' 5IEDF0KD' 5I3IL TRIBUNE, :MEDFOBD, OKEGCX, ' IOWA GIRL WINS SPELLING BEE 31 V , Dorothy Greenwald of Dee Moines, Iowa, receive the 1,000 prli which ehe won In the national epelllng bee held In Washington. Prof. George B. Woods, dean of American university of Washington, who was chairman of the contest, msde the award. The other two In the picture re Arthur Wlbbels of Louisville, Ky, and Wllma Pyle of Detroit, who took third place. TWO KILLED IN SUDDEN STORM ha r5rfM?s'SMlf i.eJ ""p. ""!" !. -Cf?ri Atmuttd Prtu FAvf Some of tha damage don In Clovls, N. M, by a series of amall cyclones, a weather freak In such high altitudes. Two persons were killed In Bethel, 30 mile southwest of Clovls. EX-KAISER'S SON IN PRUSSIAN DIET 4saoemd Pru Plot Prlnc August Wllhelm. son of th .x-kalser of Gsrmany. Is shown (center) as h. .ntsrsd ths Prussian dlt In Berlin at th op.n Ing session. He rspreeents the national socialists, or Nails. In the diet. NOTRE DAME HONORS OWEN YOUNG T J L.I I Own O. Young, International financier and prominent democrat, I hewn receiving an honorary doctor of law degre from the Rev. Father Chsrlss Lo O'Donntll, prldnt of th Unlvtrslty of Notr Dame, at who 85th annual commsncerrwnt ceremony Voung wa th arlnelpal ipeiKlJui s' " BONUS ARMY ARRIVING IN WASHINGTON BONUS ARMY ON PARADE IN WASHINGTON - JJr - 1 'i T 4f fj 2 , Urf ra- asaif nun's IS s : 3 .. lull ; " s. . wf ill I ? f AsMOciated rres fnoi Headed by . group of be-med.led ex-soldlers and an American Legion fife and '"''"f of war veteran, marched through the nation's capital to emphasize w.th tramping feet their demand for Immediate payment of the soldiers bonus. ' . Astociatci Preat I'hcto In spite of a warning of a food shortage war veterans by tha hundreds continue to pour Into Wash. A Ington to sweM the ranka of those a'reaoy there. Some of the cx-soldiera vow they'll remain In the capital i and starve If necessary until the soldi bonus I paid. Here Is a group of veterans arriving In Washing- J ton on a frelgnt train. SCENE AFTER EARTHQUAKE IN MEXICAN CAPITAL Held As War Spy WILLIAMS TRAINS FOR OLYMPICS r-l tlstoctoted Pr khoto Thli picture made after recent earthquake In Mexico City ahowa the destruction left In its wake. More than three score persona were known to have been kilted and upwards of 100 were Injured. Much damage was done over a wide area and a number of smaller towns were destroyed. Associated Pres Photo After a 13-year search, this man was arrested In New York as Capt Fritz Joubert Duquesne, wanted In England as an alleged German war apy accused of blowing up the steamer Tennyson off Brazil In 1916. He denied he was Duquesne and aave his name as Frank Craven. MIDDIE WAITS 24 HOURS FOR BRIDE READY FOR CONFEDERATE REUNION I sSK.' Vi- ,.;..(.. -low. ' IT -n n-r-srsnnsniti uriu il : 2 ......m .irr. .k . ILi itMoeiaud Preaa PAofo "A perfect rosette," ssld C. B. Faurqurean, confederate veteran, to Ruth Wood of Richmond. The rosette Is the result of a collision of a confederate bullet and a union bullet fired simultaneously. In ths same line acros a Richmond battlefield. They came across It as they wer preparing civil wsr curlosltlee for exhibition at the forty-second reunion of United Confederate Veterana In Richmond. June 21. WOMAN HELPS BONUS MARCHERS AssoctMitdPfssPbot Becauie of a new ruling forbidding marriages for naval academy graduates until at least 24 hours after graduation, this couple's nuptials at the academy chapel were delayed a day. They are Ensign Harold L. Sargent and Jane Anderson, both of Hannibal, Mo. CONGRESS MEETS ON DIAMOND !.;.r - . " r - An army marches on Its stomach, so ths saying geti, and Mrs. Vsrs Perata, Oakland, Csl using the family car, carries provisions (era west ern division of th bonus army on Its trsmp to Washington. '. s pic ture wss mads as ths veterans camped under t: s shadow cl C .:..ijs's skyscrapers. With Mrs. Persia Is her husband, William Perata (left) nd James 05! of Burijngton, CsL ' With party lines strictly adhered to, democrats and republicans of th house of representatives met on the diamond of Griffith stsdlum, Washington, with unemployed benefiting. The gams had all the trap pings and fanfare of a big leagu enow. VlcePresldent Curtis tossed out th first ban. There wss plenty of sctlon ss shown by ths plctur below. Rep. Dsvld Hcpklns, Missouri, Is at bat. Rep. Thomas McMillan, catcher, and Umolr Gelid cj ihj Acibua lfgu Is csuj 'em , 1 "AyrVOS s. J Z- 5r- Assoctjtrd freu Pilot Percy Williams of Vancouver, B. C, the "Canadian Comet" who won both the 100 and 200-meter events In the 1928 Olympic games, has gone into training in Seattle for thie year's Olympics at Los Angeles. He believes he has recovered from a leg Injury suffered two years ago. FREAK TWISTER HITS COLORADO A. 1 "fKir-il Ufffct)V-s,i;,lv.:,V,;.jr;-... ' -. "-r . Atntistri frill fhrf Fifty houses wsre damaged, four children Injured and one man killed In a tornado that struck Colorado Springs, Colo. Upper: ecene of wreckage wher lineman lost his life and (lower) death grazed a mother and five children when this house exploded. LIBERAL LEADER AT CONVENTION "'i I'. I . ' ' I (.- v. .. I f I .;'-'it I . - j ' Francis Clay Harley, mayor of Astoria. Ore., was a national con vsntion visitor In Chicago. He represented the National Liberal Alli ance and asserted he was the first man to run for governor on a re peal platform n nit. - -