| Show - - - Iyata)344e41"41 - m - ia- a- 0 --- 1 t f') ' - - i i ' ''' (- -1 1 ti 1 t 1 - r - c-- 't '1 jewel ' 4 ' I i 1 3 Nik t ° In ' A st 7 7 ' L' 1 ' 't I 6 - vatt ii 4 irr) — i '''-- ) i 0 I 1 -- 11 I r-- 1 4 a - i 4 j 1 )41 L 1 ‘ 1 ! i 1 it At 1 - G-m- an y was a westerner born in Franklin Ida popula- SAlf COWLEY about 500 He went to grade school in Preston Ida and received a BS degree from 'Utah State Agricultural college class of 1925 in the school of business administration He filled a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints in the Hawaiian islands was married Aug 31 1929 to LaVon Chipman 'That was Cowley's background that and law school at 011eorge Washington university and then the department of justice in 1929 ' 5 i 1 ' from him" $ 0 ---- N '' ' - '::l ' - I ' s : Samuel P Cowley who received his '' ' - - '' l'' : i ' - ' ' - - '-' or - at - (-- 1 F '0 gm 'E'''''''' - ' t 1 r 4 m 1 NN 41 A: Mt T - X el t K 1 - wifoncEs i : -- : S Chamber Chief 1 t SW 1 farteachs toeia -- 1 I L:- - 4 — ' DMêlat ltItitiattlit Or La' — :'''-rr'A- --- - -- -- i - 7 t'4:---- 4 w" - A - ' - s ""' A'—--—"'- 17 1- -: - ''' - - -- - v 4 a x ' : - - -- - - — '- -r 7'- -- ' -- - - ---- -- - - 11115 - — gy 0112 I - ti : I-- 1 '''- -- 1g : i - '- - 7 ' - -- ' - '' 1 ': ' - 7: - - is I- ::: - '"'' - f - l' ) - N--- - 3: i —7 — 7 r- 7:1: : - -7:::- :- : -- 111::':±:: T -- : a i it eto4- - I - s tAmsato' ess--- 1 ::: tounee Navy Treaty sit -- - - :- - i - - i - rrAlbw t i - ::- -- : tsks Italy France ' : - - ": - - '' : - ----- -i : - ' - Sm itt S : ::t::::::iv - " - - - -- --- ca '!' ''4 :- Z-- ' - e- A- 'It I -- - 'La' -4 1 1 i tt-- i - o - --- - "" — " : -x - -- - -- : - - ' 1 s - 1 1 1 Reproduction of the front pare of Salt Lake Tribune of Nov 2a 1034 (above) tells story of the shooting of Samuel P Cowley and Herman E Hollis by George "Baby Face" Nelson who was found his body riddled next day 4 - - - Cavt Iry known 44 UT' Ilautcr - :' m - - : 1 ' t ::7-' z 4 I vr ':: ' ::-- - --- i 't"'" ''' - z::- - I -— t- 1 rums ktvaa -- ‘ : " L mar Ahot Onenr moan rnnetont Infra& toiloorto IA -- --0- - - 4) - '-- tit Awe at :2--7----- --- --- G-m- an - ' - - c) )4kmbelot ' "'': - kTyrots G-m- i - - 5 rita sELN Ufs‘s 4 te i ica i 14 -- Gnat r tr- thin e ytttittlitiors i suing -- ”- - UpBtlianahscn tiaSitt4 tao totformmo :1'S VICICUI I -' C:- - rt- - -- e- --- - l Troil vt 144 enoners rat Micrinty Ilk sondsni lt Sarivan Gann -- ------ - ert----ATa PUT--- I I 1x ltmtnnot Stk 14 ra i'tp-J 'i yr -- I ? - i k i 7- - :- T WWI 't - I c1 'owner '1 ''"'-- - ! ! - - I ""4 -4 t ' ' - f 1 - - -- ': --- A " 7:1::--:----- - -: - - - ' - 4 - - S ' l''"4"' i 't' -- :::: z47 J' —ttrtstsitt4 a 1lirmity — '''''" -:- -: '" ---- 1e - "":"'-'H -- f -- COM It --: -- 20 v 14o t t: Lw -- 6 :7: - - -- --- -- - cr::1 -- -' -- -- -:-- — !f : ' -- ' '4 - - - ! ''7--::-7 Svolooter ' - "“w r'-'--' r -- --- -- - cmnetkett---- -- -- a oorroreltscrv-4 Iadoot oofk lit vilest fat Iforower 690d laamamktra ' swot A AIZi114 lizk- AL - 'Baby Face' Nelson ' And Fellow ) f i Killinras Uf Way From ARMS - Voices Optimism for soLoNs AsK Y ISc'ED rpn re- it : Busines 4 in S L Talk E EGENcy norrimukat folSo for rootberotvoo 40 torroror ShUVV1k10 7a4 PtiCP - Mrt AL AcrNT:s-14- 21ip-Fig-ATEi- :- ' : - ' W f ir 1 b 11 n r (1 Odt - '1$4 " 1 ' ' ( -4- ' c -- to o! :' 144 4 "! t et4t1 t r I (41 1 1 s vz---? - - ---- - togoto104 4 SP 1 1 0' C 4 : 4 rl tata a t 4 - t t 4 investigations "The sun was rising and they had knocked off John Dillinger It wasn't a bad night's work Purvis vvas the chief and he showed his gat so in that careless and carefree way that old - - - ' reporters take on I addressed them en masse and asked them to t 1114)aris Ps irmy sNat1 (hrr ()moos:: - 7 '''''‘ ''" '- n-- '' 2 '''''-show theirs "One agent not knowing exactly who I was or why he shouldn't do it pulled his 45 Dillinger hadn't been shot with that kind of a bullet I didn't work around morgues for 20 years and not know The two caught the car and forced it to the side of the that The other boys came out with their cannons—all but Cowley" Nelson road was case and Sam but tired of the Dillinger leaped out and began shooting and Cowley and his J Cowley Windup mate fired back The exchange of shots dropped Cowley into the Edgar Hoover decided to keep him on the job Cowley was told toa the other federal agent and go after "Baby Face" Nelson and four months later he reached gully at the side of the road killed showdown with his second public enemy—a showdown that was sent Nelson staggering into his car career somewhat of an anticlimax to Cowley's Samuel Cowley died in a Chicago hospital that night The next day a naked body was found in Niles Center about 20 miles northbleak and dismal and a lot different from that west of Chicago's loop The body was a little torn up—nine bullet COLD November before boles in all—and was wrapped in a blanket "Baby Face" Nelson hot wait near the Biograph theater On the-da- y fatally wounded by Cowley's bullets was all ready for burial His Thanksgiving Nov 27 1934 Sam Cowley and another federal man were sent out to patrol the northwest highway in Chicago on the friends had left him in front of St Paul's Lutheran accommodating spotted him - eemetery at the same time Sam Cowley's body was on a train tip that "Babyg Face" was somewhere on it-- They car with another mart and a woman ' beading west riding in a I ':'o i-- o C ' from Ti S A C AS a student at Utah State F 1 i -- :t--- inquest went on Jack Lait prepared the rest of his WHILE that of the long session that was more like a wake than an -- degree In 1925 - 4 'izsimm - 7 bachelor's' : - I ''' - - - G-m- - - ri11 - ? 7 - 1::1::::- -- - ? :' ' (12 ' 1 ' :fand his agents had to fight through a souvenir-hungr- y ' to get to the body of Dillinger When they got the corpse i'!! (0 ' : to the Cook county morgue there was a new job in store for them 7:t - Sam Cowley had studied the Dillinger case he'd seen fingerprints 4 v Al 4 :I I ' 11 1 t ° 1 ri VI AJ2-- - 4 $ and photographs and so had Melvin Purvis But this was a new " John Dillingers The face had been lifted plastic surgery had re- ": T 'r c'lli k "')TC" 7 7 i:11 t i brown hair had been dyed : ' moved an old gunfight scar the reddish 5 i ' I black and Dillinger had grown a mustache also dyed black His had been treated with acid but it was still possible to 41' finger-tip- s him And the coroner inquest to deter- UV' it was really Dillinger it - - - t " : : sat I that P Cowley through II)litit) 1111Y t all RI: Dd illinmgiedrn :unit ffy Is:1 of the night He dressed in a black suit 1 i s 1At 1:3 1 4)74 !I t who described the :r: talked to Jack Lait '7 ' r P' : : man who shot t of the ': :nlif 4) :I:!! 1 "The man who has the deepest notch in his gun in the world " Is pamuel P Cowley He Is the man who killed Dillinger - 17 1 - punvis ' - T rot-tx-- A ' (11411v -- - i 1 ":17aratttt 1 er A ' - I :' I ---- - newspapers tell the story of that chase for Dillinger CHICAGO that had all the thrills lf Renfrew of the Royal Alcunted Dillinger had been in hiding throughout the early summer of '34 and it wasn't until that hot July 23 that the F HI got a tip on his whereabouts The bureau learned that Dillinger was planning to see a movie at the Biograph theater 2433 Lincoln ave And the vigil began At 8:30 pm John Dillinger walked into the movie with a woman The feature attraction was "Manhattan Melodrama" with Clark Gable and William Powell and it was about a gangster who finally was tripped up by the law Melvin Purvis Sam Cowley and 11 agents stationed themselves outside the theater and waited until 10:40 pm Dillinger walked out into the sultry street He was wearing a straw hat a white silk sAirt a gray tie white shoes gray trousers and no coat He started to walk around the corner from the movie house "He saw me give a signal to my men to close in" Purvis reported "He became alarmed reached into a belt and was drawing the pistol he carried concealed (Purvis had expected him to be unarmed) when two of the agents let him have it Dillinger was lying prone before he was able to get the gun out and I took it ry i o i wzar i 0 He worked around the country on various FBI assignments— Los Angeles Salt Lake City Butte and Detroit And then to Chicago under special orders from Chief J Edgar Hoover Those orders read: "Get John Dillinger" So Inspector Cowley—an inspector since July 1 1934—dropped in at the Chicago bureau to see Director Melvin Purvis PICKETT 31 slow-talkin- ' i robberies These have been big crime news in American newspapers l but they're somehow tame compared with crime headrecently lines of 13 years ago For John Dillinger was on the loose he was hailed as "public enemy No 1" and his chief satellites were "Baby Face" Nelson and "Pretty Boy" Floyd It was in 1934 Roosevelt's second year in office Bing Crosby warbled "Temptation" Cable and Colbert made their cross-counthitch-hikin- g tour in "It happened One Night" and the N R A made new deal history Crime news brought attention to a comparatively unknown agency the Federal Bureau of Investigation and fame to several of the F B I's operatives This is the story of one member of the F B I Samuel P Cowley Around Washington's F B I headquarters it seemed strange that g man as Sam Cowley could be a such a quiet i Cag-neIle was tall rather blond didn't show that tough Jimmy manner generally attributed to federal agents fiber that two-gu- n o 0 ) -- dit ‘11 kiAT! NX 1 j --- By CALDER ‘ r LA L i - - 1 - f 1 ' n e i -- ---- '' ' ' i t - Inset plaque In entrance hall of the USAC main building in and memory of Cowley Sigma Chi who shot Dillingen i t G-m- an ! - fast-movin- i t I 4 kV' ''' i t I r' i 0 - t 4 CO I : "A AA' s A'1" --' ' itt 1 4 loti o 1 I Nr i I - 1 f -- - i MELBA MADSEN' "There was an old woman wrioAavect in a shoe " i She had so many children -- the resemblance of the old llady to the Salt Lake City board of education ends for the school authorities are taking logical steps to solve a situation which could have been most critical this year with the entry into kindergarten classes of the first of the "war babies" Impact of the "baby boom" will undoubtedly last over a period of about six years according to Dr M Lynn Bennion superintendent of schools who reports that the first of the "war baby crop"—those born in 1942—are entering school this year and 'have swelled the kindergarten population from 2881 in October 1946 to 3261 in October 1947 an increase of 360 children over last year To care for the influx the city school z 1 I Iticur 1 ' 1 la' I 1 1 i i 1 ' unused classrooms for kindergarten- kindergarten system has 55 half-tim- e e makteachers teachers and 14 headquarters" Miss Green said "In three instances—at the Forest Emerson ing 62 instructors for the smallof fry of about the city This makes an average and Garfield schools—where kindergar53 children per teacher—but cut into ten rooms were comparatiVely large two classes of two and one half hours classes were 'doubled up' to ' about 50 per day the teacher load is about 26 ' children per room and two teachers were students each assigned to them" Opening of the new Airbase Village are accommodat- school she said was a "direct expresEXISTINingthegkilkdergarten and its war-bab- y sion" Of the war-bab- y situation population nicely according to Miss Eva May Green primary and kindergarten afproblem of supplying teachers for supervisor but this happy state ofsome was a tough one since fairs was not accomplished without kindergartners head scratching and close figuring It was almost impossible to find nine new "When we made plans last year in teachers with a backgroundr for school teaching Qualified teachanticipation of an enlarged kindergarten we ers however were moved from first and population" Miss Green explained made arrangements for four additional second grade classes to the kindergarten kindergarten units Since school started posts and new teachers were hired to however we have had to add nine more fill the first and second grade spots The problem of equipment and supmaking a total of 13 additional kindergartens in Salt Lake City schools this plies was licked "in a fairly easy way" by the granting of priority for school year" she said been done by utilizing 'This has supplies to kindergarten teachers over teachers' rooms cloakrooms school already existing orders from other nurses' offices and In some instances groups - otA?01401Tee i i ! 1 14 - i t i -- -- 0 1 ''''' 1 i --- - ' a r ''-- - ' - 4- '''' ' -' - ' - ) 't -- - ''' " 1 ''''''' - -': too-doti- 1' - ' -'- s along" ' ':''' ' ? '' ' - y - 1 - - - 1 I I e - ''''-': - k 1 I k 3 'aka ' ' v - I - ' - 'j ' ' 1 1 ' - 4 '' ' : - a -- - -- - - t i - t i -0 ' r i i i - id': '- 4 t N --- st--' -- ''"1 4--a- v or--- ' -- - i 's trow ' t -' ' 'Is k : tr 3 - o '" ' ' 6 1' '1 - 01 - v f ' a - : '- t g r i y -- i ' ' -- ' - b''' it - 1 4 '1 -- t 1- 1 l ' A 1 f i' 1 I - 's ' - '- t ' ( a - a a- - - ' i 0-- : - A - - ':a t i'-''4-- -- ?- ' 4 - - ::::- : ' - ' '' l ' - 'i I — - - -: A : - - - 1 ' ' "r"-- ' - - - - I ' ' ::::-- ' - ' ' - - - - -- - - - - ' ''''''-- - - - A t - - - 1 t:--------4'- r - : i - - - Itlfht:: -- 'b t 5all gakt Zribunt Sunday Nov 16 1917 - "- ::: - : k ( J ' - i if r i : : ' D51 Nine new kindergarten Salt Lake's first crop at Douglas school i - L''' 4 "- - - -- ares0o-07- - 0 - ao0 - t 17 1 - - i ' - '''''5 - '' - i -- i t - -- -- 2 ! m ( - I II ‘ - I Photos by Jack White) f 4etr what the increase in war baby population over the last five years has been This will serve as a guide in remodeling and building programs The "bulge" in student enrollment during the next five years must be taken Into account without doing "a lot of overbuilding" he said Another board of education move which will cut slightly the number of kindergartners enrolled next year will be moving up of the age date from Oct 31 to Sept'1—that is a child must be five years old prior to Sept 1 in order to be eligible to enter kindergarten This has a two-fol- d purpose: to cut enrollment slightly and to give the child every advan- tage of maturing before entering school "Statistics show that the under-ag- e children seldom become school leaders" Miss Green said "Entered too early1 the child becomes a sideliner The alert child adjusts to the skills but is not able of the to lead in thouep socialI and citizenship parts of the rogram" she added "and this disadvantage continues throughout his school officer - ei "- - "On the strength of observations by both teachers and adthis ministrative change is being made next year" 1 "' - - -- : L career i b 1 ITh4C1' I 1 - - - According to Dr Bennlon a survey will soon be made of ' - f (Tribune-Telegra- - -- - r - - First war babies old enough to enter kindergarten here have swollen preprimer population from 2841 to 3261 Considerable improvisation was needed to take care of young fry Above Larry Hanks becoming familiar with the printed word with aid of teacher Beda Nordvall 4- - - ''': 1--- eii 4 dr ' -- - - - - - '-- - - ' -' -":'7- '' 24raaa44 'a ' 't ' ' ' :- - y 4- ''-- ' 4 - f- - :' - -- -- -— i 1 --- -- - 4 - ' -- - - - - - --- : - ' ''-- ' - '' :::: " '' 7 ' -- 44 4— - -- t ' - 4 - - - t - - s - A - v - - - L - g - I ' t14 ! - - I - ' ' ' ' - - - - - - -' - 1 - - mi- 1 -- f14'''''714' - 1-- ' y 1 '''- --- i ' '1'1 - - F - - - I I - i -- a -'- '1 - - ' f ''-- t - - --- - ' - - t - -'- t - '' - 1 ‘ f- - - ' ' - - - - birth certificates to determine ing - I or - overcrowd- - ' - 0 ' es'' ' - '' - ) 1 '6 4 I f greatly increased by ' - : ' - - - : - - 4 - 1 - 4 - - - - 14 ' - I i ' I :1 f ti - g" - A i it 1 ::it a '' 1 A I - - - - ' ' l 4- al :4 - ! bv - - -4 -- 4 : 1 - 1 i k " i 0 i ? : ei ' - i' ' e '' - I -- - - ' o' - I 1 a 4- : f r ' 1 " 5 t) 4 - 1 : ' - 3 ' - toe - ' A 1 v she explained : This shows itself in such small 'ways as inability to relax which of course makes smaller classes necessary The tension or electricity in a room she said is well-bein- g ' -' d- t A p ''' 't - ' ' ' - " j :---- ----' 'N l 1 -i - '' - I t 1 mo4 '5 '"4- '"' i' - bb 1 i I tv- - - 1 6- I '''' I 4or ': -- i t " 4 o?h i 'I A 0 i F f - )‘ - I ' I i 1 t - f ‘ :''i $ - o ' - - mm o—A -- - ' i ' - ''''' ' '-- "- -- 7: ' -- - b 40 ''" ----- 3 00-- 4' ' A i ' ''''" ' Cr - I '" - 1- - - t ws 4- - ' - t - - e - L - ' for i -V 4 - ' 00 I 1 ' - - ' ! I - - 1 - indicate that "war SURVEYS are as healthy as other children according to Miss Green "Their problems from babyhood have been more in terms of drains on their emotional rather than their physical - i i - ot" - -J ' - IP - -- 's ! - - AK 3'' 141 A It - ng t MkbV Sil ' 1 "' ' " 4' i k es age-mat- - 'r I ' ' ' - 1 - ' - f 62 kindergarten teachers who have ample opportunity to study their charges find that "war babies" are basiMiss cally just like all other Green said They are eager to learn resPond to- sympathetic guidance and are stimulated by the opportunity of mingling in groups of their There Is however some evidence of lack of stability in these youngsters probably a result of the great mobility in their lives Lack of concentrating power certain aggressive behavior and shyness were listed as some of the conditions brought on by war and postwar condiqpns brought about by frequent moving necessity of adjustment to new groups living with grandparents or other relatives and homes broken by divorce or separation of property and of 'belongingness' must be carefully instilled in these children" Miss Green declared "They don't need a special program but they do need special consideration in the regular program We must recognize the fact that their problem is a little different than it would have 11 i been if the war had not come I de pre-gra- J - I - - :s I THE full-tim- By" t i 1 i 34 oilrli014: 4t--or' mgr 1- - 5 I 1 ' 1 1 r g I 5- I 1 -- -- - I |