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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 17, 1933)
a I ! ! i MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, MEDFORD, OREGON, NEW LATTER DAY SAINTS CHAPEL STRIKERS SEIZE BIG MINNESOTA PACKING PLANT & rpt?r 'ft' : it'.' ,. Am At dedicatory ceremonies on Nov. 5, this half million dollar chapel In Washington, D. C, will be consecrated by the Latter Day Saints church. Members of tho first presidency and other officials of the faith wer to attend. (Associated Press Photo) Muscat Prodigy Hailed By Critics New York's most sophisticated music audience sat dumbfounded through the program of Bach, Be. thoven, Mendelssohn and Chopin which 8-year-old Ruth Slenczynskl played masterfully In her debut at Town Hall. This Californta-born prodigy has been studying In Eu rope for the past two years with her father acting as her only teach er. (Associated Press Photo) . . A.iS' f S i 'Sir i . til JR. - t - 1?" I. I tvtik. - Yt m $ mM i fc . m.. , r V" , LEWI . V i 1 - -- y.. r - J! T ! This picture shows some of the 2.500 striking employes of the Hormel packing plant In Austin, Minn, as they kept warm by bonfires after a walkout. Leaders of tho strikers who took possession of the plani and shut off Its refrigerator system are shown at top. Left to right, seated: W. C. Knutson. C. J. Fosson president of tbe workers' union which led the str.ke; Mary O'Shaughnessy, Frank Ellis, a strike leader; Ber? Godfredson. Standing: William Hubbard. George Guerard. (Associated Press Photos) GLAD TO ENTER STATE PRISON Alcatraz Warded r , 14 ?-&Zh fc aft- i 1.1 -w. r.- : I j'.- H Pi J LVJ lit r il t: J k - k f 4 (Associated Press Phots) WARLIKE SCENES IN MARYLAND LYNCHING BATTLE Tony Gerpa (above) smiled broadly as he was rushed to San Quentin prison after being sentenced In a San Jose. Cal., court. Serpa. convicted of manslaughter, was in the cell next to Thomas Thurmond . , - when a mob broke into the atl and seized Thurmond and John Holmes Jmes A. Johnston of Ban hran ani iun-hH hm Rrni uihA u. throntni h,. Mu Cisco has been named warden or i rnhf.H sa cran!.ic,A .af-tu .h -..u... hl the new federal prison on Alcatrar fnnvirtinn h. wmict.ri h'. aHni.n(.u 4nH a.n'.H m,. ni.An Island In San Francisco bay. Ha has had experience In California's penal institutions. (Associated Press Photo I 1 V : A -1 ONE-HOUR BRIDE BECOMES WIDOW In i surprise move by Governor Ritchie state militiamen were sent to the eastern shore of Marylsnd to round up men secused of participating In the lynching of George Armwood, a negro, at Princess Anns last October. Four men were arrested and Immediately afterwards an angry crowd formed, bent on re leasing the prisoners from an armory In Salisbury. Beaten back by bayonets and tear gas. the mob dispersed and the troopers returned to Baltimore with their prisoners. Left shows the prisoners being lecorted from the armory and at right members of the mob are held at bay by the soldiers' bayonets. Associated Press Photos) Mrs. Alice Pluta Bergman, 17 (left), bride for an hour before her husband, Walter, was slain by officers of Kenosha county, Wis., after he had shot and wounded a filling station attendant, is shown with Mrs. Hazel Schnomier. also 17. whose husband was captured in tha same episode. (Associated Press Photo) ARIZONA MAN BAGS BLUE EAGLE Foreign Minister , t i 1 BOULDER DAM WORK PROGRESSES Kokl Htrota is Japan's r.ew tor tign minister. In his first public pronouncement hs said the outlook was hopeful for amity between ;4oan and her three grpat neigh bors, tho United States. China and funis. (Associated Pren Photo) -71 Tar' 5Jf- nT 1i 4 i 'i ' j L'nlsS.1 Hers is ths latest aerial view of the Boulder dam site on the Colo. r;do river where progress ahead of schedule is being msds. In this c'icto. looking downstream, ths dam Is seen' rising In the river bed with Arizona (left) snd Nevada spillways. (Associated Press Photo) Florence Rasmussen is showing ths real "blue eagle" her employer, E. C. Stults of Phoenlr. Ariz., kilted on a hunting trip. Examination showed mors than half the bird's feathers wsrs bright blue, a color for which ornithologists could not account. Ths NRA "natural" was stuffed tor a mascot. (Associated Press Photo) GOVERNORS AT WHITE HOUSE RELIEF PARLEY t&slAaa3Ssayfesss i fav JjlflBtjl. .-ittfi- Five hundred state and city officials assembled In the White House to hear President Roosevelt ex plain a new plan which he said would put four million men back to work in the winter months. Harry l HoDklns frights, civil works administrator. Is shown addressing the convention. Seated In tho front row are, left to right. Governors Stanley C. Wilson. Vermont; Frank H. Cooney. Montana; B. B. Moeur, Arizona John G- Pollard- Virginia: Hill McAllister, Tennessee: Ruby Lnffoon. Kentucky. Back row: Governors Henry Horner. Illinois: T. A. Re.irdon. representing Governor Ralph of California; Eugeno Talmadge. Georgia: George White. Ohio; M. S. Connor, Mississippi, and Ira Blackwood, South Carolina. (Associated Press Photo) Beats Husking Champ SEATTLE GIRL MAKES DEBUT Si" Ernest Rehn (above), 40-year-old farmer of Magnolia, III., defeated a field Including Carl Seller, last year's national champion, to win the 1933 Illinois corn-husklng title and a chance at the national crown. (Associated Press Photo) V 1 v in it:: iw, Byrd Elyot of Seattle, Wash., a graduate of the Cincinnati Conser vatory of Music, made her bow Into the world of violin virtuola In New York. Hei program was described by discerning critics ss "inter, sting.' (Associated Press Photnt IOWA PICKETS USE RAIL TIES TO BLOCKADE ROADS -ir 11. ita aT. : - (' J I v I t "I I - . r- 4 St 5' I m i" ' i i CrLl AVi il Using railroad ties, farm pickets near Sioux City, la., placed a blockade around the city to prevent marketing of farm commodities. Thla group of pickets la shown ready for action against market-bound trucks. (Associated Press Photo) VINES LOSES IN DAMAGE SUIT Oil Witness 9f .1 L 4 v. 1-M William 8. Fltipatrlck (above) former president of the Prairie Oil eompany, appeared before the sen ate stock market committee In Washington to tell of a payment to him of 300,000 from a pool In Sin. elalr Consolidated Oil corporation ststk. lAnocismj Press Photk.. -r A .v Ellsworth Vines. r., tennis champion, was ens of tha defendants In a 30,000 damags suit In which John Albright, tha plaintiff, waa awarded $3900 In Los Angeles. His brother, George, and mother, Mrs. Caroline Vines, wsrs co-defendants In the action which resulted from an automobile accident. The car was owned by Ellsworth and Mrs. Vine, sanctioned her sen's driver's license. Left to right: George Vines. Mra. Ellsworth Vines, Jr., and Vine, during a recess. (Associated Press Photos V