Image provided by: Hermiston Public Library; Hermiston, OR
About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1936)
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. British Reds Demanding Aid for Spain Thursday, October 15, 1936 Scenes and Persons in the Current News "an ad Aie tan DE, not iKCO { London's famous Trafalgar Square packed by British members of the Communist party as leaders ad dressed them during the recent unity demonstration in “Aid of Spain.” Mayors of Two Winchesters Meet ONE-BOY NEWSPAPER 1—Parade of the Grand Army of the Republic down Pennsylvania avenue, Washington, during the annual encampment. 2—New palace of the League of Nations in Geneva which was occupied recently with dedicatory ceremonies. 3—Harry W. Colmery of Topeka, Kan., and Mrs. C. W. Hahn of Wayne, Nebraska, who were elected national commander of the American Legion and president of the women’s auxiliary at the Cleve land convention. Almost Died of Thirst in Desert MAYORESS FROM CHILE : I With 85 paid subscribers and enough advertising to keep his sheet “Out of the red,” Edwin L. Hem- inger, nine-year-old editor and pub lisher, is shown at the small hand- press with which he puts out his ?" 4 “Glendale Times.” Young Hemin- a ger, whose father is editor of the Findlay (Ohio) Republican-Courier, An interesting ceremony is pictured here as Mayor C. R. Anderson and whose grandfather, I. N. Hem- of Winchester, Va., presents a flag of the American city to Mayor A. T. inger, has been a Findlay publishei of the eight passengers and crew of four of the Imperial Air Edmonds of Winchester, England. The American mayor is in mufti. since 1890, put out his first news ways Some liner “Horsa” shown as they lay near exhaustion under the shade The flag was presented as a token of good-will from the modern Ameri paper on a typewriter a year ago. of the plane wing on the Arabian desert where they made a forced can city to its ancient namesake. His grandfather bought him a press. landing recently. In the foreground is Mrs. Wallace Smith of Brisbane, England, the only woman in the party, who said when they were res cued, “Had another day passed, I doubt if any of us would have been GOPHER CO-CAPTAIN alive.” They drank dew from the plane wings. Swedish Week-End House on Legs CHINESE GIRL WINS At a i A — sb** Paying a long-deferred visit to New York is Mrs. Alicia C. De Er- razuris, who is shown on the S. S. Santa Barbara. Back home in Chile the señora is mayor of Providen- eia, one of the country’s most aristo cratic residential communities. She is the first woman mayor in Chile. Three Steel Barons Get Together s. 3 y * I Julius Alfonse is the co-captain and halfback of the powerful Uni versity of Minnesota football team. Experts call the team unbeatable. This unusual week-end house was erected on six legs at a vacation point near Stockholm, Sweden. The open space under the house pro vides space for automobiles. Steel I-beams form the supports and main Little Gem Hoahing, of China, frame for the structure. The house is similar in principle to modernistic proved herself a sensation at the dwellings which have been introduced into the United States in recent girl's junior lawn tennis champion years. The structure is prefabricated and can be readily assembled on ship tournament at Wimbledon. the lot. Seldom does a photographer snare three big fish such as these with one snap of the camera shutter. They are three of the biggest steel executives in the nation, pictured chatting in the Union club, Cleveland, where they met prior to attending the Great Lakes exposition. Left to right: Tom M. Girdler, chairman and president of Republic Steel; Eugene C. Grace, president of Bethlehem Steel, and William A. Irvin, president of United States Steel. Gathering the Grape Harvest in France Crippled War Veterans Pray for Peace -he ■ A A. * -I ure 47 • _ a grA "as ... Gathered before the miracle working shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes, in France, battered war veterans from all the nations of Europe—many of them former enemies—joined in prayers for peace. A hundred and Vineyard workers gathering a bumper crop of luscious grapes at Vougeot, France, near Dijon an area fifty thousand veterans made the pilgrimage to this year's peace congress at the grotto. famous throughout the world for the quality of its vintages. ’