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s O e g HERALD CAMERAMEN TELL THEIR STORY A IIIIIIII}IIIi|fllflllmlliIIlHHlIflI“'lIlIlIIIHHHIIIIMIHHIIIMHHHlIIHIIHImIMIMIIlIIIIII|||||||lllllllIIlIIllIIl'lllIlflfil“IlIlI!IVIHHIIIIHIIl|II||I|I||IIIII|lll||I!IIllll|II|Il|I|lIlIII!I||!III||IlIIIH||||I|IIIIHIIIIIlllllIlll'Il||IIIII|I||II|IIlIIIIIIISIIIH|||||lllllllllllIIIIlIlIIllIIIllll|||||!llllfilflmllflllllllllllfllllflllll||IIIIIIH!IIHI!IHIIIIIlIIIIIIIflIflNIiIIIIfl"IIIIIIIIHIII!IHHHIIIHIMWHHNWWWWWI Death Bus in Which Ten Lost Their Lives Dramatic Scenes During Second Session of Browning Suit (ByP. & A This is all that remai bus carrying Baylor uni vy basketball team after train struck it at Round Rock, Tex. Ten students were killed, five injured. Note how heavy vehicle was ripped apart. The force of the impact w f th om some quarters, an in- ion will be demanded to cause of the terrible catastropre. It is one of the wors have come into consta (By Pacific & Atlantic) Browning (right) wore this expression during testimony of Peaches. Peaches Heenan Browning in White Plains, N. Y., court related details of her married life with wealthy, dandified Edward W. Browning in second (h\ of her suit for divorce. Huge throng of curious was on hand to listen. In night court at New York, Magistrate Charles Tolleris (left), on his first night’s duty, received congratulations of Magistrate Good- . 3 5 3 . e ; ter) and Abe April, a friend. His first case was brought They're in the navy now and <o they have to practice. Above, view of Fifth division of flect from deck oy ‘omer S S L , : Here's part of crowd on hand for Browning trial at White Plains, N. Y. the seaplane. ' She’s Some Lumberlady! Exceptional Were They Ancestors of American Indians? (By Pacific & Atlantic) George M. Neville (above), 21, hns i succeeded his father, 3 Neville, to presidency of Vlen ian and Bigbee railroad, which runs through Mississippi and Alabama. Neville is young- est railroad president in U. S. (By Pacific & Atlantic) Tribe known as the Oroter, he- 100, Many Laws Icy GreetmO' for ngh Seas Queen lieved to be ancestors of Ameri- . S can Indians, has been discovered i pP. [.: up \hn\e are membe: the Gimyt-Dorgje (By Pacific & Atlantic) = Gt ket e tribe s e on the border Dit chilly in White Plains and that $11.000 sable coat certainly came Fievated to manager of lumber yard in Brogklyn, N. Y, Miss Cecil lin nd Mongolia. in handy. Here's Peaches entering the White Plains court with a King promptly climbed to top of timber pile for survey, then named Note great fa semblance to reporter all primed to tell her story of marital woe. T. H. Tesauro (right) assistant. Indians. A Little Example of Railway Acrobatics Silk King’s Daughter Faces Eviction (By Pacific & Atlantic) {By Pacific & Atlantic) “We have enough laws,” declared Stella B. Haines (above), s., who represents ut county in state assembly, in her introductory speech. She astoundel men legislators when she disclosed that she had come ] ssembly without a single - ® b d bill in her brief case. She said: Anybody got a spare $1.050? Unless Hiram Royal i “I intend to devote my Ime to ih i-i-vering passengers looked down on this ice packed slip as the v s s SO B 3 0 lionaire nan o 9 ork onie om 10 gene demanding a strict enforcer:ent liner Majestic pulled in New York. The sea queen wasn’t fazed by Here's h]uw a Lo x]m nd, N ay ¢ ¢ acks at Rockaway Park station. \ nine-car Bowen (above) with fe, r Lo alentine Mallinson, of the present statutes and not the greeting—she nosed right through it. train split switch, n it ck rain was empty. faces eviction from his home in New York. trying to promote new laws. (Copyright: 1927: Pacific & Atlantic Photos, Inc.)