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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1929)
. ' x KI ' -'Lw w 1 "43P' - vC,i7,.V V h,-'j" 'ft vW i-'U'' ' ' til - - WHY. MARY. YOU LITTLE DEVIL! TAI1 tuckered' ' oui in n uusicr Drown suit and your nether extremities v exposed to the camera I Well, she looks quite sweet and.' oh, yes. it's Mary Brian of the movies!.' - AN INTERESTING STUDY OF FACES AND BODIES OF FOOTBALL PLAYERS IN ACTION is offered by these pictures taken at early games of (lie (929 grid season. . No. I shows Halfback McMahon of Fordham on his way to a touchdown in the Fordham-Westminster game. He received excellent i !)locking assistance, as shown by the opposing players sprawled on the ground. No. 2 shows Halfback Mirley of Boston College tearing around end lor a good gainl Perfect blocking also aided him. No. 3 pictures burly Herb Fleishhackcr of Stanford reaching futilely for a pass. The handsome young man in No. 4 who seems: lo have ust kicked a spiral tar down me neia rs tommy ujngnccKcr, Lanniouui oat. jt njpaicnuj', lummj ' AS SHE LIES, and what a difficult one, Ted Burkett plays his ball at Rivermead Club at Ottawa, Canada. As Burkclt made an ap proach shot to the 1 3lh green, on a Friday, his ball struck in the rough against a rock and then bounced into the low branches of a jack;pine tree alongside the fairway. The caddy suggested a lad der and Burkett played it as she was. He's shown above, perched on the ladder, from which he whanged away and got on okay. It's a, s. shot one shouldn't envy jTHEY DON'T COME BIGGER than this 2435-pound imported Pcrcheron; at least, not often. Broni is the largest horse. jn the far. west Ethel Schofield js the young lady holding the rcinY SWIMMING DEVOTEE.' too. is pretty Betty Nuthall.l young British tennis star And she handles herself as nicely in water as she does on the, tennis courts.'' ILsstv fl?4 awsSbi Shsyft . v .- ..is rr- 1 J L HONORING LENIN'S MEMORY, this monument to the Russian revolutionary leader was unveiled recently at Chelianbinsk, in eastern Russia. , It is of unique architecture. THEY'RE MRS. HOOVER'S DOGS, a gift to" "the first lady of the land" from D. C. Kok of Pasadena. Calif. Of course, the English setters are great friends with the tiny ' airedale, shown with them. ' i , jNOT A CARE IN THE WORLD h. Mr,. Call Tail ,ai she nts before her Irpee in Glacier National Park and imokei contentedly on her peace pipe, which, incidentals, has been in tin family for 50 years. It's noticeable that Mi ' rtA. Calf ! ail has not gone in for modern style ARSOLUTELY CHARM-) ING looks Mary Nolan.' rinrma actress, in this pose. She's resting now between all-talkie productions. . i , TUWU3 r lJ.l r IKt. IKL'CKS were used in San Franci u, make t art take living lorm at recent outdoor exhibit of sculpture. Aboe are the Kotloff dancers perlorming under the beautiful columns ol the Calilorma Palace of the Legion of Honor, as the .lights illuminate then dance.. . I " " m t.-: 1 mi rlukl. t: ft Tlm. HISTORIC ASBURY CHURCH in Surrey. England, shows by its wealner-beaten appearance that it ,s one of the oldest places of worship in the world. A large sum was raised lecenUy to restore the ancient edifice.