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IN CHAMP HIS OWN NG ameralne n Tel Ther Story -— AS WORLD GREAT WAVES BATTER S. § of the great waves about to bi DE GRASSE— York, too! had been ex and | ine was on a rampage during over the ship as it battled a ferce storm in mid Atlantic. FORMER CONSTRUCTION ENGINEER IS NOW AN ARTIST—Stewart MacDer- construction engineer, workin, on his painting of the girl of 1850. joned girl the most interesting old-f Mac a toll of ten ] cen seriously burned. ished. (I ey Vinal, clectrician ¢ AERIAL SEARCH FOR LOST PAR dition, h had been lost in the Arctic w is sh planes which were forced d pedition. ( Richard Pez the frozen ocean from Dease’s Point succeeded in getting throug i 7 Py WHEN THE NORTHWEST CORNER M the memorable gridiron contest between the CLOSING THE LAR bank d steel a R | N NORTH—The se¢ han two months, is a h for the MacAlpine Expe- epic of the north. Above and desolate region while hunting for the lost Sxpedition, a record trek They were rescued by one of the airplanes ET THE SOUTHEAST CORNER—An exciting moment in boys from the University of Oregon and their hosts at the University of Florida. Although the Southern sunshine kept things so hot for the Northerners that they occasionally had to remove their jerseys, the ited with their reception. Internutional Newsredl i concrete. :ST DOOR house of Heydt & Co., Berlin, Germany, closing what is said to be the largest and heaviest entrance in the world. The cntire entrance weighs 400 tons The door itsclf weighs 35 tons and is 3 feet nd 7 feet 8 inches in diameter. Tnter Y IN THE WORLD—An employce in the fonal Nowsres! TWO- AR-OLD VISITOR FROM SCOTLAND—Leslie Mullin, two years old, arrived in® New York on the S. 8. Republic, making the journey from Scot- land enroute to Detroit, where he will join his parent i A O———_