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ve Casvet Daily Cribune PAGE FIVE. Firat in News Of All Events seen QINT TRIED To on, THAT " GET @ JoeB? C WOULON'T 00 Y ied | | ig it j a s: SOME BODY'D yuu WoeE LESS owe ore GE SURE “TO : M Wh Will Guide Senators, Indians, Th Sansa FIND ty OUT Biowss and White Sx Mek Stes In Their Positions. NEW YORK, Dec, 13.—(By the Speaker, who became famous a8 Associated Press).—Playing man-| the center fielder of the Boston Red gers have gained the majdrity in| Sox has piloted his Indians to one t American league, five acknow-| world pennant. After nearly a de- ledged baseball stars having been| cade in the American league he is selected to lead clubs in the 1925] still able to account for his position, season. They are: although his hair is grey. ‘Washington—Stanley (Bucky) Har- Cobb, considered by many ris. greatest player of all time, eveland.—Tris Speaker. tinues in center field for Detroit, hit- Detroit.—Tyrus Raymond Cobb. ting with the beat and apparently St. Louls.—George Sisler. Tetaining his sprinting start which Chicago.—Eddie Collins. has accounted for hundreds of Perhaps never in history has a/| stolen bases. ry quintet boast’ng such fame in the Sisler, out, for most of the 19: national sport been raised to lead-| season, with the possibility that ership. would lose his sight, returned to Harris led the senaters to the] play last summer and hit for better eee te Nati e's weal a ci , Wl iers Reach ts bt Bc ea : a Island of the quintet, being but 27. " MoInnis, is regarded as the best at ion in any league. : 7 Sadly ugh ig Eseenh—-Nites, Delta's 1806 sooeunll | A tae Hop Down Aleutian ‘Archipelago To- pebid Ras ecg EEE 1 T 4 og : (if COAST TEAM Fegulat season. I waa also eno of| tip claims, Contre ie in the same| Ward Japan Recited by Lieutenant i KAPLAN STOPS the greatest teams of all times. Position Notre Dame. Centre o 5 notable that Cobb, Bill ‘ Wambsganss of the Red Sox, and) By HENRY L. FARRELL. [championship of the Southern con- Roger Peckinpaugh of the Senators, (United Press Sports Editor) ference with Georgia as the runner. veterans all, each played in 185| NEW YORK, Dec. 18. (United|¥P) but Centre beat Alabama and There may have been great teams | doesn't belong to the Southern: con- Wade in His Diary games this year, the only men to|Press).—Notre Dame's 1924 football] Georgia and was beaten only by : in the past that were better in one| ference and Netre Dame isn't a 4 @ame than Notre Dame. There may | member ef the Western conference, have been teams this year that were|but Centre and Notre Dame prob- better in’ one game. Princeton,| ably could beat every team in their playing as Princeton did agninst/| local conferences. —— ' Harvard, might have beaten Notre Although California engaged in Dame. Yale, playing as Yale did/one more tie game than Stanford, u 5 against Harvard, might have beaten | California probably will be regarded Question Is Raised of Notre Dame. But that is doubtful: /as the best team on the Pacific coast NE’ ; Dec. 18,1 fe to assert, however, that/i¢ for no other reason than it had Whether Guard May |, zw rorx, ec. 33--Loue ayn} ng tonne tn the corniry wan aa come | aca’, tee ae bd ” stently and regularly good as Notre] fornia with the title. Receive Ball. Honatip eke of Jone’ Lomeergo | Dame was through a schedule that of Panama, in a slashing bout at|CoMtained the Army, Princeton.|and Cornell, who were flopped this Madison Square Garden in which | G90rgia Tech, Nebraska, Wisconsin | season after a long winning streak, By LOWELL THOMAS. Map shows route followed by flyers in actually crossing Pacific. If (Copyright, By the Chicago Tribune Newspapers Syndicate and the Mc-|was on these jumps that the sigbe circlers probably encounteted their = Clure Newspapers Syndicate) most hazardous experiences. “Next day, after the night that the storm: swept our planes off the beach, we rebuilt the runways and pulled all three cruisers high enough so that in the future no matter how great the gale it would be impossible for the waves to reach them. But just to make doubly sure we filled a hun- dred burlap bags with stone and loaded each plane down with a weight of over a ton. Sergt. Harvey to leave Chignik, launched the planes before break- fast. A few hours later Maj. Blair radioed that the weather was fairly] another crowd of Aleuts and the clear, and at 11 o'clock we ‘took off,’| sole white man, a school teacher with the entire population of the] named William Nye—no relation to island of Unalaska on the beach| the humorist, by the way, but even cheering us as we taxied single file| Bill Nye himself would have lost out through the channel into Ber-| his sense of humor ‘f he had had to Saw the Eider riding at anchor in a Uttle be We were welcomed by i i. “Our most interesting experience| There was a concrete tennis court live h By LAWRENCE PERRY. the latter was knocked out in the| 8d Northwestern California has the most impressive e y ing o68: ve here. Notre Dame had a team of indivi- | during our long stay here on the|here that had been built by the of- nd oe (Copyright 1924, Casper Tribune) |rourth round of what was to have i yrds neve bpienessd iss: Tesora ot sry tone inthe country. | Thang. of Unalask says Lelgh|ficers and crew of some. govern.| “Because the sky was completely| ‘The trading rights to this Island NEW YORK, Déc. 13-—In the bean a 12 round match. genius of Knute Rockne. into al four years and California hee ot overcast and the clouds were down | of Atka are under the sole control of Wade, ‘was when we attended East-|ment boats cruising in Bering sea, e four great back- church, on the night of April 26. for skiing than for lawn tennis, we| fly fairly low. ec ir. s deat of talk in the wee wer see Tatton {]ing combination out of them. Petty ‘ ning, Mr. A. C. Goss, a trader who| seven or eight sets. a a Oi : tw the teams on the coast an@ the game tundra below. The traders at Dutch| ashore they pulled up anchore and mitted to the writer, he in turn plac- | outgrown by Johnny Dundee, former foal ‘are bound, to arise and|‘y owns fox farms on adjoining islands, “Next night the willie-waws were a fi . yed on the coast are as good as Harbor told us an interesting tale| left for Attu, the last island in the ed it before-some of the more promi- | champion. Gisabbénkions itollew. Play entertained in our honor. The entire|on a rampage again. Several of : : ~ anything he had ever seen in the 3 vt : ahout thisherd. ‘It seems that yeara|Aleutian chain. So we wore left on nent eastern and southern officials. * crifloa-in the cast saitthat white population of “tiiyook was} them ‘hit the Japanese freighter u Fad a it and middlewest and he has seen when the white men came into/ this desolate, wind swept remnant Thére.was a marked diversity of : Stubldreher, Layden, Miller &nd| ong there. Counting all of us, there|down the bay and she wirelessed to} °S° ; rd ‘ . and handled some mighty fine foot- . the north and hunted, the walrus| of an ancient volcano without even opinion and it seems clear that the e ley formed. the greatest com- were twenty-one men and six wom-/the Haida for help. So our revenue]; ‘ ; rules committee wjll have to con- Fifty ears finetion ever meen behind a line of | 07 °MS en. ‘Mr. Goss, by the way is called| cutter friends steamed to the rescue| “nd seal on an hates epee akeicursats ace croa! this Teac sider the problem and place their de- i scrimmage. A prominent eastern the tincrowned King: of the island of /and towed the Jap to deeper moor. | ernie and Aleuls were escice ty | ee ner Some ey rorne in hia trad ieee Of B ball erp i viy-< ns yay oh RA ni Jing place. That night the woolles|{ttrough great hunters, they could | side stacka of flour and Biles ot con. the football guide. ase ers coming from the Army-Navy bout midnight we heard a wild|seemed to be blowing from every di-| "Ee srany compete against the|densed milk, while the rere slept in ae whav en follows: iiikewts ae trod ringing of bells, and we all rushed|rection and for the first time we had My a eens coached by Paul ee lgten We aceite the one of over to the church, Crowds of/an opportunity of observing the of-|™ore cfficient methods of civilize} the attic. | Noshithe rite ee Behisslor, had the ball, ‘The center By JOHN B. FOSTER. the three Notre Dame backs that ieee sa ctpnenes sun tn thate: Blin: el gd asa Met grade ag government official interested in the| ning over us. I don't mentina tro Tire X coat OF ar tenat 10 wane | COPPHIaRE) 1nd: Gheaee ayia) (0 Sais on an Al-amoricas eae both from starboard and trom port,| Welfare of these natives of the farlrats, however, out of dlarespect for ne defense was ct 1 QUESTION ourse of the recent Oregon-Oregon| ‘The Connecticut Jad thus earns Neagien game, the Aggies pulled a the right to meet Danny Kramer, preen' by pri-) our big hearted host, Mr. Goss, ft Hart: eam.” Im ive Eastern Service. re} heets >? wat ‘i | Porth, raised enough money 5 ; for the. defense was vainly hunting for! 1, arly baseball ford always | football team.’ Ae UBeeah ere agebed tr Pus iett ehasts, piper yacleceriee a eta nutdcripen eral Inteeaune ce [ite huly: anananrd roe bast ae a White. The native chief, who is altho other. Several times sheets were | "Mall herd of reindeer from paper: aim snen: candle merchant, stood near the door| lifted right over the top of the ship.| hoping that he ae re 45 Red ‘To Lowell Smith, our newly ap- Selling his product to the worship-| For a few minutes everything wou'd| uid Up a new industry for the Me} pointed flight commander, went tha pers as they passed in. I believe I|be perfectly calm. Then as audden.| ‘ves. That was along about ll.) honor of occupying the only bridal would rather have his candle conces-|1y as the wind had died down, it| nd since then the government Had) sulte—that is, the only bed in the sion than be king of Atka. would come up and go whistling ana] ™made, further, | appropriations acer pare -ctnt ae, didn't have all the 4 If you have some question to “The sexes separated when they|screaming over us. I'd hate to get ' i % all, because his bed compnlotely Ja8s oe the hfe oy. Pt ihe Serritery immediately adjacent | to} the aa pe * ae brenda ate pp uint ‘Sasabalf, roothal: Dox-| | marched in with their candies, the|caught out in a row. boat pa ead Aleuts Too Lazy to Work, broke down with him twice during umpire claim ston. + | pert the ball carrier and the Aggies inter-| 11) 464 2 prominent in the spost| Stuhldreher was rated by several erers were making fake dashes. |v. Charter Oaks, organized in [experts as the greatest quarterback BOX Finally the right end came around!) i374, were one ef the most famous|ot a decade and there been behind and the guard passed the) 4 the nation’s ball clubs. New|some cracking quarterbacks in that ball to him. He made a 36-yard run| 0" "has been foremost. in base.| time, ; before tackled. ball and Connecticut was foremost] ‘The spoing stressed that part of The referee seems to have beenjin New England, tf we except the} Notre e's greatness came from Now some officials with whom the| was Robert Ferguson, one of the| The writer felt that Illinois was If you want to know anything | |er allowed to sit down once from] er seemed ideal for flying. ‘The sun| even look after the herd. They No cials a a ay ti oll : he] WitMiout our seeing a snowstorm. caribou, a APTA Some “e Wed mat! . work: | |SPorts, an come to their village from the/ sfaj, Blair,.our meteorlogical guard.| reindeer which is indigenous to oerielal eee AO if ri Porat inves of this team were ee eae seas phobia ences ied an Fair Play on boxing and other | | clouds, we were allowed to sit down.| jan angel, radioed ‘Maj. Martin that|aska and which has never been su writer talks, support the umpfre,| best known men in the. history offone of the greatest teams of the| |*bout @ play or pl midnight till dewn. Special benches | was siining and there was a light,|*mply turned them loose and let vriter bh + ‘4 wistéd to "move. backward | famous eiccranere: Ther, were Sint tum that wasn't ‘on cage] |Profesatonal sports. All are spe-| | But we could only do so after the| weather indications seemed tavor-| cessfully domesticated. Today the THIS WINTER ‘ii the first nighi * .| |ing or any other amateur or pro-| | women ow the left and the men on|these willie-waws happened to be ‘One of these herds was brought grounds that a player who recelves| ‘The Hartford team was « meitibe® rn onesie ia as western fessional sport— the right. The ceremony lasted all]on the prow!! to this island of Unalaska, but the (To Be Continued ed the ci e- : i ‘er— Write to John B, Foster, on| | had been brought in for us, and al-|eteady wind. It w: them become wilder and wilder, un- s * and that . steady wind. It was the first day SE ee hie gear Seer tes SRR MATRIC Dod Hue Wrenn oe Lastbee taeae cantblng tek 15 oalivond Degeball. though contrary to the rules of the!sinco leaving Seattle that passed| tll today they aro as wild as the . ' amat cl * 8 oO ono! vl ha patting the ball from «enter. As a] roer through his baseball life was}about in the form of Chicago's tie vawrence Perry, on teur eur cial correspondents of the Casper | | h! priest had blessed the benches. | able and about noon a message came| Aleuts are so lazy that they will not with the ball be steep ates then | Doug ci a w. = Coamniey fhe and beet turned around aud) |onune, 814 World Building, New uteh Harbor is the official resi-/ rom Chignik stating that the Seat-| even go out and hunt these rein- bag si preety 1 snderetoad that ball, Fea poke, Saat gets Ne otined hed to be a good team to} | Yo": dence of the patrioarch of the Rus:|tie had at 1 rted for Dutch] deer for meat. The reindeer has one H If you want a perso: ly | | sian Church_of the Aleutian Islands, x eculiarity that gives him an advan- the rules hold thet anyone may|tional league great pitchers, Ed/win the “Big Ten” champlonship,| | oncioas a stamped. aairataieel and ft was this bishop with his long ge eel a apent) thecteatl et tags “even” Over thee mien He carry the ball except the center and/ Milis the giant first baseman, Jack}put Chicago started slowly by los: envelope. Otherwise your ques-| | beard, flowing robes, and imposing|tho day speculating on where the| prefers to travel against the wind, By FAIR PLAY the two players on either side of| Burdock, a second baseman whose|ing to Missouri, the champions of| | 11,., will be answered in this col-| | headdréss who. led the ‘service. ‘The major and Harvey were aud when|Our friends at Dutch Harbor told] (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune) him. Thus, were the guard, upon|reputation as a player always will/the Missouri Valley conference, and] | 1.1, church was only illuminated by a] they would be likely to arrive. Hours| us that there are between 200,000and] NEW YORK. Dec. 13.—The hot receiving the ball from the center, | live; Tom Carey, Tom York, wholthen worked up to the ftincst form fow flickering wicks in tallow dishes.| passed and they didn't come. Dusk| 300,000 ‘square miles of tundra in| dope is that Jack Dempsey and Tom. hela by the referee to be the ball car- rier, ul calling for a penalty wetha" fave been Psomimitted. ‘The | Ground and who was one of the best|to be on the proper edge for covery | made behind the line of scrimmage? difference of opinion centers on| outfielders baseball ever had; J. J.|gay’and we don’t know of any coach | That is, can a man 10 yards back of whether or not the guard really is| Remsen, Pete Cassidy, Dick High-|in the country that could do it with} the line throw the ball forward to oes ipevapats gee sd lg per ad a ball carrier. am and W. H. Hardbridge. the exctption of Knute Rockne. The| @ man three yards back of the line? | 8 bese Ed Thorpe, a prominent eastern} Hartford was in the fight all the| Notre Dame coach, however, was 80 Answeor.—Yes, Alsaia @: Devout People. too, Dad seen nothing of the plane.| about Alaaka.one might gather that | if he has not. he will go in on a ault otball official, says that he would| way through the first year of Na-|rich in reserve strength and he was Question.—If_ the ball is kickea “In the center of the room before} something had surely happened. But, you see, we flew over the is-] many ways to the promoters of the carrier’ if he made. no\‘movement oOo tn eemnte he wan uble, to | and one of the kickers side recovers |‘h® altar was a draped casket, and Search Well Organized. lands, foe fields, co capped moun-| milk shows, and.it will be his ten carrier if he maGs no. movement | third in the race with @ percentag¢itor high scores that he was uble to} sad one O€ the lickers side recovers |at the height of the chanting, while|’ Al that night we tried to get| tain ranges, and yoleanoes along the | 0 come through with « tighe Inner whatever, But if he even so much | of 691 and 47 games won to 21 lo8t./ gaye his regular backs and keep baiartora does the down count or|tt@ Aleuts were wailing in a falsetto! Chignik by radio, and failed. But|coast, Erik and the other boys who| half of the cause. Pee rl SALT acl an og mae opi ig onapereg BS! geen = Ampaieneree (OR first down for the side that re | Key the Bishop, followed by pricsts| as soon as it grow dark, Smith, with | flew with Capt. Streett on that great | Dempsey has not fought tn #o long ‘0 another er, he waitatee, 7 swinging incense braziers, lifted the|/the rest of us constantly with him,| 9,000-mile flight from New York tojthat the generat belief is that consider thut he fell within the) vear but the Hartforde that year) Yale and Dartmouth were the best | overed it, that is thekicking side? | case to their shoulders and march-| remained at the radio station, wire.|Nome and return passed right thru| my will make him step quite sce category of ball catrier and would|were playing against the stron€|teams in the East. Figuring that Late Rule XVII, Section 3.) eq out of the church, followed by | iensing every ‘ship within reach, ask-| the interior of Alaska, and once they| On thing {s certain, Tommy Gibv- inflict penalty. Chicagos and the St. Louis team| mental equipment is as essential to| holds “iis player may cened the |th@ entire congregation, all still|ing them to help in the search. We|had crossed the mountain ranges | bons is'no longer a true light-hea: perenne Arete ere which was much stronger than hadia great team as physical equipment, | Kicked ball that has not crommed the | ohanting, Around and around the| assigned each vessel to a separate| right through the heart of the north| weight. He looked very draen the | been expected when the league was) Yeie had a better team on the form| met scrimmage, This, of course, | church they marched, and when they| section of the const, night She met Kid Norfolk at 115 “ formed. dhown in the Yale-Dartmouth game.| Would mean first down for tho wide returned, the casket had been left|and two nights we remained at the| flowers and sunbhine, a vast empire | pounds and the chances are he would The head of the club was Morgan| Dartmouth should have won. the ae Sapybhs aed eel ing Pretax without. But the bishop was car-|radio station awaiting news. Search| which should one day sustain a] not wish to hazard’making this di- = FS G. Bulkeley who was also the tirst| game but) Dartmouth was outsmart. | te*pretation by the committee | rying a shroud held high over his only a little while ago was the gate-ifor the most important games. ‘The chanting in Aleut was as weird man at the press gate at the Polo|- ‘The point is that Notre Dame 1ad| Question —Can a forward. pass be} (6 °tn4 winds and volcanoes of this remote island, And as we sat there in our leather flying coats we could Alaska on which the reindeer can feed and which will support at least 10,000,000 of them Interior » Paradise. ‘rom what all of us have said my Gibbons will meet in the Madi- son Square Garden thig winter in the first of the season's milk fund bouts. Dempsey is sald to have a finan- clay interest in the Garden and even it he has not, he will go in on a auit- approached, still no whirring of a Liberty in the sky. Between Chig nik and Dutch Harbor there is a wireless station at King Cove. We were in touch with them but they,| * too, had seen nothing of the plane.| about Alaska one might gather that For two days| they found themselyes in a land of Parties were organized by land, and| large population, yision against a strong natural light- president of the led and Yale won. it is hel t if akicked ball strikes! nega, indicating that the Savior had| beth natives aad white trappers took| “As we flew over the Aleutian. is- heavy like Gene Tunney. Mr. Bulkeley afte ha’ Ady: slso/had 2 powertul cobate sikatoee: ye are 2 a risen, their dog teams and started for the| lands we passed schools of whale The fact is that Tommy looks to PITTSBURGH.—Harry Grep,| Oameball in the United States, therelveam, but the Cadets blew the | ee ne reer sige he Aleuts all seemed very d¢-|interior. Later we ned that]and frequently frightened great | be right up in Dempscy'a clase, 180 world’s middleweight champion, ant Sows 1 fox, Relating pan’ Soe chance for a high rating by falling ‘| vout and chanted their weird songs| Washington had dispatch Lieut.| flocks of arctic birds called mures./190 pounds, right now. That is to say, he gave evidence that between these weights, he will be at his best. His ferocity against Norfolk gave the fans a better idea of him than ever before they have had and there is no doubt he would be an attrac- tion against the champion to score k tuochdown egainst a 5 Ses over and over without apparently le H. Tonkin from C: field, | When we would come roaring along pep erg all: 8 Tas necetved oy offer | overcome. Navy team that had been beaten in eters err a te to know | being aware of our presence. Short-|san Francisco, with a Curtiss JN they would ‘take off with such « i Oa Ter te ent | Another condition that developed | any every game on the schedule.| What territory the base | runner's |i, netore 2 o'clock they all lined up| airplane. which was boxed up forswishing of their wings that the wa- Atlanta, Ga., negro, in a title bout| was the continuance of building up The Army beat the Navy, of course, | Path Is on from third tohome and is| again, still chanting, and then|shinment to Alaska by heat ter was stirred up just as though it in London, in June. baseball: sentiment all over southern | SUP Sn. beg margin of four field] ® direct line that Srhich ie from the| marched single file past a cross and|. "Then on the 24 of May the fol-| had been hit by m squall. As we DAVENPORT, 1n.— Ghie and the counties on the top| eoais and the army victory did not| Center of one base to the center of /two sacred, pictures, each of which| lowing message reached us from the| passed over the Islands of the Four 4 4 Je—Dare Forbes, | tier of Kentucky where baseball has | So's Sud The ey va eretrior foot. | Smother: a they kissed in exactly the same spot.| chief of the air service Mountains tens of thousands of sea Detroit welterweight, was awarded| been strong with the athletic loving | Pert {t did by the errors com.|,, Answer—The base runner's path | Tuberculosis is @ terrible scourge in| “T.ieut. Lowell Smith commana| pigeons came whirring up to have a Rete, over “Dago” Joe Gans of| population for Years. It is more mtteea by the miashipmen. Hes along a direct line from the cen-| these islands, and it seemed to us|world flight. Don't. delay. longer| look at us. The air was thick with Ga tr when the reforee claimed} than love for the game iteelf and Denhsyivania had-e good team. but | “tof One. dave to the center of am las though there could hardly be a| waiting for Maj, Martin. See that|them. ‘They seemed so excited that Cans fouled Forbes in the seventh Sbroeesiity At thet Country oa Penn deat Georgetown only 3 to 0,| ner base. | Tt art a the tase | More effective way of making sure| everything possible done to find him. | st looked as though {t would be im- a are score: xcelle: ‘bewe! / ’ that evéry Aleut contracted tho dis vO. -| possible: fe pavckaphs gst! 2% 1 gna Gebri wn was defeated by line on his Way home. He is out, ry 1 je dis-] Planes two, three and four to pro-| possible for them to keep out of our OMAHA, Neb.—'Tiny” Jim Her-|ated great playérs and all of which m. Penn State held Penn’ to| powever, if he runs out jof line to ceed to Japan at arliest possible] way. We flew right through the : M1 during the service every few| moment.’ midst of them, fearful every mo- man, Omaha heavyweight, won a| Play interesting basbball, & 3 bree wenn State was|/avold betng touched by 'a fielder one of us would run out to Off for Japan, ment that we would hit one and referee's decision over Martin Burke| The inter, city contests which take Georg: nt ‘with the ball in his hand. e still all right ‘Maj. Blair, with the bureau of] break a propeller. But after two hours of the monoton-| fisheries people on the Eider had “On Yuanska island we saw more ous chanting we returned to the| gone on ahead to the island of Atka,f| waterfalls and cataracts than we of New Orleans, in ten ds. place in that region are famous |#nd Pittsburgh. pa ni beara tallied ay everywhere for the closentss of the} Syracuse started out well, but wames and the expertiiess of the|S¢emed to slip back as the season “ 2 home of our trader friend, while the| where we were scheduled to make] could count. They were caused by i Electric Retiy: & lay 4 Gn the. Salt Sele ieee See br Woot Virginia. Wesleyan ERE and ¥ pati earners on with the service| our next stop in hopping down the| the snows melting high up on the . bage- re . wu morning. Aleutian archipelago toward Japan.| mountains. At Seguam, the next Construction Co. ball enthusiasm for a half century | There were bis iad rence eae THERE Play Tennis in Snow Maj. Blair radioed that they were en-| isle south, we flew past a volcano Anything in the Electrical and to this day on important ocea.|ther® was dissension in each “Sunday the 27th was the first|countering severe storms and that| where we could see a wide path of Dy etri sions baseball fans will go to Cinoin-| A@l4 players and that one star bac! ; day since we left Los Angoles and| it would be very } rdous for us| lava from the rim of the crater SEE US ne ae res ee bid teed big he ly Dae ty. Sale Do IT Now started on the world flight that we|to leave that day ext morning| right down to the water's edge 5 ay in t lecision matches o: e a 2 d a ” t complete | w were up before dawn, and with ‘ . 142 E. Midwest Ph. 483-W ey ae spe cectsinn cas petition] Centre probably had the best teani| Fone 2702 and make appointment} hed a chance to take a complete | p before a and with| Atka Accommodations Limited. for your Xmas photographs. Credell! r: Monday came and found us|the help of a crowd of Aleuts we It was 3 In the afternoon when Fhudio, 181, Cenper Bt. downataire, still) wajting for Maj. Martin and|took advantage of high Ude and) we flew over the Island of Atka ang i KEGBe yt eT SY ee ed South, Alabama won Lhe A ,