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Siai is LIFE— By aui • • • •' VNPOP tf A wac MEM> TALUK THAW VOURS Fossil Plants Saved in Region of Black Hills National Museum Is to Be Erected in South Dakota. New Haven, Conn .--Fossils of one of the richest petrified forests ever uncovered soOlrwill be arranged in a national museum to be built in the southern Black Hill4 of South Dakota.. v Prof. G. R. Wieland of Yale uni versity, international authority on fossil plants, said the museum will be erected in the center of an area which includes the most complete of all North American petrified for ests. He has fully investigated the area, which he early filed under the homestead laws to insure protec tion for the fossils. He later sur rendered his equity when congress voted it a national monument. In the area were found formations 120,000,000 years old or more dat ing back to the age of dinosaurs. Included in the discoveries were petrified "flowering cycads" whose modern relatives are the rare Chi nese maiden-hair tree and the so- called "sago palm." Final development of the will cos FAVOR POLKA DOTS i Without it the visitor would not see anything but the scenery. "After all," he said, "the visitor need not go there, as many have done, ex pecting quickly to find and take away valuable specimens. Except for some accidental fragment mean ingless to the layman, nothing is to be seen at the surface fulfilling the untrained conception of petrified for ests.** Recently, with the aid of CCC help, quarrying brought to light more than a ton of additional speci mens. These were found just as they were left in their final resting place of a hundred million years ago. "Uneroded, unbroken, of specific type, nothing approaching such a collection in one place has ever been seen before in the course of the even hundred years during which the cycadeoids have been known as fossils." said Wieland. "Rightly displayed in the field mu seum planned for the monument, this material alone will afford a sin gularly fine exhibit "There Is a wealth of lesser leafed, branched and more general ised columnar types as highly in structive la tracing relationships and la proving hew these plants, es fantastic as the nahioa vegeta tion of the trepica or tugh moun tains. may yet be traced te their CONSIDER THE ^ LILIES By LEONARD A. BARRETT anmed rvletlvi m, muck like the ret day megai Vtoal to Ctom While the apersmew i it i mil Its ere to B itorato to fee toetogtol end togtaa . fee prarsm of petrSfire- 1 to e Mb to agestol mtovewsy to fee chew wfefeni ketoeeee Vke Carved on the stone of the "Sing ing Tower" in Florida, a memorial to Edward Bok, are the lines: "The kiss of the sun for pardon. The song of the birds for mirth: One is nearer God's heart In a garden Than anywhere else on earth." Music, art, and literature are ca pable of expressing not only the beautiful but also the impure thoughts. Not so with flowers. However we may define the nature of that source of power which gives the flowers their strength and beauty, we no doubt all agree that the nearer ws get to nature, the near er we ere to the creative intelli gence of the natural world. If we are sufficiently learn many valuable our gardens Much of tbs development of our civilisation is attended wttb deal af netse flesneeae bee maty the anteae af eur greet ctliao ae (bey Mend In n center af (be mdMArtn! JfouseRofS Jfints J ' By BETTY WELLS ^ ' G IVE us a glimpse of your linen closet, and we’ll tell you more about yourself than even you have suspected. Oh, we’re a regular Sherlock Holmes when it comes to towels and sheets. We’U know how fastidious a housekeeper you are, how foresighted and forearmed you are, how economical, how meticu lous, how good a manager, not to mention what you consider is im portant. Speaking of sheets, here are the Ten. things we think ere Short sheets are a sance Get IM-Inch SWEDEN'S PREMIER late soul of the country gentleman of his time. \ln that day of por traits there was no more perfect portrait of the English squire than one of Chippendale’s chairs; hand some, upstanding, stout in the legs, broad in the seat, straight in the back and square in the shoulders.** Chippendale was certainly the most versatile and prolific of fur niture makers, and his designs have a distinguishing individuality about them that survives genera tions of copying. The first important worker in mahogany, a new wood when he came first to London, b# took his inspiration where he found it—from the Queen Anne psriod, from the continentals, from ths heathen Chinese. But always his hand upon it shaped it to his own originality. Sometimes ha usad a straight squared leg; sometimes he used s carved cabriole leg ending in the ball and claw foot. Hs used ladder backs, the ribbon back, vase shaped becks Intricately carved and Interlaced, fretwork backs with a secant, all dacislvaiy dlf- yet an 0a*«af at by ash* • are snip la be | and shsgy «f aaaetty as and < af dl • *. AM Pnaad Cyvad i Mat ims. as a mass Marvad ad bM laai anaat la Ms af Mma" — «l VtafosM aMaa Ms vtaw a nan^ ssaty sdnssannaJ snihss sf and ad dMI fodas sash bbs flar-awnp Mndmndan •naan. asMsad ssans ash ad nhseh ns ansa asarea nn Ida and is la Mass as Folha dais are la MMt la ear this asnsan Rare, they are •tut* an the navy Mat sd a asnady craps rad- dlpBls Ths draas aademsaih la a navy blue erttb a flange af whits ptque finishing the neckline and ex- to the waist m front. tw* 4-e I • da Wwasam ww*« drawn kp fidsnnsnd snanaasa la dM Ssaaetw*•< W st ms Vain asfiwal af Rna ana The dw sagas "vflMw warn and Rd ad EM (Be there fin Ms wnaaaBwai m Bm i • sines *>•* a yewtery nsgBay be set la fed ad«aessps. asaardfeg la WMdnd ferns. Mans —The ewy a ataertaps hranaa fewaaa eawchss fee da M levtag A yemg aaan appeared enth a bland and brunette sad dstnMdad a license The dark asked adnrk was the prespscties knda Ths yeuaf aaan dapped a cam The Mend •elected heads sad ths brunette tails. m • is era eppnwwneasfe fee a ■nar hstd wapSL da deal i ■m** seemly The mi npd d da asnaher af lamp w da sinrid nr dfeng fenrw Firm, snare wnean a na are napeneas fiw rawdeevt cm ART mm AMAZE A SCIENTIFACTS MINUTE ^ BY ARNOLD Sterilizing . T T / * 11 / r i * ,CE * 1/ Ice wmich If W 1 W IK If# 1 3 IN If# m STERILIZES / si WATER AS / y 1 5 * IT MELTS MAS BEEN DEVELOPED in Germany. Animals in TME AIR- Of TME vtOtLO's _ ANIMALS, Alt AfiLf TO R.V Of fiUOf TnfOUQM TUI Alt * IfTY dd TNf NUU/ fur Add Renas pnwwdflMdar sd a nee yneasprafned rsesafifiy at de rwenang team sf hd kanw m fearfe | beam The te**uy kawfisd ksnfe dadeas d da baanpreimd eJaap de I wnd sd da smdy radnn da ssfindr- I Pup sd da prmm ddwas*. whn w I parte 1 in arty hanwn far fid addma ’ m acananhim Rama means growth, ea pans tee. prepress Perhaps as. but d da amrftd «f beeuty atlsnra and not aama Is Indicative sd growth Did yea aver try la listen to a My grow? Ws have seen ths water My unfold its petals to the morning sun. and draw its beauty back an thin itself at the hour of sunset. Silently does it work; almost effort less. H seems. No visible strain, nor struggls, nor violent exertion: the lily writes its biography in noiseless beauty. Whence this free dom from strain? The answer comes from the lily itself. It teaches us the lesson that obedience is liberty and freedom; disobedi ence is slavery and death. The lily obeys law by surrendering itself to law. It lets nature do her work and does not try to interfere by self- induced efforts which defeat natural purposes. It accepts as its portion of life, sunlight, heat moisture: and grows. Its silence of surrendered life is unbroken even in darkness, cold, drouth l Many lives are stagnant, because the lesson of surrender hiss never been learned. Emerson said: “The man who surrenders himself to a great ideal, becomes great." A great incentive, a controlling purpose, a singing will, never command us until ws have surrendered ourselves to a great love. It may be a person, an ideal —It matters not. just so it is a great love that draws us out of our- •elves into the vtiaitsod spirit af per- amslity pund>d at its samrs of bo- tog A face Muaso wttb fee jay af •sgvme when ibm aorvtoe to dans be and ofiady mrvenPared to R few fee • toatoar fe a cap dtoadd ae «arm ton tons aamaaa stay bane to P» fewm-dwPMhfemaa wdnaa aw emas «f gaoetob ton mpp am la (torn to asanas am toPw^mmaa las wo «aa Safe m aamfis fto lam ws fe toast tom ’kwm a n*w*«-« a auamaww to ton mas mwa tore toto to pm smhw same earn And smafeevad atotofimp to afea seotosbto la I aewtofe prued tomato Ttotod to am toll aw toagmeed a towsfiL - • • I 1st tototy fiw cbmre tadtoto tokto rewmekabto csbmet maker af tom Kagtoad, Aad we ran acr— ttda pan to one af Barak "Chippendale w to the laarticu- economic, physical, and social. No man can makt himself grow, but every man can make himself worthy of growth. Consider the lil ies. They toil not, neither do they spin. But they take away the stress of toil, and sweep the soul clean of its foolish pride. • Western Newspaper Union. Jules B. Bachs, banker, has d ns ted his world-famous t20.000.000 collection of classic art to ths pub lic. Ths great collection of gems from the brushes of Italian, Flem ish, French, Dutch, German and English masters will be housed in Mr. Bache’s home in New York, permanently endowed. "Pepper” Now Boxing Manager to a mob are brought at once through a vertising is ths great voice of In dustry which we are all prtvilagad to haar. • Great Talent How often the highest talent lurks in obscurity!—Plautus. mOROIINEfH SHOW WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY wiSm Unlooked For Pleasnre Pleasure that comes unlooked for is thrics welcome.—Rogers. Lazy, bored, grouchy Tee may fed th» way as a remit sf Ooastipatloa Is an saai are. It dalls your enjoyment of the beat entertainment and the best Mania. Ts Deflect const! padoo Is to te- v1t*sertoastrnnr>> Forjuur bealtkli asks, take Black Drmagbt at tbs first toga sf rnesdpedoo. Tea’ll sosn feel better. Here* a toxadve that to Suck-draught A GOOD LAXATTTB W^tch . u u n v 3 Doans Pins CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT ret *>n r*i TtorR. mrm wnth owory Rtfftifila l#^l PrrfI v»wy*r'F"<''r” P'Vv* 1 tmli t ii > ii«.enm«.i > i • - ’ mm fRfe - ^ v I -r-- ».w— Spend a part of your vacation in Atlanta— altitude 1,050 feet — The Henry Grady Hotel offers cool com fortable rooms, excel lent meals and every desired service at most reasonable prices. Con venient to theatres and shopping district. Auto storage in n fireproof garage with door pick up «>d delivery. HENRY GRADY HOTEL ATLANTA i l» toko feto tofeR mam tom atom Rk to ■■■■Rl saw am aaatoto eafto samnm ■r too to tomaw tomm asato km • MOMto Sw me wsmto towi i ■et Wa aatvi