OCR Text |
Show Thursday, May 8, 1930 mE MIDVALE JOURNAL Camera Finally Invades the Sultan's Harem How Popocatapetl Looks t& the Airmen • > • ~ ,•, ., :-. ' ., ·~ " .. . An aerial view of lilt. Popocatapetl, famous volcanic peak rising 17,1>43 feet above sea level, 40 runes southeast of Mexico City. Disabled World War Veterans Making Buddy Poppies nooms in the ~eragllo palace at Stamboul, Turkey, where the sultans and their wives lived are now open to the public for the first tiroo In their history. The Imperial harem was originally built by Sultan Suleiman the Magnlf· icent ln the Sixteenth century. This photograph shows one of the magnlt.cent rooms overlooking a garden. DEMOLITION BOMB ·' ( '-:· ,., ,. ·~ .,'·' ~ . -:: ......•• •' >. ;· -·- .. ..·. ~ ~:- .... :: ;· :-.- '' Collecting Spoons Is Her Hobby :-. ~: In all the United States veterans' hospitals the boys who were disabled in the World war have been at work making buddy poppies for distribution by the Veterans of Foreign Wars durlng the week prlor to Memorial day. The scene pictured above was in llosp!tal No. 67, Kansas City. Study Traffic Conditions From Air GLENNA MADE PILOT This fet·ocious looking "demolition bomb" is one of the kind which Uncle Sum's Seventh Bombardment group of fighting plnnes Is eq.uipped to carry. It weighs" 4,000 pounds and Is about three times as tall as the average The Seventh Bombardment man. group has been engaging In thrlllillg maneuvers at Sun Diego, Calif. DEAN OF POSTMEN Dr. Ella Kyes Dearborn of Portland, Ore .• is said to have the largest eollection of spoons in the world. She is here shown holdlng a large aluml· num spoon, whlle behind her are 2,456 more spoons, from every country 111 the world. Promoting "Better Homes in America" .. These men, judges and other officials of Chicago, made a flight over the city to observe traffic conuitions during the rush hom·s, especially over the Boulevard bridge, the north side outer drive system and the Skokie valley district. This Man's Home Was His Castle ... Miss Glenna Collett, captain of the American Womens' Golf team that ht to oppose a picked British team In the first International Women's team match in England. PILGRIMAGE BADGE ,. Richard Hagel standing ln the door. way of hls sanctum sanctorum, the Gypsum (Ohio) post office, where he nos been hnndin~ mall over the Postmaster counter i'ot· 53 years. Hagel Is the denn of Unde Sam's postmen, having entered the service during General Grant's aulllinistra· tlon. Forty-Shilling Day .\n lnsumnce conJpnuy recentls bought a Paris building to demolish It mHI 1111 It~; site construct a new one, but nwt with the obstinacy of n tenant who 1\'t>uld not mo,·e. lie had R small shop and room on the sixth floor whid1 made It m•ccs:mry to et·cet a acafi'Qld tor the tenant until the con· \tructlon should lndude his room. This Is the batlge to be woi'!l h' Gold Star mothet'S and whloiY ~ "" their l}ilgt·lmuge to the cenieterle:-: .lll •l battle fields of .France. It was Ill: • · lzed by the War department an . sued by the quarterJuuster's coq ·. E'l·et·y Cnn<llemns day al \Yotton. Surrey, In 11ccordance with the will of William Glandvilll', a nephew of Eve· lyn, the diarist, ~ix or eight boys of the neighborhood stn nd bareheaded around his grave In Wotton church· yard. With their hands on the gravestone, they rPpt>a r from memory the Commandmt>ntR. the Lord's Ten Prayer, nnd the Apo~tlcs' Creed. after whkh they lan·e to write from dicta· tion "ln a fair, legible hand," cet'tuin ,·erses from f'orinthianc;, As each suc· ·essful cnnolidnte Is awa rcle<l two 'otmds, the nnn!vt>rsm·y Is known lo· ally as lforty-Shllllng duy. 1\Irs. nay Lyman Wilbur, wlfe of the sec: reta t·y of the interior, planting a ' J';t h aptlle tree to cel ebrate the opening of "Better Il t>lllP.S in Ame rica" week. The cet·emonlcs took place at the Gil·! Scouts' modern itO me at Washing· lOll, D. C. TOLD IN A FEW LINES Purls was first mentioned in au· n. C. To help hold blm down ln the water a diver wears a belt weighing 100 IJOUnds. 1hPntic history ln the year 53 were lntroduc_e d Into Europe in the Seventeenth ceu· tm·y. Greek school children now have. some of their ll'S!';ODS by InQtlon picture film, by Ol'de1· ot the Greek iOt'" ernmen t. Chr~·santhemums |