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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 32
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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 32

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
32
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THURSDAY. JULY 15. 1937. 32 "3c THE WORLDS GREATEST NEWSPAPER Robinson Death Blow to Backers of Supreme Court Packing Steel Rioters Fired First, Inquest Told i rTT x-x 4 'W 7 Vy'rK M.r x. v-g.

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Vic x. XX-' 1.11 GIRL TELLS OF SEEING C. I. O. GUNS Miss Jean Carleton Garey, 19, a student, with Coroner Frank Walsh at inquest yesterday into steel riot fatalities.

She told of seeing weapons on inspection tour. (Story on page 1.) WOMEN CONFESS AIDING IN ROBBERIES Mrs. Inez Gerasta and baby Jerome, with her sister, Miss Margaret Craig, who were arrested in flat as accomplices of bandit, who also admitted passing counterfeit money. ITRIBUNE (Story on page 3.) vW-J. 'SSTtf' -yf -X xx; x.xx;.xx..fcX";:.:.r x- o' xx i xV yiv as o.

rx 0x lillililillM xx 81. "Jr v.Srxxwx-.ti x. 4 1 5 Associated Press Wirepioto. ISLANDERS THREATEN TO SECEDE UNLESS U. S.

HALTS STRIKE Franlc E. Vincent brings mail and vacationists to the mainland at Woods Hole, after strike of seamen tied up regular ship service for passengers and freight to Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard. Help for the islanders was expected as a result of demand that food be flown to them in National Guard planes of Massachusetts. (Story on pag 2.) I x. 4x XX' iot A i SOVIET AVIATORS LAND IN CALIFORNIA WITH NONSTOP RECORD lllllllllilllilllllli xHV I "7 .1 'joi I I 4 1 A V--X.

Jj i 4 x. fit 4 i P. -xW 4 S.xv -i iftilii 5 'x xf ot 4-- li. xS i ocr x-r" 2 caw Ad A 5kVrf- tw" -1 zr SPENDS NIGHT IN TRUNK TO ESCAPE BATH Jerry Nichols, 7 years old, beside trunk in back yard at 4S01 Winthrop avenue, to which he retreated when mother ordered him to take a bath. He spent several hours in the box.

TKIBOTTE Photo. (Story on page 2.) 4 o. 5 j. ooexs 'ft i we -xxo- Push War on "Hay Fever" Weeds (Story on page 11.) xt-. -r i V-iU IB i Cv i Kx jx mNctsi x- MOURN DExATH OF SENATOR ROBINSON Joseph T.

Robinson of Arkansas, who died in Washington yesterday of heart attack at age of nearly 65, shown with his wife, who was at family home in Little Rock. (Story on page 9.) 5V x. vj x. -2Tx. "Lx 'v Route of flyers from Moscow to San Jacinto.

They flew more than the distance indicated because they became lost. Associated Press Wirephoto.l Looking down on the big red monoplane of the three soviet flyers who landed in pasture near San Jacinto, yesterday after nonstop flight from Moscow via the north pole. The single motor plane was in the air more than 62 hours, covering more than 6,200 miles. The previous nonstop record was set in in 1933 by Maurice Rossi and Paul Codos, French flyers. rv liTOpililiiiPIl Sx s'Swir Afe J'-'-iJvi 7.fes-xx oxH.v A a x'; wyy- fx x.

V.p-v S-. x. -V sn i X- xjx -if K' -J xi a 0 4 J- x. '-'x 0 A i i II mm. i.x'Va'5 x'j 04 x.

S.r Air- 0x 1 WPA workers cutting weeds yesterday in the 3300 block on North Central avenue as several agencies combined to rid the city and suburbs of pollen which causes hay fever. Private landowners, state and municipal authorities are aiding the campaign. I 4 Associated Press Wirephoto.l T. Claude Ryan, aeronautics official, holding barograph containing records of transpolar flight of soviet airmen. Unable to speak English, the three flyers were taken to March field, United States army air base 25 miles away, where they waited impatiently for their first real meal since leaving Moscow.

Left to right: Pilot Mikhail Gromov, Navigator Sergei Danilin, and Co-Pilot Andrei Yumoshev. Associated Press Wirephoto.l sc (Story on page 1.) WED IN MAY; ANNOUNCE SEPARATION June Lang, screen actress, and Victor Orsatti as they started married life with a kiss on May 29. Yesterday they announced that they have parted and contemplate divorce. Acme Photo. (Story, on page 6.) 7 K.

i5s Slain Proivler Is Policeman's Son U. S. COMMERCIAL AIRLINES SPENT FOR PLANES IN 1936 $76,805,000 (Story on page 10.) TOTAL COMMERCIAL MILEAGE IN U.S.AND FOREIGN EXTENSIONS 61,532 A. vx itx i i a- il I' ffx i. r- 1 o.x.

7 x'xX I i r.vxi V0 w' 'x iTwiriAV xKx "XXX.0-0XJ 5 iv TOTAL PASSENGER MILES FLOWN ANNUALLY-49 1 ,744,053, OF WHICH 435,740,253 IS IN DOMESTIC SERVICE 56,003,800 IN FOREIGN EXTENSIONS ojr ixxx lx: xx xt O-OXT' iXXV 0 TS 'x xxxvxj xjS' -v jerm r' oofeyis ft rf zr x. i xXo Black lines on this map represent routes of the far flung network of the commercial air lines operated by United States aviation comrjanies, pioneers in establishment of another great arm of world transportation. Achievements of commercial air lines operated by them include: Flying U. S. planes 201,017 miles each day or in a year 73,303,836 miles, of which 63,777,226 miles are domestic and 9,526,610 foreign extensions; operating 8,849 planes in scheduled and other domestic flights; using 2,343 commercial, private, and military air fields throughout the United States, and carrying a total of 1,147,969 passengers annually (domestic, foreign extensions, on pag 4.) The toy pistol (foreground) and brass knuckles of Carleton.

The smaller pistol is Leudtke's. Raymond Leudtke, 25, who shot and killed Byron Carleton, the son of a policeman. A ragweed cutting machine in operation on the Illinois Central near Genoa in De Kalb county. It mows on both sides of the track. TKIBUNE -Photos..

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