Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
TAKES A LONG TIME TO DIG OUT—Chicago’s spring blizzard, with its 19 inches of snow, is the talk of the nation. Trbt Chicago to be on the front pages, one way or another. Who would expect a = $ % 4 street car to be forced off the track by snow packed on the rails in the heart of the city on a spring 'J RUSSIA TEARS DOWN CHURCHES AS ENGLAND PRAYS—Dis- | § : o a1 ki . day? Chicago docs nothing by halves. regarding protests of religious sects in other nations, Russia con- t i tinues to destroy churches. At left is the brick skeleton of what once was a religious edifice in Leningrad. At right is a view of special protest services being held in Westminster Abbey, London. SHE LEADS THE PROCESSION —Miss Thelma Bonini, mascot and drum-major of the Overseas Band and Drum Corps of the Vet- erans of Foreign Wars, has the honor of leading the band at the opening of the Buddy poppy drive, in a march from the capitol to the White House. She is pic- tured with “Hotsy-Totsy,” her terrier pal. ; WOOLWORTH HEIRESS AND FIANCE—Miss Maysic Gasque, daughter of the former secretary of the English Woolworth com- pany, and niecc of Hubert T. Payson, president of the Woolworth company, is photographed in the garden of her London home with the young English lawyer, Roland L. Robinson, whom she is to wed in July. € e AN ARMFUL FOR BABE—Col- : | 1 - onel Jacob Ruppert, Yankees’ g i A LOCOMOTIVE TAKES A owner, arrives at the St. Peters- & 1 : | REST—The Simplon Express, burg, Fla., training field in a 3 noted Europcan train, en route to blimp (the colonel’s first air trip) Athens, Greeee, is derailed near with an armful of bats for Babe 2 N —Mis: < o . = i oir] i Lamina, Greece, running into a 3 ‘ : —— e Ruth. Incidentally, he refused the v\c}:‘f:\;{lgior‘c‘vohi[: S‘(;:xg;)hn; :z;o wr;;mli:;‘;;r,:ga]s:}nl‘::l:aflr]i{el: # | hill, one person dying and several |7+ %3 o MUSSOLINI'S HOPEFULS—Bruno and Vittorio Mussolini, sons of Babe permission to go aloft. Too evolver s cngravcd' and inlaid with gold i i| others being scriously injured. S 3 i : G i the Italian dictator, are snapped observing a steeplechase at Figrano, precious. 3 i : T nehr Rome. Bruno resembles his Tather. TESTIFIES AGAINST POLICE —Miss Dorothy MeConnell, ' s e A it g , . TRANSLATES INDIAN SCRIB- 1 is a defensc witness at the trial in - IN BATTLE OF STEEL—Leading onc of the greatest fights on rec- . " e o ; e RAa DR Theodars New York of Communist leaders oyd for control of a large corporation, the o giants of the steel @ : . Gordon, coutt interpreter at the who were arrested during a recent : attempt to hold & demonstration Miss McConnell says that al though she wa innocent by- 'z to have Youngstown Sheet & Tube com- 3 ; 4 : 2 trial in Buffalo, N. Y., of Lila ' pany b a pul of Bethlehem Steel corporation over strenuous & s - : Jimerson, Sencca Indian, for com- opposition from stockholders. At left is Charles M. Schwab, chair- i A a G B i i . Plicity in the murder of Mrs. Clo- ) man, t right Eugene G. Grace, president of Bethlehem, while ——————————————————————————————————————————————————— thilde Marchand, translates Sen- m stander, a policeman struck her, potween them is James A. Campbell, veteran chairman of the PROSPECTING—“Desert” Charlic Hubricht, 67-year-old St. Louisan, with his group of burros which cca scribbling and Indian testi- Youngstown company. carried him and his family from coast to coast, is seen in Philadelphia on the road home, mony. causing her to stagger and faint. N\ NN