H. B. Rozzen was a police stenographer. Joseph F. Fueger was a teletype operator (who was later arrested for robbing stores at knifepoint). Lena Greenstein may also have been a police stenographer.
Portrait photograph of Count Rudolf von Stefenelli. He is seated on a small table, holding a cane and gloves. His coat and hat are on a chair next to him.
The Mutual Orange Distributors display at the National Orange Show. The display is a Viking ship, complete with mannequins dressed as Vikings. A sign on the right reads, "Success they won these Vikings so bold. Success you'll win on the ship pure gold." A sign on the front reads, "Selected from California's best and... Pure Gold oranges for your protection." Two women are visible in the background.
Eleanor and her husband President Franklin D. Roosevelt visited Los Angeles for a day before visiting San Diego. During their time in Los Angeles, the President gave a speech at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and Mrs. Roosevelt gave a speech at the Hollywood Bowl.
For the next year Miss Barnaby has been permitted to teach history in California through an international exchange program at South Pasadena High School. She was exchanged with Miss Myrtle Farrar, who will be teaching at the Girls' High School in Dudley, England.
Related to the article, "Night Club Men Freed: Committee Has No Authority to Cite Witnesses for Contempt, Says Court," Los Angeles Times, 20 Jul. 1935:1.
This photograph appears with the article, “Wife Stands by Accused Man: VON MOLTKE FACES TRIAL Check Forgery Charges by Employer to Be Heard Today,” Los Angeles Times, 14 Aug. 1935: A8.
Photograph of President Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt waving good-bye from the platform at the back of the presidential train before leaving Central Station (Central Ave. and 5th St.) for San Diego, with 3 unidentified men standing with them.
Several train cars lie in ruin, derailed with train parts strewn across the railroad accident site. Three men look through the wreckage while onlookers stand a short distance away. The Southern Pacific Railroad locomotive had crashed into a seven-ton truck on the tracks in Glendale. A dozen people were injured, with no fatalities.