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Show LEHI FREE PRESS, LEHI, UTAH Scenes and Persons in the Current News ,rv 5? 'irr ' Scores Die in Worst Rail Wreck in Years 'Dv? rrrrn 1 .lijf..'.'.".v AN at U. "Wt Jat f-- ec j si-- - u LIS t 5 lit J pa nun "Wj. tut f UK w at ij- .... . fw' -- V W J? i " ' ; I--,sv v v.if A WW 5. I I k - i' ..Id, Si i I f j a - s PHOlS Hi., . , ,i i , , i J I01 amp trJ 1 Bo . (til i eloped A rwrawniimniHi EmboaM women refugees lChinese 1 - o " ,.t. ni ' vjuv. a i aim jnj war iuuc. jjaird Townsend plan convention rtowill be married to Princess . iir ittm a ' mil Ju, ',"n""' a on beside J a train which them out of the Shan- riding: brought c.;j it: ank, . . . r i f t a unu ur. i rancis ui timuru lownsena snown as tney opened me .'.ciium at Los Ane!es, Calif., recently. 3 Crown Prince Mohammed Riza of Iran, Fawziah, sister of Kin? Faroa'.t of Egypt. : Afc-mu- TWO Gold-Fis- 4 Clay d S. Bowl Bath h jjp!i...w,vt ..y,:. t iniriiMfflmin m it rrt n NO-HI- -- TnTift-mi -- TTf'i :.. v ira, z " alt Ilka 1 I .IS? ' - W uu..'' Ncwlywed Roosevelts Honeymoon GAMES T SHEIKISII ENVOY iimiumiiiaii.i. ruf r In the nation's worst railroad tragedy in years, approximately 40 passengers were killed when the Milwaukee road's crack "Olympian" train plunged into the flood waters of Caster creek noar Miles City, Mont. A midnight "flash flood" carried away the trestle spanning the creek and the train plunged into the raging waters. These two coaches bore many of the passengers who lost their lives. ... w f fiilil" inrnnmit iiiiiiiaium f svVtfv I f "if"' 4 . 1 1 ., i GOOD Softball ITArfr all Laka, t ED rate f Pa? I ty, Utah testae?' ft ws's? x g. i fit- - , COl I :abineu-- f s, Steia U tern f:'kr leluren .ake Ci I Prirtl catalog 4. Salt Lake f be adran4 ED Gr.e is Bcrr.tjt. ,uarantei shown La. Hhododendron festival I esn't seem to mind all IES and Coiled. Csk. FATHER OF ROTARY hen Call I'n. L.E. nk S Meer, twenty-three-year-o- ld pitcher of the Cincinnati Reds who wrote new baseball history recently when be pitched two games in succession. He shut out the Boston Bees first, and then four days later took on the Brooklyn Dodgers in a night game at Ebbetts field and whitewashed them 6 to 0. No other pitcher in the century-olJohn Roosevelt and his bride, the former Anne Lindsay Clark of history of baseball has ever pitched two Boston, who went to Campobello Island, New Brunswick, Canada, followgames in the span of a single ing their wedding at Nahant, Mass. The young Roosevelts planned to continue their honeymoon with a trip to the West Indies. left-hande- no-h- d it d Elect . of the most public baths ever here in a bath tub in the baby parade held during the annual at Asheyille, N. C, recently. The young entrant making his ablutions a public affair. taken was the one by this youngster Vander Johnny His excellency, Sheik Hafiz Wa-haof Arabia, who is in the United States en route to London, where be is envoy extraordinary for the king of Suadi Arabia. Most of his work there, he says, deals with citizens of who make British protectorates their pilgrimages to the holy city of Mecca. Dream Conies True Lawn-Tender- 's no-h- it XKS Jt. LlfK :tive. Kir- F.ndur Greyhound's Chief Rival a Salt Late IMPERIAL POTENTATE V albomefs coin. I lyette Bare: utatant 32nd. 1 t Sunplfc ninal Si ianv Citv T it! V T U esirea r!- - Lib1 i. lilies. Stanley Compi V Paul P. Harris. Chicago lawyer years aS bounded Interna-- i L tjjionai Rotary, was one of the hon-l'an-.:ed guests at the twenty-nint- h - " - e. Pr the organization Ca,if recently. all parts of the jimi convention of gan Baiwryj Frandsc0j ence legates from '.Mld were in . attendance. Interna-iJ'iion- al peace was the theme and goal the convention. fc. With this contraption, Alvien Lodge, unemployed mechanical engineer of Millersville, Pa., mows his lawn without moving from his chair in the shade. Lodge, who is unable to walk freely because of lameness, built his remote control mower by adding two electric motors, an old paint can, a wooden mixing bowl and sundry gears and wires to a S. s fc; . i Andrew A. D. Rahn, hearty imperial potentate of the Mystic Shrine who was elected to his post at the recent convention in Los Angeles, Calif. Potentate Rahn hails from the Zuhrah temple at Minneapolis. Keel Is Laid for New U. S. Warship Ship w. at " - This superb action photograph shows Brogan, a 2:01 performer, owned and driven by E. Roland Harriman of New York, in a fast workout at Goshen, N. Y., recently in preparation for five clashes with the world's champion. Greyhound, this summer. Fans of this area will see Brogan first July 14 at Harriman's historic track. regulation mower. Artist's Conception of New U. 0 ...... ; sl 1 5 I cles one ' and Ol ,Vcsten out , .iVC-S- j feifev'Jlii SO"'!' .Me4V II ..... ' 'iH IHHIIIIiiliii I' II aWWt . ' . . i L'H . ltMAn . liner which is now under construction ior me Limcu cMaic. l.tier, Han. The vessel will take the place of the histoiic Leviathan and will itf"" and Washington in the north Atlantic service. Launching is scheduled for July la, snip will be delivered to the nne in reoruary, I. i Pfc Falls ' r ne new $15,750,000 ru. n, Hntntinif K"J i1"""Man" otA 1939, and the com- - f .-- r n 91 Km' R;r5 tAift "fwA . -- TCTr?,7 : mii'irt .1 i for the laying of the keel of the navy's newest battleship, the dreadnaught 11. S. S. Waslanulon, at the Philadelphia navy yard. Left to right: Mayor S. Davis Wilson of Philadelphia; Rear Admiral Wat Ciuverius. commandant of the Philadelphia navy yard; Lieut. Comdr. William Cunningham, representing G;iv. George Farle of Pennsylvania; Rear Admiral Luther Gregory, civil corps, (retired), represcniht ; Governor Martin of Washington; Capt. Alexander Hamilton Van Keuren of the civil engineer corps, in ch rge of construction at the navy yard; and J. C. Kauffman, master sheet metal worker at the navy yard. Tiie scene as the first rivet was driw $65,-000,0- en-ginc-er |