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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE, UTAH IVEssauri i Town Stages Contest of Eddlers Learning liow to Salute the American Flag Flock or Ide vidua! UPf! 1 irie . I;' flocks J n the vywY, fc , dm-- number) h :o on. ij""gaWr,Aie.'' ' !ss than 100 Purebred P I herd 5 "tales, d 111 i mi ever-prw- . of anlmaiji Tie fW. f" li g ,v A 77.7 - wis Mrs. Jean Pratt of Ellis Island, New York city, showing the children of immigrants the first essenthij of good of the United States. Respect for the flag is one of the first things taught thee young foreigners and they ' 1 are here being shown how to salute the colors. ip 1 M , T?T . nyim ii.rir.iM,,,.-..,,- . e Mo., held an fiddlers' contest the Paris, and the S musicians c'ty the by-tmelodies of proved that iiy still beautiful. The illustration shows were the contest in progress, and Henry Taylor of Cairo, Mo., won the large cup he is holding. ..inrrini iirimnMr.ninrimirtiiimmn.Hiinfnfr ivrrim old-tim- of Jewels for Cincinnati Tower 25 wffl b fi will be. II mi j eeuarten 1 Turks Ready to Blow Up Maritza Bridge at Adrianople ft&, IMPERIAL POTENTATE rn iim. mm eenths.- T 125 u the ounj of 25 5 space for label, fie I r -f - M : Applied to f the sixth 25A; next If desired, ced ' l- the Jim. '4 n " ' m 'WJt I v.: jml i ill I ;. 1 III !Si: S3 I I J V i lisiilfcllll , aV ' . f,J! 1 I on the If Vi. .11 M II It ' I f 0 animals jjj! a with m h further ft i:r&: replace, t I Nil I Identity t Threatened by the Greeks with renewal of the war, the Turks in eastern Thrace have mined this bridge across th Maritza river between Adrianople and Karagatch and are ready to destroy it and all other bridges over tha river. SAYS HE WAS KIDNAPED .. Omaha Indians Adopt Chicago Girl ''"It.- - its JWWWtW""11'1 Gfrowft Y: eradicate a as wild growths, Former Deputy Imperial Potentate Conrad N. Dykeman of Brooklyn, N, j g Y., of the A. A. O. N. M. rTrfrw.j, S., who, on Forty-nintof the the last annual day !.ese jeweled minarets will form the center of a spectacular electrical at the Cincinnati fall festival, August 25 to Sept. 8. The spires, session of the Imperial Council at Washington, was elected imperial poM feet high, will be festooned with 50,000 jewels. Forty searchlights, tentate, succeeding James S. a total of 450,000,000 beam candle llluminabe will used for the power, be; end a making last half JSfcSMBSiSr: I July nost V w- - h e most ! radicated summer; AVIATORS AFFIANCED M the mmer, or h a Farthest Up of American Hotels hoe suchu smother I f C H me rent keep tt tind to- - 1 . ) : eases rf d either la feed, , t ' - i ),8cali AUU it done 1 a !TV W , r v'i-r- i irv ii ifm, A' nestline in a niche on the side of Mount Rainier, 10,200 highest hotei in the country. It Is built of yolcanlc rock FprHl together with cement which was brought up, 100 pounds at a time, uai'K or a burro. Those who negotiate me cumD to tne summit oi ;fr fach summer sleep here at night and arise at 4 a. m. for the final pull Mile. Andree Pejre, who flew tft height of 15,000 feet, at Los Angeles, breaking the women's altitude record, is here seen with her fiance, Capt. Curil Turner skywriter, greeting he just after she landed. MINNESOTA'S S'-rT- .L ft . '.. Underwood Samuel S. Ripley of Richmond, Cal., lawyer, and said to be a former Samo-a- n prince, who has filed suit In Chicago for $50,000 against Capt. Waldo Evans, now commandant of the Great Lakes naval training station, and W. A. MacDonald, for alleged false arrest and Imprisonment during the time Evans was naval governor of American Samoa. Ripley alleges he sailed from San Francisco on the S. S. Sonoma In 1921 and on reaching Pago Pago paid several deposits as some sort of custom payments and later was confronted by Evans, MacDonald, and a man "who purported to be a customs official," and was placed under armed guard and held a prisoner. Later, he alleges, he was put aboard the vessel again and for 30 days was a virtual prisoner, being released only when the vessel returned to Honolulu. HE IS ACCUSED OF FRAUD . . w.J & iiv i&lj&K&xm!W'ir 4Wl T B Willi II l'.4tftA. Underwood. Sympathy for the Indian race and her determination to aid her country In Its efforts to advance the status of the red man has brought signal honors to a young white girl xt Chicago, Marlon Eleanor Gridley, from representatives o the various Indian tribes who gathered In a meeting of the Grand Council Fire of American Indians. Miss Gridley, who is just sixteen, was adopted lntq the Blackbird Clan of the Omaha tribe and given the name of meaning "Little Moonbeam." Miss Gridley has written many strikingly beau tlful poems about the Indians; and much of the beadwork seen on her costume is her own work. She is shown above with Princess Little Eagle. Japs Are Not Wanted in Hollywood w a VmVM NOT rAWHtTEHAHfs WJ r , .4 ST"?"' iVLur r if? r il li v ranl'l -- ?m Neighborhood. 'i BEST l2 I . raj Vf t 4Vb rv 7 : II l V i'. I ' I' ' i the ar$ iteD! 0 I Is Camn Mulr. altitude the dead of 3 I P1 where It fj; v ?" I I button I !5--'s- :, I be call I -- WfW 'Ito ,s i'' .wS tSS,?" m( 1 0 I pshmgton Honors stf 1,4? Pae s Memory s ' 1 jZ' "wniititTTTtMr'i''","i Is r iiiitfiiUfiit r In Hollywood, Cal., Is an association formed to force the Japanese to leave, ' the community. The lady who occupies this residence evidently is a member. . n HF mmm r m. " Barbot and His Flivver Plane a tfr 1 v ' put on. liY j ig Tills -- y''-'!pi'- Dri: l -- T! A A f ' ' 'r ' , ", 'iffcrf" 4 f 1 Miss Amelia Scherfcnberg of St is the replicn of the boyhood home of John Howard Payne who wrote Paul, Minn., who hns never missed a 'Trip i9 'ITT i n rrm'atmmant TYOrlf- - day from school In eleven years, waa t l " 11 nii uccu uum i." " e,,v;m..iv..i nuiiie, sweet xioine. 'South of never late at class, nor made a class the treasury at Washington and was dedicated June 4 by Harding, opening the "Better Homes Week." Mme. Homer, famous con-i'- grade below 05 per cent, Is the winner sane "Ilnmn Sunei Hnmp" nnd the speakers included several cabinet In a competition for school stallenc In her native state. the home will be moved to a permanent site. i5! Iter '' This is Marcus Garvey, "provisional president of Africa" and president of the Universal Negro Improvement association, on trial in New Georges Barbot is here seen in his flivver plane, brought from France, a York on charges of using the mails to defraud, la connection with the affairs he started on one of his two unsuccessful attempts to 2y from Hempstead, Tjong' Island, to Vest Point. Of the Black Star steamship line. self-style- d |