e . e eachn man foughnt for the OTDers wgn. Now the'big man suddenty _ _ wemught his game little enemy by the es .and waist, hurled him to the * round _ and, 'grasping a knife, ap-- :. 'pesared to plunge the weapon into his ff st. . Then he proudily placed one ce t on the seemingly lfeless body _ Wbreast, knives forced high in the air, g 'wa@ithelr bodies swayed back and forth. . lt both knives fell to the ground }e _ end each man fought for the other's 5,» d Now the'bizg man suddeniy _-- venught his game little enemy by the we .and waist, hurled him to the \a¢. round _ and, (grasping a knife, ap-- ; ipeared to plunge the weapon into his Evff t. . Then he proudly placed one . * foét on the seemingly Mfeless: body _ wanid swurg his blade high in 'the air ---- uim & trilumphant gesture. | s M to | -- somalt of tel _\!".f$ the 1 Ei'h _4 tio /' ~Aknives and in n afihe ctanl «_ Qorlltan, ferocious though they seem ',,f' be, arg not carnivorous. If they ® human being or'an animal they Rot @at the fiesh of their victim KT gemerally in s Actensn, r.muu. "Just about as--p'tu!--common," re &o»uu-uun-m Ridge. feller from over at Blipper? Miap got G@runk, excused hbhimself and went out and throwed rocks at the Bouse till Lank got sorter thred of his 'Ruoollnbhnhess and took a couple of ahots :*. Outaldé of that there wasn't ' new,"----Indianapolls News > :m'"hm&m # report in the New York Times "Aelis much of inferes soncerning the "seuntry: and its pooples. 'The folow: "Lag is an Incident: . _ *--~"At the-- frontier.. on creasing --Inte "mation of the nose toward the right Rpinal bones showed evidences of ar-- 'thritis, or inflammation of the joints + "Mow was the dance at Lank Lopp's Puthor night?" asked an 'acquaint 'mace wihose rheamatism had kept him '"tThe guard, a single policeman. When '#e had Anished the mevessary oficial «Geocuments, "right--hand salute!" roarcd Auft. "Quick march !" he sbrisked, and 'Mraightway took himeslt oL. He was A Qurka, and all Gurkas tove Orllling «Choemaecives Iif they cannot got anyome adlee to drill them." * ' We applauded, for at no time dut-- Ing the dance, which was as scientific 3 fast--fought boxing match or saber 'dupe!, did the performers for a single 'mavement lose time with the music. Army of One The Mount FE--rost ciimbers, mak "Mu«--fln.fl. bad at last eccounts reached Sikkim frontler, with dy Boasparte came to their ald, Of Paris streets. This old law, neve: repealed of course, according to cus Som in democratic countries, has been ealled in now, whentbqomm tests agninst the creation of a great white way in the nelrborbood of the Opera, -- During the past few years that vicinity 'of historie monuments has begun to look like Broadway with ts myriads of electric buibs. 'This is mnot to the taste of the: Parisians, who like a subdued melJow light, at Least near the Opera. And fortunate Compared with the size of hig head, PDante had a small face," the bones sheow ; and his features were not sym-- Bonaparte Saves Paris . Once again the muaicipal govern ment of Paris is blessing the name of "the little Corsican bandit," one of Napoleon's nicknames. It seems' that Bonaparte in his day, for inscrutable geasons of his owa, passed a law pro hbibiting the too glaring iMNumination sexeieton is the large capacity of the eranium or brain cage. Thhg is 1,700 euble centimeters, or much more~thas the average even among men of-- high Antellect. Dante's height was--about 8 Seet 5 inches. 'The shape of the bones Of the head definitely identifies Dante, aceéording to Professor Fassetto, with the Mediterranean race, contrary te thae opinions of those who believed the poet's name and family fo han' been of German origin. $ \--Dante's Massive Brain te was not a Nordic, as some f ogists have asgerted, but a member of the Mediterranean n«.' l., declared Prof. Fabio Fassetto of the University of Bologna, in a mi présented to the American Association of Anatomists at their meeting in But falo, N. Y. The evidence is from--a recent examination of the bones of the: great poet. . * | The most important feature of the ukéleton is the large capacity of the Corillas Not Man Eaters ran Danee Copy of Actual Knite Duauel ) amokg the Karo--Bataks mmuhm we werse mat by garage. "The--Meanest Man in Town" will be the film production to be shown at' the school house on Friday might. Guest night at the Woman's> club of Lake Bluff has been fixed. for Tuesday evening, October 28. winged fowls angd w=.-- .. .. fish that erowd. the lovely lakes, furnish all the excitement that a true saports-- man Ccll desire, ahne Mitses Shiclds of Chicago are vieiting their. aunt, Mrsa, William Somera of Ravine avenud. Mr. and Mrs, Eino Dowdall of 301 Scranton avenue, have returned from Binner Fall, Wis.. where --they bave bean visiting foy the past ten days. W. C,. Potter and wife dt Glouces-- tor, Mass., are visiting at tha Frank-- Nn Pattersons, 101 Park place. Stanley Fleld' and family left the _ Mrs. Wright was driving her auto east when the truck made a quick turn and., the two machines r%gmo together. Fortunately both drivers were quick with the bn?u and thus a serious atcident was Avoided. The Wright car was damaged how> ever and had to be 'taken to the The -- basketball -- enthQusiasts . are already getting into trim-- for the tweon. the . neboot team "and . thas of ween s d ' that o the Anuflm. Wwill "be keener than ever., Both teams are. using the school gymnasium -- on -- alternate nights and the first game between Franklin R. Mullor and family of Lake Bluif and Waukegan arrived in the village Tuesday night and 'are at their home, 536 Scranton avenue. They spent the entire summer at their lodge in -- upper Wisconsin, hunting, fishing and enjoying the many ~-- wonderful ffl of ~that wonderful. place. Mr. Ner _ has made ~many improvemenbts tod large estate therse and it is upon as one . of the best hunting . _The school team is much stronger this ~season and will undoubtediy make a good record, 'The Legion team of last year will be about the viliage SBunday On Monday morning the automo-- bile of M. HM. Wright; 550 Center avenue, was in collision with a truck, at the intersection of Truesdell ave nue and Sheridan road. "The way out of this problem next year is to sow clover in the small grain in the spring. It pays to grow sweet clover 'for this purpose even where the soil has to be limed to make it thrive. + "Many farmers have a serious prob-- lem on their hands as a result of the pasture situation," Fraser continued. '"'Their cows are undersfed and too thin to be the most proftable milk producers; their pastures. 'are. so short that stock shold be taken off at once; they have no other fall pas-- ture available and grain prices are high. = _ Urbana, LiL., Oct. lc.---lanc'ab' sow clover in their small grain crops last spring is now making many Ili-- nois farmers fell'h serious pasture shortage, W. J. Fraser, dairy farming specialist at the University of Minois, said todays The absence of clover in stubble fields has caused a scarcity of pasture and as a result many blue gras pastures have been pastured far beyond the limit, he said. . Many of the cows on these short pastures were too thin to be the most economical producers during the win-- ter," Fraser said, discussing an ob servation, trip through these sections. "However, there was no reliet in sight in the way of extra pasture, for no clover could be seen growing in the small grain stubble to.. furnish fall feed. The only way to handle thesa short pastures is to take the cows off them immediately ahd> start the regular.full barn feeding. > Many. dairymenp wil be forced to take their cows of pasture and start the regular full barn feeding earlier than usual, &s a result of this condi-- tion, Fraser predicted. In spite of the abundant rains, fully 90 percent of the grass pastures in the northorn and central parts of the state are eaten to the ground, he explained. LACK OF CLOVER CAUSES SHORTAGE OF PASTORE FEED Cows Wil Be cPut on Winter SOW CLOVER IN STUBBLE LAKE BLUFEF This is the magnaifsent Lake Forest estate of Louls ¥. Swift, where Prince af Wales was the guost whoen he stopped off today for a few hours before going into Chionago, Barn Rations Very Early This Fall. =«. s¥ NEWS ITEMS Whare Prince Was Monday to for their out ----Mn. and Mrs. J. Melville Brown, !fliu _Brown, Mr. and Mre. Robert 'Day. Mrs..Ind Jensin and Miss Jenr sin. . The yearly meeting of the con:-- gregation will, be held on Thursday eveniug when the elders apd trus teea to serve for the ensuing <Yyear will be elected. The Ladigs'® Guil# will . entertain the congregation fi friends at 'dinner the same ning. ,Dinner will be gerved at 6:30 4 Somg new members were .@admit-- ted .to membership in the Union church last Sunday. winter restdence in Chicago, 1550 Lake Shore'drive., 'They will pay week end visits to their eatate 'here as long as the good weather lasts. . The bureau received in all 671,886 ap-- plications® for vocational training -- of which 330,058 were accepted as--eligible ho s rereivicg m from $80 o are receiving to $170 monthly in addition to the schooling they are given. \[To.restore the color of a shellac sur-- face that has become white in spots, hold & heated iron over the spots. Veterans Bureau. Special instruction and in many cases, the use of eleverly ad-- justed artificial limba and other appli-- ances bave enabled hundreds of crippled men to surmount tremendous obstacles ;\hflr fight to overcome the ravages wWaAr. 'Thousands have mastered trades and science, overcoming the loss of limbs by the use of special apparatus and by &z pert training.. Of the approximately 70,-- mmenltillbduzt,fmmlm.h 6,000 are enlisted in each of the {ollowing secupations : h trshsrommarnd 'Houn~ . Eqereeit ts Cennmad s drafting, electricity, fa-en? machinery, salesmanship, tailoring and law. , Disabled Veterans Master Crafts Although handicapped by the loss--of Jimbs or by other inpurice suffered in the war, thousinds of former service then have been rehabilitsted --and completed courses in vocational training through the What the World Is Doing (As Seen by Popular Mechanics w ' _ Compositios of Sea Water * Whil® most of the 92 sea elements are belleved to be in sea water, only} 82 have been found, slanting toward the feed trough, is ex-- tended from --the barrel, and the slop is poured into this, . . "¥ Millions in Cactus _ Luther Burbank, tho.'plut wizard. claimed that in a few yenrs the annual crop * of> the ~ fruit--beariug, | spineless cactus Will be valued st milllions of dollars. ~Barrel fo; Feeding Slops Feeding slops, which are mixed to-- gother in a barrel, is quite a tedious task, as the stuff has to be dipped out of the barrel and fed to the hoga by the bucket-- ful. _ A wuch easier method of emptying tnd;:oub:-: '"'l'h' in two se-- curely set into the ground. 'This is done by boiting or screwing 'around the barre! a heavy iron band, in which two short sections of shafting are mounted to serve as pivaots. A metal spout is nailed to the: edge of the barrel at the mouth to facili« tate pouring the slop. A wooden chute, Ocean Mystery Ia -- Seen in Island Covered with C:bbages -d-h-ulfl-i-h.thu*u_b circle, Kerguelen isiand. or Desolation Land, as it is called, presents one of the "m-yd:zdbhl- ocean,. It is covered strange muk that found hl.'z part of the world. There are also millions of eabbages whith bear large heads of leaves cighisen to twenty inches acrass. [ When he found that some anitoal ha# bitten through one of the eggs under & patched -- the ' hole rubber from an shield itself are readily removable. > -- What is P * may h':h the main q once, but. hasn't, what -- is happening, superseded> it? o , #° s Windsbiéld for Rear Auto Seat * Windshields used omwear seats of auto-- mobiles are tsually constructed of thick piate :fl.' require a substantial metal ~to hold them in position. This heevy @matruction can be avoided saild, 'removing the cigars from his vest pocket and stepping toward hee.-- Jack--0'--Lantern (Dartmoutb), wiihint Yes, Yes, CGo On | "I've never n& a girl before," he ; Gregory says: 5 l "Ciremnavigation m an easterly of westerly direction does not prove the 'm to be --globnlar.: It has been pointed out 'that --circumnavigation '(would :be pessible on a-- fat surface iwm: the North Magnetic Pole at its center." ----The System of the World, Volume 1, Page 234. _ Dr. Woodhoute, arlate.Professor of Astronomy at Cambridge, said: "When we consider that the advo-- eates of the earth's stationary and gentral. position can account for, and of the heavenly bodies) are the same Int the hypothesis of the earth 'at rest and in that of its motion round the sun." ----The Bible plainly and unmistak-- mbiy teaches that the earth is a sta-- tionary plane, and not a globe, There are many facts which agree with the teaching of the Bible, not-- og'thqtmm'flch_uvd. J. Norman Loekyer said: "The appearances of the rising and the 'setting of the sun may be due either to our earth being at rest and the sun and. the stars traveling around it, or the edrth itself turning. sround while the sun and stars are at rest." * It is absolutely wrong for teachers to tell schoo!l children that the World 'Fiyers have furnished conclu-- sive evidence that the earth is a --~Rtementary Physiography, Page 110, R. A. Gregory, F.R.A.8. A glance at the following map of the earth as :a <stationary plane will show at onuce that the jJourney which the World Fiyers made proves . the earth to be a stationary plane just as--much as it proves the earth to be a 'globsa. Infact. to be perfectly fair, it does not prove conclusively either theory, but it does prove one just as much as it proves the other. ipernican gzlgbular theory oft> the earth's shaps bave been londly as-- mn:.ho plattorm and thru the ~press,: their accomplishment of Aying --arouyd the earth . proves conclpsively that:--it is a globe. s We bolidiy--take -- the position, and without way fear of successful contra« diction, that it does not prove any» thing of the skind. A 'The attention of those who the Copernican .globular theory : called' to the statement of one of their foremost advocates, Professor R. A. Gregory, PR.AS. Professor The French astronomer, LaPlace, "The appearances (of the motions Bince the World Fiyors completed air (journey; ddvocetes of the Co-- TS THE EA&RT}&! A GLOBE : STATIONARY PLANE» _ By Witbur Glean Voliva (General Overseer of Zion) On the advertised Challenge It may chelp some students to get . their bearing if they will ponder tha tollowing from the preface of a book wyitten 'by Copernicus, entitled, "De Revolutionibus . Orbtum." ----This written either by CBpernicus £ of his asistants. --It was 'published not . long before his death.. _ @ reference to absolute truth of hood." _ iz fw WILBUR GLENN~ The study of astronomy is intensé-- ly interesting, and one of my m pal purposes in agitating the sct is to cause people to ¢a some: serious thinking for themselves. "It is not necessary that hypot : es should be true or even probable, it is sufficient that they lead to ' of calculation 'which agree with eculation. Neither let.any one, so as hypothesos are concerned, expect anything-- :certain . from _ astronomy, since that sciencs can afford no f of the kind; lest, in case he adopt for truth things feigned for another purpose, he should lea science more foolish-- than he came. . explain, the -- celestial phenomena »as accurately, to thaoir own thinking, as we can ours, in addition.-- to ~whitch they have the evidence of their sene es, and Scripture and hmnt,fi* lmnvor, which we have not; it is uot without a show of reason that: they maintain the superiority of their sys valuable only po far 'as "The hypothesis of terrestrial m« We Can Not Fill Mail or Phone WILBUR GLENN VOLIVA . an hypothesis as it expiained considered withk