Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Harrisburg Telegraph from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania • Page 6

Location:
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

U. S. MINISTER TO DENMARK IS WHITE HOUSE GUEST Mr. Ruth Bryan Owen with Mrs. Roosevelt, her hostess at the Executive Mansion where she is staying dur ins her brief annual leave from her diplomatic post.

1 vv TTi A CHAMPION AMERICAN FARM CIRI waMfl Wl UCIIfl UCT" ersluis, 17, during the corn husking event at the Los Angeles County Fair at Pomona, where she won the titular crown by defeating all other competitors in hay pitching, cornhusking, churning and tractor driving events. 4 i 1 I Maps of New Jersey, Including the Sourland mountain region In which the Lindbergh estate Is located, and of the region In Massachusetts where Col. Lindbergh was sent on a futile mission during ransom negotiations, were found In Bruno Hauptmann'a trunk. Here District Attorney Samuel J. Foley of Cronx county Is examining one of the Sourland area mari while holding one of nine German English dictionaries, each of 1,000 word, also found in the trunk.

(Associated Press Photo "Sip Telegraph newspapers photo MRS. G. S. WISE, 239 North Twenty fifth street, Camp Hill, driving from a Harrisburg Country Club tee in a recent golf tournament. Joyce Gilmour, winner of a Morv treal "outdoor girl" beauty contest, made this charming if unusual arrival In New York'a grand central terminal when she visited Gotham at "royal guest" of the national "American Beauty pageant." (Associated Press Photo) WW 6 SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 6, 1934 HARRESBURG TELEGRAPH NEWS OF HARRISBURQ AND THE WORLD IN PICTURES Telegraph newspapers photo Officers of the freshmen class of Enola High School, left to right: Lou Barley, treasurer; Harold Kechler, president; Jean Bitner, vice president, and Kathryn Welsh, secretary.

Telegraph newspapers photo PHYLLIS GOLDMAN and LILLIAN MARION are the editor in chief and "associate editor, respectively, of the William Penn High School Founder. The first Issue of the school paper was distributed recently. AIM AniWTOAT TfTDHTC IDAV mnnirn WT Yi. muivwunwiH: vice Admiral William C. Watts, Commandant of the Philadelphia Navy Yard, driving the first rivet into the keel of the U.S.S.

Cassin during ceremonies marking the start of construction of the destroyer. A NOTED ARTIST CONTRIBUTES HIS SERVICES TO CHARITY Howard Chandler Christy at work on sketch of Shirley Martens of Whitestone, N. prize winner at Camp Fire Girls Hobby Show in N. as Ruth Nichols, noted flyer and former member of the order, looks on. Telegraph newspapers photo Eight Harrisburg Area Scout leaders are attending the fourteenth annual assembly of Region Three Councils of Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia at the Hotel Abraham Lincoln, Reading, today.

They are: First row, left to right, Carl R. Smith, Scott S. Burgoon, Morris J. Sachs, and Elno Hill; second row: J. M.

Kelberg, Chief Thomas Sparrow, C. W. Hunt and V. Grant Forrer. Telegraph newspapers phota Among prominent officers of the Pennsylvania National Guard attending last night's banquet were Adjutant General David J.

Davis, Major General Edward C. Shannon, Major General Hugh A. Drum and Colonel Eric F. Wood. THE FIRST TRUCKLOAD OF INSULL CASE EVIDENCE: Special Assistant Attorneys General Leslie Salter and Forest Har ness and U.

S. Attorney Dwight Green (left to right) with books and papers which will be submitted during the Federal trial of Samuel Insull and sixteen co defendants in Chicago. William J. Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, Is shown as he addressed the convention In San Francisco, when he bespoke labor's advocacy of a six hour day and five day week. (Associated Press Photo) tmsmmmm if 4 mM mmim mmm ma r.fi piiiiiiiiiiii 'mmmmm Workers in the Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Bending Company recently sent a delegation to learn about the work done with their contributions to the Welfare Federation campaign last year.

Members of the group, with children in the Harrisburg Children's Home, are: Clarence Snoke, C. A. Ryan, Jesse Landls, N. H. Marks, C.

E. Maxwell, George Morrisey C. S. Boyer, D. F.

Ommert. On OCEAN MAIL LINES OWE U. S. OVER HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS: Postmaster General Farley and First Assistant W. W.

Howes, silting on mail rates Board of Inquiry in Washington, hear testimony that operators carrying mail abroad owe Government $111,366,757. 1 io AN INSTRUMENT FOR COMMUNITY STAR GAZING AT A MINIMUM COSTi Small observatory whose house and telescope were made at a cost of $35, receives finish ing touches before being devoted to the astronomical education of school children of Hopkins, Minn. LOOKING DOWN ON THE SECOND CAME OF BASEBALL'S ANNUAL CLASSIC: Aerial view of Navin Field, Detroit, as the second game of the World's Series got under way, showing part of the 45,000 fans who packed the stadium to see the Detroit Tigers defeat the St. Louis Cardinals, 3 to 2, after twelve innings of thrilling baseball. Iim a I I 1.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Harrisburg Telegraph Archive

Pages Available:
325,889
Years Available:
1866-1948