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Show PAGE FOUR FROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1932 1 FIGURES AND SCENES IN SEARCH FOR Legionnaires See Real Indians "LET NONE STARVE," IS HOOVER'S MESSAGE JEWELER'S MYSTERIOUSLY MISSING WIFE Y J- A- '-"to 'f 4 ''' 4-, ' -y - t it A' 's s "t tt ' A4m ,'-"' iL-:y-r.'-.'-j:-v---'.v.:::-.-.-.-jL-.--yf::::'y mm. . kr L. J lif , ill " ; f , tr S' ' ' v-- tr i " ,V , &-i5Rrw ij.; tits 1 -7 '-:S,., Wur-- '' At lnil TI1K POLICE HUNT for dues in Great Herring ??pd, sft of the Di'i Bois summer camp near Plymouth, Mass. , TIip, HUSBAND, Charles E. Du-Bois, Du-Bois, Tuckahoe, N. Y., jew eler w.-.w.-.-.-.'L-K'i-y:':-:.:-:.-----"..- mm? ttv Pit il7L ft lie fljfl i fk 5 -Sr. " ft THE WIFE, Mrs. Edith Du Bois THE DU BOIS LONELY COTTAGE at Great Herring Pond, fornier- myieriousiy uusrm iy occupira ny liie wrainiy j v ir i unu ins " " When police arrested Charles Edwin Iu P-ois at. Ply mouth, Mass.,- on a charge of murder following his wife" unexplained disappear. ':nce he figured inno- oer.ee but a few days later committed suicide. Meanwhile, the wateis and land about the Uu Itois' Kiimnaer home near Plymouth were Ihorou ghljr aeareheu .-.: i:ue.s io the fate of the wile whose mysterious ahscnee since August 10 had aroused the s usttleif n of neighbors. While police chemists asi- alvi.i-d a muss .r wenrian s hair discovered floating i n Plvmoutli bav. and other officials examined a nude torso found near Tuckahoe, Du iiois himsolf was ke pt "under observation. Miss Grace Atwood, a- Mid- dleboro, Mass., society girl, v.ar; reported t( have mitted friendliness with Du Bois. Doa-Gone Good Time Made Heads Auxiliary i Chanes Farnsworth, resldingf in Oregon's Willamette Valley, had ' to make a trip to the Idaho line. He's small, so he trained his ' dogs to wagon work, hitched thern to a little vehicle with ball-bearing wheels, put' in a camp outfit, and they rairbled right alo:. Mrs. Mary Blackburn of Kentucky, chosen national head of the Women's Wom-en's Auxiliary of the American Le-gion Le-gion at its Portland convention. (- PRODIGIES AIM AT. SUPER-INTELLECT J V ' ' v, 'ATI 1 1 . r.-.- -jK;'.:-. . . M W(.'Wi. v.-. ,-.v -v.-. 1 A. - m 1J s i y ' (L 'tY W, -S-- w 'y-i.-. t-t- A Z1 r Mor;tbaildO. applications were filed when Nortweitern'tuivertliy,'inAEvanston,-ni., announced it would h&v special class for infant prodigies who hadgrabated froni high-school. Out of that number only :vfeiV.Il..4.lyftoj?8have. been accepted.-;; T heir ' "work will -"be watched by scienUsts studying mteiet developing the ,"superr intellect," in an ef for t 4o dlseover whether prodigies accomplish more in groups oVworking alone.-.Hera you see Walter Dt-Sedtt, left, president of the university, greeting the ttijiyw xy.voe,nwrvMsy cms. i ney , are, jejjL Jto j:ignt, Jaue-JUiceHal, 15 .of Clovis, N. M.; Mary Matgareti Ifoore.riiTanyille George Edward . Alcott Weiner Ark-t James " Allen Norton, 15, Flint, Hich.; WUliarofiDuncau Stehc,' New York City. A t right 13 Harold Pinlev.' 16 now a senior. Alan listed' flfr a rwonder studeatt when be entered college. Two of th a'- selected seven nad noi arr.vea when this picture , was. taken;., "J" -j.' . r . : ' 1 i,. ''f'-.-'X . . .- . ... . . . " . .. ." 11 Stoptjff at the, Pendleton, Ore., Round-Up gave eastern members of the American L,egicn opportunity to see the real wild west and western , Indians. Above - A. A. Chudziniski, Fremont, O., admires a Umatailla papoose. Kelow - Walter Ioe, accompanying his parents from Mississippi to the Puitlaud convention, yets acquainted with a young redskin. Flowers of the South " I ' '. Th- J'oil-s are bursting in Dixie and the cotton market is looking up, so Miss Barbara Phelan of Memphis, Tenn., makes a prosperity bouquet and smiles "MISS AMERICA," ETC. im iff M S wll-i This picture will gtv& you a fair idea of the eye-filling sights which greeted visitor to WHdwood, N. X, the other day. Dorothy Hann (center),-entered as "Miss Camden," was crowned "Miss .America' at the. annual Wlldwood beauty pageant. Estelle Kurk ,Ieft)i' as '.Miss New Jersey," and Mildred Johnson (righ), as "Miss Georgia," , were two of her comely competitors. .-, 1. . . . . ... . . .: "Let none starve," was the message President Hoover gave to the key representatives of the nations relief re-lief agencies as they gathered on the White House lawn. Hoover's audience comprised members of the citizen's citi-zen's committee which will direct a national campaign to hlp .'oral communities obtain sufficient lelief funds. ! Newton D. Baker of Cleveland, piominent Domnc guests of President Hoover when the president which Baker is chairman. rat, a.i .ns. )..iKcr arid their daughter. Miss Margaret were : reused tiie national citizens' relief committee, ! 250,000 Price i Set on Her Bath AS GOES WISCONSIN? 1 i F L- A L'r A quarter of a million seems a let of money to pay for a bath, especially espe-cially when someone else took it, but that is the bill Ben C. Kohl-meier Kohl-meier faces . unless Los Angeles courts decide otherwise. For the bath was taken by Mrs. Myitle Wisconsin holds the political stage's center as its voters go to the pri- Manon Morris, above, "Mis3 Flor- niarics Sept. 2u. For if "kick out the ins" is the result these con- ida" in a beauty contest, with Kohl- seivatives w;:: replace progressives and the state might lose its na- meier assisting, according to wit- tional political' rating as "the off-ox." In a comeback effort, former nesses, and her husband wants the Governor Walter Kohler (top right) is opposing Governor Philip La- $250,000 for alienation of the beau- Folktte (tup left). The veteran Senator John J. Blaine (below left) has ty's affections. his i-vpo:ient John B. Chappie, young editor (below left.) FOUR REASONS FOR REFLECTION , . aw? - . . . t . . ,. Now here's a pretty dish for a 'perplexed pulchritude connoisseur to reflect upon. One of these young ladies is going to be a movie star. They are finalists in a national contest to chooseTa "panther" woman" for a forthcoming film. Unable to decide on one, th e judges took all four to Hollywood for screen tests. Left to Tight the girls are Verha" Millie, Kathleen Burke, Lou Andre and Margaret Pitzputrick, 1 VP V 4 . . |