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Show TIIK SAI IS A sr.N. SAUNA. ITAII - They Have Gone to Seek a Dream Island I. - How Mount Blanc Looks to Up-to-Da- 9- TourLt j te . Ol.Ui. and KU party aboard the turnout Arctic ship IV ry Bromley. wo.lil.y paving rwMrador of (tru-latcl-o which they have lh In n jnb nf a Vifnw Wsti'P front I foul o' Urilnt, Ur, llnui' M-ru.e ! jt f.orti an airplane, In the W U aen f HiU uui.m Itlml an I raring a caje mat. XL rtt9 !! i!N !, il Winner in a Church Building Competition 11,i .trlklng picture of XI (. Blanc a made from a the Air union, svtio rwmiljr hrvke all ltumiwan frond .y I1 Inc piloted ljr Lieutenant TliM, lb Intrepid airman rlrrn jnwwiigcr,i over lb anowcaped Alpine peato i( Dancers in Columbias Play, Oh, Hector t ! I Tli! Methodist Kplxcopul rliurrli at Trainer, Pa., wa awarded the first prize of fl.WM In the nation wide rl.urcli building eoniHt!tlon condueted hr the Christian Herald for the moot beautiful and adequate small church. It w at designed by Tliornlf Sundt and llruce C. Wenner, young Philadelphia architect. I 1 LEGIONS CHAPLAIN Henry Is Fairly Big for Thirteen Three dancing "girl are undergraduates of Columbia university WINS LAMME MEDAL In - their Ilay "Oh, Hector. Acrobatic Stunt of Colliding Cars resaw? &g i I the height of the two boys llenry Mullins of Atlanta, who are trying to reach his outstretched arms; yet, hes the some age as those boys. Henry Is thirteen years old and is seven feet tall. Despite his very unusual height he is well proportioned and doesnt feel the least bit conspicuous. Ga., Is nearly twice One-Legge- Rabbi Lee J. Levinger, Ili. !.. of Columbus, Ohio, was elected national chaplain of the American Legion by the Dutional executive committee to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Rabbi Herman J. Reck. As an army chaplain, Doctor Levinger served division at with the Twenty-seventthe front at the Cattle of the Selle River. h HE WON A DOG DERBY Mountain Climber d These two cars near Bishopville, S. C., wound up in a position that would do Justice to a couple of acrobats. The driver of the one on thn bottom tried to avoid the one on the top. A second before the former trie! to get out of the way, the latter turned over and on the second turn landed on top of the other. Strangely enough, no one was injured. Allan Bertram Field, electrical engi- Society Women Clean Their City neer of Manchester, England, who has been awarded the first Lamme Gold medal by the American Institute of Electrical Engineers; and the face of the medal. The prize was founded by a bequest In the will of the late Benjamin G. Lamme. SEEKS NEW RECORD themSociety women of Norfolk, Va., donned blue smocks and armed es with spiked rods and gunny sacks and, aided by Boy Scouts, cleaned Hampton boulevard as the firgt step in their program of beautifying the and Mrs. C. R. Bulley were caught by the . Mrs. Fergus Reid, chairman, work. leraman hard at the worlds greatest mountain climbing feat of 1028 was ITohjibly taxidermist of Kalispell, Mont, who. achieved by Clyde Cobb, middle-agewearing an artificial leg. climbed Mt Wilbur (9.283 feet) In the Rockies, this icak had been sealed by only three other men. all professional raoun tain (Timbers. Reaching the summit where in 1923 Norman Clyde of the cairn of rocks, the Montana man bared Sicrru club of California erected bis artificial leg and made a snapshot of himself standing beside the cairn a proof of bia ascent d Fred Print z of Cascade, Idaho, being kissec by Ills wife and presented with the Marco Heilman silver trophy and a purse of $3.nuo Immediately after winning t he first Sieira Dog derby between Truekee, Calif., and race run Tahoe Tavern a three-daIn daily laps of 32 ndles each. Mr. Garnett assistant passenger traffic managei of the Southern Pacific, Is makiDg the presentation. y RANDOM NOTES interesting camera study o) Scgrave. the daring Lritish sportsman, the first man ! drive a motor car at a s; end 'great r than 2HJ miles per hour, and wh" aspires to better the mark of 2u7..7'C miles per hour now held by Ray The Keecb of the Fnited States. tests will b held at Daytona Beach. An Vaj. n. O. D. Milk Is about 86 per cent water. Fire on farms In the United States take 3.700 lives each year. Reindeer feed chiefly on plant diet, nut occasionally eat mice and fish. Electricity today Is estimated to be 70 jer cent below gprewar levels when basis. figured on a cost-of-livin- Germany produces 2,000 varieties of The fire of hate usually flashes la the pan. The majority of waiters In restaurants are guests. , If poverty is a virtue It is making a virtue of necessity. We still say sunrise, even though w know it lUPd atilt ft , J ' |