ern being nnywhere from six to 45 millions of yenrs. They call tho first era Archeozoic; It Is ancient beyond nil knowledge. Then comes tho Proterozolc, with its very prlmltlvo forms of water life, lasting W'A millions of years. The Paleozoic, with fish, am. phlblans nnd lnnd plants, lnsted 45 millions;' The Mezozoic, the ago of reptiles and amphibians and of trees, saw the first mammnls; It lasted 1Q mil lions of years. The present era, the Cenozoic, has seen tho rise nnd development of tho highest or ders of plnnts and nnlmnls nnd tho nppenranco of mnn ; its duration to date Is put at 0 million years. So that's what wo aro up ngnjnst when wo talk of there being nt largo In Africa a survivor of the Age of Iteptlles. Anyway, wo know these reptiles nctunlly lsted becnuso wo find their fossil remains prettv much all over the world. Why, theso fossils nre so thick out In Utnh, U. S. A., thnt we hnvo tho Dlnosnur National monument. You see, onco upon a time, tho waves of an open sen rolled over the spot where now stands Long's peak (14,1255 feet) "King of tho Hockles." , In this son sported tho marlno monster of long ago and on Its shores lived the grotesque creatures of the Ago of Hop tiles,' Then tho ltocky Mountnlns heaved them selves up nnd this great Inland sea,hnd to run off Into tho Arctic ocean and the Gulf of Mexico and tho Pacific. And then the rains washed down tho mountnlns and filled up the plains with tho woiirlngs. Somo of the creatures in this Inlnnd sea got injrpd nnd their bones nre(now found pctrlllod In n remarknbly perfect state of preservation. And lt' no trick for a scientist who knows hU busl uens to reebnutruct an anlmnl from bis kaaL. i Mr. Gnpolle's monster teems to suggest the urmored dinosaur, Stegosaurus. If that's the fel low, he Isn't dangerous. He's herbivorous. He's scarcely any hrnliw nt nil; that's why he Is armored to protect him from his enemies, lie's iitiout "0 feet long nnd 10 feet high. The Tylosaurus. "half snako half beast." Isn't n Dinosaur, but a Mosasaur, though 'that prob ably makes no particular differ ence. He's n seaserpentlsh sort of thing nnd probably requires more water "than n morass nf-forils. The Hrontosaurus, according to the restora tion herewith reproduced, doesn't look especially formidable, except for his size. Tho dlnosnur that seems best able to pny his way and keep on going Is the Allsaurus. He's got teeth and claws and looks us If ho might move rapidly. However, the fact that tho African dlnosnur does nor Bcem to ho exactly hko any of his pre historic retutlvcs proves nothing. T-S may bo thnt tho fellow Captain Stevens Is nrtcr has cvoluted like the rest of tho world and Is prepared to pre sent 8ometnlng entirely new In dinosaurs. Why should ho not hne developed? He's had ot least six million yours In which to Improve himself. "The Outlines, of History," II. G. Wells' new hook, considers these early monsters quite fully: Ho snys In one place: "The carllest-kuown reptiles were beasts with great hollies and not very powerful legs, very llko their kindred amphibia, wallowing ns tho croco dile wallows to this day ; but in tho Mcsozolc they Boon began to stand up nnd go stoutly on nil fours, nnd several great sections of them began to bal ance themselves on tnil and hind legs, rather ns tho kangaroos do now. Another division wus tho crocodile branch, and another developed toward the tortolso nnd tho turtles. The Pleslosnurs and tho Ichthyosnurs were two groups which left no living representatives. Pleslosaurus measured 300 feet from snout to tall till of which half was neck. "The Mosnsaurs were n third group of great por poiselike marine lizards. But tho largest and most diversified group of these Mcsozolc reptiles was tho group we have spoken of us knngaroo like, the Dinosaurs, muny of which nttulned enor mous proportions. In bigness theso greater Dino saurs have never been exceeded, although the sea can still show In the whales creatures as great. Some of these, nnd tho largest among Mhom, were herbivorous nnlmnls; they browsed on rushy vege tation and among the ferns and bushes, or they Btood up nnd grasped trees with their forelegs while they devoured tho foliage. "Among tho browsers, for example, were tho Dlplodoccus carnegll, which measured 81 feet in length, nnd tho Atlnntosnurus. The Glgnntosiu rus. disinterred by n German expedition in 1012 from rocks in Enst Africa, wns still nioro colossal. It measured well over 100 foot! These greater moustcrs had legs, and they nro usually figured ns standing up on them; hut it Is very doubtful If they could hnvo supported their weight In this wny out of water. Buoyed up by water or mud thoy may have got along. "Another noteworthy type wo hnvo fir .red Is tho Trlceratops. There were also n grea'. number of flesh caters,' who preyed upon these herbivores. Of these, Tyrnnnosaurus seems almost the last word In 'frlghtfulness' among- living things. Some species of this genus measured 40 feet from snout to tnil. Apparently It carried this vast body kan garoo fashion, on Us tall nnd hind legs. Probably It reared Itself up. Somo authorities even sup pose that It leapt through tho air. If so, It pos sessed muscles of n quite miraculous quality. Much more probably It waded, half submerged, In pursuit of tho herbivorous river saurlans." And nlong with these terrible beasts wero bat llko creatures. "These bat-llzurfls wero tho pterodactyl-'. But hlrdllke though they were, they were not birds, nor tho ancestors of birds. Tho struc ture of their wings was that of n hand with one long linger nnd n web; tho wltyj of a bird Is like an arm with feathers projecting from Its hind -edge. And these pterodactyls had no feathers." All of theso creatures have dlsuDpeaeed from the face of tho earth, Wells says. They ended abruptly. They voro extinguished, ns though by the waving of a magic wnnd, perhnps In order to make place for man; and Wells snys that the end ing of the reptiles Is beyond nil quest jpn tho most striking revolution In the wholo history of the earth before the coming ofMnnuklnd. ' "It Is probably connected with tho close of i vast period of equable warm conditions nnd ' onset of n r'ow, nusteror age, In which the wlnti" wero bitterer and the summers brief, but hut.' AMERICAN LEGION ill WPo XTopy rir Thin Uoimrtmeiit HiiipIleJ by Natlonul lluiulituartcrs of tlia Ainrrlciiti I.kIoii.) INCREASE FOR DISABLED MEN Dnrrow Bill Enlarges Amount by $20 a Month for Veterans While Tak ing Training. Another Important victory lt tho American Legion's long light for bene ficial legislation In behalf of sick and Hxitbled ex-service men Is revealed In i telegram announcing passage of the bill, recently received nt Legion na tional headqunrters from Thomas W. Miller, chairman of the organization's national legislative committee In Washington. The senate In n night session, no' milling to the message, pased the measure as n rider to the deficiency appropriation bill, nnd as It previously had been parsed by the house. It now iwalts only the signature of the presi dent to become n lnw. The Durrow bill Increase, by ?20 n month, the amount of money pnld to disabled olornns of the world war while taking training under the direc tion of the federal honrd of vocntlonnl education. This Is the second tlmo the Legion has obtained nn Increnso for tho innlmed heroes, hnvlng pushed through congress, Inst December,! the Sweet hill, which raised the amount of com penatlon for them from $.'!0 to $80 b month. "The postage of the Dnrrow bill," unld Lemuel Holies, national adjutant of the Legion, "wns largely duo to the work done by Leglonnnlros who visited Washington In Its Interest. General published reports nt thnt time Indi cated that tho Legion representatives confined their nctlvltlcs solely to tho pending fourfold optlonnt compensa tion bill. IlesultM show thnt tho needs of tho disabled men always have stood tlrst on the Legion's program and tho organization Is going right on working for these unfortunates, Irrespective of what congress may or may not sco fit to do with tho problems of ex-servlco men ns n whole. "Tho passage of tho Darrow bill will glvo great Impetus to the Legion's co operative plan to assist tho federal board In getting every eligible disabled man Into training at onco, as many had refrained from taking training bo cuuse of tho Inadequate compensation heretofore allowed." SHE MAKES THE MOST CALLS American Legion Headquarters' Switchboard Operator, Lula B. Vlze, Is Known aa "Sunshine." Tho girl who "calls" more people and gets "cnlled" oftener thnn nnyono cJho at natfoual headquarters of tho Legion Is Miss Lula B. Vlzo of In dianapolis. She has chargo of tho telephone switchboard and a sort of .general Information bureau adjoining the offices of the natiounl commander. She offers complete proof of tho fal- "KSwMflj. cm 'EPHHft Mm af'Ohk f'wtwtSmmmm b. S - $ sWC" WBBBBBK IIH m ' y -33mKmmmm 1 ',: -- $??ViiiiH l ZA ' t-mmmmm ll:':"':. :'JmmWmmmm Miss Lula D. Vlze. lacy of tho theory that red, or "tltlan" hair Is Indicative of n fiery temper. Her perpetually sunny disposition hns earned for her the olllco sobriquet of "Sunshine." Married? you ask. Well, as some facetious "buddy" might say: "You tell 'em, concrete; wo'ro too mortified 1" Accepts Men From All Branches. David W. .Tnmeson Post No. 183, Philadelphia, which was originally started ns a Chemical Service post, has lnk nccordanco with tho desires of tho state and nntlounl conventions abandoned tho unit basis of member ship, ami now Includes men from nil branches of tho service. Should Be A Holiday. Armistice day, November 11, should ho n legal holiday throughout tho Uni ted Status, according to resolution iidopted by the Great Falls Post No. "A, Great Falls, Mont. Copies of the reso lution wero forwarded to tho Montana !''iigressIonal delegation at Washing on, signed by Charles Davidson, xiiron Slnght and E. .1. FItzpntrlck. TRIBUTE TO EX-SERVICE MEN National Commander D'Oller. In Let ter for Memorial Service, Compli ment Men Who Served. Listen, huddles, to whnt Frnnklhf ITOIIer, your nntlounl commander said about you In a recent letter. A Legion post' nt WostvUlc. N. .1., nskw Itev. Hownrd E. Thompson of Wood bnry, N. J., to conduct a Mcmorla service for them, and the mlnlstri wrote the national commander for i message which he could read publlclj on that occasion. "In a very few years," Mr. D'Olln wrote, In part, "the ex-service men of this country will be the most promi nent In business, In tl professions ant In politics, nof merely because thej are ex-servlec men, but because, It order to epter the service, they win picked men, physically, mentally nn morally, and being thus selected nn having the advantage of great expert ence In the nrmy, navy and niiirliii Franklin D'Oller. corps, they will necessarily bo leaden In nil walks of life. "The American Legion proposes U keep tho ex-scrvlco men -together U nn organization whose deals are serv ice to our country nnd sorvlco to out comrades, nnd their reward will be tlM continuing satisfaction of unselfish service faithfully performed." FURLOUGH AT ATLANTIC CITY Famous Retort Pott Arranges to At commodate Former Service Men on Their Vacation. Tho Atlantic City post of the Amert can Legion Is hooking up tho A. B. Wi leave area Idea to the possibilities o America's summer resort It la Invito Ing Legionnaires from any part of tb United States to Bpend a furlough at Atlantic City, and It Is establishing foi them a tent camp at' which the e penso Item of quarters Is reduced to minimum. So, even though our well known former skipper, Uncle Sam, Isn't nvallahlo to Issue transportatloa and commutation of rations and quar tors, any Legionnaire may now spend n vacation nt Atlantic City without going financially fiat In the process. Bill Fisher, formerly top sergeant ol Company 0, Twenty-third engineers. Is the father of the Atlantic City leavt area plan. He put tho scheme up tho Atlantic City post and the post voted to carrv It out A committee was1 authorized to go ahead with thi ' scheme. Tho conception of the camp whlcb tho committee had In mind when It stnrted work was a t'ent town which should bo oncrated on tho simplest plan feasible. It should provide for I nominal sum living quarters undei canvas, thus saving the Legionnaires tho expensive hotel bills and nt the same tlmo assuring them of n place to stay In a city In which It Is sometimes difficult to obtain hotel accommoda tions at nny price. Living In the tent town, tho ex-service men should be able to tnko udvantuge of tho bathing, tho boating, tho dancing on tho piers, tho shows In tho theaters and the many other diversions which tho re sort offers. Tho committee hns named the tent town Camp D'Oller in honor of the Le gion's nntlonnl commander. It' has workeU out nil tho details of tho camp. The city councllmen, led by tho mayor, granted tho post tho right to use a plot of ground owned by the city nnd tho city engineer laid out the camp streets and planned ,the sanitary facilities. All the Boys Know Him. What do you know about pendlcu Josls? Tho bug experts In tho bureau of entomology of tho department oi agriculture aro seeking Information about this flvc-syllnblcd nfillctlon, which the A. E. F. veteran knows by the shorter term of "cooties." A re port of tho bureau Bays that If lice borne dlsenses should get a foothold In this country their appearance In epidemic form Is not Impossible. Had the. Goods on Him, "What's tho chargo against this mnn?" nsked tho Judge. "Fighting In tho street," replied the officer. "You're fined $0.00, my mnn." "Whnt Is tho 00 cents for, youi honor?" "Wur tnx." "But, your honor, tho war's over." "Over nothing; you were fhjhtln weren't youj.1; ... , J