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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1934)
MEDFOKP MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, SMART FOR THE COLLEGE GIRL FIRST SOVIET PASSPORT ON COAST RUSH BABY TO HOSPITAL IN PERILOUS AIR DASH For the college girl who wants to be smartly dressed In lounging arti re, here are the proper togs. The ensemble at right consists of clever pajamas and robe tn white satin striped with wide bands of navy blue. Gail Patrick, film actress, wears the outfit. Dorothea Wfeek at left wears a blouse of white catm with high-waisted trousers of b'c:x satin. (Acccciaicd Press Phctos) SEES HER BABIES FOR FIRST TIME f V .11 - . f 1 5 j !' yl -j Blind fo- 21 years, the sight ot Mrs. Thomas Naylor of Green Bay, Wis., was restored after a delicate operation and she saw her two chll dron, Laverne, 3 (left), and Mildred, 4, for the first time. Mrs. Naylor, whfc has been blind since she was seven years old. remembered her husband (pictured with the group) as a childhood playmate. (Assocl ated Press Photo GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE TOWER RISES f Mm TKtA I ' I ; : Vt 1 iV-. J ---. The Marin county tower of the Golden Gate bridge connecting San Tyncisco with the north is shown as it near, completion. The towtr s reached a height which approximates the floor of the bridge. A ereeper truss is shown -t the top while the huge cross truck below .iil serve as a permanent tie between the two tower legs. (Associated press Photo) a y waej IS 1 If. " ' I 4 X v ' wet - 4 v -a v ' : fi lvs" r- Wl i S lV 'il . S V fl .4v ' JL w Mrs. Alexandra Anastoaiova Semenova showing I her P"Pr Immigration Inspector Lester Voung as she "rived In San Francisco from Vladivostok. She was believed to have been the first enter the United States on a Soviet Union PPort ssued by an Ame lean consul since this oovernment recognized Russia. (Associated Press Photo t S t 1 ' Hollywood thought she was single until Miriam Jordan, film player, filed suit for divorce accusing her husband, Joseph Davis of New York, of "lazinesr and profligacy." (Associated Precs Photo) fCt T',pv"rtn x- CAMP TERA GIRLS DON'T MIND THE SNOW 11 4 V- The snow storm that swirled over the east may have meant suffering for some, but not the unemployed girls and women at Camp Tera, Bear Mountain, New York. They took to their skis, and had a big time. Here a group waves gaily at a photographer. Camp Tera, organized for the care of Jobless women, II sponsored by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. (Associated Press Photo) SERVICE MEN SUCCEED IN STRATOSPHERE FLIGHT VST V , kl v ' 1 l;.nit;'? t.?"c s i lit l W' ' fi.f , fS , Ascending more than 58.000 feet Lt. Comm. T. O. W. Settle, navy pilot, made a successful flight Into the stratosphere. He Is shown (center) Inside the tiny globular gondola which was loaded with supplies ranging from bananas to cosmic ray meters and female fruit flies. His companion was Major Cheater Fordney (right) of the marine corps, who had never gone up In a balloon. At left Is Ihw Inflated bag of the stratosphere balloon. The ascent started at Akron, Ohio. (Associated Press Photos) SIX BENEDICTS ON GRID TEAM AT MURRAY COLLEGE The football team of Murray State Teachers college In Kentucky, one of the nation's few unbeaten and untied squads, boasts sis married men among Its players. Left to right: Preston Laster and wife, Howard Allen and wife, Norman McKenie, wife and son: Howard Moss and wife, and Dorsey Vesley and Bradley Thurman. whose wwes were not nresent when the picture was taken. (Associated Press Photo) James R. Wedelt, speed flier who After a hazardous air dash from Houston, Tex-, Sue Trammell, Piloted the airplane on the wind flve-months.old baby, was taken to Johns Hopkins hospital at Biltl- tossed trip, is shown as he left the more, Md., for a brain operation io save her life. The baby la shown niP of Baltimore. Braving atrong being carried from the plane by a nurse assisted by an airport attend- lcV winds, Wedell drove his plane ant. At right Is the child's uncle and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W, B. over the 1,400-mile trip In slightly Trammell. (Associated Press Photos) more than 11 hours. VIKING ROMEO,' WITH FOUR WIVES, LANDS IN JAIL! ft -1"? IT 1 Alt W I i Mil M V 114 k$ :k ' ii 'af I Sn. t . srf1 CI Bror Peterson's quest for the "Ideal bride" to take back to Sweden to claim an ancestral estate according to nls story led him to marry four Chicago girls before he found the "right one." He landed in la 1 1 following his failure to pay a wedding celebration bill for wife No. 4 (right), Mrs. Lydia Fagas "eteraon. The .hlrd wifo of the bald-headed Romeo was Mrs. Mabel Pagnlo Peterson (left). The 44-year-nld husband's hrldes ranaed from 22 to 26 years of aae. (Associated Press Photos! SHANK DOZES AT TRIAL FOR FOUR 'POISON SLAYINGS' ' " ' -iimnUii mumni ith mr siHitnirl wu Mark H. Shank, Akron attorney, Is shown as he dozed at his trial In Benton, Ark, for the slaying by poison of four persons, Mr. and Mrs. Alvln Colley and their two young sons, 8hown with 8hank are his wife (center) and hie mother. Four-year-old Clyde Colley (right), whose parents and two brothers died from poisoning. Is shown as he appeared at the trial, (Aseoclated Press Photos) Seriously 111 HUEY LONG'S EFFIGY IS BURNED , auLtWi I r F L. -. . i i I A r, ; 3 . L- r S t m . 9-i. -3 K I Hi ( ,7. flH Ama 1 1: T l at 1 4 - 1. 4 -1 4 i V ; V "7 ' - 4 j ft i I lj" JLi - Political fever rose to high pitch In Hammond, La., during the lection to select a successor to the late Congressman Bolivar Kemp, This effigy of Huey Lono was burned on a Hammond street, (Assc aistad Press Photo' Notified cf the serious Illness of his daughter, Mrs. Edward 8. Cowles, Senator William Qibbs M Adoo of California left Los Angeles by airplane to race to her boalde. Mrs. Cowles, III with pneumonia, la In a New York hospital, (Aisoclat d Press Photoi