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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1928)
; - V Events of the Week in -Pictures . IT '4 (TEXTILE STRIKERS FAIL TO RETURN 1 JtT FOUND IT HARD TO GET MARRIED , CANADA BEAUTY TO WED VISCOUNT- ! HUNT FOR AMUNDSEN CONTINUES V 4 "4 $y I V, l tux. . rl I nr- Aii records for diDlcully in gelting murricd seem to have boon broken by Mr. nnd Mrs. Lewis E. Wood, who finally have had the knot tied nt Los Angeles, Cnl. For three months Wood and his bride-to-be, the former Miss Youda Hays, sought to have tho cere mony performed. Wood is a musician on tour. Every time he mail: an appointment with Miss Hays to meet and be married, his man agers would order him elsewhere. They are shown above at Los A.&cre!r. p.fter tba ceremony. I v&rr? d ij Although 27 textile mills nt N;w Dcdford, Mass., opened recently to give employment to 27,000 strikers only a score returned to work and tho mills were again clo;ied. Above, a common scene -the soup line, llelow, a meeting of strikers in progress, just lifter tho mills And reopened their gates. U. S." AVIATORS TO HOP TO U. S. Miss Margot Fleming, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Fleming, of Ottawa, Canada, is to wed tho fourth Viscount Hardinge, aide-de-camp to. Lord Willingdon, governor general of Canada. An nouncement of lier engagement has been made by her parents at the Canadian capital. Search for the missing Arctic explorer and his crewof the French plane, Latham-47, which disappeared while on a flight to locate the party of the wrecked dirigible Italia, has been continued by the gov ernments of the countries touching the Arctic circle, t Amundsen is shown above, center, with Lieutenant Dictrichson, left, and Captain Gilbaud, at Tromsoc, Norway, before setting out on their flight. Below is a view of the Soviet ice-breaker Malykhin that has been siding in the search for Amundsen. f AN HONEST WOMAN IN FRAUD CASE : f . J : '3&J!1 m 1 COW CLEARS GROUND BY FOOT TRICK HORSE STUMPS AUDIENCES or 20 years Mrs. Lou C. Pennington, G2, of Louisville, Ky., carried on an honest business as purchasing agent for thousands of persons throughout her state. Then something snapped, and after gleaning nearly $200,000 in alleged fraudlcnt operations she disap peared. Located in a sanitarium for the mentally ill near Louisville he has been arraigned in court to answer score of.warrants charging the utterance of worthless checks. Her attorneys arc to offer an insanity plea when Mrs, Pennington is tried for tho fraud. She is shown above as she was brounht into court at Louisville. WHAT DID YOU BID, PARTNER? ! v j ! This pun-bred shorthorn cow is declared by its owner, Theodore J. Tegeler, stockman, near flattie Creek, Mich., to be the smallest of its kind in 'the world. The cow, seven years old, weighs S74 pounds and is 36 inches tall. She measures only three feet from the root of the tail to the forepart of her withers, ard there is only a foot between the ground nnd her chest. Her owner is not tall, yet the cow does not reach to his waistline. Two American military pilots, Lieutenants Kangun, left, anJ Johnson, snapped at Taris, France, where they arc making prepara tions for an attempted transatlantic flight from Lc Courgct airport to New York, via tha Aiorcs. MAP OF REGION OF ITALIA RESCUE Examine the horse above very closely, for she's truly a remarkable animal. Her name is Lady, and she docs problems in arithmetic, spells, bends her body when going around a comer and finds hidden coins. Lady's owner is Mrs. C. D. Fonda, of Silver Springs, Md. k Several professors have admitted themselves at a loss to explain tha COOLIDGES SNAPPED Al IMPROVES ON HELIOCOPTER IDEA "a' T Sf v -'v " i 111 ' - o& Bi Just for a thrill, Mrs. D. J. Walti. Jr., of Vhiladelphia, Ta., re cently invited several members of her brii.;r- club tn a puine up in tlio clouds, in five-pas?ini;. r n,oihpinn. Above, the came is in (progress. Left to right. Mm. M.uji ry Vi ' tius. Mrs. May Karb Mrs. Jane btanken and Mrs. V.tli.., tl,e ln.. is. f7y y ..ill i i r y di s a a" it i ., r ! V WALKING PARTY WHlK h La V . DJ - M RESCUED BV ..H . . . - : i.j i j- s , ;sos ' vi . . . - . - - ' . i. w, - v . -' v"... . - y--- f .vT e.V. .'V. r." r- i 1 CrtilLCT lfr 11 B i'-'a I t y. 19 I C Of I I A- ? : I : ill' . J Tt- ? l III f M t I' II.. - II Eli J t : ? 5 M . I , ' Hi 'o '-U : Z-z . 1 HURCH A : i.,.vi X Mr ."-e 1. ... - i . i i An airplane intended to save landing field space has been de signed by George l..r.i.hin, Milwaukee, Wis., mechanic. ''Lauchin't ship, instead of having the familiar t.ip propellor of the heliocopter, carries two pusher motor.", that swing under the wings to boost the machine otT the rxiund. Its motors virtually are the same as those which furnish the motive power for r.eariy all standard planes ofjyduy. Top, piielo j:ives an idea of how tiie ing motors ar swung back to K Tin.il pisitift while the plane is in the air; below, the wing motors in pen'.ton for Uiking c;T and Undmg. " TW - 'fill'' CtLUNKHNOVSICY Map showing region in which the Soviet ice brrcker Krassin haj ben effecting the rescue of some of the members of the ill ftf'.eJ Noiic puUr i.Qpeaiuun. Inct is of. Chuknovsky. Uussian aviator, who made the discovery of members of the expedition, try ing to walk over the ice fleet to Jand-. 7 W TreaiUeul Y,n. Cooiiuge pdic while llie photographer ."shoots" them at the conclusion of church servicej, in the tiny structure, a Bru!f, short distance from the aummer White House.' L : 1