f Twins—Five Sets of ’Em—Amaze New Yorkers Skyline, Not Petty Girl, to Welcome Legionnaires Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fifield of East Thompson, Conn., shown with 11 of their 13 children, including five sets of twins, as they lunched in a New York restaurant. New Yorkers were as much amazed at the sheer num ber of the children as the children were of the city’s skyscrapers. The youngest set of twins, Franklin Del ano and Eleanor Roosevelt, are only two years old. The oldest child, Marguerite, 13, is seated next to her mother at the head of the table. Two of the children, Including an infant son, are not shown. ‘Heaven’ Can Wait—If Newport Has Its Way Mrs. Angela C. Kaufman, widow of the multi-millionaire Joseph Kaufman, was recently refused a liquor license by Newport, R. I., officials when she planned on converting her mansion into an exclusive dinner and cocktail place. Then the fireworks started. Mrs. Kaufman created a furore in the ultra-fashionable resort by offering the mansion to '‘Father” Divine, Negro cult leader, as a "heaven” for his followers. The Negro evangelist accepted the offer, and is completing p'ans for establishing the new "heaven.” Left: The Kaufman mansion which will house the Divine flock. Right: The bar for which Mrs. Kaufman was refused a liquor license. One-Man Submarine Tested in Hudson .. ... Barney Connett of Chicago, master and crew of an 11-foot submarine, previous to making a successful test dive in the salt water of the Hudson river in Yonkers. N. Y. Connett, in his homemade sub, has made ap proximately 400 dives, once crossing Lake Michigan under water from Chicago to Michigan City, lnd., a distance of 37 miles. The sub is pow ered by two sets of batteries and has ail the usual submarine equipment. Police Close ‘Human Slave Market’ Photographers had to be alert to get this view of America’s most novel matchmaking establishment, "The Human Slave Market," for immediately after bids got under way, Palisades, N. J., police stepped in and sent six people to jail on the charge of maintaining a nuisance. Here the auctioneer is asking for bids on a young man, an elderly gentleman and a young girl. The idea of the "market" was to offer marriageable subjects on the block. Masquerade Revealed Involved in a minor traffic mixup,, James W. Phipps was taken to a < Pasadena, Calif., police station. There a sergeant penetrated the dis guise and revealed “him" as a woman. Twice married, Phipps is the present “husband" of Mrs. Ma bel Phipps, 50. For 23 years Miner va Phipps masqueraded as a man. “His" first wife died in 1928. — Caribbean War Chief In San Juan, Puerto Rico, Brig. Gen. Eilmund L. Daley steps from the amphibian plane provided him by the war department to cover his vast insular territory. Daley is com manding officer of the recently cre ated department of the Caribbean, wh'ch includes Puerto Rico, the Vir I gin islands and all intervening keys. cmcagos skyline and not me curves of a George Petty beauty will bid American Legionnaires to attend their national convention in Chicago this fall. Illustrator Petty’s painting, center, was rejected by the Legion in favor of the design at the right. U. S. Army Increases Production of Gas Masks As the international situation grows more grave, the U. S. has seen fit to protect its national security and its far-flung interests by bringing its military structure into order. As part of its preparedness, the army is perfecting the gas mask in the U. S. army chemical warfare school at Edgewood, Md. Left: An inspector tests safety glass for gas masks by dropping a steel ball on it. Center: A view showing the assembly of angle tube to the hood. Right: Final assembly of cannister to tube. Each gas mask is thoroughly tested by expert workers fey any possible defect. > Invents Snow Cruiser for Antarctic Trip Dr. Thomas C. Poulter of the research foundation of Armour Institute of Technology is pictured with a model of the Antarctic snow cruiser, carrying a live-passenger airplane, which he will build for the United States Antarctic expedition setting out this fall. The completed snow cruiser will be 55 feet long, 10 feet high and 15 feet wide. The plane, car ried on top, can be demounted in 10 minutes. Rear Adm. Richard E. Byrd, who will head the expedition, plans his latest dash to the pole for some- j time in October. What! No Chance of a Martian War? There are no men on Mars and no men could live there. That was the opinion of three astronomers gathered at Cambridge, Mass. They are, left to right. Dr. Bart Bok, associate professor of astronomy, Har vard; Dr. Peter Vandekamp, director of Sproul observatory, Swathmore college, and Dr. Leo Goldberg, Harvard astronomer. Also pictured is a I p'anetarinm machine which duplicates motion of planets about the sun. j The small planet between Dr. Goldberg’s nose and the earth is Mars. | The sun is the electric light bulb adjacent to Dr. Bob's neck, and the earth is at Dr. Vandckamp's shoulder. De-Lovely, Delightful I Here’s a very delightful scene. Young Tommy Ingram and Jimmy Young lick up a couple of delightful ice cream cones by the sign post that marks the boundary of Delight ful, a small town near Warren, Ohio, Marble Champ Crowned A new king was crowned recently when Harry DoBoard. 14. of Landen burg. Pa., defeated finalists repre senting every section of the country in the National Marble tournament at Wildwood. N. J. Harry is the champion of 3,000.000 marble players. Smart New Fashions For Now and Later IJERE’S a charming new pat * tern (1784) that gives you a pretty sleeveless dress, with a jacket that transforms it into the nicest kind of street suit. It’s de lightfully simple and cool—very easy to make, with flattering frills as the only trimming. Chiffon, georgette, silk print, flat crepe and linen are smart materials for this fashion. Girl’s Play Suit. There’s a place in every girl’s life for the smart little play suit and suspender skirt that buttons all down the front. Cool, comfort able and easy-to-wear for summer play, it will be nice for school in the fall too. The shorts are be comingly flared, and the blouse i has a becoming sports collar. Gingham, pique, linen and broad cloth are nice cottons for this out fit, 1786. The Patterns. No. 1784 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 16 re quires 678 yards of 39-inch fabric, without nap for dress and jacket with three-quarter sleeves; 2Vfe yards of trimming. No. 1786 is designed for sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 10 re quires 1% yards of 35-inch fabric, for blouse; yards for shorts; 1% yards for the skirt, without nap. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1324, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. (Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.) Large Diamonds Found, last October, in Brazil, a blue-white diamond weighing 726.6 metric carats. Known as the “President Vargas,” it is third in size among the world’s dia monds, the other two being the Cullinan (3,024.75 carats) and the Excelsior (971.75). It is 71 mm. long, 56.5 wide, and 24.5 high and is valued uncut at 750,000 florins in Amsterdam, where it rests.— Engineering and Mining Journal. » • If your dealer cannot supply you, send 20c with your dealer’s name for a Trial Package of 48 genuine PE-KO Jar Rings; sent prepaid. iBMGMMsj <; —that will save you many a ;! «; dollar will escape you if !; you fail to read carefully and j \ regularly the advertising of ;[ <; local merchants » » » Sta————a———upMW^———————— | lTw~TisispSpEir ————i -m mtL itsm mm ■ m Imamt — —i————r~~~~*rf