Yessir!
Air Corps doctors to get their own insignia
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Another ‘salvage for victory’ campaign is planned in city about June 6; same articles will be collected, director asserts
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Ruling stirs up hornet’s nest in some of retail fields
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The Pittsburgh Press (May 2, 1942)
All well, airliner pilot radios – then he crashes near Salt Lake City
Salt Lake City, Utah (UP) –
Seventeen shattered bodies were removed today from a wreckage of a United Airlines Mainliner which crashed into Ensign Peak, near the Utah State Capitol, during a rain and sleet storm.
All aboard the plane – 13 adult passengers, a one-year-old boy and the crew of three – were killed.
The plane, piloted by Captain Don Brown of San Francisco, hit 300 feet from the top of the peak as it circled in preparation to land at the Salt Lake City Airport, seven miles away, on its journey from San Francisco to New York.
Crashes in Wasatches
It smashed into the north side of the peak, which juts from the other airlines crashes within the last five years have taken 61 lives.
Robert Pearson, who ran to the scene immediately after the crash, reported that one of the male passengers lived for about 20 minutes but was injured so badly he was unable to talk.
Mr. Pearson heard the plane’s motors shortly before the crash and said the plane “seemed to be in trouble.”
P. A. Larson, who also lived in a residential area near the capitol, agreed.
A brilliant fire rated after the plane hit but it was soon extinguished by the rain and sleet.
Cause undetermined
The rain made travel up the muddy, brush-covered mountainside difficult, and a huge, 10-wheeled Army truck was used to remove the bodies.
Experienced pilots, awaiting the arrival of official investigators, could not explain the cause of the accident.
In Washington, the Civil Aeronautics Board ordered four investigators to the scene of the crash.
The plane left San Francisco at 7:15 (9:15 p.m. EWT) last night and was due here at 9:50 p.m. Captain Brown radioed at 10:56 p.m. that he was preparing to land and that he was no having no trouble. He reported he was 10 miles north of the airport, flying at an altitude of 12,000 feet on a radio navigation beam that would have carried him to the landing field.
He radioed that visibility was nine miles in spite of the storm and pilots said that was a safe visibility range. But nothing more was heard from the plane. Some reports indicated it may have crashed at 11:01, five minutes after its last radio contact.
Wreckage scattered
The plane was almost demolished.
Its wreckage was scattered over a wide area of the muddy mountain slope. One wing was leaning against a tree and a motor had been thrown 150 feet. The second motor was still attached to a wing.
Bodies were lying among the twisted parts if the plane. All were badly burned.
The crash was the first for United Airlines since one of its planes missed the Chicago Airport and fell in a street Dec. 4, 1940.
United Airlines officials said the company had completed 17 months of safe operation prior to last night’s accident. United was awarded the 1941 safety certificate by the National Safety Council.
Salt Lake City, Utah (UP) –
Those killed in the crash of a United Airlines Mainliner last night:
Dispatches from enemy countries are based on broadcasts over controlled radio stations and frequently contain false information. Bear this in mind.
Tokyo, Japan (UP) – (Jap broadcast heard in San Francisco)
An enemy submarine, probably American, torpedoed and sank the Jap vessel Calcutta Maru off the coast of Japan May 1, naval authorities announced today.
Lloyd’s Register lists the Calcutta Maru as a 5,339-ton, 400-foot vessel.
It was announced that on the same day, Jap vessels intercepted a distress call from a torpedoed Soviet vessel off the Japanese coast. About 50 persons were rescued from the stricken ship.
Gore measure also urges parity farm prices
By Hillier Krieghbaum, United Press staff writer
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