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PAGE SIX German Nazis Open Drill Camp for Boys in Jersey Exclusive photos taken in Camp Wille und Macht (Will and Might), as possible is carried on in German, the 200 students wear brown shirts being operated near Princeton, N. J., by the Friends of New Germany, and drill in “goose-step,” and fly the Nazi flag alongside the Stars and a Nazi organization, for the training of boys. As much conversation Stripes. The leader, H. Haas, Brooklyn, N.'Y., is shown drilling the boys. : ,, ' * (Central Press) Building Up of Navy Starts BRITISH UNITED ~ ' JAPAN 966.379TQNS vJt- ; 663,389t0ns Oak ! n pUt t 0 ' Vork at Kearn y. N. J., Pensacola, Fla., and USSni V 1 - b J com P, anies which were successful bidders for con -2258? °V v 5,, « h, P s 'y, lth which Navy will begin building up to treaty d™.i» S IL,tar y Claude Swanson and Assistant. Secretary H. L. o„ { ;.T ai; snown opening the bids. Present tonnage of American, Bm,B “ and .apancse navies are shown, with U. S. far behind ratio allowed her by treaty. (Central Press) Doesn’t Want Another Snake Bite Albert Teester, Sylva, N. C., pre.achpr who survived rattlesnake bite h« received during sermon on faith, is telling the world, “I wouldn’t touch a rattler again for all the gold in the United States—unless God tells me to! Other Southern pastors promise similar demonstrations with snakes. (Central Press) HERE ARE UNCLE SAM'S SEVEN GIANT POWER PROJECT? r w ~ " Ist LAWRENCE PROJECT,! AMERICAN AND CANADIAN, • V C^J?£ M ' *•- 200000 H.P j A \ 12,600,000 M/? | V r I SKAGIT, I J>" I WASHINGTON, MM* Y—T^ | \POOQOQHP W l I BONNEVILLE DAM I © &Erh L OREGON, , , _ -S_ k_ Es 360,000 HP • MUSCLE SHOALS. NIAGARA FALLS, *v :) —1 -e ALABAMA AMERICAN AND CANADIAN, „jl T 1 Brfcl LG'O-OO OH* —LOSO,OOP H,P = S COLORADO, vk, ' 1,635,000 H.P | >. tg£ j ==^"'s ‘ ~ * • *4s President Roosevelt’s visits to i various great dams on his trans continental tour focus attention j I on the seven great power develop ments in the United States. The 1 Pj~°j*etj? _with the horse power^ HENDEXSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1934 Ready to Use Rattler m Faith l est • dewey Dodson (center), Holiness Church evangelist in Birmingham, Ala., is ready to let rattler bite him if snake used in illustrating sermon on faith uses its fangs, and follow example of North Carolina preacher vvho survived rattler’s poisonous thrust.- With the evangelist are his son. Dewey, Jr., 10, and Erskine Rigsby, 15, also preachers. 'Central Press) Governor Wins i riMH : mm .jjgSsl dm By a lead of more than tyo to one Gov. C. Ben Rosp of Idaho is winner of the Democratic nomi nation for the third term he if seeking. they will generate when com pleted, are indicated Oh the majfc shown below. Cge,s* Mystery Death s A . > a:.-. ’- : " " . • fwßwiWfnr mrntm*, m vxle ' Mrs. Irene Eilert Paul de Gadon Denying charges that Mrs. Iren# Eilert, 23-year-old blonde, died at his Hollywood home as the re sult of an illegal operation, Paul de Gaston, concert violinist, in sists Mrs. Eilert, a “casual ac quaintance” succumbed after call ing at his home and drinking a cup of coffee which he made for her when she collapsed in a fain* on his front porch. That Cost Meiion #1,500,000^ While employes of his Aluminum Co. of America strike for higher wages, Andrew Mellon is in Eurojw buying art. He paid Soviet Russian government $1,500,000 for this painting, Raphael’s Alba Madonna. The Soviet’s Hermitage Museum, in Leningrad,' from which the painting will he removed, still has some of finest works of the Italian master.' (Central Pre*?) OUR YESTERDAYS ~ ■ WJyen a Terrific Tornado Struck Lorain , Ohio, Snuffing Out Lives and Destroying Property —■ ■ ■ : - - , M IMIII VieWl of wrerlarre in I nrain » AMn . ABOUT-6 o'clock on the evening Os June 28. 11)24. residents of Lo rain, O', and vicinity, were pre paring for dinner as usual. The sky had been overcast, but no na- ; live of: Lorain -1 bought the dark HARNESSING OF “OLD MAN RIVER” GOES FORWARD • Completion *\ $7,000,000 locks and dam, above, at Rock Island, 111., is another step in the Missis Advertise In The Dispatch view* oi wreckage m Lorain tornado clouds would mean anything more than a hard storm; at worst Sud denly . ahd almost without warning, a terrific tornado struck the city, tearing down buildings, uprooting trees and laving waste generally sippi river flood control and navi gation project. When finished, the river will have a nine-foot E>. to the whole area. When the tor* nado had passed and calm was re* stored, the survivors counted 94 dead. 71 of them in Lorain proper, and estimated a damage of $o0 s ? 000.000. channel, making it navigable from St. Louis to Minneapolis through out the shipping season.