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2 fall 21 feet in a single night. Transportation remains at the most primitive |eveu, dugouts on the rivers. head an in the forests. A few dogged ploneer plnntoru have made the rich soil yield them ' d shoulder packs WILD JUNGLE 208 " {a good living. Cotton and bananas | Land I5 Ceded o Gountry by mm".‘m :;223‘?;;"5‘;".:;::; aming the country as jpain Colombian Govt, at the height of her power. Hun- dseds of years ago there were — Washington, Apritl 20. (#— A volted, wiped out the Spaniards, South American boundary disgpute of | and captured their wives. A trav- long standing was settled when Co- | €ler will push on to such a place as lombia ceded to Peru the Putumayo | { Loreto, holdly marked on the map, | 1egion pecently. ‘only to find a few empty hws now Perw, by the award, adds a hook- | Used occasionally by the fonest In- shaped piece of wild, tropic forest- | dians as a market placa ©d upland of about 13,000 square| The situation of the wjies to her northern territories. country is not hop(‘lfiu, the society There is a temptaton noted by | 53Vs. Iquitos, a part with 20,000 the National Geographic Sockty to | residents, lies a few miles away. think of Ecuador asa wedge be- | Freighters steam to Iquitos, 2,600 tween the two republics of Pery|Miles distant from the mouth of and Colombia. Ecuador's wedge, the Amazon. When Putumayo pro- however, does not extend deep |duces. her products can be carried rnough to scparate the two nations | t0 market which Dow hecome meighbors| One of the most irritating ene- FSoisia SENIanl: Fonanare mies to life iy the vampire bat. F tiod ha 1; It will seek out a man or animal our Dallons have been con-| . eep cut a hole in the skin, and osmied 4o he dispute over ferxi: oo™ s plood. So skilitul are Syt e ]’”"”4”“"'*“d O srim | the vampire bats that a man often S Mea e razil | g not aware of thelr visit until | .s‘! ttled their ;]\lfrv nces in 1851, | he finds a pool of blood in the Colombia and Feuador came toan | oo e 5 POR O Poed I EAC | agreement in 1916, Colombia and | weakened by the bats' attack. % Peru made a racent treaty, but the | = dispute between Peru and Ecuador over a large blork of land east of the Andes remwins. The region awarded to Peru by Colombia CONSTELLATION IS hes | north and east of the territory still | | ~ NEAR FINAL BERTH Peru will be long in taming the | Putumayo region. Dense forests, | . ‘ whose trails e knosv: 1y t . 1 Seattering tands o Tmtrin, eover| (] Frigate May Finally Rest at the foothills. Torrential rains feed fickle rivers that pour their floods | into the Amazon. A trgveler on the Putumayo river saw # rise and | “It Just Happens” says Edna Wallace Hopper, “that Fort McHenry Fort McHenry, Mr., Aprfl 20. UP— | Spangled Banner, the old !rl;lte\ vour shoulders, for conveniemice and | Constellation probably will tind a ! custom's sake, are covered And | permanent resting place as ons of how fine the texture of thekr Skin!|the “immortals” of the American “Your face must be the harbor|navy. | for inpumerable specks of dust and| It {s the plan of the Star soot, lashed hy\spm;xed Banner assoclation to | the wind—treat- | have the famous vessel put into cd harshly day |port here for the last time on De- in and day out. | fender’s Day, September 12. The 8o {if you association was organized in honor thoughtlessly at- | of the writing of the national an- tempt to clean: them by Fraacis Scott K | it with saap and | a prisoner on a British wa | ~vater, ugly, Baltimore harbor. | large pores, The Constellation, now at New seamy rough- | London, Conn,, is believed to be the ness result. oldest frigate {n seaworthy condi- “Your face is|tion possessed by any navy in the cntitled to the| world. Built in Baltimore in 1794, | hest of care. lts‘ was ordered out for service even easier than | against the pirates of the Barbary | the hit-or-miss|coast during the closing year of method of wash- the eighteenth century. Among her | ing, wmch places agdditional tax on | crew on that expedition was Llout—i‘ an over-burdened skin. John Rodgers, ancestor of the late | “My French liquid cleanser, which | Commander John Rodgers, hero of I call Facial Youth, goes to the|the attempted seaplane flight to depths of your pores, gently, ac-| Hawaii a few years ago. During tually removes the dirt and sooth-|the war of 1812, the Constellation ingly undoes the harm of the wind | was blockaded at Norfolk, but three | and dust. It has a fresh, clean|vears later the frigate was in scent and s by far the best method | Decatur’s Mediterranean fleet. lh'-htlkw. {many villages until the Indians re- | Putumayo | | from the present top of the moun- | Here in the harbor of her birth and \ States Geological Survey and home site of the inspiration of The Star |secretary of the National Academy, | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, ANCIENT TRAILS BEING UNCOVERED Were Made.Belore Grand Can- yoo Existed’ | ! Washingten, April 20. (#—Dig- | ging back about 25,000,000 years into the recorda of life on this con- | tinent, Dr. Charles W. Gilmore has added to the Smithsonian Institut- | tien's collection a number of new | specimens of footprints and trails | of long extinct animals as a result of his most recent trip to the Grand Canyon National Park. | Dr. Gilmore, who is a curator of Paleontology of the National Mu- #cum and has recently been in Florida secking evidence to deter- mine whether man existed in America before the end of the glacial age, has just completed his account of his third expedition, last year, to the Grand Canyon. | As a result of this trip, which | was made with the financial as- | | sistance of the Grand Canyon ex- | hibit committee of the National | Academy of Sclences, the known geographical range of the foesil !tracks in the region were consid- crably extended. All of the trails, he said, were made by invertebrate animals. It | is clearly indicated that a great number of these creatures crawled about there in the moist sand be- fore nature had bulit up the moun- | tain through which the Colorado | river for countless years has been slowly cutting its channel. ,That | sand, now in the form of sandstone | strata 900 to more than 1,300 feet | | tain, bears the record of their ex- | istence. ! Dr. David White, of the United | who accompanted him, discovered | tracks of extinct animals in asso- ciation with foseil plants, Dr. Gil- | more relates, in two widely sep- | arated localities, on the Bright | Angel Trail and the Yaki Trail. The plants were in an excellent state of preservation. G. E. 8turdevant, Grand Canyon National park, naturalist, another member of the party, found a slab of well preserved tracks on thc Bright Angel trail, and subsequcm- ly has announced the discovery of | fossil tracks in two geological for- | mations on the north rim of the | canyon, further extending the range described by Dr. Gilmore. Boys and Girls Trade High School Courses | Huntington, W. Va., April 20. (® —The old order of things has found | a complete reversal in the Hunting- ton high school. Getting an early start in dem- onstrating the equality of the sexes, girls have invaded the| manual training department which | previously had been conducted | solely tor boys. ‘ Next year the school plans to In- | i 1 know of to protect and cleanse the | face, Get Edna Wallace Hopper's The soviet government is encour- | Ta¢ial Youth at any toilet counter, | aging the manufacture of tractors in | 75 cents.” i Russia. A SALE of TAILORED HATS UNUSUAL! In the variety of attractive, in the new brims and ornaments—and in In the newest colors— Black, navy, soft green, Lucerne Blue, Rose, Beige and others < In all Headsizes others. Smartly fashion, up-to-the-minute styles— the amazing values offered. 95 E season’s most fashion. able straws are featured — Visca, Milan Hemp, Patent Milan, Novelty Weaves, and models await your inspection. troduce the boys into what has heretofore been women's exclusive sphere. A course fn home econom- ics for boys Is being worked ont. TOMORROW — ONE DAY b ONLY! STRAW $7.98 $3.75 tailored in the new a host of alluring PRICELESS WANPUM i wampum recently added to the col- It will be called “camp cookery” and will teach the boya the basic principles of cooking and food valuea There are 12 girls registered in the manual training course. They turn out household articles with as much skill as the boys, W. A. Childs, their instructer, says. | Fiber furniture weaving is taught with much success. BELTS IN MUSELM Additions Made to Collection in New York Albany, N. Y., April 20. P—Four almost priceless belts of Indian lection in the New York State Mu- seum make it one of the finest groups of these “historical docu- ments” in the world. The belts were left to the mu- | seum by the will of Anng Tread- well Thacher, whose hushand, John Boyd Thacher, purchased them in 1893 for $500. The four new belts in the col- lection are known as the Hia. watha belt, the Washington Cev- enant belt, the Wampum to Mark the First Sight of Palefaces and the Champlain belt, The Hiawatha belt is believed here to be the original record of the formation of the Irequois League. The exact age of the belt is unknown, but it is believed to have been made in the middle of the aixteenth century. The Washington Covenant belt was the one most highly prized by the wampum Lkeepers of the Onondaga Nation. It derives it name from its use during the presi- dency of George Washington as a covenant of peace between the 13 original states which he represent. ed and the 8ix Nations of the Iroquois. The third belt was made by the Iroquois to commemorate the “sight of the first palefaces” but it s not known whether this rvef- erence is to Spaniards, French or Dutch, The Champlain belt is virtually | a duplicate of the General Eli 8, Parker belt, also a part of the col- lection. It commemorates the ex- cursion of Bamuel Champlain into the country of the Iroquois in 1609, Tasmania is starting a movement to make the island a recreation re- sort for visitors from all parts of the world. The Newest Frocks Burst Into A genuine Mangel's value-giving frock event for Women Misses who insist upon the newest fash- ions — the latest otyl:.d fntuus!”ls [{ ette g § glaxy of color and design. 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