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0 GUSHER—Spouting hundreds of feet into the air, a new oil gusher <omes in in the Playa Del Rey, Cal., field, an inspiring sight, espe- cially to those who have invested their money in it. COURTESY VISIT—Just repaying Colonel Lindbergh’s flight to Paris of three years ago, is the way Captain Dieudonne Coste char- acterizes his non-stop Paris-New York hop, on arrival with Maurice Bellonte. He is shown, left, being carried on the shoulders of the crowd at Curtiss Field, while, right, is Colonel Lindbergh with the late Ambassador Myron T. Herrick during his Paris reception. SPARE THE ROD—and the child; says Lord Ca above, London’s foremost col " deposed President AT POPULAR PRICES—Television is already being taken out of the luxury class and being placed within the means of all, according to C. Francis Jenkins, Washington television expert. He is shown - demonstrating a machine, easily operated and inexpensive, to Miss Vera Hunter, also of Washington. HELD IN PERU—H. B. Grow, former U. S. naval commander, who has been seized by the Cerro government in Peru for aiding the Leguia, is snapped before his arrest talking to a group of Peruvian officials at Ancon, Peruvian naval air base. President Leguia is shown, seat- ed, wearing the derby hat. PRESENTS HIS CREDENTIALS—Viscount Willingdon, governor general of Canada, and Colonel Hanford MacNider, mew U. S. minister to the dominion, are seen at Ottawa, as the latter made his first official visit and presented his credentials. RESULTS OF DROUGHZ—Stockmen of the western range ttates are being forced to ship thousands of cattle to market on account of short feed conditions This photo was snapped at Pitchfork, Wyo. [} TFESTIVAL—Representing every variety of fruit and grain now in season, this 50-foot column, con- taining 25 tons of fruit, was auc- tioned off at the start of the an- nual\German festival at Philadel- phia, Pa. More than 20,000 Ger- man-Americans gathered at the Quaker City for the fete. ANZAC AIR HERO—Bert Hink- ler, first to successfully complete a solo flight from London to Aus- tralia, is snapped on his arrival at New York City. While in the United States the Australian plans making an intensive study of American aviation methods and airport operations. /| N GIFT OF PRINCE—Miss Rayment, inmate of an old people’s home iting the U. S. He advi at London, England, proudly exhibits the gift of the Prince of Sam to rid himself of lim . Wales, a statuette of himself in riding togs, to her friends in the loving gunmen and rack ; institution. The prince sent the figure to replace an ornament old-fashioned flogging broken during a recent surprise visit to the institution, Za 7 ist and man-about-tow g UNIVERSITY_ FOR DRY SLEUTHS—With the intention of making dry agents the “best trained group of d_etectlves in the world,” Colonel Amos W. W. Woodcock, director of prohibition, has opened his Uni- vgrs:ty of Prohibition Enforcement at Washington, D. C., with an enrollment of'24 agents. Left to right in the photo, snapped at the opening of the first 30-day course, are Webster Spates, law instructor, Colonel Woodcock. and Harry M. Dengler, supervisor. S CHEERING WOUNDED VETS~Tom Mix, famous cowboy star of the films, pays a visit to the wounded war veterans at Walter Reed hospital, Washington, D. C. The ex-cowboy is the object of much interest on the part of his wheelchair friends as he ‘shakes hands with one of them. g ‘ N\