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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 20, 1934)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, JfEDFORD, OREGON. SOVIET FLIERS RESCUE REFUGEES FROM ICEPACK Frank Buck's Wild Animal Show in New Fair F4 Revamp Fair's Enchanted Island I A UM ' ! 1 fw!a V v Iff 7 i : J f'Bl'' Forty brand-new features will greet children to the Enchanted Is land when the new World's Fair opens In Chicago May 26. Chicago Junior Leagui girls were helping with the repainting when this photo was taken. The fairyland Is free to children. Many free features in the Fair, lower transportation costs and low hotel rates make a visit to A Century of Progress Inexpensive this summer. For Free Concerts at New Fair In thla great lagoon amphithe ater, Swift and Company will pre ent the Chicago Symphony orches tra In ten weeks of free dally con. certs starting July 1. In the new World's Fair. This Is but one ol many new free features which will make the visitor's dollar buy mors this summer. The Fair opens In Chicago May 26. OWNER-MANAGER HAS HANDS FULL Versatile Earl McNeely, owner-president-manager of the Sacra mento club of the Pacific Coast League, gives a working illustration of how he keeps up with hit many duties. In addition to the three jobs mentioned, McNeely, the youngest ball magnate on the coast, expects to take a turn as an outfielder this season. Jack Downey (left), veteran trainer, doesn't know whether to give his smiling boss a rub nr ask him for a raise, f Associated Pre phntM 9 & i.:re two views cf aamags done by the wind of tornadic force which dipped into lower New Orleans, demolishing or damaging about 100 homes and seriously injuring st least 12 persons. (Associated . Press Photo) In a swift sortie over the Arctic, three Russian aviators saved 84 persons stranded on the Icepack off the northern coast of Siberia. They were aboard the Chelluskin when It was crushed by the Ice and sank last February. Upper: standing at left, the three aviators (left to right), M. T. Sletneff, Prof. George Ushakoff and F. A. Levanersky at Fairbanks, Alaska, before the takeoff. Lower: two of the American built alrolanes used in the work. Others have been rescued. (Associated Press Photos) FLOOD SENDS TRAIN INTO DITCH; THREE KILLED I SV f'J'-. i ; Jiff Flood waters that swep! over a large area of western Wisconsin and southeast Minnesota took nine lives and caused heavy property losses. A washout Bent (his train into a ditch near Hudson, Wis., causing the pile-up shown and killing three trainmen, (Associated Press Photo) Heads Farm Union f a 4? r A. nWJ - '7. til ma 0 f- vf: .. ' EINSTEIN HAD A GOOD LAUGH E. H. Everson (above) of Huron, 6- D., automatically succeeds th late John A. Simpson as president of the National Farm era Union. Everson was vice president prior to Simpson's death. (Associated Press Photo) Admits Poisoning Prof. Albert Einstein (left), usually of serious demeanor, had a good laugh when he attended a testimonial dinner In New York In honor of Rabbi Stephen Wise (center), who with Mayor Fiorello LaQuardli, found the situation equally amusing. (Associated Press Photo) ARIZONA BUS CRASH KILLS ONE Official at Sapulpa, Okla., said Chester Barrett, 32 (above), a lath r who aald he "could not bear te tee my family starve." confessed eolsonlng three of his small chil dren. He was held for murder, (Associated Press Photo) 3 "r. '.- Skidding on a slippery pavement west of Vuma, Arls., a trans, continental bus somersaulted from the road killing one passenger and injuring 27 others. Rescuers are shown trying to free passengers from the overturned stage coach, (Associated Press Photo) Frank Buck, explorer of "Brlnfl 'Em Back Alive" fame, will personally exhibit more than 1,000 ani mals, many of them rare species seldom seen even In zoos, In this zoological garden now being built for the new World's Fair which opens In Chicago May 26. At the left Buck may be seen with a huge python captured In Africa. Low railrcad rates, low hotel rates and many more free features make the Fair easier on the visitor's pocketbook this year. Land of Wooden Shoes in New World's Fair Quaint cottages,! giant windmill, dike and natives In bright cos tumes and wooden shoes will greet the visitor to thla Dutch village t the new World's Fair which opena In Chicago May 28. Fifteen "foreign villages" offer the visitor the unique opportunity of "touring the world" In a slngla day. Lower railroad rates, low-rat accommoda tions In Chicago and more free Fall faaturea make It possible to visit the Exposition at little cost The Fair has 84 miles of free Industrial and scientific exhibits. Fair Knight POSTER MODEL NOW IN FILMS I f Al N fe' r5T ' 1 1 ; v? i Pageantry at Fair, Twenty arm ored knights, mounted, booted and purred, with shields and spears will act as official escorts at tht new World's Fair which opena Ir Chicago May 25. Cyrus Qrlmshaw la the knight shown hsre and Roset ta Rasmus the damsel In distress Young Astor Wants Costly Ring Back 'J - a If 5 l Evelyn Kelly, whose face has appeared on many billboards through out the country, Is one of Hollywood's latest recruits. She will appear In a film of an Earl Carroll show. (Associated Press Photo) LA GUARDIA LISTENS TO FIRST LADY If (. J'TI Mayor Fiorello LaQuardla of New York, highly regarded a a con versationalist, Is recorded her as a good listener t.i well. Mrs. Frank lin O. Rooeevelt held hie attention at the Women's Trade union dinner In New York, (Associated Press PJigto --