Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 152, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1932 — Page 13
Second Section
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Richard Halliburton Richard Halliburton, the glorious adventurer, whose new book of travel and romance will be published by the Bobbs-Merrill Company at Indianapolis on next Triday. It is called The Flying Carpet.” BY WALTER D. HICKMAN. ANOTHER Indianapolis woman has become an author. This time it is Edith Ann Ulmer, a school teacher who resigned to write books. “High Weeds” is the title and the publisher is listed as the W. K. Stewart Company of this city. It sells for $2. Its theme concerns the gin drinking, sex reckless youths of today who go in for a thrill. At times the story becomes sex in a most unpleasant way. The chief character Is Caroline Hampton, a young social revolutionist, if such a dignified expression can be used, who believes that she should try out a day and a night trial marriage w’ith her boy friend, who happens to be a young college professor some years her senior. This experience of Cara, as her friends call her, brings on dire results. After a trial on the marriage bed, the two go speeding in the professor's roadster and, of course, there is an automobile accident, the professor's head being more damaged than any part of Cara. The professor is out of his head with pain and a doctor urges that the two be married. They are. k tt a The author then tries to show that Cara really begins to love the professor and the two go to a Maine retreat where the professor starts writing about Browning. Cara and her husband are strangers in their own household. He is cold in his attitude toward her. Trial marriage and the accident seemed to have changed some of his ideas. Then, as to be expected, the trial night resulted in Cara becoming a mother, but she will not tell her husband. During a snow storm at the retreat in Maine, two men enter the cottage when they become snowbound, and Cara carries on a wild flirtation. When the men leave, the husband becomes cheaply melodramatic as he assumes the role of a rapist of his own wife. This is certainly not pleasant reading or even pleasant writing. The wife escapes in the snow storm, has an accident—then the hospital scene, her terrible suffering when she loses the baby and then the more terrible suffering when the husband realizes what a fool he has been. “High Weeds'* has been better written that, the subject matter deserves. That is my opinion. I think the theme is cheap. You have your own idea. • man "Lances Down,” by Richard Boleslavski in collaboration with Helen Woodward it he authors of “The Way of The Lancer”) has just been published by Bobbs-Merrill. The new book recites the experiences of Boleslavski as a survivor of the famous regiment of the Poljsh Lancers during the Bolshevik revolution. ana In the November Good Housekeeping, Emily Newell Blair lists the books that she wants her 4-year-old granddaughter to own now and later. Among the titles she has selected for the child now are: “The Choosing Book," by Alice Dalgliesh; "The Story of a Little Yellow Dog and a Little White Bear,” by Dorothy Sherrill: “Here, Bingo.” by Anne Stoddard: “Raggedy Ann in Cookie Land,” by Johnny Gruelle; "Angus Lost," by Marjorie Flack, and “Johnny Goes to the Fair.” a a a Have been advised by many people that my political education was not complete until I had read "Washington Swindle Sheet.” by William P. Helm, as published by Albert and Charles Boni. It sells for $2.50. I am glad that I read it, because I have more knowledge of how senators and representatives legally "rob” the national treasury. Right at the very beginning of the book. I read—"ln fact, every senator starts his public career by perpetrating a petty swindle upon the people of the United States. The cheating begins when he hurries for his train in Washington. The swindle operates even before he takes the oath of office. It consists of his taking from the treasury, to cover his trip, a sum approximately four times as much as his actual necessary traveling expenses. He calls it mileage: but the public has another name for it—graft. Concerning Senator James Watson. “Washington Swindle Sheet” prints the following: "Watson of Indiana, majority leader in the senate. lives in the town of Rushville. ■Walk Into the depot and price tickets to Washington: the station agent will tell you that the fare and lower birth both ways total $58.52. Senator Watson drew $255 20 in mileage, a trifle of $196.68 in excess of the actual fare.”
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THOMAS’ VOTE FIGURED OVER TWO MILLIONS Socialists Confident That Thousands Have Been Won for Cause. NATION’S VIEW CHANGED Wild Notions of Program Sponsored by Party Are Corrected. BY HERBERT LITTLE Time* Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Nov. 4. The Socialists, who claim that theirs is the only party to offer a specific and adequate program to the voters in this campaign, hope to roll up 2,000,000 or more votes Tuesday as a basis for a real national Socialist organization. They believe that the campaign of their nominee, Norman Thomas, has done much to break down the indifference to their beliefs, and to overcome the feeling of many voters the Socialists avoid haircuts, have dirty necks, and are first cousins to wild reds who would like to redistribute wealth by torch and sword. Thomas concedes that Governor Roosevelt will win Tuesday, and, on this basis, the fulfillment of Socialist hopes depends largely upon whether the Democrats in power follow conservative or progressive lines of action. Depends on Democrats The record of state and national history in recent decades shows that the La Follette policies of thirty years ago, attacked as wild and red, have been largely put into effect by both major parties. If Roosevelt adopts the Socialist policies of Democratic control of industry on a large scale to conquer unemployment and depression, the Socialists appear likely to continue as political ineffectives in their own persons. The size of Norman Thomas’ vote on Tuesday, however, largely will determine whether either of the old parties is likely to be frightened into more drastic social remedies, and whether enough Americans are breaking away from the idea that all voters are either Republicans or Democrats to justify an extensive campaign of Socialist party organization. The Socialists are making campaigns also in a few congressional districts, but most of their money and effort has been concentrated on Thomas’ remarkable 45-state “upper berth” campaign tour. Set 3,000,000 Figure Some estimates have given Thomas a chance at 3,000,000 votes or more out of the 40,000,000 expected to be cast. This Is not at all impossible. Eugene Debs polled 6 per cent of the total vote in 1912, although, with a much smaller and exclusively male ballot, his total was 897,000. In 1920 Debs got 919,799, his largest total, but only 3 2 per cent of the votes cast. The Literary Digest poll final today gives Thomas 4.84 per cent of the 3.000,000 votes collected from telephone subscribers and automobile owners. Socialists believe that a larger percentage of Thomas’ votes will come from people without automobiles or telephones. Thomas’ 1928 total of 267,000 votes was a fraction of 1 par cent above the 1928 Digest poll figure. The Digest percentage, however, applied to a vote of 40,000,000, would give Thomas 1,936.000. Will Not Sway Election The Ohio Scripps-Howard poll gives Thomas 5.5 per cent of that industrial state’s voters— a possible 137.000 votes out of approximately 2.500,000 voters in the state. On a national scale. Thomas, with this percentage, would get 2.200,000 votes. On the basis of the predicted overwhelming Democratic victory, there is little chance that the "balance of power” potential in this third-party vote, would sway the election one way or the other. In 1912, Debs’ large percentage would have made no difference in the outcome. But in a close race —as in 1916—a milhon votes easily would throw the election. It has been calculated that the Socialist vote in two key states would have given the election to Hughes. WRIGHT REPEAL "IS UP Referendum on Ballot Nov. B—in California. Referendum on Wright lr.w repeal is on the ballot Nov. B—in California. A sample ballot from California, which was brought to the statehouse today, disclosed twenty proposals upon which voters of the state are asked to take a stand. Repeal of the "Wright act” is No. 1. Oddly enough, as in Indiana, the California Wright law is the prohibition statute.
THAT FIRST BABY! OBEY YOUR DOCTOR’S ORDERS AND, ABOVE ALL, DON’T WORRY
Sewing th.v garments is in style. Many women are having their first babies this rear, many others are thinking over the possibility of doing so some time in the future. They all want to know what to expect and how to plan for the event. This information is contained in a series of six articles prepared bv Elisabeth Clark with the assistance of the Medical Information Bureau of the New York Academy of Medicine. This is the first. BY ELIZABETH CLARK / T'HE bank is shipshape. Among the "best people" it is smart to be a mama, so you are going to have a baby! Thousands of bright young couples in Indianapolis this year will have the idea that this is a good time to call a halt in racketing about and invite a visit from the stork. Night club lights now bum less brightly than the family .gaslog, anyway. Parties will seem all the gayer after a sell-imposed vacation from them.
The Indianapolis Times
SIX FIRST LADIES OF LAND STILL LIVING
Former Mrs. Grover Cleveland Spends■ Tranquil Days in Jersey
Bix wives of President* still are living In America. Where are the present homes of these First Ladies of the Land? What are their activities? What are their activities? What is their social life? Who are their friends and neighbors? How do they view the contemporary world, and what are their recollections of the White House? In a series of six articles, the first of which follows. William Engle, a Times staff writer, will answer these questions. Today he interviews, in her Princeton iN J.i home, the former Mrs. Grover Cleveland, now Mrs. Thomas Jex Preston. BY WILLIAM ENGLE Time* Staff Writer (Copyright, 1932. by the New York WorldTelegram Corporation; PRINCETON, N. J., Nov. 4.—ln the high-ceilinged drawing room on the estate that William Penn bought here from the Indians, Mrs. Thomas Jex Preston, who used to bfe Mrs. Grover Cleveland and who still is a legend, talked today of tranquil times in Princeton. Quiet-colored hours against a backdrop of prismatic years. There is church work to be done, she said. The First Presbyterians keep busy. There is multifarious detail for the Needle Guild of America. She is the president. And nowadays one has to. put in some time at contract and at help for the unemployed. “We motor a good deal, too. Mr. Preston and I both drive. But we like the seclusion here. The old town. This old house. The old things.” As for the portraits on the wall —“Yes, I was like-that when I was in the White House. This is my little girl who died when she was 7. Here is Mr. Cleveland. It’s a striking likeness.” Thus in the old-fashioned room, in the sedate, old street, the name of the twenty-second President was spoken, and the years rolled away. nan THE years rolled away, and it was Memorial Day, 1886. Miss Frances Folsom, who a long while later was to be Mrs. Preston, of Princeton, was getting ready, at 22, to be married to the President. Her handkerchief was fluttering from the balcony of the Gilsey house in Fifth avenue, New York, and President Cleveland, the bachelor of 49, reviewing a parade of blue-coated veterans two blocks up at Madison Square, seeing her greeting, was doffing his silk hat. Pat Gilmore’s Twenty-second regiment band was striking up Mendelssohn's wedding march. The crowds, out for the parade, were uproarious in premature congratulations : “Long live President Cleveland and his bride!” But the ceremony three days later—the first White House wedding—was a model of decorum. Miss Folsom, tall, blue-eyed daughter of the President’s former Buffalo law partner, and for several years before her marriage virtually his ward, went early from New York to Washington on the wedding day. The President had to be up at 5:30 to greet her in the rain that the New York Herald pronounced was “gentle as a maiden's tears.” In the evening they had the ceremony, quick and quiet, without ostentation. Nevertheless, the Blue Room was a bower. The two five-foot candelabra that President Jackson gave to the White House gleamed against roses and pansies. John Philip ■Sousa’s scarlet and gold Marine band played the wedding march and Dr. Byron Sunderland, the President's pastor, read the especially revised service which had the bride promise to ”love, honor and—keep.”
Great Democratic Gains Are Forecast in House
Senate Majority of 11 Also in Prospect: La Guardia May Lose. By Scrippu-Hoicnrd Xcirgpaper Alliance WASHINGTON. Nov. 4—The Democratic party Tuesday may gain thirty-six seats in the next house of representatives, giving it a majority of eighty. Even conservative estimates give the Democrats a 50 or 60 vote majority. # It appears that if Democrats gain the full strength the prophets forecast, progressives will possess a great deal less power, if any at all, in the seventy-third congress. Progressives in the last session were potent because of the insecure Democratic lead of half a dozen votes. A similar situation may exist in the senate, where, according to these same predictions, a majority of eleven Democrats, at most, is in prospect. The country Tuesday will elect 435 members of the house, although
And, because the average healthy modern girl plans when she wants to have a baby and takes it in her stride, she is assuring a crop of lusty future American citizens, doctors say. If your young hopeful is to be one of the country's finest, get two things into your head and make them stick there—after you have seen a physician, obey his orders to the letter—and do not worry. He is the engineer who will plot ycur curves and chart your course, and he knows better than you do what that course should be. m u * IF you do as he tells you—above all. if you are cheerful—he will write you off as a prize patient. You may feel as* important as Mother Eve, but thousands of
INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, NOV. 4, 1932
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The Grover C’eveland family, photographed at the turn of the century. Left to .ight—Esther, Francis, Mrs. Cleveland, before whom is Marion, Richard and Mr. Cleveland. The former Mrs. Grover Cleveland, now Mrs. Thomas Jex Preston, as she appears today. Above, a sketch from the old Harper’s Weekly by T. de Thulstrup of the wedding ceremonj in the White House on Memorial day, 1886.
THE Rev. William N. Cleveland. brother of the President, said the blessing, a salute of twenty-one guns roared from the navy yard and all the church bells in Washington chimed applause. Thereafter, through the three remaining years of Cleveland's first administration and the four of his second, that first White House bride was wha + t.ie newspapers called the nation's darling. “The country rapidly became aware that the new mistress of the White House was the most charming woman seen in that mansion since the days of Dolly Madison,” says Allan Nevins in his new Cleveland biography, “though, unlike ‘Queen Dolly,’ she made no effort to be a belle.” “Few young women fresh from college,” Nevins writes, “would have met the exacting demands of her position, which gave her hardly a free hour, without complaint.
several states will have smaller representations, and several greater, as a result of the 1929 reapportionment act. Besides the colorful figures of Hawley. Tilson, Crisp, Linthicum. and Collier, w'ho are lost to the next house because of primary defeats, deaths, and resignations, numerous other important men are involved in Tuesday’s vote. Probably the outstanding member who is threatened with defeat is Representative Fiorello LaGuardia, swarthy Republican progressive who represents a New 7 York upper east side district. Tammy may take his scalp. The Democrats now have 220 members in the house, Republicans 214, and Farmer-Laborites, 1. There are six vacancies, but these are counted as filled by members of the same party as the former members. But of these pre-election forecasts are fulfilled. Democrats will have 265 members of the house, Republicans 176, and Farmer-Laborites, 3. This will mean a gain of 36 Democrats, a loss of 38 Republicans, and a gain of 2 Farmer-Laborites.
other women are claiming the same distinction, and no doctor is going to be impressed with your delusions of superiority. If you pay no attention to Old Wives Tales and superstitions and don't go presupposing some last minute contretemps, what a contented trio you will be—your doctor, your husband and yourself! Just because some dearest friend and Amazon went everywhere and did things, drove her car from coast to coast and never was tired, snitched mince pie from the icebox in the middle of the night and was never ill, is no reason that such a regime would work out for someone else. Women are individuals and what goes for one is apt to make another far more uncomfortable than she need be.
She carried her zest for life and her unselfish interest in people into the routine of dinners and calls. Holding two receptions weekly, she assigned one to Saturday afternoons so that women and girls In Washington offices might attend.” The matter of wines she met by merely turning down her owm glass and expressing her views to no one. But the matter of those inevitable contemporaries, the handshakers, she did not solve. They diverted her to music; made her right hand noticeably bigger than her left, and she went in foi* - violin. She went in, too, for receptions, balls, teas and theater parties. She brightened up the town. a a a THE "five of hearts” —the Henry Adamses, the John Hays and Clarence King—set the intellectual pace, a smart one. Society bowed to the whims of
MAKE OWN CHOICE, ADVISES W, C. 1,0. But Vote for Dry, Plea of Organization. By United Pretx EVANSTON. 111., Nov. 4. The W. C. T U. policy regarding presidential candidates is to allow voters to choose, the organization’s national headquarters here announced today. The advice, however, has a qualification. As expressed by the W. C. T. U., its policy is as follows: "Vote for any presidential candidate your political conscience dictates, but let that candidate know by postcard that you favor retaining the eighteenth amendment.” W. C. T. U. dissatisfaction with the platforms of both major parties was expressed by Mrs. Ella Boole, national president, in a communication to W. C. T. U. women. Swallows Poison by Mistake Miss Opal Stone, 28, of 825 North New Jersey street, suffering from effects of poison she said w r as swallowed by mistake at her home, was treated at city hospital today.
It is the exceptional woman who truthfully can boast that she never felt better in her life than 3he did before little Horatius was born. The chances are that the boast is nine-tenths fiction, although if you are having a particularly seedy day when some girl friend hands you such a line, you probably will feel more like lulling than cooing over her. BMW DO not let her get you all up in the air and excited. Do not round up a lot of imaginary symtoms that you are sure Bill prove fatal. You are almost bound to feel squeamish in the morning and wonder how the dickens you ever relished bacon and eggs at daybreak.
Mrs. .Levi Z. Leiter and her two agreeable daughters, the novelist Frances Hodgson Burnett and the energetic Don Camerons. The capital w’hirl was so merry, in fact, that in the pre-Lenten season of 1887 the Washington Post was moved to grumble: “Every day in the week is given to receptions, balls, teas, luncheons and theater parties. On the face of things it looks foolish to see the streets of a large capital thronged with private carriages whose occupants are on pleasure bent.” For rest, the Clevelands went week-ends to Red Top, their country house off the Tenallytow T n road, outside of Georgetown, and there they gradually assembled the personnel and impediments of a farm including George W. Childs’ gift to them, a cow named Grace. But always in a few days they returned to hurly-burly her problem of the guests’ places at dinner, his of the Venezuelan boundaries. To the mistress of Westland, the big colonial house that stands back among the trees that were raining russet today in Bard lane, Princeton, the glitter of those White House days seems now an alien shining, dim but real, away off in another life. She has been living in Princeton since 1898. the end of Cleveland’s second administration. He died in 1908. Since 1913, when at 49 she was married to Mr. Preston, retired Princeton professor of archeology, who was 50. the placid tempo of her life has not been changed.
Trainmen Chief’s Charge Brings Denial From Doak
Whitney’s Statement SeeKs to Discredit Hoover, Says Secretary. By United Pres* • CLEVELAND, Nov. 4.—Charges by A. F. Whitney, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, that Secretary of Labor W. N. Doak has not been free to serve the interests of labor, were termed "unjust,” and an "attempt to discredit the Hoover labor policies,” in a telegram received Thursday by Whitney from Secretary Doak. Whitney made the charge in a speech at Indianapolis Tuesday and was asked by Doak for confirmation of a United Press dispatch on the speech. Whitney, in a letter sent late today, acknowledged the charges and said he had made them to protect Doak. “I can not believe,” he wrote Doak, “that after your years of service with the brotherhood and your familiarity of labor ethics, you would follow the destructive prin-
You may feel prettv grand during the day and then, just when you have finished primping and are ready to surprise your husband by tackling a five-course dinner, your usually well behaved tummy Bill gat temperamental for no apparent reason. Console yourself with the fact that doctors would give you a credit marx for good sportsmanship. This last minute rebellion may happen simply because you are trying too hard to be a gay and charming companion, * B B IF tummy upsets extend beyond these limits, naturally any sensible girl will pour her troubles into the ear of her physician rather than experiment Bith wellmeant but often ill-timed panaceas
Second Section
Entered •• heeend-Cl*** Matter at Postoffice. Indtanspolls
S LENDER, with eyes still keenly blue beneath iron-gray hair, she had little appearance today of ageing. She spoke with such quick perception, moved so with the old grace, that it seemed no wonder at all she was the one called the Perfect White House Lady back in the time of the tariff battle of 1888. “I’m more interested in the Needle Guild of America than anything else now-.” she said. “We collect articles made or bought by members, you know', and they are distributed among the needy. The membership fee is two articles a year. “We’re growing wonderfully, too. There are 700 branches in the country and last year we gave aw'ay 2.000,000 new garments.” She is national president and Princeton president, and one of her most active associates, she said, is Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, out at Oyster Bay. “Os course, in the evening w'e read and I play some contract. All of us have to nowadays, don’t we? But in Princeton—l wonder if you knew—there’s very little playing for money. We never play fdr stakes.” Hers, she thinks, is a fully satisfying way for a First Lady to live on long after White House glamofir; a life filled with new activities after the flight of the children she adored. “No woman should ask for a greater interest than her children,” she used to say. “Other interests come into every woman’s life. But I think that’s the main issue.”
ciples advocated and carried out by President Hoover, unless irresistible pressure was brought to bear upon you.” Whitney, in citing facts in support of his charges, alleged that although railroad wages and employment had been cut in half, “the railroads in 1930 had paid the highest cash dividends in their history,” and had paid higher dividends in 1931 than in many former prosperous years. The rail brotherhood chief also attacked* the “stagger system,” which compels workers “receiving no more than a bare living wage to share their pay envelopes with the even less fortunate victims of present inexcusable conditions.” HOUSE LASTS CENTURIES Structure Built in 1635 Occupied by Builder’s Descendants. By United Freex BOSTON, Nov. 4.—A house built here in 1635 by Thomas Bird is still occupied by his descendants.
that did wonders for Aunt Mathilda or made anew woman of cousin Jane. Awful as she may feel at times, the girl with a yen for eating between meals gets more than an even break when she decides to become a mama. For eating lightly at meal times and "nibbling every two hours" often keeps a recalcitrant digestion in order. Breakfast in bed is another of life's luxurious habits that she can claim as hers by right of adoption for at least a few months. As to what she may eat. that again is up to her doctor, her own good sense and the caprices of her own digestion. NEXT—Choosing a physician, and What Price Baby?
CITY CHURCH LEADERS JOIN IN FUND PLEA Great Need Cited in Joint Catholic, Protestant and Jewish Appeal. GOAL IS $1,052,632 Campaign for Relief Work Will Be Conducted From Nov. 14 to 28.’ Appeals were made today by Catholic, Jewish and Protestant religious leaders of the city for support of the Indianapolis Community Fund during its welfare and relief mobilization. Nov. 14 to 28. with a goal of $1,052,632. The religious leaders said: M. D. Lupton, president of the Indianapolis (Protestant) Church Federation: “We approach the opportunity of joining financially with cur fellow men in one of life’s pleasures—having a part in the Community Fund drive. Immediate physical relief
from hunger and cold is first, but much farther reaching is rehabilitation of morale and courage. “A man may fit up a luxurious office with every appointment, then sit at his desk and go to sleep, not carrying to completion the work begun. "If temporal relief is not followed by upbuilding of character, we
have not accomplished our real object in community work. Much more must be done thus year than ever before. Let us all pull together in this great work." The Rt. Rev. Joseph Chartrand, bishop of the Indianapolis diocese. Catholic church—" The love of our neighbor is a precept as binding upon man as that of the love of God. -Thou shalt love the Lord thy God.' This is the greatest *nd the first commandment. And the second is like unto this. ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.’ “The neighbor is every member of
the human family without regard to race, language, creed or personal merit. This love of our fellow-man induces us to sympathize with him in his sorrows, to alleviate his pains, to relieve his wants. It is the mission of this love of our neighbor to benefit both the giver and the receiver. “The one who
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is more benefited is the giver, whose nature is softened, in whose heart pride and egotism are annihilated by the sight of suffering and misery among his fellow-men. “The citizens of this community are confronted with the serious problem of looking after the needy and the suffering whose number has become quite large, owing to the troublous times through which we are passing. “The people of Indianapolis are able to solve this problem by increasing, as much as possible, the annual offerings to the Community
Fund of this city. Let it be consid e r e and a duty and a privilege to keep want away from every home.” Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht, Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation—“ The Community Fund should by this time require no argument to justify its existence. Both in its theory and its record of achieve-
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ment, it long since has established itself here as elsewhere as the most sensible and effective method of satisfying the financial needs of all local social agencies. "The man who, especially in a democracy, is unwilling to give his bit cheerfully to the commonwealth, can not fairly be regarded a good man any more than he can be said to be a good citizen. "While the relief of individual distress is naturally uppermost in our minds at this particular time, it should not be forgotten that relieving the pain of a man's mind and heart is just as pressing a need as is the attempt to relieve the pain of his stomach. A social agency, therefore, that helps a man’s character successfully to face a spiritual depression is quite as essential to the common welfare as its sister agency designed to meet an economic depression. The Indianapolis Comrmihity Fund represents a pooling of agencies peculiarly adapted to meet such situations. “The need being acuter. its call for funds this year is correspondingly greater. I am confident the call will iie answered with the characteristic generosity of our citizenship.”
Hoover Dodge By United Prrxx MADISON. Wis., Nov. 4 Mayor Albert G. Schmedeman. Democratic candidate for Governor, has proclaimed Saturday a holiday during President Herbert Hoover's visit. However, Mayor Schmedeman will not welcome the President. He will be at Marinette. making a campaign speech of his own.
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