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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1933)
3TEDF0RD MAIL TRTFUXE, JIEDFORD, OREGON, HOLE DUG FOR BRIDGE ANCHOR H0W BROWNSVILLE WAS DAMAGED BOSSES OF OIL CODE MEET AT WHITE HOUS& fcVTKe Nira Dancel Bite 'V;kI' lb M'MmA f WW This excavation will be filled with 64,000 tons of concrete and will be one of four "anchors" of the same size for the Golden Gate bridge crossing the entrance of San Francisco bay. This hole Is on the San Francisco side and the Golden Gate can be seen In the background' (Associated Press Phntn) Indicted Banker Sensation Of Turf L it rWr--iv4- iS 17 Sterling 8. Cramer (above), for mer president of the First-Central Trust company of Akron, O.. was ne of six ex-officials of the insti tution to bs Indicted by an Akron grand Jury on charges of misappli cation of funds. (Associated Press photo. Jockey Jack Westrope, 16-year-old former Iowa farm boy, has ridden more than 180 winning horses at various race tracks since last Feb ruary, and hung up a new record by booting home nine winners In two days at Hawthorne track, Chi cago.- (Associated Press Photo) RUSH RELIEF TRAINS INTO TEXAS j , fcCu i 7--H I Here are ambulances loaded on flat cars which were rushed from San Antonio to the Rio Grande valley of Texas, to care for the many persona Injured during the tropical hurricane which caused such widespread damage. (Associated Press Photo) Duf field Married Critically 111 ft JiK 4 '4 4 Dorothy Lee. film actress, and Marshal Duffieid. former Southern ftlifornla football star, slipped cross the border to Agua Caliente Lower California, to be married aft r she had flown across the contl nent for the weddiig. (Associater' frets Photo) yeraSrV',", 1 II A sample of the property damage caused by the Texas hurricane at Brownsville la shown here. About 20 persons were known to have been killed bv the tropical storm. (Associated Press Photo) This group of experts and administrators handling the ell Industry's code of fair competition la shown outside the White House after a conference with President Roosevelt. Left to right: J. H. Marshall, Charles Fahy and N. L, Meyers of the Interior department; M. L. Benedum of Pittsburgh; Donald Rlch berg. legal counsel for the NRA; Administrator Hugh Johnson and Secretary I ekes, administrator of the oil code. (Associated Press Photo) DIRECTORS OF BANK INSURANCE BOARD TAKE OATHS fajf ' ; y ; llafeifeMm-atlljiwit?f2 , .Xz:.:Ji: iiisiil 1 .aij Directors of the new federal deposit Insurance corporation are shown taking their oaths of office at the office of the comptroller of the currency. Left to right: E. G. Bennett, Walter J. Cummlngs, chairman; J. P. T. O'Connor, comptroller of the currency, and J. F. Douglas, notary public, administering the oath. (Associated Press Photo) CUBAN SOLDIERS WHO TOOK PART IN REVOLT ... - - i Soldiers with rifles and machine guns are shown here gua.ding the entrance to Camp Columbia, near Ha ana, on the day the Cespedes government was overthrown in the revolution in the island republic. THE GOVERNMENT'S SCIENCE ADVISORY BOARD ':jl. . .i.-t'. - IT-.", - . .2"- -ft"- .f. 'V i :...; .r & l-B ws i I- 'I . I 4 tt A. J 1 ik t I r ''c r if 3 Members of the national research council's science advisory board, created by President Roosevelt to aid In dealing with scientific problems which the new era in American development brings, are ahown meeting In Washington. Seated, left to right: Islah Bowman, chairman of national research council and director of American Geographical society; Earl F. Compton, chairman, president Institute of Technol. ogy; W, W. Campbell, president National Academy of Sciences, and John C. Merriam, president Carnegie Institute of Washington. Standing: R. A. Millikan, director of Norman Bridge Laboratory of Physics; C. K. Lelth, professor of sociology, University of Wisconsin, and Frank B. Jewett, vice president American Telephone and Telegraph company and president of Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc. (Associated Press Photo) HERE TO ENTERTAIN THEIR JAPANESE COUNTRYMEN William H. Woodin Jr son of the secretary of the treasury, was reported critically III In the oxygen room of a sanitarium In Tucson, Ariz., where he has been undergo ing treatment for heart trouble, (.Associated Press Photo) . Seven Nipponese singers and dancers arrived at San Francisco on the Chlchibu Maru to epend six months lightening the cares of their people. They are all members of the Oka-fa family. Left to right; tfaruko. Hesava Mumeko, Hitjuka. Kotsuru, Komiyako and Matsuko. (Associated Press Photol BALL PLAYER IN THE MAKING y. a. Mildred Adams of Birmingham, Alg., and Tom Rellly of Syracus, N. Y., demonstrate a new danco step the Nira at a convention of dancing masters In New York. The dance involves a sliding forward step, two short side steps and ona lonaalide. (Associated Press Photo) Did He Hit Huey7 I i -, , . A . ' ix Little Billy Walton aspires to twinkle as a star on the diamond. His first instruction is coming from his aad, William H. " Tubby" Walton who makes quits a showing on the jail field. The elder Walton la a patron of the sandlot players and when he isn't out with the youngsters he tends to his restaurant business In Atlanta, (Associated Press Photo) Sues For Balm Steve Webber, police chief el Port Washington, Long Island, was one of the several persons named as the man who "socked" United States Senator huey Long, but he denied "officially" that he was the man, (Associated Press Photo) GARMENT WORKERS GO ON STRIKE - Joy McLaughlin, 22, (above) filed suit in Los Angeles for $900,000 against Don Lee, wealthy automo bile dealer, whom she accused of oreacn of promise to marry. (Asso ciated Press Photo) Arrested In Slaying JI ' ,i; 1 mi XV Mors than f,500 Chicago garment workers went on a strike as a pretest sgalnst alleged failure of their employers to adopt a suitable esde under the national recovery act Hers Is a vlsw of soma of the strikers after they left their machines. (Associated Press Photo) LITTLE AND LIONS HE'S TRAINING John H. Hsnkel, U-year-eld Cin cinnati Juvenile court ward, was ar rested at Meridian, Miss., In eon. nectlon with the slaying of Oliver 8. Bally, Cincinnati socialite, and waa returned to Cincinnati to face, a first degree murder ehirge, (As, ociattd Prise PbolAi S " 9 i 51 Tha largest squad In Columbia's football history reported to Coach Lou Little when he began shaping jp 'he Lion machine for the fall campaign. Ha Is shown (canter) wl.h Ed Bromlnskl (left) and Capt, Cliff Montgomery, who will resume their duties In the backfield again this vear. (Aaaoalarad Prasa Photo) .