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Show Trr $ ii n 4 if iin TnE li VA L, LOO AN. R I Mn)U MI. World and National Events Pictured By Sj : HERALD-JOU- l l ! U Rn'1 tn Tl,e'r Deaths in This Crash on a California Peak 1 n page three. 8. Herald-Journ- al Photographers Where Coal Mine Blast Killed Ten MtSiric s 3 0 2 ' LOOKS HOPEFULLY AT LIFE After Operation All Watched I -- & M A Y i ' iwvv " Vlfc .Sw?. V A1 Hclaine Colan, old victim of a rare optical cancer, is pictured above resting comfortably after surgeons had removed hir left eye in a desperate effort to save her life and part of her sight Torn by the dilemma of letting their daughter die or submit to the blinding eiperation, her parents, Dr and Mrs Herman Colan of Chieago, left the decision to a Jury of ten physicians and two rabbis Since she bore the delicate operation so successfully her doctors are observing the baby closely in the hope that excision of the other eye will be unnecessary H iby tJ? ?k n f(,f Vegas, , AnaPi if. than an 1?n a neW Lofkh(ed B.K ( ne persons aboard on hour liter it crashed on fetrone Panger toplane Las flight Mountain. 40 miles from Los Angeles, and its nine passengers tnree men. lour women and two babies were Instantly killed. Above, a general view of Uie wrcck- age of the $80 000 airliner, crumpled against the hillside. ITALIAN NAVYS Dies in Crash W AR DOGS DARK FOR HITLER five-wee- Highlights of Air Raid Blackout Immediately after a terrific blast in the St. Clam Coal Companys mine near Pottsville, Pa , sounded a knell of death, anxious relatives of possible victims clustered abou the shaft mouth. But it was four hours before the first victim was brought down the single track railroad seen in the photo above Ihe explosion, which killed seven and seriously burned 10 others, was the second major mine disaster in a week. .XVJTa r e: J , V v-- 'sy - s. -- Mjtri A Vv agT -- t sw; An entile lamm mui in Hie turning wreckage of a new transport pi inc which crashed on a hillside north of Los Angeles on a flight to Las Vegas, Nev With Mrs Henry W Salisbury, above, were her husband, a Northwest Air lines ei gincer, and their two children, Richard and audith. Nine perished In the tragic accident. ss M Chnuillor llillir m n,or' of a sea might after watc lung, duung his recent vsil, the great naval sham battle st igcd for Ins fit at Naples by Premier Musso- s the grcut battle dups, jlnl pictured above, thundered out broadsulis S'i subm irines burst to the surf u c simultaneously and, as seen below, loosed ele i k cannon which fired 1U00 shots minute vivul took home It lly s VJ& isnkiv iwi ..jf k---. fe irftM sb. V JlVbmlX. - His scared body bundled in wrappings, one of ten miners who were badly burnpd m an explosion that killed seven others at the St. Clair Coal Company's workings near Pottsville, Pa, is shown being taken from the scene of the disaster on a flat car. Of 19 miners on the level where the blast let go, only two escaped unhurt. I , UTAH GIVES FLAG p&r V area around Farming-dal- e, Although buildings and streets in a I I , were darkened m the first blackout air raid maneuvers held in this country, attacking enemy bombers, flying invisibly beyond the pointing fingers of defense searchlights, quickly located local aircraft factories. and "destroyed their military objectives The bombers dropped brilliant parachute flares, as pictured above, circle. At left, below, a fair spectator floodlighting a watches the battle with furrowed brow. At right, a young Farmingdaler, taking the raid seriously, dons a tin pan helmet and finds double-barrele- d safety for himself and his Scottie in a j le five-mi- le home-mad- e air raid chamber. Scouts New Shortstop ty r y cJ Cailtt Walter T Magee of Salt Lake City, presents the flag of Utah to Gvneral C P Cummerall, president of The Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina This flag, the gift of Governor Henry H Blood, ia to be hung In the recently dedicated cadet chapel with those of the othir states and of the territories. More than thirty flags have been rtueived already, most of them the gifts of the chief executives G. A. R. HEAD OPTIMISTIC ivyT' w Z SPt sr' s, r Si HL1 vT-- i With moio thin 3 Ti 3000 men the rail for a Anal dcs-rate serrch of the forests north Etadforei, Pa, hope that Mnrjoue West above, fniCht be found alive wis f st "tning as the volunteots filled io uncover a trace o. the child Hie girl disappcnier during a P( -- enr-old o'heg Jin y outirg f i rn . v.ith hr Two successful candidates in the histoiically bitter Pennsvlvanla Democratic primary eleetion arc a triumph that dealt a stunning blow to the first bid pictured above on the day of their triumph-At left above Charles Alvin Jones, Pittsburg L. Lewis and the of John wide power for stite seen as he won the nomination for governor from Lieut Governor Thomas are Jones Mrs and liwyer, Gov George H Earle, sips eof'ec mate Kennedy C I O brain truster At right, Jones running keel while listening to vole1 returns that piled up his easy victory as senatnrl d nominee over CIO- hie Jtivor S Davis Wdsrn of Philadelphia YsT r.' CIO Chirk Griffith is positive that he has a n w shortetnp in Thomas (iifiith Cronin, inf int son of his adopted d lughlrr, Mrs Joe Cumin, wife of the manager of the RoMon bed Se x The piesidcnt of the Nats si opted the prospect at Garfu Id hospital, Washington. The grand army of the re ublic s voungest veteran and lomman-d- c Dr Overton H Mcnnit, blames tne government in Washington for the diprtssion of 1137. but is not pessimistic about the outcome, he said in Seattle Dr Mennct, who is 89, is touring the wist, speaking at rallits of his few surviving comrades. Return to a simple way of living and be willing to woik is hii advice. |