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Show PAGE SIX PROVO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1934 Herald's p. ameramen " Flash News' Of World To You In Pictures 5 dj Air View Shows Portland, Oregon, Including Its Inland r . r Oct Ipiw x . MB lUc i?Wrl frx --TS?SSSSSS?5WS? JRf x vtfYJ?SS TSR wt wmcciwih-j. .uuu.il. , .jn.uii.il 1 1 win n ,1 ... fc c rp p ' p rp rp cp rp rp rCp r) Harboi Hands That Run Looms Raised in Victory Pledge rp p rVo Call Her 'Doc' - - . . , . (Copyright by Brubakcr Aerial Surveys) This alrvlcw of "Portland, Ore, looks downstream along tlic "Willamette River, aiul shovs the business section on the left, the industrial an residential east side on the rig lit. and t he series of drawbridges connecting the two shores. Though 100 miles from the oce;in, Portland, throaeh the Willamette River, and the Columbia into which the "Willamette empties, has a deep waterway that makes it an important seaport Sinclair Treads Another Platform Guard Mills to Avert Sabotage Shot Kills Pal l-i ' -'If - - f ii (:' ' xW- ; m.- : i P f , . i (; t , , ' v ' X y I " J- r f. Mi l An ancient dueling pistol held by Lansing Brown, above, ended the life and career of Russ Columbo, radio and screen star. Los Angeles authorities held the shooting accidental. Bride Exposes Wedding Hoax 8pry and happy, Upton Sinclair, California's ex-Socialist Democratic Demo-cratic nominee, eagerly passed through New York City enrout to Hyde Park, where he was scheduled to discuss his EPIC platform with President Roosevelt. Roose-velt. He is shown on the railroad platform as he changed trains is Manhattan. Stranded Flyer Saved in Arctic kll the outer aspects of war accqmpany the textile strike In which fOO.OOO workers Were called out. Here is a typical scene outside the tousdale cotton mill at Seneca, S. C, as guardsmen search a worker work-er entering the plant. Everyone arriving at the mill gate is searched (or hidden guns or bombs, In an effort to prevent sabotage. Colleta to 'Tell Mother AIL' .V.V.V.-.'.V.V.'.'-W .h.V., V i Jfr si it rV' - -ft U - v, ft ' ' TK' s j ft. A Re&ued Horn an isolated fjord in J Iceland. John Grierson. Enjnsli aviator, above, contin-v contin-v tied! his flight toward Canada, " marked by a series of misfortunes misfor-tunes since he left Ireland, in ,July. Forced down in the Arctic Arc-tic Inlet, Grierson sent an SOS and? a searching party found Uini a day lateiv - I . fft. ' W--J. 'A-- K - A- - v ' - V . i"'Y ' s ' - - W ' s'-" iT2l!!ly'wwwL).iij.ii ' NBA Colletta Mulvlhill. 15, the sky-larking heiress to Pittsburgh, Pa oil millions, mil-lions, who startled society by eloping with a truck driver while en. gaged to a wealthy Spaniard, "perks up" in San Francisco. Oolletta'i en route to meet her mother in the Philippines to explain marital and nearc efl1T7t1iirtTi' - Everybody present at the wedding of Helene Fortescue (above) and John Marshall. Jr., In the Rock ridge theater at Carmei. N. Y., believed they were married; but when their families asked for details, de-tails, the bride admitted tha ceremony cere-mony was a hoax on her friends, the minister having been an Insurance In-surance man, ; Miss Fortescue,; an actress, to a sister of Mrs. Thalia Massie. central figure of Honolulu's Honolu-lu's famous revenge flaying. i1 1 Y f's " ii. -S- ' I Scenes like this were being enacted throughout the South as labor leaders sought to rally their forces to tnak the United Textile Worker?' strike 100 percent effective. A group of union executives at Charlotte, Char-lotte, N. C, is shown haranguing a'crowd which has Just raised its hands to signify its willingness for c finish fight against mill operators. She Can't Bear Baer for Name Latest Addition to U. S. Fleet Believed to be the youngest member mem-ber of her sex to be admitted to medical practice under stringent California laws. Berthella Jarvis, pretty and blonde, has earned right to title of "Doctor." She is 24. Claims Record for Air Jumps ' ' V 1 A i It might be "finis" to her romance ro-mance with Max Baer, world heavyweight champion pugilist, that Dorothy Dunbar Baer la writing here: Despite rumors of reconciliation, the actress who once was Baer s wife has petitioned a Los Angeles court for permission to drop the "Baer" from her name i I I W M II I mm mm m M J J . "??,es ''fro ? it's .sli.'H-p arid Plendrr lines bespeaking the speed with winch it will hunt and harrass .ships, the new destroyer U. S S. MucDommgh is being readied at the Charleston, Mass., navy yard for service with the fleet. The ship was christened by Hose McDonough. deseendent of the naval hero for which it was named. Aviator Yevdokimov of the Soviet Army flying corps, claims to have set a new world record for delayed de-layed Jumps when he dropped more than 26,000 feet before o:enit.g his parachute. He s shown tangled up in the halyards of the 'cbute. SENSATIONS MARK SENATE PROBE OF MUNITIONS RING Astounding intimations of bribery, spy actirity, profit splitting, and attempted tax evasion featured first hearings in Washington of the Senate Munitions Committee on the world armament traffic. Sensational evidence was given on the business connections of the Electric Boat Company, Groton, Conn., submarine builders, wita Sir Basil Zaharoff, European munitions "mystery man." This picture shows the committee taking testimony. Principal figures are, 1, Senator Gerald P. Nye, North Dakota, committee chairman: 2, Stephen Raw-siienbusb, Raw-siienbusb, committee secretary; S, Henry ft, Sutphen, rice president, Electric Boat Company; 4, L. Y. Spear, vice president, and 5, 1 ljga--Car set presidents - - - |