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Show .. Friday, July 19, 1929 THE MIDVAJ.E JOURNAL • Pap Six - ----Beautiful View of the Great Coolidge Dam - Flags of All Nations at the Women's Congress PretQr lfrla camlDc the flap of all natlona lD parade at the openlni of the women's lDternaUonal coarreu Ia BerUD. Germ&Dy. Lynn Celebrating ltl 300tb Birthday -- - - Here 1s a remarkable view of the new Coolidge dam on the Gila river In the heart of the San Carlos AII&Che Indian reservation tn Arizona. It 1s the first multiple dome dam ever built. It Impounds 1,200,000 acre-feet: of 'Wllter to Irrigate 100,000 acres of desert land, generates Ui,OOO horse power of electrlclty, and f.rovides a great bridge for the transcont:lnental automobile highway. . Lincoln ~morial Bridge Is Completed This 1s the new Abraham Lincoln Memorial bridge which spans the Missouri river between Blair, Neb., and Mlssourl Valley, Iowa, which will be formally opened and dedicated on Friday, July 26, with Gov. John Hammlll of Iowa and Gov. A. J. Weaver of Nebraska participating. Tom Osterman, editor of the Blair Pilot-Tribune, Is prealdent of the dedication committee. Thls bridge wakes a cut-otf on the Lincoln highway, shortening the route by 28 mlles. SUMMER GRID COACH Prize-Winning Peace Poster leeDe d111'1nc the parade of 10,000 school ch1ldren that was part of the ceremonies In celebration of the three Mass. The parade was reviewed by the dowagl!r marchioness of ~ who 1s mayoreu of Kln1's L7DDt England. •111i4re4th RDDlveqal')' of the founding of L7Dn, Old "Peppenass" Is to Climb Again RULER OF ELKS Old ..Peppersass," l!rst locomotlft tt elllnb a mountain, 68 years ap, Ua the White mountains, baa been nsuscltat:ed aftel! 25 years and wiD be restored to the U~Qun taiD ~ce, belDg operated by Edward 0. •Jack" Frost, here ahown wtija the veteran englne. Schooner Hopelessly Stranded CoL Walter Pemberton Andrews, past exalted ruler of Lodge No. 78, Atlanta, Ga., who was unanlmousl7 elected grand exalted ruler of tbe Benevolent and Pllotectlve Order of Elks at the slxty-fttth convention Ill Loa Anreles. Bob Zuppke, for sixteen years a coach at the Unlverslty of llllnols, ls ahown teachlDg Barkham Garner, a San Diego (Callf.) State college stude~:u: how to "hit 'em low." Football Is simple, Zuppke says, 1t players wlll only use their bead, keeping It down, tackling low and turning their face lD toward the knee. Zupplte gave a summer COlJl'Se on the sand of the Paclflc at Coronado, Calif., where eighty Callfornia college boys learned something of the IlUDols "system." NEGRO ALBINO Fine Summer Quarten for a Senator JAMES C. STONE aJr ~'ti lh~J tbe old llllaber ldloner .Am&e .&ra'Oe110. Oalff. fte earco. .. ~ ...... was B•nn•tr tlriqwD . lohn J. Eppenstelner of St. Louis, Mo., won first prize tor the peace poster, photographed above, In the contest conducted by the Christian Herald. The jury consisted of Charles Dana Gibson, Nol'Dld" Rockwell an Gltford Beal. .( This ftve-months old negro girl of ClnclDnatt Is one of the very few aepo chUdreQ In medical hlstory to be bom a pure albino. Tbe cblld bas piDk e,_ and white balr and skiD• ~ father ud mothu are both deacl This 1s the yacht ll'eUcla Oil wblcb 'Dblted StateiJ Seaator J'.., p. Metcalf of Rbode lslalld and JlrL lletealf are IJPGdlq their nrmer _..._ a 8UWil waten. TJala IJp l*ll tit* , . _ -~ z m |