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Show N ORIGINAL FLIGHT RIA- NRiklN TO WSMONGION 13.010 Mills V1. SLAT 111 i VfESfB FROM COUIM ORIGINAL Ol&UNCft J , X:'1 GUINfA- T HAWAII f ',.3HlrtWi TR,, r ; , , " - gj i nySJb ' i-- y A Wjt - f-U- 1 r ' . ' " IXlCO l; X & - - IOUAI0I- - - V'- f0M riRIH gum FFINli 2? L. 241 !. vf coiumiui 5j flAPSIO fllGMf 1IMI 'S.yyXtssSX'.-- . 10 COAST 44 NOUIS KKCOtO BIOftfcN NIAK INIS rOlNf ' S. A. U. ; f. OF SUPERIOR GENERAL DO- . . . Father MINICAN ORDER Emanuel Snares of Spain, professor of ranoa law, newly-electsuperior general of tho Dominican order pictured following his arrival at Caslelgundolfs to be received by the Pope. ed APf I" Ocean Pacific 'fMywi 3s ZiAlAND BOL'TE . . . The broken line so the Above map shows the route flight Bai7o "Truculent Turtle, a Lockheed P2V Neptune, on Ita world record from Perth, Australia, to Columbus, Ohio. The plane took B5 boars and IT minutes for Ohio airport la excellent condition. It carried a crew of four and a lksilnc st tbo line, above, indicates part of the proposed route, from which the plane veered at Mid- RECORD-BREAKIN- WORLD G LAST OF THE OZETTES . . . Elliott aon-eto- p Pj Anderson, 7. sole surviving member of the Oirlte Indian tribe. Is owner of all tribal rights In the Oirlte reservation In Washington. With him, above, aro two children ld P RECORD . , . Crew members of thu BREAR WORLDS "Truculent Turtle navy twin engine bomber which landed ut Colump trip from Perth, Australia! bus, Ohio, after u 11,236 mile smashing eld mark by 3,309 milea. Left to right, LL Comdr. R. IL Tabeling, Jacksonville, Fla.; Comdr. W. 8. Reid, Washington; Comdr. E. P. Rankin. Kapulpa, Okla., and Comdr. Thomas D. Davies. Clev. laud, pilot and flight commander. Trip took 55 hour and 17 minutes. Navy officials ardcrcd the crew to land at Columbus Instead af attempting try nt Washington. NON-STO- of the Makah Indian tribe, with which he now lives. Ill THESE UIUTED STATES ;v:v 441 P0!! IJ trj :V-- vxy ST1 ; i '6 i $ScSfl Ir( ; JM M J : w'3fWee, that wild, roadless area of forest and ocean beach, now uninhabited. Several years ago he moved to the Makah reservation at Neah Bay, Wash., at the urging of friends that t his age he should not live alone on his own remote reservation. Until recently he haa been employed Irregularly by a Makah tribal en- Fefw e boWreig, u Wm - iNWOs jif. terprise. S7 In 1939, while etlll living on :htFNWI the Ozette reserve, he applied aa the last living Oxette for tha $71.93 remaining la the tribal funds. He received the money, the Incident marking the flret time In Indian Service history that tribal hinds were turned aver te one man. Anderson was born in 1878 near the Ozette river. Two devastating smallpox epidemics struck the tribe at about that time. In the early DOi a count showed 67 members left. In 1906 there were 35, and in 1923, the number had dwindled to 8. Excelled at Fishing. sall( dot la airirwi annw are content to "play house with their dolls and can drive the horses about the farm of Andy Walker, so that they ean be jtijfi mu, A trot la, where she Is staying. Here Shirley drives two draft horses IlkMta the plow for the days work. A real farmer's daughter, the tiny tot loves horses and is not la tho kul frightened by them. (DEB hi, M a ARE HER PLAYMATES . . . Most not Shirley Adams. She Is happiest when she m ipoflfe uKtund raftsli m led b jht v'vc , ; rot. .ivi KVi .V" -- . ,S 3.U- ifk Ta - :4r ihvl ,V.. m Xi ' 'if 5 l; ' R J ...v y m r. P" L tfv . . jf! W AND GOERING HEAR THEIR FATE . . . nermann Gocring, as he heard sentence, of death by hanging, and Rudolph Hess, W received lire sentence at the recently completed Nuernbrrg KB Ml, w crime Dials. Twelve Nazi war leaden were senlcnced te be tapf, three were acquitted and ecven received Jail sentences, All defendants who Hating is in case of Hose to life imprisonment. n senlcnced to hanging immcdisicly filed notice of appeal. Those Field VRicnced to hang were Gocring, Joarhim von Ribbcntrop. Tinhal rn. Wilhelm Keitel, Ernst Kaliernhrnnner, Dr. Alfred inkers. Hans Frank. Wilhelm Frick. Julius Stretcher, Frit L HKkcl fal. Gen. Alfred Jodi and Arthur Scyss-lnquar- n.lRRlMAN IN NEW CABINET POST . . . H. Aver ell Harriman, shewn as he arrived at New York by air, te take ever the post of secretary of commerce. Harriman was former ambassador to Great Britain and Russia. Kjw fc m w-f- c I . I 4 "w, icfK i : J r.l n on C ps vk Wiwaw one-ma- 719-ac- re ;W 'ecu a liMW In I Indian tribe is disclosed by records of the of- flee of Indian aifairs. He is Elliott Anderson, widower, who is the last surviving member of the once AVIATION NOTES populous Ozette tribe and therefore the sole owner of MORE TLANE MODELS tribal rights in the different models of Ozette reservation in Clallam personal and transport planes cur-- i rently are In production by 29 county, Washington. a But the last Ozette no longer lives American alrcrait manufacturers, A caaRAa o, 4m- Indian Tribe Retains Sole Rights to Reservation feuure One-ma- n i.y biflloi RRf ' y non-sto- t The Ozettes once were mighty fishermen. Stories still are told of whaling and sealing expedition so dangerous that only the strongest men could take part. Even in An dersons youth the seals still abound cd oil Tatoosh island. He still likes to tell how he and his brother used to swim into caves and holes in the clifTs, kill the seals with clubs and swim hack with them to their cedar canoes. Anderson attended the Makah reservation boarding school at Ba-h- a da Point. Later he became a telephone line repairman. One of his favorite stories concerns the time when, from the top of a tall tree, he espied a group of Indian youths and maidens who had consumed too much "firewater." Cupping his hands, he sang an ancient song. Frightened by the music apparently coming from the air, the young people ran, and Anderson privately enjoyed the weird stories which circulated among the tribe the next day. A gold watch presented to Anderson for heroism signalises his efforts to save lives whrn the barge W. J. lirrle foundered off the roast in November, 1920. In gale and rain it took nine hours of running and occasionally swimming to make hla way from Neah bay to a point near the place whe.re the ship sank. The Ozette reservation was eslab-- i lisht-by executive order in lB!3. It Is within the Jurisdiction of the Tuholnh Indian agency, of which 3eurge P. LaVatta is supennli'iKl-- ' ent. It is deserted except that occasionally Indians fish in the Ozette river. Once it was famous for cedar j which the Oettes used f T canoe .making ar.d for buricr v.itb Unir friends, the Muknhs on the north and the O.iiliutcs and the Ouinai-- J elds on the south. . HOPE WINS HIGHEST AWARD . . . Itob Hope, tort, "per-ton- al coart Jester to the millions of U. 8. servicemen ef World War II, shown BOH ns he received the Amerirun highest nward. the Legion's Le-gle-tts Forty-seve- n Distinguished Medal. j directory of civil aircraft perform- ance specifications Issued by Aircraft Industries association reveals. Planes rang from per hour personal planes to franeports capable, of 400 miles per hour. Most of the 1948 planes, a well as models subsequently tested and approved for production, will be shown at the Cleveland National AirThis will be craft show Nov. exthe first postwar Industry-wid- e hibition of new models. Some new experimental and production models are not yet listed In the directory because it covers only models approved for quantity production or undergoing government approval tests on Aug. 31. A similar publication recently released in Britain disclosed that 14 British manufacturers had an- nounced 28 models of civilian planet. 15-2- ... Lee Ilulbey, 18. ef ChatswsrUi, 111., WINNING FEN OF IIOGS exhibits bis winning pen ef three Chester Whiles ut the Chlcsge Junior market bog shew and tale. In addition to Brut ribbons, young Ilulbey received the rillsbury award. With more than 1,860 hogs exhibited from four stales, winners fared stiff competition. Ilnlbey club beys and girls bavt made s paying and hundreds of ether basinets out of their various (arm enterprises. 4-- II ... ApLEO GETS HIS SHARE parently aware of the crlulu which hue made millions ef American d Is Lee, star boarder ut the Bronx too. Tha cagey king ef be sals retreats to n corner to enjoy hla meal ef the scarce food. meat-slnrve- . Under the premise that airmarking la essential la expanding rural aviation, Inducements are being offered for all towns In laws, Nebraska and Michitheir gan to properly towns. Michigan offers free air-ma- rk paint for the purpose. NO PARKING WORRY Flying farmers who with to trade in the little town of Argunla, Kus., don't have to worry about transportation to town. A street leading directly from the airport to the downtown section has been designated as a plane taxi strip. There is even a place arranged downtown for parki- fv V - f ; ( c; ng. KNOWLEDGE COMES HIGH Time was when school books went to class only under a reluctant scholar's arm. But now. It seems, school bunks ure flying-p- art way. at least to their destination. Capital Air lincs-I'CIn conjunction with a Syracuse, N. Y., publishing firm, art flying text buoks to schools throughout much of the nation. Initial shipment consisted of 10,000 fourth grade readers. , w y e yv '.s ... Kan SAN ANTONIO HIT BY WORST FLOOD IN HISTORY Antonio ritizrno are scrupled by trying ta make onme sort of order out of the chaos caused by the worst flood in the history of tile city. Nearly u score of lives were tost and damage was reported nt six million dollars. Photo shows crowd on bank looking at the wreckage of n bridge which was swrpt away and was washed along for u quarter of a mile by the raging flood waters. ' a.. AT . ,;, V 1 . P? f 4vm w J in nu w . . - ... against her. ,W - f. . . . Thin NEW TIIUNDKHJET Is the first aerial photograph of the army's nrw Jet lighter plane, the Republic Thundcrjct, in flight Although Its maximum performance is still a military secret. It is reputed to be in the class. Wing span is 38 feet, 6 inches; overall length 37 feet. CLEARED OF NAZI CHARGE C .nstance Drexrl, 51, once Indicted by a federal grand Jury as a traitor to the U. 8. for broadranting Nazi propaganda. Is shown as she arrived at New York City cleared of all charges made r'sH ry-.- s' f 'J' (' - v : . . :4V Juy, -v; .- Sr fiOO-m- ' , j d t - ' V ; V' i - y; V FOR MW1FT SWEDES as tho presented scrolls the Swedish team that act a new world's treat during lbs track meet at Stockholm 1 Greek children. . . . Mmc. Theodoridis and laurels to members record for the stadium for the benefit For Wall Material t ... kVa CREEK LAURELS f Greere Is shown Vti Baled Straw Used As CHAMPION FIE EATER hla reward for winning the pumpkin pie euting contest, held ut the Pumpkin festival. Eureka, 111., Kenneth Remmrrt, 13, Is prepumpkin pie sented with u by Floyd Sherry, left, and Ray McCloud i j j OMAHA. Another means of enm-- i bating tnc lumber shirtnge has been prupt'xed by Homer Gieer, Omaha bus driver, who has applied for patens on a process to use baled straw as bricks in housing construc- lion. Describing straw as a "near perfect insulator," Greer says he could raise the walls of a with a two-ra- r garage adjoining fur about $155. FARES KI. ASHED Substantial reiiut iiuns in tranx-At-- j lactic air j.ns'.rnger rales bcranie' effective with ajipruval by CiviJ Aero-- ; miiit.rs board ul fares adopted by Ii.P rnitional Air Transimrt North Atlantic conference. Heductiun average 12A per cent but be effective only until Feb. r IATA 28, 1947. when the agi cement expires. Represented in the conference ire American Overseas Air Lines. Pan American Airways and Transcontinental 8c Western Air Lines. ufso-ciation-'s one-yea- v j' ; -- s vF j v ,I1 9, w A.. v ... s . . . Students ef Glasu-borafter they went on strike In protest of a school board rule forbidding students 19 years old or over to play on the school football tram. The rule directly affects ntudrnl who enlisted when they were 17 and have now come back to finish thrlr education. Striking students want the ruling changed so that the veteran again can play football. KTITIEN'TM STRIKE OVER G.l. RILING N. J., high school are shown plekrUng TIGER TURNS BOUNTIFUL . . . Gen. Claire Cbrnnault, retired of Chlna'a famed Flying Tigers, and later commander af the U. 8. 14th air force, le bark In China to head an airline for flying relief supplies in Chinn. |