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Show gMERY COUNTY PROr.preg CASTLE DALE. UTAH r Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Hoove? Air View of the Coolidge Summer Camp h I if I i Jt i VAT. V?w24' A. 41 fes5115 f early, beii S 4 - W , wr 7 t 1 one Iosm ln2 because ?fl f4 A 1 An excellent air view of the Henry Clay Tierce estate on the Brule river, near Superior, Wis., whore President and Mrs. Coolidge recently arrived to spend the summer. um. What ness. u t) tfcf if t 4f ff'pSf? 1 3 SI win2 r ij; wtangibL Mexican Good Will Flyer Greeted at Capita! is evident 'Stores of tli as eloske as the Si Is- How el fer over s&L " MLrsmatsS5aafca i v 'Vs,rs - to Russia's "Answer to Chamberlain" two weddii n. a 1 'uue pi children! mi Jred the ti tier two 1 Hi s than 8i elr heads, yes was their sti were Just is that h; i 1 lM,'V S; seems Qg the man, wort m ind the a) e tireless i added pot & fers witti lings, ' tad rj Thestd . moisten a poetn confined 1 swnvJi i: if of tlie :n:'e crowd which gathered at Moscow at the presentation to the Red air fleet of the snuadron. far niswer to C'hainhorlain." consisting of 17 airplanes built with funds collected from workers throughout the Met riiiia after the nreak with Great llitnin. The nrpseritation took-- nlnr nt (Vntral nirdrnmo tipnp AIospow A er. j view part of Jutslde GREET TOM HEENEY Cc?i.pt3c, bx Summsr Horns guarded sworn deal s hrf w -.. Ef Rii ,f, i Vi(3 -- in rH i)' , . "i. J i WMMlffi flyer, being greeted by the Mexican ambassador and high government Capt. Erailio Carranza, Mexican good-wiofficials on his arrival at Boiling field, Washington. In the photograph, left to right: Assistant Secretary of War for Aviation T. Trubee Davison; Mexican Ambassador C. Manuel Tellez greeting the plucky flyer; II. Ii Olds, ll elusion thlrtj-nf- -- 5 l pened. tl not hapra of state, and Edward Warner, assistant secretary of navy for aviation. undersecretary Winners of Dance Marathon CONVENTION BOSS poem His beJ s one soa e call ore I If to answl 1 eloped compla limed fP if WWjm (hear, H!" o'clo at f 4- - feil I , ' (ml KJ jl II Una U Tom Ileeney, who is to meet Up Tunney for the heavyweight pionship In the latter part of July, visited West Point the other day and was given a cordial reception by the cadets. Tom went several rounds with some of the bo:;Ing prides and instructed them on th3 finer points of the game. (Afric astgre rheM iced to lament Fl a (U-n- e cham- pr itrrled Igh beat soft! " rl rand J h Sirs. " spondf J. t: is H es sf W IS The Biological Survey says that martins are not likely to eat many honey bees. It has been noted from examinations of the stomach content of martins that most of the honey bees eaten were the drones, because drones are not able to fly very fast. i wl g?3 ft 1 wlntf V n barf ' XuLi V , A i JM! Judge" Is the newest accoutrement of aviation. The first one Westover of the Superior court of California, who spurns iilh,' ;"'"n Til nut.. . . ... . . in pi;. """Mines to go anout nis auaiciai auties in various locaiiues ioodhi- "tMiner lieit; una ansa Ann inri&i oiuoiiiji me juuge J "II Irltin! frit. ' ex-ma- Martins and Honey Bees ; e ' and Serena Gergandl of Chicago, who won the Robert Johns, a dance in marathon, after 259 hours 5!) minutes. Photofirst $3,300 prize graph shows them with the cup which also went to the winners. frlcal d 1 v. ti ie 5 CLASS PRESIDENT ? q the vi CHIEF OF TRAINMEN as made on tl.e lawn of Cet,ar ishmd, where the President 'oiilidge are spending their vacation. California Has "Flying Judge" low, a Edwin Ilalsey will be sergeant-at-arm- s of the Democratic convention at Houston, Texas. Mr. Ilalsey Is assistant doorkeeper of the United Slates senate. 1 . J 2M Resisted Price Advance r riots" took place at Garden theater, London, in 1S09. The cost of the new theater, then just built, was so great that the proprietors raised the price of admission, and the public resolved to The Coven t Alexander F. Whitney, who Is tde new president of the Brotherhtod of Trainmen. Field of Catharine Vt., president of the class of 192S at Bryii Mawr lege, Bryn Mawr, Pa, Miss Mont-peller- col- , "old-pric- e Rczdi-- j own to h lllcury : it one It is thing I Is quite another to u y It wisely. have often been astoni.ihed how liitle care people devote to tin- - selection of what they read. Books, we know, are almost innumerable; our hours for reading are, alas! very few. And yet many people read almost by hazard. They will take any book iliey chance to find in a room at u friend's house; they will buy a novel at a railway stall if it has an attractive title. Indeed, I believe in some cases even the binding affects their choice. The selection is, no doubt, far from easy. Sir John Lubbock. Haphazard |