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Show PAGE SIX THE NEPHI. UTAH TIMES-NEW-S. Thursday, June 26, 1930 BUNKER HILL Opening the "Door of Unity" in Plymouth, England Pasadena's Substitute for the City Dump Br jtMEi a. tavi.oii (Oda sun at tb dedication of th monument, Jun 17, 1841.) and atlll wra tb wood and hill And th wavei below yet alum-b- e red. Tha breexea Hk tit of a aummer Mm niKht All tha dewy houra numbered. Tha aentry'a tramp from tna camp. With hia tone f haaty warning. Cama low and clear to tha yeoman's 'a 1 " ear watched the early dawning Aa ba Tha beroea thought, aa they bravely wrougbt. Their country's altar rearing. Of a noble land by valor'a hand Made tree and home endearing. In firm array when broke the day The deadly charge they waited. And aide bv aide In ailent pride With akill tbelt pruweaa mated. t mr I K yy t--.. .riV' . Mr ( t ' - ' Jf?" a i r 3t ATI ' avv Albert Hatstead, American consul general at Plymouth, England, opening the "door of unity" leading to the I'ryston house of St. Andrew's church. The service Is unique In the history of the church because of its International character. Coincident with the opening of the door, the unveiling of the memorial to two American naval olllcers who were hurled on the spot In 1S13 took place. In the Path of --- , s E t.yjr(nt..i j a .y.41i.M ,).' J f it i ' " non's flare 1 evening llgl.t Its crimson turf o'ershadlng. ii rsF U -- - dyes xx Today a throng with festal song. The sacred mount o'erMowing, Have gathered there with pomp and All prayer. hearts with rapture glowing. On the gory bed of the martyred dead. Its shade majestic sleeping. Stands freedom's pile In glory's smile. Many Changes in Stars oh the American 'Hi i il .rt&Til.i,M,Wi . I ,i i, f r I'll V U i' - y 1 .waWK' Frances Miss Williams, a com- paratively unknown golfer playing In her second tourffament, annexed the Women's Eastern Golf championship at the country club course at Rrookline. Her card for the 54 holes of medal play showed a score of 2T4. more than ten strokes ahead of her nearest rival, Mrs. J. Anderson of the Cherry Miss Williams repreValley club. sents the Brookside Golf club of I'ottstown, Pa. FINDS GERM OF COLDS 1 rf:,,,iisa One of the two gigantic eagles that will stand guard over the entrance to the new Soldier's and Sailor's M morinl bridge at Harrisburg, I'a. Each eagle weighs 200 tons and is 22 feet high. It took eight freight cars to move them from the mills of the Indiana Limestone company, Bedford, Ind., where they were carved. Seeks the Title of "Miss Universe" y. Spanish-America- r: Flag As new states joined the Union the number of stars on the flag gradually Increased, so that the soldiers of each of America's wars fought under a flag different from that of the others. In the Devolution the flag hnd thirteen stars; In the War of 1812 it had fifteen; In the Civil war for twenty-nin- e the southern states were never recognized as being Independent): In war the flag the had forty-fivand In the World war forty-eighthe same number Thomas S. Gates, a partner In the of stars that the field bears at this banking firms of Urexel and Co. day. and J. P. Morgan and Co., who has The first (lag of the United States been chosen as president of the Uni- to symbolize the thirteen states by Mr. Gates horizontal versity of Pennsylvania. stripes was carried by will play a leading role lu the re- the first troop of Light Horse of organization of Its corporate struc- Philadelphia In the summer of 1775. ture, allowing Dr. .Tosiah H. Pennl-nm- The occasion was Washington's ap provost of the university, to pointment as commander in chief, devote his entire time to academic when the Light Horse escorted hlra to Connecticut on his way to take phases of the administration. command of Ihe troops at Boston, ; f Their crystal waves are blending; But peace divine around the shrine. Her boundless harvest wearing, Blda us proclaim to a deathless fame Our fathers' matchless daring. i .JM ( A. Above the fields are bending. And the waters atlll beneatb tha hill Eternal vigil keeping. ...... y fl erls: i-- Once more the skies with aummer HEAD OF U. OF P. Ago- KBIT" ' pt Had holy grown as freedom's throne Like ber starry crown unfading. Tragic ruins which lie in the trail of destruction left by the series of giant twisters which tore through the east central portion of Minnesota and the west central portion of Wisconsin. Five persons were killed, injured, thousands of dollars worth of property destroyed. The photograph was made at Randolph, Minn., one of the towns hardest hit. - X O'er freedom e birth were playing. And that green height, with tbe CO VA' MA, iiJLJLJLJLJLi Then waved the aword, then blood waa poured Oppressions host dismaying;; Death rent the air and the can- -- r For Harrisburg Memorial Bridge WOMAN GOLF STAR - if An exterior view of the new "mechanical hog" at Pasadena, Callf with city employees ramming brush and wooden refuse down Its "throat." This machine digests three to four tons of brush, etc. In about two hours, turning It into pulp to be burned, thus doing away with unsightly city dumps. The pulp can be burned In a retort. Tbe hog consists of underground revolving jaws which grind tbe refuse as It is fed Into a hopper. a Midwest Tornado They Start 'Em Young in the Army wi ; J? n t, ''1 I I J J n, Lwn.J .iiiivtmwaww.. w....... w. urM wwawwwWffwuwmMMilnJ son of Col. Leonard L. Deitrlek, Q. M. C, taking a hurdle at the presidio of San Francisco. The young man is quite a horseman, his tender years notwithstanding. Daniel Deitrlck, WINS RADIO MEDAL HER TRIBUTE What the Hatfields Are Like Today Q m if 'K 5 A. F. Tfeiffer of the University of Maryland medical school, who has announced the probable discovery of the germ that causes the common cold and the vaccine that will cure and prevent It. Doctor I'feifTer has been studying the J. Dr. - its 4 yn i 2 Ml j causes and cures for the common cold for the past seven years and he has Isolated a small organism which he has established as the cause of the coughing and sneezing costs American that Industry $2,000,000,000 a year In time lost from work. mm I 1 Next Y4 di f Tub,' , s i fir i 1 In der of succession In case of death or disability of the President. To her surprise one answered with "the one who Is next to him." Which Is tha Index Finger? The forefinger, namely, the finger nearest the thumb. Is known as the Index finger because It is used to point with. "Index" Is derived from the Latin word meaning to point. Pathfinder Magazine. , w.. ,hmm Many of the present generation remember the famous bloody feud of the Hatfield and McCoy families In West Virginia. This Is a new and Interesting photograph of the present Hatfield family. They all hold public oflice in the town of Williamson, W. Va., with the exception of the mother and the youngest son. They are, left to right: (seated) Mra Greenway Hatfield, Sr.; Mayor V'Irt Hatfield; Sheriff Greenway Hatfield, Sr. ; and Jailer Wayne Hatfield. Standing, left to right : Assistant I'ostmnster Shade Hatfield ; Postmaster Willard Hatfield ; and Greenway Hatfield, Jr., who Is attending the University of Virginia. teacher an Indianapolis school hnd nsked her pupils In a written examination to give the orA Alwyn E. W. Bach, whose diction as an aunouncer for the N. B. C. ling earned for him the 1030 medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. "You've gotta admit That 1 look cute, Specially when I go Into tuv salute." Those Who Are Tiresome) The people who are always talking about what they have done are almost as tiresome as the people who are always talking about what they are going to do. Loa Angeles Times. T I V !TlaiBfa:- - .'WW'S, 11. l..eJhiBat; 4 Miss Beatrice Lee of Salt Lake City, Utah, who will compete In Brazil for the title of "Miss Universe." The title carries with it a cash award of $10,000 as well as a tour of the world. men's sections of department stores "Village Smithy" in England The famous smithy, Immortalized by Longfellow In "The Village Blacksmith," Is snld to have pictured a Kent (England) village which Longfellow visited during his second European journey. retnll and 7ft per cent of men's socks and 64 per cent of his ties. And yet we wonder why men leave home I Los Angelea Times. Greatness, says Emll Luiwlg, la always productive. It Is never receptive. Always gives. Never receives. American Magazlna. Women Dresa Mea Man still Is allowed to buy his own collars. But more than half s of his of Ills shirts and underwear are bought by his wife. Three-fourth- s of the business In Women buy Is done by women. 85 per cent of the goods sold by Creatnesa |