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.Va.) Daily Mail, December 17, 1933, p.14; “Organize Hunt All Over U.S.for 4 Outlaws,” Chicago Tribune, December 17, 1933, p.7;, “Forty Marksmen Picked to Hunt Outlaw Gangs,” Chicago Tribune, December 20, 1933, p.17; Melvin Purvis to J.Edgar Hoover, December 19, 1933, Dillinger file, 62–29777–44, FBI.For the next six months John Dillinger was sighted all over America, pumping gas, eating breakfast, and robbing local shops.See, for example, “Dillinger Battles Police in Chicago,” New York Times, January 1, 1934, p.1; “Two Dillinger Men Believed Shot in Battle,” Chicago Tribune, January 1, 1934, p.5.62.“Another Pal of Dillinger Goes to Jail,” Lima (Ohio) News, December 24, 1933, p.1; “Dillinger’s Gang Called ‘Kill-Crazy,’ ” New York Times, December 26, 1933, p.28.Shouse allegedly made advances toward Billie Frechette; see Cromie and Pinkston, Dillinger, pp.133, 155; Matera, John Dillinger, pp.133, 149–50.63.“Jail Raider Trapped in Illinois City,” Lima (Ohio) News, December 20, 1933, p.1; “Officer Slain in Gun Battle; Convict Seized,” Chicago Tribune, December 21, 1933, pp.1, 4; “Nab Convict as ‘Outside Man’ of Dillinger Gang,” Chicago Tribune, December 24, 1933, p.4; “Dillinger Plans Fight to the Death,” Lima (Ohio) News, December 26, 1933, p.1; “Slay Three Gunmen in Trap,” Chicago Tribune, December 22, 1933, p.1.The Chicago Tribune coverage included an editorial, “A Mighty Good Killing,” praising the Chicago police on the deaths of the three Rogers Park men, Katzewitz, Tittlebaum, and Ginsberg.64.Field report from R.L.Shivers, Jacksonville Office, April 9, 1934, p.2, Dillinger file, 62–29777–424, FBI; H.H.Clegg to J.Edgar Hoover, April 15, 1934, p.9, Dillinger file, 62–29777–5XX (file number illegible), FBI.Apparently they bought at least two of the cars in Jacksonville; see Memo from R.A.Alt, Jacksonville Office, to the Chicago Office, April 2, 1934, pp.2–3, Dillinger file, 62–29777–293, FBI.65.Mary Kinder later reported that Frechette and Dillinger had been fighting and that he blackened her eye; Ellen Poulsen, Don’t Call Us Molls, p.94, writes that her interviews with Frechette’s family contradict any domestic troubles.Notes to Pages 53–59 | 21766.“Dillinger Gang Named as Chief Public Enemies,” Chicago Tribune, December 29, 1933, p.1; “This Describes Desperados of Dillinger Gang,” Chicago Tribune, December 30, 1933, p.3.This last story described the “gang of fugitive convict desperadoes” who “have sworn to die in battle rather than be captured alive.”Chapter Three1.Field report from R.L.Shivers, Jacksonville Office, April 9, 1934, pp.2–3, Dillinger file, 62–29777–424, FBI.2.Billie later claimed that they met at a prearranged time on a bridge in St.Louis, but the best evidence is that they met in Chicago.Ellen Poulsen, Don’t Call Us Molls: Women of the John Dillinger Gang (Little Neck, N.Y.: Clinton Cook Publishing, 2002), pp.98–101; Dary Matera, John Dillinger: The Life and Death of America’s First Celebrity Criminal ( New York: Carroll and Graf, 2004), pp.169–71; Robert Cromie and Joseph Pinkston, Dillinger: A Short and Violent Life (1962; Evanston, Ill.: Chicago Historical Bookworks, 1990), pp.133–36; Brian Burrough, Public Enemies ( New York: Penguin Press, 2004), pp.186–89.3.Steck quoted in “Outlaws Rob Bank, Kill a Policeman,” New York Times, January 16, 1934, p.4.Steck’s words were reprinted with slight variations elsewhere, including in the Chicago Tribune as part of the day’s lead story, “Dillinger Robs Bank, Kills Policeman,” January 16, 1934, p.1.4.For United Press coverage, see “Notorious Bandits Escape,” Hammond ( Ind.) Times, January 16, 1934, p.1.For an Associated Press story, see “Dillinger Gang Slays Policeman,” Mansfield (Ohio) News-Journal, January 16, 1934, p.1; “Spread Dillinger Hunt to Four States,” Gary ( Ind.) Post-Tribune, January 16, 1934, p.1; “Outlaws Rob Bank, Kill a Policeman,” New York Times, January 16, 1934, p.4 [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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