t wil othing to h uiered uld expect Adjacent arly‘twice con re to & no ding that at 1 p.m ransporta AND REST ILY altt . daily People" lCago w Co. NCE LER . t 3:00 pim. E Add fin 1100 9% 4A # / Ay Â¥4 Then he= was allowed to see t nilninncc0â€"8n a mal: .‘ _‘ white Indians wh nresence â€"had Comal 109.80 rap m.T always \been denied. He persvaded I e At the native chiefs that their difficul}â€" -\‘: C‘TEF CHURCE ties would be solved of a kinship| E14 -\mw«w could be establi between the | 3 | white Indians and the white people|| Sund ( i. 4 of the north. He saw about 400 of|| 9:30%iâ€"The church school. j these Indians of all ages and photoâ€"|| 1¢:0(0â€"Community bible class, graphed "b"'":‘;. of them. || 11:00â€"Morning wflrg}; service;"" . l. o ) i ':‘ 7 One scientist 1 / of the ‘poinimm| . The ncrament of the Lord‘s Supâ€" that the condition nnder which white!|P¢" will be oherved on%h first Sunâ€" Indians are prc is by lencoderâ€" |day of |August, â€" o e o he Aibatrntreneiniitais : Aitsincs dnc anthistees t â€"Finally, after ing friends wit! an Indian chief a coastal tribe and curing him and many others various ills, he ‘the opportuni to win the friendship of all the of the region by |stamping out tw epidemics of s . h It was not until th¢ very end 0 the trip, he said, that any whi Indiang were seen, because the rum had preceded the party that its obi was to take such Indians into captivi ty and bring them .c & 5 :;:o . He told of the march to the in terior in which| great difficulti were overcome. | Before the tri ended almost the| entire party ha been taken seriously ill, and t members, the tative ‘of t Smithsonian I â€" and the R public of Panama, died of fever. These representatives were pre ent when he 1 New â€" York last January, and when he got to Pan, ama he received help by the f ing of additional observers from th¢ United States ,. the Pan Canal Zone Government and the | public of anm:Ln - ‘ It was at fi thought that Marsh had brought a group of s albinos. out of forests of Pa ama. and was calling them whi Indians. After \a critical exami tion by a large group of our scientists it wasy agreed that were white Indiansâ€"but abno and pathological cases. + How Tribe Was Found Mr.â€" Marsh how he fi saw white Indians in Panama 1 summer and deI'ermlned to. retu with (a properl% equipped : exped tion. He told how he approac the Smithsoni Institute Washington, the) Museum of Natuâ€" ral History here and the Universi of . Rochester in order that / ; might send representatives on expedition, so that its results wou obtain the confidence of the scie tific world. tC The children ’*re.npt alone. Old members of the tribe and paren were : brought along â€"safe retu to their Darien |region of the Pa: ama, being assu and ‘guarantee Most of the ‘older mem are . brown, skins and of n India characteristics. | £d ‘ Brought from the jungle wh they wore no clothes, garbed in civiliâ€" zation‘s modern | ‘dress and thrown suddenly into the world‘s largest c â€"the three children, Chepu, Olo, and Margaret submit to a critical examâ€" ination ‘without | seemingly a flicker of feeling passing across their d countenances, neath shocks bf bristling towâ€"colored hair. Many of the |leading scientists in the United States are discussing the subject, poking,. prodding, twisti g ears and looking down the throats |of three homesick | little tots in New York, brought here by Richard (O. Margh, American explorer; who l¢st summer discovered a tribe of 400 in the San Blas ntry of Panama; Yes. We have white Indians. The question | now, however, "What makes them white?"‘ * Explorer Brings Them To U And Scientists Are Not Agreed on Sources; Albinos, Maybe â€" wWHAT MAKES THEM WHITE PANAMA TRIBE OF _ "WHITE lNDwJ NUMBER 20 Part 2 fiere sre shown three white Imtn hildren of Panama with Richâ€" m 0. Marshâ€"of Ncwrz‘ork, ho i vexd':fltho tribe of 400 in the Blas country of Panama. The children failed to be impressed with anything they saw in the wonderjeity of civilization, New York. Here are shown three White Indians 4 uks [ saicroaden fertc n,' | C (Thé ‘first Sunday in the month, the y (rlfl:munion). 17 ~ Ever nï¬:i:OOp.m.':j’ ¢ Th y and holy doT‘;, the Holy Communionâ€"9:30 a. m. . In New York they do nothing but stare.| They blink their queer squintâ€" ing blue eyes at the=cms, the buildâ€" | ings, the traffic. Sometimes Margaret 'cries. Alo and Chepsw shed never a tear; j|they |are men, and their stoiâ€" | cism is as typically Mongolian as are ,their rominent cheek bones â€" and flatteried noses. . But they do not smile,|either; and one feels that perâ€" haps, [when they crawl into strange beds at the Waldorf, and the lights go‘ , they hug each other quite tightly, in their utter darkness. Sunday servicesâ€" hLL "The [Holy Communionâ€"â€"7:30. The u\'cfo Schoolâ€"9;80 a. m. Matinsâ€"11:00 a. m, . _ You‘ ure cordially invited to make use of| the reading roio#pq at 387 Cenâ€" tral avenue, which is every week day f1 mnmoo'clock?themomiu until ‘o‘clock~in ‘imnint and S’:ln afternoon from two to six o‘ } t The Subject for next Sunday‘s Lesson sem“ & “Lff:'." u’i"d Â¥ices are‘ held in this church 387 Hazel | avenue, c‘uz Sunday mornisg at| 10:45, Sunday . school meetsjat nine thirty o‘clock and is open pupils up to age of 20 years.| The Wednesday evening meetâ€" ing, which | includes onies â€" of 7 n . Science ling,| is at 8 a strip until I got them," said© Mr. Marsh. "I tied a red bandanna handâ€" kerchief on each. When I got them to on I put them in shirts and pants, but I had a lot of trouble at first keep them from undressing right/in the hotel, they were so hot and Â¥ncomfortable." This trip from their native junâ€" gles to the very heart of civilization meanks little to the three little white Indiains. They are, perhaps, the loneâ€" liest phildren in the world. And quite the thost bewildered. + §€ little girl had worn clothes, but : ither‘ of the boys had ever worn gles meal Indi liest the â€" \ mid, He is Dr. Cuthbert Christy,; of | the! Smithsonian Institution, and an | expbrt on trophical diseases. He has made a fl;"orongh examination of the white Indian children, â€" _ _"J believe Mr, Ma?:? has made a. _gregt discovery," he said. "But not so thuch in the field of anthropology as In the field of trppical medicine. hete is an imeresr&ng disease egâ€" peciklly ctl)‘|l't!w;'allerxt in the West Inâ€" dies} which is known Bs leucodermia. Whin T.examined m children I fourd mn&‘i:gs on t more symâ€" mertical those zou observe in the West Indian cases ; "If we could get a commission here|to investigate these cases T think | it would lead to important results.| There has never been ‘any success at ng at the cause of the disease fe m the: West Indian cases, and it has been tried repeatedly. But with | esd observations localized as theyl are, it seems to me the maybehope' of finding the cause and devising 'j cure [+ t v. P. .C. ivLieï¬' t, D.D., Rector. ev. . (Philip \.|: MacDonald, M. A., Assistant. _ Higbland Park Presg Pi2 L“;‘g'l’ifï¬un taken of 7 ) malidge, Jr., yo\mrakm Prikident, wha died last weel en t 2P k Wighin r asg wa t;!ecf'ixou favorites play. _ __.â€"| ernumber of charges to be worked in a crucible before it is thrown in the scrap heap. ~ _ #l f It has been discovered that gqlrun through a correct burner arrangeâ€" ment into carefully built crucibles secures a longer life for the m itter than has) heretoforé been <possible. It has been found in times past that the average crpcible will give Trom thirty to thirtyâ€"five charges of brass melting and then ‘have to be thrown into the scrap heap. The improveâ€" ments aforesaid enable a much greatâ€" ' Prospects are exce:;‘ent for * co:fl- siderable extension the iploys | ment: of gas from the mains‘:?fthé Public Service company for the ‘purâ€" poses of house heating. . Numérous ‘house owners are making the 1 4 sary installations. Engineers 0 the industrial gas department expect that the season of 1924â€"1925 will joj n with more than double the nu ï¬t of customers now on the list of . | using this serice. §P* > For some ‘years past it has been recognized that aluminum melting is a very desirable load for the gat inâ€" dustry, and quite a bit of apparatus has been installed in various plants for melting this metal. For Alumiâ€" num,casting work, and especially for sheet aluminum work, gas has proved its efficiency. In melting of brass, however, there is a different condition to be met. Temperature required for a long period of time is so very rixh that no matter what fuel is used the crucibles have deteriorated very rapâ€" idly. _ _A new employment for gas supâ€" plied by the Public Service company is presenting itself in brass melting, a fact created by recent imp ments in crucibles. 14 | ago Other New Uses of This Conven: ient Fuel Reported By: : .. Bervice Co. f UTILIZE GAS FOR For any pastorial service call upon Mr. O. Lawrentz, 113 North ‘Green Bay road, Telephone 814â€"R. ._ , f West Central Avenuq.j;‘, f W. F. Subr, Pastor, _ Sunday schoolâ€"9:45. C alh English serviceâ€"11:00. $ The pastor will be on a vécation covering the next two Sundays. Hi place in the pulpit will be occupie by Mr. | Milton Reinke, a candidat for the ministry. The members of the Sunday sch and confregation â€"will meet at th church at 9:30 a. m. Transportatio will be provided. Will those that hav automobiles ~ volunteer â€"to Rssist Everybody is heartily welcome, _ t | Avenue [ s Rev. Hugo Weichelt, Pastor Therf.l will be no services at church Sunday. < The ‘annual picnic outing will held this Sunday July 20th, at forest :;teser've south of the Dun road, #bout one quarter of a mil east of the Waukegan road, . x sho outdoor service will be held. abo 11:00 &. m. , «t _â€" ._North avenue and Lauretta Place O \Wm. B. Doble, Minister _ _ . _ 9:30 a. m.â€"Sunday school. : . 10:?‘ a. m.â€"Morning worghip. . : 10:45 a. m.â€"Morning worship. Se mon by pastor, _ t | 7:30 p. m.â€"Evening service, | Friday, July 14, Ladies Aid socie will meet with Mrs. Max Lauridse 874 North avenue at usual hour. + GRACE M. E. CHURCH or. N Nation Mourns ZION LUTHERAN HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINO Green Bay Road & Homewoo ST. JOHN‘S EVANGELICAL HEATING HOUSES 8t tp T l e people think. the i r ather is due to the fact that) the A§is of the earth is slipping. 80, I take it to one of the excellent of| this dity and get it fixed up. ||; Shat such students as they gend to |§hat school will ‘be given a spec ';um in fire insurance trhiping ‘CIne of the features of the plan, beâ€" ginning with the second semg ’l:â€" of ihe first year, will be three h ‘;‘; s of [@ractical: work in the offices df the (iMsurance companies: and as »rany. jnrs in the classroom. h QI ce ?rk will be in the morning nc the ‘gpecial ) instruction in the aft@rmoon. || "This is the first time that Bip inâ€" sprance business methods ha 3!~ n thught on the basis of partâ€"timie in th ofl?‘and partâ€"time in g: s&â€"| pom over a special course -‘f“‘ ng two. years," commented E. C. Davies, $sistant dean of the Northwestern [{niversity Commerce School. (!f{Uniâ€" versity .training for business es eptives : and â€" prospective ‘exedutive: hias been demonstrated successfully in | Miany other lines," he con 5’ "Now a group of the most progré ive | fike insurance companies of the ¢ ... fy are acknowledging this f t nd | asking Northwestern Univelsity f t§) help them recruit their staffy g with | yHung men‘ who, in future yea ‘-}‘ i | qualified to carry on the @re t} biisiness their elders now directff â€" | . furnish free scholarships in the orthwestern University Se of ommerce with the understarading _ For those who like more ?' ion in â€" the ‘stories they read thkre are: : Sabatini‘s "The Snare," a ktory of the N?oleonic wars; "Ba ;;- the Magnificient", also by Sabatini the plot of which is laid in the|time of Lonis XIII; "Wild Horses" q western story for which there is Always a demand, and for those who like the sea, "Race" and "Cap ' Maceâ€" doine‘s Daughter." Many o ‘ ts there | are, with Edna Ferber‘s "Bo â€" Big" still heading the list as the reatest in demand. t o | ' Twentyâ€"eight of the largest rance companies of> the â€" tes have joined hands in. ual educational movement 1 y hope to provide for the ung executives of experier Eili_ty, These companies have .__Most of us delight in tray ling, but a great many must do their Wraveling from an armchair with the aid of books. No section of the warld but may be visited in this way, Viry easâ€" ily and quickly. A few of the recent travel books which carry u j}‘f- Eurâ€" ope are; "Ports and Happy Places" by Cornelia 8. Parker; " o) you‘re going to Paris" by Lan fMin and Palen‘s "White, Devil of thH Black Sea." "Galapagos" by Willidiy) Beebe, and "Pearls and Savages", Â¥] Frank Hurley tell: of islands and @puntries little known. Galapagos is ,'} group | of volcanic islands 600 mile ‘yrest of Ecuador, while "Pearls and ©avages" tell of the strange cannibalisfl¢ tribes f the island of New Guilga who had pever seen a white mig» until apfï¬n Hurley : explored | their untry. $ Biographies, the life storigh pf real eople, are far more intere ¢ and ascinating than any fiction Kcnry, | olt, the publisher, has writlkn the tory of his life in "The G&W#ulities f an Octogenarian Editor." Hé came n contact and knew intimately) many n contact and knew intimately) many ‘&rominent men of the past fiffy|years. is | reminiscences include}|"| widely nown men as Turgenieff, thea Rusâ€" ian writer, Cleveland and ‘(: sevelt )oth Presidents of the United |$States, English and American write 8 Uf such iote as W. D. Holes. Char ,_' Dickâ€" ns and Mark Twain. Otis nner, he famous actor tells of his IMe and tage career in "Footlights a :1 Spotâ€" ights." | Still another b ) ‘p'hy vhich ranks high, although the date f publication is not so rece Life and Letters of Walt age" which is widely read ussed. Fls o f LAN INSTRUCTION . IN INSURANCE RK ew Course In Céï¬uiwrce hool Of University Suppo t By Underwriters 4 ‘There was a time wh M | summer was thought by most pebple to be the season of the year for lkht readâ€" ing. When a hammock ; be ocâ€" cupied and the very latest Hest seller be read. For those who Mill favor the newest in fiction there Whe; Edith Wharton‘s four new "no ' "False Dawn,"â€" "The â€" Old Ma "The Spark," and "New Years Day." Each one is very short and piglures the life in New York city duriny t decade. of the nineteenth century. ‘WThe fourl novelettes complete the cycle ifrom the forties to the seventies. »v“n. Canfield needs no introduct gh to the reader‘ of modern fiction, (Her new book "The Homeâ€"maker" (: us a picture of family life but @ifferently . than it is usually thought pF Here, the woman goes daily to b Hiness and the husband manages the home. | THURSDAY, JULY 17, LIBRARYX NOT eys the ini the ime of estern ays a 1 favor ; Edith "False "The ." Each the decade e inâ€" ited un- by Ives and L summer | le to be readâ€" be ocâ€" seller 1 favor ‘aphy date s the Hines | disâ€" NORTH SHORE BUICK C Store closed July 10th to 17th to prepare for sale. Open for. busilless Thursday, July 1 at 9:00 a. mnt®"*Come early for first chhige O‘NEILL HARDWARE CO. STUPENDOU Entire stock was slightly injured Ty fire, smoke and water _ | July 17 to 19 Inclusive| FIRE SALVAG CAE When better automobiles are built, Buick will build @ 29 &Socond lStreet 40,000 stock of Hardware, Paints, China, Sporting Goods, House Furnishings and Builders‘ Suppli O‘Neill Hardware Co. from every department.. â€" All merchandise in this store MUST be sold quickly regardâ€" less of cost or value. _ Standard Six LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS â€" in one day in one day saw the new . M.‘*Come early for first choicte. See it for Yourself Why? Because everywhere mdyimamu%{atdwnew“m ardSix"â€"the that sets a new standard of quality and price. Announcement of the new Buick whiely 200000 pooop mc baat ldutzonc on the first day this $ BARGAINS OF Telephone H. P; vOLU 496 [ i ® if # Ab 4 Â¥4 8 i)