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Show TUB SPAMS!! FtiRK PRESS, RPANLSII FORK. UTAH They Have Gone to Seek a Dream Island How Mount Blanc Looks to M. F. Brntulcy, wealthy paving contractor of Cleveland, Ohio, and til on which they liar sailed from Boston In aenreh of a "dream Island dreamed of Hit wearing a cape coaL Tourists Up-to-Da- tc party aboard Ilia famous Arctic stifp Feary off ths western const o Mexico, Mr. Brow-Icauiitcn Island and Inter believed he located It from au airplane. In the photograph he Is eccu y Winner in a Church Building Competition Thla striking picture of ML I.lnnc was made from a plane piloted hy Lieutenant Thoret, the Intrepid atrman C, Alpine peak. the Air onion, who recently broke all European record by fly Ins eleven passenger over the snow-cappe- d Dancers in Columbia's Play, Oh, Hector This Methodist K.iseopnl church at Trainer, Fa., waa awarded the first prize of SI,000 In the nation-wid- e building competition conducted hy the Christian Herald for the moat beautiful and adequate small church. designed hy Thom If Sundt and Bruce C. Wcnner, young Philadelphia architects. Henry Is Fairly Big for Thirteen church It wue LEGIONS CHAPLAIN These dancing "girls are undergraduates of Columbia university In their play, WINS LAMME MEDAL Henry Mullins of Atlanta, Ga., Is nearly twice the height of the two boys are trying to reach his outstretched arms; yet, hes the same age as those boys. Henry Is thirteen years old and Is seven feet talL Despite bis very unusual Height be Is well proportioned and doesnt feel the least bit conspicuous. who One-Legge- Rabbi Lee J. Levlnger, Fh. !.. of Columbus, Ohio, was elected national chaplain of the American Legion by the national executive committee to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Rabbi Herman J. Beck. As an army chaplain. Doctor Levlnger served with the Twenty-sevent- h division at the front, at the Battle of the Selle River. HE WON A DOG DERBY Mountain Climber d -- Oh, Hector." Acrobatic Stunt of Colliding Cars These two cars near Blshopville, S. C wound up in a position that would do justice to a couple of acrobats. The driver of the one on tha bottom tried to avoid the one on the top. A second before the former tried to get out of the way, the latter turned over and on the second turn landed on top of the other. Strangely enough, no one was Injured. Allan Bertram Field, electrical engineer of Manchester, England, who has been awarded the first Lamme Gold medal by the American Institute of Electrical Engineers; and the face of the medal. The prize was founded by a bequest in the will of the late Benjamin G. Lamme. Society Women Clean Their City SEEKS NEW RECORD Society women of Norfolk, Va donned blue smocks and armed themselves with spiked rods and gunny sacks and, aided by Boy Scouts, cleaned up Hampton boulevard as the first step In their program of beautifying tha city. Mrs. Fergus Reid, chairman, and Mrs. C. R. Bulley were caught by tha cameraman hard at work. mountain climbing feat of 1928 was taxidermist of Kalispell. MonL, who, wearing an artificial leg. climbed Vt. Wilbur (9,283 feet) In the Rockies, 'this ieak' mid been settled by only three other men, all professional mountain climbers. Reaching the summit, avhere In 1923 Norman Clyde of the rocks, the Montana man bared Steria club of California erected a cairn bis artificial leg and made a snapshot of himself standing beside the cairn hs proof of his uscer Probably iirliU'ved b.v . 's Clyde Cobb, greatest nilddle-ace- Fred Prints of Cascade, Idaho, being kissed by his wife and presented with the Marco Heilman silver trophy and a purse of $3,000 Immediately after winning the first Sierra Dog derby between Truckee, Calif., and race run Tahoe Tavern a three-da- y In daily laps of 32 miles each. Mr. Garnett, assistant passenger traffic manager of the Southern Pacific, Is making the presentation. RANDOM NOTES British sportsman, the first man to drive a motor car at a speed greater than 209 miles per hour, and who aspires to better the mark of 207.552 miles per hour now held hy Ray Keech of the United States. The tests will he held at Daytona Beach. Milk is about 80 per cent water. Fire on farms in the United States take 3.500 lives each year. Reindeer feed chiefly on plant diet, but occasionally eat mice and fish. Electricity today Is estimated to be 50 per cent below prewar levels when figured on a cost-of-livi- basis. Germany produces 2,000 varieties of sausages. The fire of hate usually flashes in the pan. The majority f waiters in restaurants are guests. If poverty is a virtue It Is making a virtue of necessity. , We still say sunrise, even though w kiyw It .stands . still, |