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Item Type- Text (13)
- clippings (13)
- articles (4)
- illustrations (1)
- poems (1)
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Magazine clipping, "The Balloon Buster of Arizona" by Norman S. Hall, from Liberty Magazine, March 10, 1928. Part 2 of 4 in a series about Frank Luke and his exploits during World War I. His relationship with Joseph Wehner is also discussed. Six pages.
Magazine clipping, "The Balloon Buster of Arizona" by Norman S. Hall, from Liberty Magazine, February 25, 1928. Part 1 of 4 in a series about Frank Luke and his exploits during World War I. His relationship with Joseph Wehner is also discussed. Four pages.
Magazine clipping, "The Balloon Buster of Arizona" by Norman S. Hall, from Liberty Magazine, March 24, 1928. Part 4 of 4 in a series about Frank Luke and his exploits during World War I. His relationship with Joseph Wehner is also discussed. Four pages.
Magazine clipping, "The Balloon Buster of Arizona" by Norman S. Hall, from Liberty Magazine, March 17, 1928. Part 3 of 4 in a series about Frank Luke and his exploits during World War I. His relationship with Joseph Wehner is also discussed. Eight pages.
Newspaper clipping, "Do You Remember?", from the Boston Sunday Herald, December 11, 1966. Includes a brief article on Joseph Wehner (misspelled as "Werner" in text) and a photograph.
Clipping, "The Arizona Balloon Buster," from Leach Heritage of the Air, circa 1959. Features an illustration of an American SPAD XIII destroying a German balloon.
Newspaper clipping from unidentified publication, circa 1910s-1920s. Brief article about Joseph Wehner and his status as an American flying ace.Inscription: "Flying Aces."
Newspaper clipping, "Vanished" (poem), from an unidentified publication, circa 1910s-1920s. Poem about Joseph Wehner's aerial battles and death.
Newspaper clipping, "An Air Friendship," from Boston Globe, January 21, 1928. Article about Joseph Wehner's friendship with Frank Luke.
Clipping, "Search for Air Safety," from The Kansas City Star, September 5, 1935. Reports on two World War I aviators, Colonels Harold E. Hartney and Charles W. Kerwood, investigating airplane crashes to determine standards for air safety.