Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
News Pictures
British Submarine Sinks With Crew of 68 Runaway Girl
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Spend $200,000 On Rock Tomb
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Capt. John E. Lyons of Middleport,
0., a well-to-do river man, is having
a huge tomb cut for himself out of
solid rock in a 100-foot bluff over
looking the Ohio River. It will cost
8200.000, including a 75-foot monu
Puts Scores of Travelers in Peril
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Lives of many passengers on the
I‘ittsburg and West Virginia rail
road were imperilled when a 125-ton
boulder, loosend by heavy rains crash
<d down from Mt. Washington. Pit
tsburg, crushed a portion of the rail
ment that is to be erected in the
brow of the hill behind the tomb.
Photo shows the excavation in the
lock. It will be closed by a copper
door guaranteed to last 5000 years.
road bridge and blocked a tunnel
which is the road's only entrance to
the citv. A debris blocking the tun
nel mouth and defying workmen’s
efforts to remove it.
Premier Mussolini of Italy has be
come the center of desperate Italian
intrigue because of his dictatorial
ways, but he appears fearlessly in
public to make addresses, as tbt
picture shows. The photograph was
taken in the public square at Milan.
Still At It
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Wiumm iviumoliand, of Los Angles
started his career as a ditch digger.
At 81 he’s still digging ditches—only
in a different way. For now’ he’s in
charge of a project to bring water
all the way from the Colorado river
to southern California over a 1700-
toot elevation and across wide de
serts, to supply 1, 600,000 people.
.Can’t Explain
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Thomas sterling, oi iuon, N. Y.,
senior at Amherst College, was ques
tioned following disappearance of
Alice M. Corbett, Smith College stu
dent. with whom he was friendly.
But Sterling could give no explana
tion of the girl’s disappearance.
AMFRICIJS TIMF.S-RFCORDER
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'I he British submarine monitor,
•M-l, is believed to have sunk off the
Isle of Wight, England, with its en
tire crew of 68 officers and men a
board. Because of the great depth of
w ater where the submarine in believ
ed to have foundered the sub its
<rew seems destined for the same
fate that overtook the American sub
marine S-51. ,
Wins Death Race
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Guy Waggoner, millionaire Texan,
chartered a special train at St. Louis
to race to the bedside of his sister,
Mrs James Gilmore, in New York,
but after her brother’s arrival, physi
cians reported she had a chance to
live. The picture was taken as Wag
goner reached t : Pennsylvania Sta
tion in New York after his record
breaking trip.
Both Win
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Like father, like son! Charles
Brenner, above, has been justice of
the peace in Brooklyn, 0., township
tor 32 years. This fall two justices
were to be elected. He and his son
William F. Brenner, below, ran and
both were elected.
Si jpp
Isabel Bennett, 1.5, a second cousin
of the late President Harding, dis
appeared from her home in New
York City. She was found two days
later in Norfolk, Va., where she had
gone with a girl friend to see the
sights of the sunny south.
Rhinelander’s Bride
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This intimate photo of Mrs. Alice
Jones Rhinelander is part of the evi
ednce introduced at White Plains,
N. Y., by attorneys for her husband.
Leonard Kip Rhinelander, who seeks
annulment of his marriage bonds.
Izzy Goes
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lzzy Einstein, most famous of all
the federal dry aegnts, is through.
Along with more than a hundred oth
ers, he lost his job in a shakeup of
the New York office. Photo shows
him casting a professional eye on
the business end of the keg of liquor.
SATURDAY AFTERNOON. NOVEMBER 21, 1925
New Memorial to Longfellow
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A shine to Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow is being built on the
banks of Bayuo Teche, near St. Bart
inville, La., where a statue of the
poet with his two best-loved charact
Turned Bandit for a Thrill
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Charles Delpsch, former University
of Minnesota student, wanted a
thrill. So he went to Los Angeles;
met Dolly Roland, and the two start
! d out to be bandits. After staging
Winner cf the Great Hardware Derby
Here’s a race horse to bet you
money on. He comes out of thorough
bred stock—a son of galvanized tin
>nd sheet iron. The horse was made
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ers—Evangeline and Gabriel—will
be erected in the middle of a 50-acre
park. Photo shotvs Arther C. Mor
gan, New Orleans sculptor, at work,
on the model of the work.
several daring holdups the two were
captured by police. Delpsch asserted
he did not need the money, but mere
lv wanted excitement.
by a Reading (Mass.) hardware
dealer out of materials from his
stock.