October 1933 CLAM TH FALLS, OREGON PAGE IW5 Pictorial Highlights of Events in News of Day Betrothed to Woolworth Heir PICKET ARMY MELTS BEFORE GAS ATTACK H i (C) Usehruh A wedding eeremoar that will be an evenl In high society early IhU winter will unlla Mix Dorothy Fell, abort, daughter of Mr. Ofdan Mills, wlfa of tha formar treasury secretary, and Woolworth Donahue, hair to lha Woolworth nillllone. Their ea s gagemenl win announced recently. When Baruch Meets Borah, Theh- , tw C I fT . . naM'T" . A i t- - t "ajwi ... .-. - ,' " ' " iTZhl ' V TP - i v ; ,V-- ?- - 0r ';y 1 V A ' ' I ' -0 Id 1"4 ni rf Throng of pickets, with woman and cbndran In their midst, Jamming the afreet near the entrance to the Welrton Rteel Co. plant at Welrton, W. Va atampeded to aafetr u aUte troopera loosed (at attack. Efficacy of the bombs as ahown iraphloallr In the a bore Tlews of the same spot before and attar the iraa attack. Now Gorernor Kemp haa promised an rnrertlgatlon of charge that trooper aaed rnthlea tactic IB dispersing the crowd. , Bush, Not Pull, Is What Linemen Need 1The Barch meet Borah, wiomenton matter mar be In & wind. Maybe ther talked only of Maho'a tamona poutoaa, but It'a a aafe wager that the foreign olUatlon was mulled oer. when Bernard M, Bench, right, flnancler and adrlser of presidents. Just back from Eeropa. stepped of the train at Boise to be greeted br Senator W. B. Borah, left. Bench, en route to the PacKe coaat, spent an afternoon, with the Idaho eenator. Their Marital Harmony Is Off Key Ji ' II 4 '-T w -Wai The next time a locomotlre breaka down near It. Louie, they'll Just call out Washington Unlrerslty' lineman to clear the track. Una Coach Oale Bull man ha bad hla boy out aborlng gondolas around to dsTslop power, and above yea aee thea la action. The coach. Incidentally, la (etUnf a tret ride. Pa'ftamg President Here for Conference pQj. jaiiei Money matter bare come between Mm, t.ulsa Tetrntstnl, world fa mous opera sliigor of a generation ago, and her young husband, Pletro Vernatl, with wbom aha la here ahown. First Vernatl brought suit to prevent her from "sguaodorlng hor money." Now tha noted diva ha eountored Ibis action by charging bar mat with extortion. Where Lower Berths Are Sky-High M Vm-.Tl!:. I ! r r , . " .... .. .... ' I ' S r on Murder Charge On hi way to Washington to confer with Prit4ent Rooaerelt n ue tlona concerning hi country and the United State, Preeldent Hrmo dlo Arise of the Republic ot Panama I pictured a be waa greeted by dlgnltarlet on arriving In New York. Lett to right, front row; Or. Rlrardo Alfaro, former President of Panama nd now Pan-American Minister to Panama; President Arias and Jama a Dana, ropreeent 1ng the State Department. The Rev. Dal B. Crowley, above, fiery pastor of the Jonssboro, Ark., Baptist tabernacle, was charged with murder following the death ot J. W. MacMurdro, an aged Janitor who waa wound ed In gunfire that renewed el he for control at the church. 'Hold That Line!' It's U. S. C. Front Wall An Innovation in nlr travel waa launched when an eastern airline Installed berths In the giant Condor planes In night service between Atlanta and Now York. Dotty CroMliwaltt, left, of Pelham, N. Y., and Honey Johnxon of Bronxvllle, N V., are shown here trying out the new accommodations which Include rending lights, call buttons, draw curtalna, clothes hanger, neta and .other Pullman-type acce aorlea of a railway berth.! r w.- .v .... r - z a, ii f t f ii r Swift, agejMslve and averaging 306 pounds, Southern California' first string Un will create lota of trouble. Left to right, Cant. Palmer, end; Harper, tackle; Steven, guard; Rotenbert, guard; Youel, center; Lade, Banner Bearer Of Communism J f .' I i"f,v'J " :' 1; r 1 ' v i j , A abort, etocklry built airL reddish-blond hair hanging to her ehonlders, hold the limelight ka Communist demonstrations ta the east. She I Ann Burlak, "Red Flame," pictured here af ter ahe led a delegation to tex tile oode hearlnga lb Waahiagtoa. Rubber Magnates ' at Code Hearing Iff I i " I .. M Two ot the nation's foremost com petitor in the rubber Industry are pictured here a they left a closed bearing of the rubber code in Washington.'D. 0. Above I Paul W. Litchfield, president ot the Goodyear Robber Company, and (below), Harvey Firestone, head of the Firestone Rubber Company. Both concern are la Akron, a President's Son on English Soil - . dlP1 - ft; -J- I & 5 A? 1 i"' N iwt y- ?' 1, V Europe had a chance o glimpse a second member of the President' family la a year when James Roosevelt, oldest son, arrived with hi wife In London, a ahown here, to begin a European vacation, Hla younger brother Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., toured the Continent '- -.during the anmmea. Banker Tells SenateTof Firm's" Losses ""Tse. ft "e3 How the banking Investment firm of Dillon. Read at Co, of New Tork, lost 128,000,000 through it Investment trusts, waa revealed during the Senatorial stock market Investigation at Washington. Ernest Ball Tracy (left), president of Investment trust controlled by the firm, and a witness at tha hearing, I pictured talking with Senator Job) S. Townaend, Jr of Delaware. A SignafdTfe WoftH $75,0C3 f $ Vrlnf Showing confidence In Jo Cronln, hi boy manager, Clark OriflHh, president ot the Washington Senators, gave him a three-year eon tract, reported to call for 126,000 a year, Jo to ahown at teat paaa pine hi lgnatre as Ori look w. "- " Silk Strikers Invade Capital in Code Protest 1 " - : i t - W V W frr Shouting "Weil make our own codes on the picket line," striking silk workers from Peterson, N. J sre pictured above In Washington as tbey arrived to attend the NRA hearing on the proposed amendment to the textile code and to protest Its provisions. Led by Ann Burlak, the "Red Flame" of the last hunger march, the strikers heard the code assailed by Senator Hamilton Keen ot New Jersey (ahown below In Inaet), and defended by Oeorge A. Sloan, president of the Cotton Textile Institute (shown landing, lower left.) listening to Sloan'e speech are General Hugh S. Johnson (left), NRA admin istrator, and Donald R. Riohbarg, NRA . jumI