» gavairy detauchment guided by Arapa-- 'hves, had crossed the Big Horn, at the: # (present site of Thermopolis. Lange % they threw themselves into the q4 & below the big spring and gent & religtous rituals. 'They urged E* } '%he soldiers to do likewise, declaring E5+ lithe waters were blessed by the Great ' ~{iBpirit and that bathing in them would i _ ward of evil. E*3 A legend almost as old as the Sho-- E3 phone tribe itself says that back in the bbeginning of things Ishawooa, a chief | ewho--ruled all the Indians of this see-- ttion, alone knew of the springs and e * Jng. among the largest in m a favored haunt Of the Great Spirit old Indian myths are to:be®believed, \ i. Today large numbers of Shoshones, 'Arapahoes and Crows camp in num-- Bers near the springs, invoking the MdtthtWhmM their ailments, They also believe g-nmvmm-g them protec-- tion against evil. vrisited them annually, thus keeping. bhis power and health. But when old "age Aually came he directed his braves tto take him to these waters and allow, thim to die in them so his spirit would +be bleased by the Great Spirit. . Ishawooa's only son, Wapiti, was ¥A --weskling who apparently would rmever be able to assume his father's Harry Lange, an old Indian fighter, recently visited --the springs and re-- galleithatwmhehnhe.ua gnember of a scouting party with & garairy detachment guided by Arapa-- fhoes, had crossed the Big Horn, at the i lendership. But as he died Ishawooa «~coundided to Wapiti the secret of find-- 'ing the Great Spirit's favor by bath-- | Ing in the hot springs. It was thus that Wapit! became strong and even-- 'tuaily an even greater chief than his Generations later the great. Sho shone chief, Washakie, submitting to the advance of the paleface, ceded the: Big Horn hot springs to the United States and the state of Wyoming on condition that a pertion of their wa« ters be reserved for free use y the weak UInd sick of both peoples, Crickets Stopped Auto >== wmx.n.m.dlinrugf Clsco, was half way to 108. 4 mmlmmdmf ots which sudden!y appeared to come from nowhere early in the morning. The insects crawled all over the auto« mobile and into the draught Roles of the hood of the machinge 4o such adm-- bers as to stop the whir! of the fan. Before Ernestine could go on he found 4t necessary to cleau out all the Space under the hood ovor his engine, He took out about 20 pounds of crushed crickets which had been cft into & jelly by the fan in its revolutions. The International Way _ The settlement of $100,000 a year. on the duke of Mariborough by his prospective father--in--law, William K. VYanderbilt, back in the '00s led Cort-- landt Bleecker to say at the Kaicker-- "The duke reminads me of another titled foreigner who called on a» other milllonatce ome day and said: #"I ghall be glad to marry your daughter, Mr. Rox,. provided--*-- : "'*TYes* said the milllonaire. *Yes, provided what? "ThWe foreigner sgmiled quietly. "'Just provided,' he said." > * husband, Sir Samuel, when he can: not fill a speaking engagement. "One of the heaviest duties of the wife of a cabinet minister is HMstening to her husband's speeches,"" siys Lady Hoare. 'As my husband bas made as many speeches on air questions as the strike leaders have made on the coal situa-- doulthhklhnhhvhm well," she' explained --at a 7 where her husband was scheduled~to DCRK Forest Fires Minimized -- | Radio, airplanes and wireless tele-- phorwes cut the toll of forest fires ml Ontario to s minimum in 1926, ac-- cording to a bulletin is:ued by the department of lands and forests.-- On-- tario maintains a fleet of 18 byfro-- planes, which patrol=the~timbéred areas daily, says the bulletin. . Look-- out towers equipped with radio trans-- mitting apparatus and wireless tele-- phones are located at strategic points. When a blaze is reported, airplanes carry forest rangers and fire--fighting equipment to the scene of the fire. Whole chapters of® the prehistory of the Chinese are expected to come to light as the resulit of an archeo-- logical erpedition to Manchuria and Tokyo. Relics of the Stone age and ence in Asia are sought by --the;aci-- entists in charge. From what has already been discovered in these re-- glons there is every indication that the surface of this particular habitat of early man has only beep scratched yet, archeologically speaking. Lady Maud Hogre, wife of the Brit-- Graveyard for Sale _ Anyone who wishes to buy a per-- fectly good graveyard will find one for for sale--no business, n.-m} was opened several years ago, but the officials say there have been no clients. An effort is being made to dispose of the grounds--to a local parish priest, and the ministry of home affairs has, because of the unusual circumstances, Here mn the body of Booby Hatch, , Who looked in the tank with a 1iguted Parts of Booby wore naver approved the sale. of Wyoming Springs Researches in China a¢ # 4 W "Aud the Lord mid, Let us go down, and there com -- _ another's spotch.. 56. the Lors semiem' Them «Bres® hpnags sc a drk + it nplion Aepmem ut popedionns. inE aprnpt roure uo inz AGL LN w M found their language, thet they may not undesstand one _ from thence sipon the face of all the carth, _ _. haned o the uit ealted Iirecls becuare the Lood dhlthies ._scutee them tpan the «4h one speech, And as me#t journeyed from 'the east they feund a plain in the land of Shinar: and they dwelt there. Abd Abrsham took Seral We wife and Lot his * builded an ahar upon a mountain brother's son, and the souls they had goiten in HMaran peared unsto Abrsham, and said,® ard went forth into the land of Cansan, and there he _ give this land. 00 00| * _ ~beatnn dergei § h m e o "ap ol e / Teaned ce . K »-- o0 s_ " /m _ e T e L2 b~ oo it & . Abd Abrsinatnstmatenss heve 2 Snd his pile? o Tw whle ts baa ihaile toe Woa--were too many," and) .&\ ham waid unis Lo: Let there be mo serile benwern thee aiid Lot with his Tnto e WBP And Abcsherm wes, ")~ 'could not dwell sagather\. _ _ _ ---- * * _ {§ land me, for we ase beotheon." . _ . ". . very sick in cardle, in siver and in gold.' And Lot siso' 5> _ ._A there was strife between the herdmen of Abra: --* _ * Then Lot chost him all the plain of Jordan. . And had focks, "and_herds, and wow 4 And the land --was /# hem's cattle and 'the herdmen .of Lot's cattle. : And Abra-- The Lord said to Abrsham after Lot was senarsied fegen Lo reae ts u ReRbE tm s Ne oib c n t ie 4999 7'? a 331 s ?,,_;,',:A. "wer + ols * * v.. '.& v'_as qsit'. ks Mose i ies T y e 191 _ 19 Y iR Sm Q" &3--.;3 BA ie B oi c 92 o8 4 i£ The 'Bible ' in Pictures i ane 'S' _ ud theoe wes afamine in the Jund: went down jnto Egypt to sojourn there: was gricvous in the land. Py yars ap l hi. Ni 3e + it Mess Fakie x W C s u200 on © Co e ciaiioants wesy 1 teke 290 1 on o c Tess ol 9 3 Phac \* o an? ces enoibie t on, : P e 1 . _ is n packs ol o in Phroant | is on cce oo aa e of" ~ And Abrsham When Abrsham was come near to enter into Egypt. he ; for the famine said unto Sarai, his wife, Behoid, thou art beautiful: Say, ; l'nylbu,lmi-ln-v-"""""d "> uot kill me: that my soul shall live because of thee. 4s KOR §#0 w o sher> ..