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Show rTT jjCiSDAY, Page The Dragerton Tribune Dragerton. Utah FEBRUARY 6, 1931 i W.W 4iyyf y I ' f Ycv To x4 . I' v,x - ' ' W'J4'VJ 1 . X Yi y y. i t f' v .b&X .sx i " i r 4v,Ty, v- -' c S O' I" : V ..- '' ,3VX 4y A V 7 stikw V f ty nx5 v,ix;& - . . & - . ' yy . AW v4 S"-V- . rteh?T: A x 4 ; v 4 wv.v . s x J $ 4 v- x a A - "'zy & l -- f. v" - 1 - ; vrr X v i 4 V iiriiinr'iiiiT4iitifio" - . K ' f( ' 't 4:' ' V - 4'' s' 4 ' Xvv Xa a a'Xnja . s 4 ? X Z- - r T it f?t ' 1 SV, v....x- - - 1 ll v '' ! 'X : X .. h, S A Ns IMMIGRANT CAMP AFTER DELUGE IN ISRAEL . . . Among the farmers of Israel, a recent torrential derainfall was a big occasion for thanksgiving, for the rain saved the crops of the land from what was scribed by ail the agricultnral experts in Israel as a major catastrophe However, the large rain brought are the immigrant camps. This nothing but a large portion of hardship and misery to the tent cities that tents collapsed and almost 11 of camp near Tel Aviv became a quagmire. About 20 per cent of the them were flooded by surface water that the ditches couldnt carry away. The IsraeU army rushed help to those most badly in need. ni .X.k.i.'.s.A.A VW.MV.VI . i VX4" 9l i :X V ? . ' ,"i 0 r w' ' S , , K ; . vs ' fx- - W-'W-X-a :- s ; M 1x. - fjj Ip x X y.:' X';-S-- : .J. :5r- - . x. 4 av Jv v v Vv 4, ..4 r,. sssr:',., , ?i V 4W ,v ; -- X v s t 4 Sr' '''. V'.!'; ('.'it ' pv,.Sw '' S S X, W A ;4v'sv v z? $ .A yxv4 ! A i f - & - r i vN' ,X , $& " X- .. x ,- -- .. j ? . . - -- Y, , . " V x: 4 v X t i- f . ;. f 4 ' ! tx' V J ' ' VA x , - S t'it 1V1 a l STAR TAKES THE SUN . . . Star of the future, Mitxl sultry-eye- d Gaynor, displays some of the charms that are making her a star at one of the top ranking Hollywood studios. She is basking on a beach near Hollywood. Mitzi can be seen next in a picture about life In a sorority, Take Care of My Little Girli if the name Isnt changed before it hits the theaters. Like many another youthful actress, Mitzi spends most of her time at the beach between jobs on pictures. mpmnmmm MSMlSMn mjri , vV: s t 4 v i h ';4' A'''- !r 4 :: -- 1 V ' i. .i x? v yy, X . . Aii r ' f. y5 v,. v "VoAa . 'i vA!y x'it x,-- . . . ' j . k ' 4 , , ', i:w5Y s' NswsX J f MEET A LA MISSOURI . . . President Harry S. Truman recently attended a luncheon on Capitol Hill for the delegation to congress from the state of Missouri. Here, the President is keeping part of the party entertained. Left to right are Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn (D., Texas), President Truman, Representative John W. McCormack (D., Mass.), and Representative Phil - J. Welsh How did Texas and &assachusetts get in the picture? (D Mo.). LUNCHEON I'wwwy ; y,j ?, 'i X . . . Henry E. Poppe, former Manhattan basketball star, was one of the players FIX HELD IN 'Wy 4 t-- w y jw .1 - I ' , f' Y It it fj 'I 'A - vv wyyww ' A BLAIR HOUSE VICTm BACK ON DUTY . . . Corporal Joesph H. Downs (right), is checked in at the White House by P.F.C. Glenard Lanier as the former returns to duty for the first time after he was shot defending President Trumans life at Blair House on November 1. Downs fell in the exchange of gunfire with Grisello Torresola and Oscar Collazzo, Puerto Rican terrorists. held with gamblers on a charge of offering a $1,000 bribe to fix a basketball game between Manhattan and De Paul. h!WEh)wbwi W x r vy M wwwywywpww11 I ..WWMW.OnW wwyi X . s'-- t, yr v f - x 4f sv ' i A-'--- A Yx k ' - 4f?vx-- ' 4 ? V.t r4 i . i y: - -- i W.tt y f AAi '' - i lCX. ' j V:'y4.T; Uj '41 y& Hin I o' I . '4 ri 5 ; .Xy 4 A , , ' YX v-- . - A'-AM4iAA- ' x: r n 5 ' lMujuijiifififtiiTflnsaiOMiiifi'ifflii'ifirriiiflfiut,r,r 1- - . Colonel Eddie Rickenhacker, famed ace of World War I, recently swore his son, William F. Rickenhacker, 22, cere- -, into the United States air forces. Shown during swearing-i- n Colonel monies at 30 Whitehall Street, New York City, are (L to r.) William A. Ilaviland, commander of the southern New York and New Jersey recruiting district; William F. Rickenhacker and his famous father, Reserve Colonel Eddie Rickenhacker ACE SWEARS IN SON REMEMBERS NIGIITMARE . . Rolf Cerstman arrived recently in New York with an account of his enforced jol in Polish concentration camp. He says the Nazis in 1943 made him throw 600 bodies into furnaces.' 4 .. j AI w - v.i t'$k X V Jr " jit ' - - r, & ' ' t 'YYX''. . a. X fr&VWtf ' ,'A",Syy . X VISIONS OF WAR . . . German school children gape at American Pershing tank rolling out of the Grunewald station In Berlin, one of the 22 heavy tanks equipped with 90 mm guns which arrived to reinforce the American sixth infantry regiment. They were brought into the American zone through the Soviet zone aboard covered boxcars. There were no incidents in transit. With the British Comets already In Berlin, they provide the Allies with heavy armored artillery. v '. ' yA A t ' ? KUCjU. mess hail OVERLOADED . . . Hundreds of future airmen line up outside at Lackland, Texas, air force base, which was caught short t on food, clothing and housing. |