<3&AZO) By JOHINi DICKINSON SHERMAN HAT is It? \V!ii? made it? What does It say ; "It" is a curved chunk of granite just dug up on the western edge of Rocky Mountain Na tional park In Colo rado ? a sort of rock image. I haven't the slight est idea uiyself. That's not surprising. Hut neither does anyone else, apparently. And that is surpris ing, considering the expert knowledge of the men who frankly admit thai they don't know, and can't even guess. Hut it is evident that this stfange chunk of granite cannot he dismissed with a shrug and a smile. For here is what J. Allard Jeancon, curator of the Colorado.. Historical and Natural History society, and former special archeologist for the bureau of Ameri can anthology of the Smithsonian in stitution. says about it : "!f this ston? can be proven genu ine, it is the biggest tind in all an thropological research and antedates anything on the American continent , going to establish the remote anti- j qulty of man. I have never seen ; such remarkable outlines of dino saurs and mastodon." Is it genuine? Aye, there's the rub. ! That's the first question I ask. and ; you ask, and everyone asks. (Heuuine it is, in a sense, beyond a I doubt. That is to say: W. I,. Chalmers, who lives on Wll- i low creek, in the Grand lake dis- j trirt of Colorado, was enlarging the i irrigation reservoir on his homestead. I A man with a pick was breaking ; ground about six feet below the sur- j face. His pick struck this chunk of granite. The chunk was unearthed. Naturally Mr. Chalmers was inter ested. He spread the news. I The tourist and publicity hurejiu of | the Denver Civic and Commercial as- j sociatiort got the derails, photographed ! Mr. Chalmers and his carved chunk ! of granite and sent out the story with I pictures. Good chance for publicity!) ? But the fact that the Denver Tour ist bureau sponsors (he story is pretty much proof positive) that the finding of the stone is exactly as told here. You see, this tourist business is an important matter iti Demer, which proudly claims to be t he irateway to the national parks and national monu ments and national forests of the ! Scenic West. The bureau's publicity j work is high class. The scenery of j the Scenic West is easy to look at, | and attracts millions of visitors each j year. Moreover.- Colorado is well ? fixed in the matter of antiquities, with ? its world-famous relics of the prehis toric Cliff Dwellers In Mesa Verde Na tional park. So the bureau doesn't have to do any faking. In fact, Harry ; N. Burlmns, the live-wire executive | secretary of the bureau, would prob- j ably lose his Job if he did any. Sft, it's safe to say that Mr. Chal- ? mers did dig up by accident this iden- j tlcal chunk of granite on his homey stead near Grand lake. Now. as to the stone. The photo graphs reproduced herewith give a very fair idea of It. Here are some details : The stone Is fourteen Inches high, ' nine inches across the tablet and about twelve Inches through to the back. It weighs fiCi pounds. It is granite of a bluish tint, and is about as hard as steel. The Thimble in History One of the most interesting histori cal facts about the thimble Is that In old Roman times, according to Seneca, the- prestidigitator performed the "tind the little pea" trick with the brass or bronze ancestors of the mod ern thimble. That was before the day of the modem "shell game" About 2fi0 years ago the quaint custom sprang up of inscribing posies and *for get-uie i? ?ts" inside the thlnbie, and it In effect the stone is the Image of a sitting man who holds in front of him with hands that have but three fingers a tablet inscribed with un known characters. One picture shows the representa tion, above the arm and leg of the man holding the tablet, of a huge land reptile. Some of the experts sav it is a sauropod, a vejetable-eatlng di- I nosaur. Another picture shows a different kind of dinosaur. This, the experts say, is a carnivorous dinosaur. Be neath it is a carving of a mastodon, j as anyone can see. As to the symbols or hieroglyphics j carved on the tablet, they are unde cipherable to date. The experts say ; they are not anything known to arche ologists. What are the relative periods In the earth's making of man, mastodon and dinosaur? Well, here are the princi pal divisions of geologic time: Cenozolc (recent life) era Its du ration is from 1. <>00,000 to f>,0(XJ,? HH) years, according to various estimates.. This era is divided into two periods, as follows: Quaternary period, divided into re cent and pleistocene (great Ice age) epochs. This is the "age of man," and of animals and plants of modern types. Tertiary period. This Is the "age of mammals," of the possible first ap pearance of man and of the rise and development of the highest order of plants. The next era Is the mesozolc (In termediate life), with a duration va riously estimated at from 4,000.000 j to 10.000,000 years. It is divided Into three periods: Cretaceous. Jurassic and trlassic. This era Is the "age of reptiles," of the rise and culmination of huge land reptiles (dinosaurs), of greut flving reptiles./ of birds and mammals, of palms and hardwood trees and of coal. According to these divisions of geo logic time, which are according to the standard table accepted by geolo gists. It looks as If the dinosaurs were pretty much extinct before man put in an appearance, and that the earliest man and the mastodon may have been contemporaneous. That be ing the case, the prehistoric man who caned this chunk of granite may have drawn the mastodon from life. But where did he get models for his two very lifelike dinosaurs? This, question, however, doesn't amount to a gr?*at deal. For every day in every way man is apparently getting older and older from a geo logical viewpoint. Tinie "was when the Cro-Magnon man of the French cave was considered the oldest human exhibit, but he dates back only al?out 100,000 years. The Neanderthal man, found in Prussia, was perlmps 'JOO.OOO years old. .Then the scientists found I in Java the skull of an erect man-ape Is said that In those days the thimble served the same tender purpose of the engagement ring of today. Leather thimbles were used for a time, but were too vulnerable to the sharp prick of the needle. i Accidental Discovery. The accidental spilling of a bronze liquid on the kitchen table by a liandy man about the hpuse, paintlnu the home radiators, has led to the discov ery of a new "way to protect wood from moisture, according to Curdle I*. (pithecanthropus erectus), reckoned to be about 500,000 years old. t And now Dr. J. Q. Wolf, a Canadian anthropologist, has just found in Pat agonal a fossilized skull, of which the t fosslllzation Is of sandstone of the tertiary period of the cenozoic era. I)r. Franz Boas. anthropologist at Co lumbia university, sa>s that this skull, If authentic, will be much older, pos sibly by 500, 0 truth, as well as rhyme!. The Synura want * * ed to yet ac- "Began to Enjo> Ever>q if ' thtd'wat?r Themselves." they tainted. Though that's a slight exaggeration? They're not as bad as they're painted ? They're really harmless; that Is wh/ The little Synura did sigh, "We'll have to give the people a sur prise." And they did! riddLes What made the moon laugh? To see the star fish (starfish). ? , i ? ? e . i What cracker can you never set light to? A nut-cracker. ? ? ? Why Is E the most unfortunate 6t . letters? . . k Because It Is nevef tn cash and al-^j ways In debt, and never out of dan*** 1 "NOBLE RED MAN" ' .h ? jL Indian of the Frontier as He Really Was. Found Highest Enjoyment in the In fliction of Suffering, and N- - Brave in Battle. During the period cf the Spanish risk in our West ? it became, actually, an Indian risk ? Indians killed nearly three hundred white men, women and children, and wasted, burned and de- i stroyed a million dollars in properties, | They were, more than anything else, destructive; tliey loved excitement; and what they preferred above all was | running off the live stock of a cara j van ; then they could get some fresh i meat and horses and till the remaining I horses and cattle \\4th arrows, shoot i them at point-blank range with old i firelock fuses. The Jlcarillas were dmnken pottery turners; the Utes were the best armed ? j of all the local tribes, they were su- j ' perior in war and hunting. But their j war making was peculiar, and highly | reasonable, in that they Insisted on j event circumstance favorable to them- ] selves. Failing tills they wouldn't J tight ! For attack they preferred the j passage of the late moon ; and it was 1 their pleasure to happen on some de tached woodchoppers, a lonely mes senger or a small party of wagons in j j a narrow canyon. j Occasions like those', gave their ! sense of humor and ingenuity full j "play; If they were in a hurry the mur- ; dering would be swift, the scalps se- ?, cured without ceremony ; but when the J j situation was safe they lingered over I preliminaries and refinements. It was j their ambition to lay bate terror and j uncover pain, and their inventive fac- j ulties were endless; there would be more premonitory touches of steel and i flame, little whisperings of torment, the feathery edge of agony, an eter nity of hours before the blackened end. The Indian regarded this as nor- j mal, an end to be avoided, of course, hut faced with the inevitable, they ac cepted it in the image of men of stone. The objections, the tenderness of the white race, seemed to them wholly un reasonable; the cries and expostula tions they must have regarded as no j less comic than conte;uptible. Vanity both in conduct and appear ance was the mark of a proper mascu- ! line carriage; the men rather than the j women painted ; they eradicated every hair from their beard i and eyelashes I and eyebrows, and, slitting their ears to hold pendants, lun g beads to the weight of half a pound from ea<-h. For ' the rest, they wore broech clouts, moe- | casins and leggins of strouding, and a j rug; they wove their hair with gum ! and paint, trinkets and feathers; and, I ! at war, coated their ."aces with char- j coal. ' The bows they car -led were three; and four feet long, nade of elastic I wood, elks' horns, ;>r, more infre- | quently. of buffalo rl,l i\ but bone was Inferior to the bols d'urc wrapped and j lined with sinew. They carried, as I well, lances. the inevitable scalping : knives ? in the South" vest there were no tomahawks ? and shields of elk hide painted with the *igns of the enf infes they had killed. At peace in the'r villages the shields, and sheafs of pipestems j wrapped in red ar.d 1 Hie cloths, were hung on tripods before the^ lodges of buffalo hide nibbed soft with the brains of that indisputable animal ? a buffalo liver dipped !n gall they con sidered the greatest of delicacies ? and there, to a Utile drum and a ? squeaking pipe, the*/ indulged in dances of a most humorous obscenity; j there they were domestic. Solemnly they slnp^d their naked and solemn sons, and varied the srriok- ; ing of their forma! an?'l informal pipes ; by the food with winch they literally ' stuffed themselves. In their philosophy and existence, in their fate, there was no tomorrow. ? JosepN Hergesheimer in the Saturday Evening Post. Fooling the Dugs. A motorist in the South once'stopped i for water at a dilapidat ed house where i a barefooted man, leaning against a! rickety fence, was gaz! jr, fruiting height, usually thr ,r fo feet from the ground, d?'p?Mi.|it,jr , the vigor of the bush. Blarfc ries require more severe pruning th] the red varieties as tW <.m A . . A Bundle of Ranere Raspberry Plant*. canes should be removed and the growth checked In the summer by pinching off the succulent tip* of rht new canes at about two feet from th? ground. Since the new rones d<> not all grow at" the same time it is neces sary to go over the Hushes several times during "the stfmmer. In th* spring the side branches \vhi