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Show PRO VP (UTAH) SUNDAYV HERALD, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1939 c5 dy d . KVp cp Squalus: Up Again, Down Again V "7 7; k . 1 f f t - SdiTie Id to 7T. 6 ore Uniisuar Weather Former Zep Base To Become $10,000 I t . .V. :... a , -jw n-Tf uT frinAin "J,-?- i ' r dT - 4 I t 4 4 'Of Salvagers came close to completing their job on sunken submarine Squalus off New "Hampshire coast when they lifted craft from 40 fathoms .deep in Atlantic, brought bow above surface. But stubborn Squalus listed sharply, settled back to bottom with cargo of 26 dead. Sub now lies in 90 feet of . water near Isle, of Shoals. Dut ta?k remaining is not nearly so gigantic as thatwhich faced salvage crew on July 13, when Squalus shot to surface, then plunged, breaking lifting chains. ' r-r- Washington's Real Opponents Stack Up Much Higher , V.: v. j r t v v-. is i L. Mokecfett Field, huge army air base at Sunnyvale, Calif which has been Selected by the National Advisory .Committee for Aeronautics as site for a n ew aeronautical research- laboratory. - The ' $ 1 0 ooo.ot o air study station will include a Jarge air tunnel, ex perimental device, and the latest 'equipment - for testing and , designing:' aircraft'.,-Here is' the-' one-ti me -'dirigible' fiacvfrom the air, back f the hn-c hangar . Ls San Francisco bay. 1 -supply station; 2 barracks; furcation building; 4 adminl iU i- tion building; 5 helium supply' tank;' G mechanical quarters; T-rofficers' quarters; 8 Infirmary, , ,' OSC"- ' -'S STAfJ' sv J"? iY:c;jt s ' flail and highway traffic came to' a standstill at various Imperial Valley, Calif., points when a torrential downpour flooded highways and railroasl tracks. This airview of blocked trains was made at Niland, , v Gas-Masked War Horse Consul Missing v'. War's Sinister 'Jewelry' .iJ ! I; t 4 7ahicsloa Hukies hope they ' can '-hurdle 1939 football foes as easily as they take symbols. Oregon ' nd Southern California barriers stand ahead of those shown. Soviet Sea Guns Blockade Baltic '. y"" -; N, - . T ' .- v v A" A yA...v,yv,vvv,..w;A;wv.Vvv . .-:.x.:o Wartime variation cfn the old feed-bag: The- gas-masked horse . a pas-maskPd Russian rava rvman. u 1 - . 4 V I : f v " With non-combatants among the First to fall in-modern war, civilians civil-ians are now wearing identification 'ta'Rs"-.such"as were u?.ed by 'srd- , diers in' the trenchesxduring the first World War. Di.scx enpravcdl with name, address and. telephone numberxlike'the ow above, ar worn as bracelets by llfitish1 civilians ' and Air Kaitl Precaution. . . X workers. . , Where Windsors Arc Staying In lingland .-1.W.- . , y,, . Vft -i--yJ! - Utah Does Marksman Amazing Gun Reported held by Russians after ' the Soviet capture of Zales2c?yki, Poland is William Morton, above of the American consular sqrvicel it ... ' Giant guns of the Soviet fleet tike those in this striking photo point toward shores of the tiny Baltic. Sea tro of Estoniar Latvia and Lithuania. Estonia is reported blockaded by the Russian .fleet and the . other two nations are fearful of a Russian move' against their independence. , y , " " y Nazis Guide U. S. Ship Through' Mines Windsor In Military Uniform i- r 4 1 i . If 7 Lw.. liilllBllllilllllil llSipiS!Bi1 1 f, l w i '? i i . -v.---- -- ----of............ . ?rtOOXW-BS-y,-r' Nv.v---:-vvwy-x--' , ... ,- .,Aw''V'.,':.,w.x..o.'.y:'(,'..J'.'. . .- .. '." "1 ' - ' - i rv w V - - . A Roosevelt For England v. ---. f - a " . ! i. - Here Js thp . house where the Duke .and ' Duchess of Winftvjnr liivc . been staying since their return to Englajul for the first tiniH . fdnre the Duke's abdication three years "ago ; It. i.-i South Hart field Hcni'.". Cblmans Hatch," Ashdown . Forest, and belongs to Major l-dw;hl-Dudley Metcaifc, former Equerry to. the Duke ol WhuLsof. ."' Polish Ariiiored Gars Join In " Warsaw Defense G. L. Becker, well known sportsman and brewer, breaking targets" in midair while motor boat travels at nearly sixty miles an hour. f The German destroyer 75, photographed from the American liner Scanyork. which it stopped off Denmark. An officer from the destroyer de-stroyer boarded tha U. S. vessel and guided it at full speed on a sharply twisting course through a mine-infested area between Sweden and Denmark. ' ' x- t Breaking fragile targets thrown " high in the air, from a: Standing positiortOn a ' swift-going ; motor ' boat, was a feat' performed successfully suc-cessfully and repeatedly by-G.-L. Becker of Ogden, Utah, at a sports festival held recently at Pine View Lake. It is believed to be the first ' time any "marksman has ever essayed es-sayed this novel stunt. c ; Another exclusive " Becker, fea- ture. vas the j playing . of chimes - with-a --,'22 calibre rifle. Each note . of "My Old Kentucky" refrain was rung out by an accurately timed shot, with never a miss or a discord. dis-cord. The chime target, the only one of its kind in the world, was ?' built for the Utah sportsman , by ?l - hi3 life-long. friend,, the late, John M; Browning, world : famous inventor inven-tor of firearms. ;V I several decades as one of America's . foremost marksmen, particularly in trapshooting events. It is said s that he has , spent over, $30,000 on his hobby and thathe has in his possession hundreds of trophies and a veritable arsenal of shotguns and rifles. Besides finding the. time to. give many exhibitions of his-shpqt- ing skill at. puouc ceieorauons, vn guides the destinies of two successful success-ful breweries one. in Ogden, Utah, and one in Evanston, Wyoming. He i3 . vice-president of and chairman of the executive committee of the United States Brewers Association; : Mr. Becker's high standard of business ethics and hi3 active interest in-terest in civic affairs , have won him a natlon-witle circlevof friends and admirers. He is perhaps the only civilian in America to; be awarded the American Legior mrdal for distinguished semce. One- of "the most familiar names in , American politics and govern mcnt finds a place in Great Britain's Bri-tain's - wartime administration .with;-the: naming-of Kermlt Roosevelt, Roose-velt, above, ' son of , Theodore Roosevelt; ' as an ' ofifclal in the British Ministry of Shipping. f Mr. Becker has been known Hughes to Seek New Record in $250,000 Plane ' tit v : The wedding trip of Capt. Hans Hansen, of the American liner Scr.nvcrk. and Mrs. Hansen, postponed ten years, proved an exciting excit-ing cV.e. Thf y are pictured after returning to New York- from a voyage into the Csllic war zone, where the Scanyork picked up 204 war ref-es and was stopped by German warships. A Nan de stroyer escorted the U. S. ship, through mine 'fields off Denmark, fcrcni it to steam full-speed alona a narrow, twistiAZ. charutL Here" is the first plclure ot the Duke of Windsor dressed in the uniform of Major .General, new. ranking granted him since he returned re-turned to England last - week. Back from his self-imposed exile in France, Windsor is scheduled to take up active duty near Paris, soon. (Acme Radio-Telephoto) . In this $2S0,OCO stratoliner, shown taking off on trial hop at Glendale, 'Howard Hughes will serlc new coast-to-coast speed raarlc. - Millionaire producer oilman will try to break wn solo time ot 7:23J5. set January,. 1937, at -327 miles per aov Warsaw, capitol of dLsmrmtered Poland, ftijl holdH 'cut furious attacksof tha Nazi army. Armored cars, like th above in the streets of Warsaw Kubuibs. have played un pait.'iri this heroio .stand. Thig, plctuie was takt-n hv 'l:t U. jtinrA t!. ::t' F.hovvn i ; ; t -. i . t. Acmeewspicture-.-taff photographer- and vaj y inu British censors. - ii hy.. 1 oil.- |