OCR Text |
Show LEHI FREE PRESS, LEHI. UTAH r World Events 'Through the Camera's Lens a Flies Atlantic in ' the I (me 1 7 r - Be ft au- - ' r- - t-- ; x. , EE . v jrroViv ... "T'-w.: v- 1 ! - iCL i J 7, v v aft. 'Crate' Second-Han- d h 'Kj of 3rit- - Jf Lf jtX ! "v & Vif - - lSf ww it ' I V 4 I V v TarJ and 'tin ire) flew the Atlantic ocean in a second-hantranscontinental flight from for $900. he which Previously making a bought monoplane California to New York, Corrigan took off from Floyd Bennett field and landed at Baldonnel, Ireland, 28 hours and 13 minutes later. Refused government permis sion for the flight, he left the field saying Los Angeles was his destination. On landing he said he had made a mistake in his direction. P. Corrigan, young American aviator who Douglas polJ Japanese soldiers pole their boats over the flooded waters of the Yellow river after Chinese troops breaks in the dykes to delay the Nipponese advance. 2 King George and Queen Elizabeth of Eng-whose recent visit to France strengthened the military alliance between the two nations for defense. ."Big Jim" Farley shown addressing the meeting of the national gathering of the Young Democrats of nerica at Seattle, wasn. k- .- 1 nine-year-o- d, ld non-sto- p lngle-mot- de andi 'ith: be ac- - RED MENACE King of the Pie-Eate- rs i , and HELPS HIS PUTTS President Inspects Shipyard ,ir,ni ra in, ; J IN. Pol of . hsv 'jAt ft V" I III 1 bww vrv Jf Vf J I . rer 1 Wally Berger, incinnati Reds from the New York ikeitiants a while ago, has regained e batting form that made him a terror for National league pitchers year or two ago. His excellent fork has contributed to keeping the up among the pennant con fers. With his hands tied behind him, LeRoy Cobb, age g ville, Ga., won with a crust to spare in a thirteen, of Gaines- contest that attracted lads from all over the countryside. LeRoy ate his lunch at the usual hour, but that didn't handicap him at all when it came to eating chocolate pie in record time. a meringue-covere- d pie-eatin- Daddy Has Gone A-Fish- EMPLOYMENT GAINS I (J If; If H y$ 1 , v'V' e, Astor Kin Sells Golf Balls . i'.'. ?' , ... d Memories of the titanic days when the utility king of America were recalled in the recent death of Samuel Insull in Paris. The famous Chicagoan passed away at the age of seventy-eighThe utility company empire he erected in his heyday crashed after the 1929 stock market panic, causing the loss of billions to investors. Insull, who came to America as a poor young man, rose rapidly to success. He was secretary to Thomas A. Edison for a number of years before be entered business in Chicago. .1 k fir' ' ' ? t. "'"'i'''' '' ' of John Jacob Francis Ormond French, impecunious father-in-laAstor, III, who was refused unemployment relief and a WPA job recently, is shown selling a customer a pail of golf balls for a quarter at a golf driving practice range at Brighton, Mass., where he secured a job. French is paid $5 a day and 50 per cent commission on all golf balls he actually sells. w Cruiser Is President's Vacation Home Rifles for U. S. Army r-- ' Shawnee-on-Delawar- he was Libbey-Owens-For- Rapid-Firin- g President Roosevelt makes a brief inspection of Mare Island Navy Yard, near Vallejo, Calif., before he proceeds over the Golden Gate bridge to San Francisco and thence to the Treasure island site of the 1939 Golden Gate International exposition. Here the Chief Executive is snapped as he greeted Commandant David Worth Bagley. INSULL PASSES John D. Biggers, of Toledo, Ohio, who directed President Roosevelt's unemployment census last January, believes better times are ahead for industry and employment. He cited the case of the & ' Glass company, of which he is presJ The wife was away visiting. So faced with the problem of what to ident; which has rehired 1,300 workp with the baby, this fisherman rigged up a seat and sunshade for her ers in the last three months. Big!iile he gers predicted a fall upturn. calmly fishes from the pier at Miami, Fla. New There is nothing orthodox about style of golf play as witness his "standing-sitting- " putting style, demonstrated at the recent Professional Golf association's meet at Pa. Diegel says his stance is the "most accurate method in the world. It isn't pretty to look at, I'll admit, but it's sound." Leo Diegel's who came to the 1 ' ' jaw y w" ' 4 1 y.M '91 y 9 A , if privates at Fort Hamilton, N. Y., test the new Garand model, replace the Springfield rifles they are now using. The new rifles are capable of firing The Sprlngfields are capable of firing a maximum of 15 rounds per minute. Army semi-automat- 60 rifles which rounds per min- - L 9' ' u f: ' ... r '.,'.. .." ir an mm- "1 4 .: ' .vtuit The cruiser U. S. S. Houston, which President Roosevelt has used for his South American vacation. Th President reviewed the navy's massed fleet in San Francisco harbor before starting. |