The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 27, 1928, Page 8

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Mrs. Calvn Coolidge officiated at the dedication ceremonies for the new $2,000,000 Constitution Hall, an auditorium being built in Washington, D. C., by the Daughters of the American Revolution. Here you see her «A.aingiy Wieiding the trowel at the laying of the cornerstone. Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt,. right, quit campaigning long enough at St. Paul, Minn., to be bridesmaid for Miss Laura Volstead, left, the bride of Carl Lomen. Dorothy Willebrandt, center, adopted daughter of Mrs. Willebrandt, was flower girl for the ceremony. Andrew J. Volstead, former congressman and author of the Volstead Act, gave his daughter in marriage. house (above) built in Barnard, Vt., in 1796, is to be the Tee menus each year, of Sinclair Lewis and his bride: Dorathy Thompson, journalst. Mrs. Lewis is shown at right. The novelist (left) is holding the family cat “Mencken.” Their home is well off the beaten tourist track, 10 or 12 miles from railroads, in a tiny town of 650 inhab- Of all the 100,000 fat boys in the United States who competed for a movie contract with the original “gang” compgny of Hollywood, Norman Chaney, pictured here, is the winner. The 11-year-old Baltimore boy, who will double for Joe Cobb, corpulent “gang” comedian, tips the scales at 114. How did he get that weigh? Well, blowing a bugle is his favorte amuse- ment and hot dogs are his favorite food. Take your choice. Julius isn’t at’all a pretty baby, and the chances are that he'll be only troublesome sort of rogue when he grows up. But right now he’s getti more attention than many a millionaire’s child. He has his own. nurse, who gives hm his bottle regularly, and a doctor comes to see him every day. _ For Julius, pride of the Philadelphia Zoo, is a chimpanzee, the only living one ever born in captivity. 5 “Mum was the word when the First Lady officially opened a flower show in Washington the other day. For the entire bref geese of chrys- anthemums, one of the tiniest of which you see in the lapel of Mrs. Coo! idge’s jacket. With her is Mrs. William Jardine, wife of the Secretary of Agriculture, and Ruth Jardine. ay bey aftor a eave ‘the seme) >: Surrounded. “Here ia the young -king. seashore,’ as any other. voy .would do, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE |__| How the Camera Sees Events (| In a desperate attempt to halt @ spectacular oil well fire at Santa Fe Springs, Calif., engineers devised the tunnel pictured below. The tunnel was decided on after the damag> had amounted to more than $500,000 and there seemed no way of quenching the flames. Through the tunnel the tremendous gas pressure within was to be tapped, while simultaneously tons of mud were to be dumped into the mouth of the well. Mrs. Kork Kelley ..: changes her oil field dungarees for a party dress Wichita Falls, Texas—Six times’ she saw the drill ofa. powerful oil rig nose its way. down into the depths of the Texas soil. and fink nothing but “dusters” or dry holes. : Then, after nearly all her money was gone, and years had been spent. in apparently fruitless effort, Mrs. *Kork Kelley, clad in dungarees’ and bossing a gang of roughnecks, brought in a 1,000-barrel well in .Waggon- er’s pasture, a big cattle. ranch near here. In abandoned her beautiful home in Wich- lis and for' months: resided in a shack on the oil lease’ where she lly made her-pay strike. Her husband, Kork Kelley, is an oil-drilling contractor and has brought in a number of. wells for oil concerns in northwest Texas, but the Wag- goner pasture venture was Mrs. Kelley’s own. r search for oil Mrs. Kelle; At the beautiful Swannanea Coun- try ‘Club near Wa! oro, Va., ie rape Coaltdae: 9a ee - Sst 8) helideys this year Satie its of Horr, F. Byrd of Virginia. The. club is: pictured ‘sbeve; « +, Gov: nor Byrd, below. 2, SELF-ERESERVATION ie Rastus .(exhibiting © razor). See ‘4 Sambo: Whatd? Yon nena, your | iy mean, safety razor? It looks like the old. c fashioned kind to'me, . .:< ~ hraugh 4 Tees tana node thr nel rl Judge.’ = ; Impromptu comedydramas like this happen every day, Photographed. Here you're a witness to one in Washington for of course only a ci al cat would camp so complacently on a perc!. s> precarious. By this time the pursuers are feeling a little e still dog- gedly determined. They know full weil the huntin+ sea ‘s height, and what better can a city dog do than chase a city cat? All you cats who like to scratch Rover's eyes out, and all you dogs who dote on chasing Tabby ‘round and ’round, look at this picture of feline- canine accord and be ashamed of yourselves. Patsy, two-year-old Mem- phis,' Tenn., mother, nursed Spot, the kitten, after Spot's mother was poisoned. New they’re inseparable. GET OUT— YOU DONT BELONG IN THIS YARD! Name it and you can have it, says John W. Nicely, superintendent of the poultry department of the Oklahoma State Fair, at Oklahoma City. This queer bird is a cross between a Rhode Island Red hen and a guines rooster. Its owner insists on being unidentified. It moves like a guines and makes a noise like a rusty saw in a hard pine board. Dresses FolliesChorus Sees Native Land Back to New Larz Andersor, ‘York with plenty is pictured here ar of new ideas about he returned for 9 stage styles and glimpse of the na- “costumes ~ comes ae end be ae el: Gloria — Christy. Aad ‘Her job is design- aera; solaies and American dij ing the attire fomat, * he has served the U. S in many foreigr countries, once ‘be was Ambassador to Japan. Gloria Christy - THEY MIGHT AT THAT ieee Lady (at telegraph of- fice): Well, if you're so smart you can send flowers and eet by tele- graph, young man, I'll be blessed if T see why you’ can’t telegraph an umbrella.—Jadge, SO OBLIGING! Dad (to daughter): Now that your mommer’s away for a holiday, you'll have to see that I get up in time for work every morning. Daughter: All rightie, dad, 1’ try to get in, in time.—Judge.

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