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DUST-NO GARMENT BAGS ARE MOTH PROOF HOMANRACEDATES 70 BURDER OF TINE Age of Man Estimated by Some| at One Miiton Years | London, April 13,—Much specula~- | tion as to the age of man hag arisen as a result of the recent discoveries| | of tossil human skulls in South Amer- jca, Patagonia and the {salnd wf Jersey, The estimates as to the an-, tiquity of the human race range all | | the way from ten thousand to a mil- lion years, Dr. Wolt's reported dis- covery in Patagonia of a fossllized L | human skull in the tertiary period, S Made in Blue Odorless and Red Cedarized The Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171 MAIN ST. Coats, Wrapsand Suits at Horsfall's A Topcont which will bestow both comfort and distinction upon its wearer—fashionad of Imported mix- tures and guaranteed 100% Camel's Halr, Suits of rich imported mixtures, platn and faintly plaided Pure Cam- el's Hair, skiifully tailored—retain- ing their femininity by following the newest Parisian modes. A showing that will be appreclated by Hart- ford's well dressed women, Wraps and - Coats of Marvalla, Yaghona, Veldyhe and Twill Cords in Navy, Black, Tan and Gazelle—soma trimmed with light summery fur— each model with a distinctive grace all its own. The woman who wears a size from 40 to 50 will find a nice assortment of all garments here to fit her. HORSFALLS 93-99 Xdsylum Strect Hartford. “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” CLATMS LEAGUE HONOR British Officer Says He Formulated Plan for the League of Nations Long Before Wilson. London, April 13.—The latest at- ‘tempt to take glory from men cred- fted with high honors is that of a British yeomanry officer, Lieut.Col. Frank Hilder, who declares he for- mulated the plan of the league of nations long before the idea was ‘gthought of by Woodrow Wilson. He says he published a book called #A Senate of Civilization,” at his own expense which contained the plan for the league of nations, and which he “circulated to all heads of governments ©of the world. Colonel Hilder, who is a member of parliament, admits he gat the orig- inal idea from the Roman Catholic league of nations which existed cen- turies ago. NOTED ARTIST DEAD New York, April 13.—George Ed- mund Varian, noted artist, died yes- terday at his home in Brooklyn. CORNS without risk of infection 8afely! You can end the pain of corns, im one minute. Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads will do it, for they remove the eause—irittion= pressure, and heal the irritation. Thus you Svoid infection from cutting your corns or uting corrosive acids. Thin; antiseptics s . Sizes for corns, caljouses, bune Toms, Gt a box today at your drugsist's of sboe dealer’s. DrScholl’s Zino-pa in the laboratories of The Scholl . Co., makers of Dr. Scholl’s Foot ot A ppliances, drch Supports, eic. ": Putone on=the pain is gone! FOX’S STARTING "SUNDAY JACKIE COOGAN IN “DADDY” n Start Laughing Now Yon Won't Stop for & | however, may nullify all previous | sclentific calculations on this subject, and the public is now getting a little | charry about accepting even scien- | {ists’ estimates regarding the date of rigin of the human race. Fver since the unearthing of the ashes of King Tutankhamun, who, in the view of anthropologists, is to be reckoned only as an “infant,” as the age of man goes, startling discoveries | | have been made all over the world| which upset all well-established an- thropological foundations. | Dr. A. Smith Woodward, director of the geological department of the British Museum, makes some inter-| | esting commentaries on the latest discoveries in skulls and bones. “For | a moment,” says he, “the public| | seemed to assume that we had found | at last the first man who lived on | earth. I fear, however, that these] conpectures are as bascless as they | are interesting. Since the skull from Jersey is sald to have been found near a neolithic burial chamber, it | is probably much nearer our period | | than any of the skulls of fossil men which show resemblance to their| ape-like ancestors. And since the specimen from Patagonia comes from | a country which has furnished more | | ‘mare’s nests’ in the study of prehis- | | toric and ancestral man than any, ‘oumr part of the world, it will not | excite interest among anthropologists | until some geologist admittedly | gkilled in such matters has satisfied | himself that this is a true fossil,| definitely associated with the remains | of extinct animals.” Who, then, Dr. Woedward asks, | was the first man on earth? “To be strictly accurate,” he replles, ‘we | have not yet found him, although we have some reason to think we know | where to look. In the dim border- | land of time which separates man| from monkey’ there roamed, some- | where in Central Asia, a form of| large-brained ape destined to be the | precursor of man. It is impossible| to fix a date for his appearance, but | we do know that when he came into| being the Himalayan Mountains had! not yet reared their peaks.” It was in 'the Neanderthal, near Duesseldorf, Germany, writes = Dr.| Woodward, that the remains of the| earliest man of whom anything is| M really known were discovered. "Com-| pared with our knowledge of ‘his an- | cestors,”” he says, “he is an intimate acquaintance. But it is impossible to{ assign him a date in years. Swedish | Runnin’ Wild 12,000 years.” “Neanderthal man,” continues the | British stiontist,- ‘“was - definitely a | man. He lived in caves from which | he sallied forth to hunt the animals, | such as mammoth, rhinoceros, rein- | deer and bison,” whiéli then roamed | over Europe. We have found his tools, flint and bone, and we have| found even the bone pins with which possibly the early women fastened the rough skins which served them for petticoats,. We have also found re- | mains of paint and rouge, which seem to signify the dawn of vanity. “Most remarkable of all, we have ascertained that these early human | beings believed in a future life, an| enormous advance in thought. They buried their dead, and with the dead | we have found both stone implements and the bones of animals which had been buried When still covered with | flesh, and were doubtless intended to be used as food in case the departed | spirits should suffer the pangs of hunger.” | Special for Saturday Read the Following Attractive Offer Come to This Store SATURDAY With One Case (100 bars) FAIRY SOAP — at $5.65 — We will Give Away FREE the following: 1 pkg. Gold Dust ... 50c 3 bars Tar Soap .... 16¢ 2 bhars Pummo Soap . 12¢ 5 bars Sunny Mon. ’ SOBD ..iiieieiiian 266 : 5/ pr— VIUSHIS MASTERS VOICE If smaller amount of Fairy Soap is purchased, will give proportionate discounts. T.E. Shanahan CORNER SPRING AND HARTFORD AVENUE THE MILLION DOLLAR KID WITH Starting Sunday THE MILLION DOLLAR SMILE L’Africana=0 Paradiso (Oh Pandil) (Meyerbesr, In fislon Hungarian Rhapsody, No. 2, Part I (Uen) No. 74808 Hungarian Rhapsody, No. 2, l:m II' (L) You Know You Belong to Somebody Else When the Leaves Come Tumbling Down You've Got to See Mamma Ev’ry Night No One Loves You Any Better than Your M<A Double M-Y Don't Think You'll Be Missed geologists reckon his age as about! . | - 'Way Down Yonder in New Orleans—Fox Trot o Dearest—Fox Trot Starlight Bay—Fox Trot Think of Me—Fox Trot or Shimmy One-Step Farewell Blues—Fox Trot Apple Sauce—Fox Trot Burning Sands—Fox Trot Falling—Fox Trot Crying for You—Fox Trot Sunny Jim—Fox Trot Whoa, Tillie, Take Your Time!—Fox Trot You Know You Belong to Somebody Else~Fox Trot “H1S MASTER'S VOICE” | New Victor Records Special Issue Red Seal Beniamino Gigh Ignace Jan Paderewski Iguace Jan Paderewski No. 74804 12-inch List Price $1.78 124nch List Price $1.78 No. 74808 12-nch List Price §1.78 Popular Vocal Heary Barr Aileen Sunley-Bflly-fiuny ~Billy Murray No. 19026 10-inch List Price 786 Aileen § No. 19027 10-inch List Price 78¢c Billy Marray—Ed Sunabl with The Virginians Aileen Stanley with The Virginians No. 19039 104nch List Price 78¢ Dance Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra The Benson Orchestra of Chicago mvv Eny X A The Virginians Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra No. 19033 10-ineh List Price T8¢ Paul Whiteman and His Orchéstra Zez Confrey and His Orchestra No» 10034 10-nch List Price 780 The Virginians No. 19030 10-nch List Price 760 No. 19081 10-inch List Pries 78¢ No. 19032 10-inch ' List Price 78¢ No. 19040 10-inech List Price 78¢. 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HARTFORD Special Values in ‘These are the most attractive of the season’s hats in fabrics, straws and straw and fabric coimbinations. - All shapes and shades— - $4.95 $5,95 $6.95 Values to $12. $3.95 $4.45 Values to $7.50 Attractive Values At $9.00 $12.00 $15.00 Untrimmed Hats.. Flowers and Feathers Specially Priced You Will Laugh Till Your Sides Ache at His Antics—And Then There Will be a Moment When You Will Wipe Away & Tear—And be Prod to do it.