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Show -- t nim.nirrn r i,r ii nrr , , 1.1 w .i., i iin .iii.inir' . ,,, r ,. n ., , mi.. ,. . , 1,1 , nmnr,, r r n, . ..m.,.,,.. LEW FREE PRESS. LEHI. UTAH First Bowling a la Panda Is Easy and Lots of Fun 3 w V f 6 TV V All-Unite- States 'Old Glory9 d m&fi - ffl A . AST :v "Old Glory" itself, the first American flag to be made with bunting, is the treat nred possession of A. N. Goldsmith of Los Angeles. Approved by Abraham Lincoln three days before his as sassination, the flag has 13 stripes of red and white and 37 stars, all but 10 of which are arranged in a diamond shaped pattern on the field of blue. It is the only flag of this type in existence. It measures 12 feet by 8. Holding it are Mary Long (left), and Bettye Knapp. American-manufacture- d tenpin style is a little unorthodox, but quite effective. At Chicago's Brookfield zoo she opened that determined stroll through the mathe new bowling season with a neat toppling of four pins. Her follow-upleswill get the rest of the pins, however. Mei-Mei- 's p Girl, 16, Is Mother of Triplet: '2' if v:v;;::::v::--:-:::::- 'IDEAL CO-E- They Sailed Alone From Hawaii COP FLEET-FOOTE- D x f I I Miss Mary Grabhorn, 17 years old, of Short Hills, N. J., was chosen as wife of a truck driver, re- the "ideal American college girl" in Mis. Paul Grimm, cently gave birth to triplets, two girls and a boy. The triplets (shown a contest which barred all "career above with mother) whose combined weight was 15'2 pounds, were re- girls." Miss Grabhorn, who entered ported "doing nicely" at a Steubenville, Ohio, hospital. Mrs. Grimm said Blue Ridge college as a freshman "gee" when told by nurses of the triple blessed event. Her husband, who this fall, was chosen on "avowed recently got off the relief rolls, was too surprised to comment. pursuit of marriage and a home." Plows His Way to Championship LEADS LEGION 'AW W 1 Lash, former Indiana university and U. S. Olympic track team star, who has become a member of the Indiana state police, appears in his new uniform. Lash, who holds a top position among the e world's running stars, was named by the state police board along with 47 other "rookies" who attended a police training school at Indiana university. Don 1 two-mil- Pictured on their arrival at Santa Catalina island, Calif., are Mr. and e Mrs. William Crow, who completed a voyage from Hawaii in home-buitheir schooner. With no other crew than themselves, they were out of sight of land for 47 days, encountering adverse winds and two weeks of continuous rains in 3,000-mil- 40-fo- ot lt mid-Pacifi- Woman Pilot Sets Soaring Record c. CZECH LEADER ' ' j; f . j , Stephen F. Chadwick, Seattle '"''', " est was given the high office by acclamation at the annual Legion convention in Los Angeles. J 4 at- torney, is the new national commander of the American Legion. He ' r 1:1 a r - Paul Stiefboldt, 22, of Naperville, 111., is rewarded with a smile from his wife after winning the sixty-firs- t annual Wheatland plowing championship at Plainfield, 111. The youth defeated two former champions and a field of veteran farmers in the farming "world series" to win the crown of champion plowman. Typhoon and Flood Visit Japan's Capital .uv 'i!J: "'VW 13P5S!wr,'' -- i - " ' ! ;" ' 4J '''' ' hits' - ' ' ;' President Kduard Benes of Czechoslovakia is shown in a recent study. Called Europe's "smartest little statesman," Benes is attempting to preserve the sovereignty of his people in the face of tremendous odds. In the glider above is Helen Montgomery, pretty Detroit girl and He was elected in 1935, succeeding the only woman soaring pilot entered in the American open soaring meet Prof. T. G. Masaryk, who held ofat Frankfort, Mich. She set a new American woman's duration record fice for 17 years, since the republic was set up. by keeping her motorless craft in the air for 7 hours and 22 minutes. G JS JH Central Europe's Trouble Spot M A N y o HERMANS I Breslau I IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA CZECHS fyTvl SLOVAKS E22 POLES IN HUNGARIANS fTTTm 2P Z-v- ) A U J2 U) ruthenians JD JL, J"ViYi.. ---. Munich More than a hundred were counted dead, thousands oi homes demolished and damage extended into the millions when a typhoon visited Tokyo recently. Downtown shopping districts felt the full force of the typhoon, and heavy storms caused overflowing of nearby rivers, bringing flood waters into crowded areas. These Tokyo residents made use of mat-boat- s and other Improvised means of getting about. likHUaw I - Till A. ' (BUDAPEST HE U (S A. M tJ T j i HI II . UMA.NIA. Map shows Czechoslovakian districts Inhabited by other racial groups. The areas shown In black are h largely occupied by Germans and would eventually be ceded to the German Reich under the . proposal for dismemberment of Czechoslovakia. Anglo-Frtnc- |