Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1937)
Th OREGON STATESMAN, Saleo, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, August 11, 1S37 rAGE FIVE .Midsummer Eveiats Reflected in Photos From Far and Near -aiwiM' 3waaAJta-jijuwwiui'i Hiww issawsjsBwesssMswsewwnw i ;;X;K' ;---N.'-9M r- t .. I , ' ? i-'.ji'" I " 4v - vsr r i "v- -i :'? vV w' : I'- i til 22 v - ; . J k? wt,.. xt r i&Mj Out for stroll fc&s-jd Half a million bookworms,, scattered across the United States from New England to the Golden . are pursuing their studies In a hundred dif ferent lines. The 400 per cent increase in summer school attendance during the past 20 years prom ises to be considerably Increased when final en rollment figures for the hot weather session are compiled. Vacation courses, extension classes, field trips and combination recreation camps and schools offer the student a variety of instruction. Hi DOfOrGET"fOW0P VV i J I Mr. Citizen takes a leMonj Cnme costs have reached such a staggering amount that police ara now appealing to the general public to aid them in curbing petty thievery, house breaking and looting. Various common sense precAU tiens are advised by authorities as means of checking crime. Regard less of how adequately a community is policed, crime prevention must be taken as an Individual responsibility if the problem is to be met,' - I'm I Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Erwla j r - s 1 : 1 ' ! - i -A. 5 ..' .. ' ... .;. .. 'A ' . . ... I 1 As . i iJi One of points visited by Frank lin D. Roosevelt. Jr., son of th president, and his bride, the for mer Ethel duPont. on their European honeymoon was Mon treux. Switzerland, where they art shown leaving' their hotel. ? above. Pat O'Brien J jllctor McLaglea J Although the handsome hero usually wins tha IJa mo vies. It's th. -mugs- in Hollywood who maka the -".S Happiest married. Such Is the opinion of Stuart Jf '1 acto who describes himself as a "mug" wd pointJ to J Victor McLaglen. Spencer Tracy. James 3"? ' Cgw a others who are not Adonises but who ara Ideally married. JErwta further belives that marriage and a career do nt so wen for the average wife, and cites his own as an S1 totmtr June Collar, once an actress, now th. contented mother of tw Uttlt Erwln , ':-::::-: .-f 4. ( -: i Instead of going to school to learn th. "three R's". Roberta Semple' daughter of Aimee Semple Vic-' Pherson. is taklsg radio coaching' lessons to overcome her difficulty ta pronouncing one r. after, which. If snccessf ul. she plans to. go on th airwaves.. l r r- t r - x 1 $ j - ...XW-TWr.int,,!..,.,,;,,,..-.!,, iMinrriii)iiiHiiajiiiiiiiin),ii " - ' i s '1 , ;: Closed for vacation Business cares rest lightly on the shoulders of J. W. Townsend, La fayette, Ind., restaurant operator, who closes his lunchroom on July 1, places a sign on the door, "Con. Fishin'. Back in Sept.", and proceeds to take life easy for the summer. m 4 sum iirfr " -r c. -r " c- i 1 :"y, " - jRoyal procession j An idea of the extraordinary precauUons taken for safeguarding the king and queen of England when they visited North Ireland is given by this photo showing armored cars leading th. royal procession in Belfast. Riots and bombing marked th. arrival of royalty as fac tions, presumably from South Ireland, seeking complete independ ence of Ireland from England kept the capital of North Ireland in an uproar. x 4h T, IK'S? i , , V -as' tv. ' - ; .i.-i.mnn.i,.,'" tn .St - Iiiii ii - .S- ' 11 1 1 1 mmmmmmmmmm Little Donald Horst, the Chicago boy whoso kidnaping precipitated a fight between his real and foster mother for th. custody, found life rather difficult when he attempted to. make friends with two other little Inmates of SL Vincent's orphanage where he was placed pending court decision on his custody. . 4 f - - .IlurriZi.wi 11 11 r r -" - frr -1 P-""""HC - f X . : . :-:r ::v:-:-.:.:-: ::v.. .'.-..: : v-- v.v-'s L i - j ;- Principals in New York's hotly contested mayor alty race are Jeremiah T Mahoney, former New York state supreme court justice and recently president of the Amateur Athletic Union; Royal S. Copeland. United States senator and former health commissioner of New York, and Fiorello La Gjardia, present mayor. Mahoney entered the race when G rover Whalen, former police commis sioner, withdrew in his favor. He seeks the Dem- ocratic nomination and has the support of the New Deal leaders of four boroughs which are fighting the Tammany Hall leadership which put forward Senator Royal S. Copeland, anti-New Dealer, for the nomination. Copeland seeks the Democratic nomination and will also be out for the Republican nomination which is the objective of La Guardia. Fusionist choice and Republican, as well as Fusion ist nominee in the last mayoralty , race. ' ' ' f D r J V , ! w.rxv Threatened retirement olf Freddie 'Bartholomew from films because his aunt and guardian. Millicent' Bartholomew, insists on more than double his present $1,100 weekly salary has given rise to! rumors that his successor may be, Douglas Scott. It was the tat ter's performance in "Wee Willie) Winkie" which won him Freddie's! part in a current production. . fx A4 6 5 .. 'i j -. One of the major addresses made by James 'A. Farley, postmaster general, on his political good will tour of Ohio was at Akron where he was the guest of political and civic leaders, including John S.' Knight, right, publisher of the Akron Beacon-Journal and a Republi can, who introduced Farley. - Speaking before a crowd of 10,000,! Farley voiced assurance that here would be no reprisals against those who helped defeat the New Deal court -revision plan and stated that "this administration has no time tor vendettas'. Apparently proceedings must have been rather dull at the sen ate agricultural committee hear ing on the currency stabilization bill because James R. H. Crom well, husband of the wealthy Doris Duke Cromwell, indulged in quite a yawn while waiting to testify. . V , ' ' ' " ' ' ! r,,i. ' . - r T- - Presidential party various posaiDie sites xor a new naval hospital In Washington. D. C were viewed by President Roosevelt when he made an inspection tour with Representative Cart Vinson of Georgia, center, and Sena tor David Walsh of Massachusetts, right, chairmen of the house and senate naval affairs committees. T - ... 4 pj,.-. I y MTHE SENTLNEL Is one of (he highest formations in ZIon National Park in southern Utah. This brilliant-hoed monolith rises 3.059 feet above the floor of the Canyon, or nearly two and one-half times the height of the world's tallest building. Lying In close proximity of Ziea is also Bryce and Grand Canyon National Parks and Boulder Dam. Vnlmm FacUla SaUrese rhot. . y.-.--fay---W.-W7-..-.: ULWorken . miiiiag around gates i ,Ten men were Injured, two of them seriously, when members of rival unions at the Plymouth plant of Chrysler Motor company at . Detroit, clashed during the lunch hour. Among the victims was Frank Dillon, president of the. Independent . Association of Chrysler Employes, shown being questioned by a detective after the outbreak.. Members of the other labor group. United Automobile Workers union, claimed Dillon's organization r was a , company union. Dillon was beaten and thrown over a fence. Shut down of the plant followed when a strike in a key department was called because of discharge of four U. A. W. members charged with taking part in the hxnca-hoorcmt--VAfcreak.i 1 ! Ltetective mev 1;.'Jhi. -ssssssssssssaapii )BfrBpr .