Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 156, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 November 1934 — Page 1
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FRANCE TENSE AS NEW CHIEF ASSUMES RULE Flandin Is Successful in Organizing Cabinet in Record Time. PETAIN LOSS A BLOW Streets Heavily Guarded as Aroused Masses Warn of *No Politics.’ lit f ni)>4 /’rc PARIS, Nov. 9.—Pierre-Etienne Flandin. 45. the republics youngest premier, today took up the task of leading the nation through one of Its gravest peace time periods as head of anew .salvation government. He did so under the coldly watchful eyes of millions of people who demand government without party politics, and who seemed ready to turn into the streets in riot if necessary to enforce their demand. There were heavy police and Republican guard patrols in the central districts af Pans but the city was quiet. Flandin and 71-year-old Gaston j Doumergue, whom he replaced, and whe was a colonial judge in Indochina the year in which he was bem, alike appealed to the nation to be calm. Flandin Youngest Premier The new premier. 6 feet 6 inches tall, the nation's largest as he is its! youngest political leader, called a meeting of his cabinet for 5 p. m.| today ill Indianapolis time). He announced he would face the cham- j ber of deputies Tuesday to make his ministerial declaration and seek a vote of confidence. By virtue of the wide coalition on which Flandin succeeded in forming a cabinet—practically identical with the Doumergue truce government, formed as the result of the fatal Stavisky riots last February—he seemed assured of from 320 to 400 of the 615 votes in the chamber. Flandin lost two powerful members of the Doumergue government, Andre Tardieu. right wing leader, and Marshal Philippe Petain, the revered war hero. Neither would continue to serve. But he obtained instead Louis Marin, of the right wing, and General Albert Maurin, who is acceptable to the right wing. Leaders Breathe Eask?r Political leaders, who feared trouble after the Doumergue government broke up yesterday, breathed somewhat easier today. There were sixteen anxious hours during which there were only six arrests in the city for disorderly conduct. Those arrested were six Royalist youths who tried to start a six-man demonstration in the Place de L'Opera. Pierre Laval. Doumergue's foreign minister, tried to form a government and failed. Flandin was called in. Within ten hours—a record—he formrd his cabinet. At. 1 a. m. today he took his ministers to the Ely see Palace and received congratulations cf President Albert Lebrun. As Flandin started for the Elysee he told the United Press correspondent: •'I have succeeded in joining around me men who. I am certain, will work arduously for France and the Republic, forgetting party differences. Has But One Goal ‘We have but one goal—to fight against misery and unemployment; to restore the national economy; to maintain strong public finances; to rryuvenate and reform the state j tthe constitution*. "I hope the nation will receive the cabinet sympathetically, recalling that I was forced to build my gov- j eminent in a minimum of time." Twelve of Flandm's nineteen fellow ministers are holdovers from the Doumergue cabinet. Flandm himself was Doumergue's public works minister. Six enter the cabinet for the fl’wt time. Five of them are of the radical Socialist party, largest group in the chamber and hence the mainstay of this as fell as the Doumergue cabinet. It was the radical Socialists who precipitated the crisis by refusing to accept Doumergue's plan for constitutional reform.
TODAY'S WEATHER
Hourly Temperatures 6 a m 34 10 a. m..... 42 7a. m 34 11 a. m. ... 46 Ba. m 36 12 <noon).. 48 9 i m. ... 39 1 p. m—.sl Tomorrow's sunrise. 6:25 a. m.; sunset, 4:33 p. m In the Air Weather conditions at 9 am.: Southeast wind, fourteen miles an hour: barometric pressure. 30 33 at sea level; temperature. 38. general conditions, clear: ceiling, unlimited; visibility, seven miles. Vote Cast in f. S. for Hitler By t nite4 frr. POUGHKEEPSIE N. Y.. Nov. 9 A vote f or Adolph Hitler was cast m Tuesday's gubernatorial elections. Dutchess county officials reported today. The vote was cast in Stanford. a few miles from Hyde Park. Times Index Page Bridge 20 Broun 25 Comics 39 Crossword Puzzle 39 Curious World 39 Ed/.orial 26 Financial 38 Food Pages 29. 30. 31 Hickman —Theatera 28 Pezter . 26 RarflO 1* Sports 34. 35 State News 18 Womans Pages. 20, 21
The Indianapolis Times
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VOLUME 46—NUMBER 156
BABY, TAKE A BOW mm m . m m m mum Doctors Predict Bigger, Better Race
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Excited and happy over the prospect of the “bigger and better” human race which she and her healthy kind will perpetuate. Jane Alice Long. 15-months-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Long, 5030 Carrollton avenue, admires herself in the mirror.
BY HELEN LINDSAY Timrs Staff Writer A RACE of giants, both physically and mentally, will exist as descendants of the present generation. * This will be the result of the care given America's babies today, and the forthcoming generations. physicians who made the prophecy declared this afternoon. They were asked this question: “Wiil the human race consist of bigger and stronger men and women in the future?” “Absolutely,” answered Dr. Russell R. Hippensteel. 5242 North Illinois street, baby specialist.
‘White Hibiscus’ Jury Ponders Fate of Killer Panel Reported Deadlocked, Six and Six, After Night of Deliberation In Love Death Case. By United Press WOODLAND. Cal.. Nov. 9.—A jury of eight men and four women today deliberated an age-old question: Should a man be punished when he kills his wife’s paramour? The jury received the state's case against Judson C. Doke, who killed the 22-year-old poet. Lamar Hollingshead, yesterday, and today it appeared deadlocked. It was locked up late last night, and reports said it stood six for acquittal and six for conviction.
Doke found ardent love poems written by Hollingshead and addressed to his wife, including a fragment of a sea epic entitled. “The White Hibiscus." that seemed to pertain more to amour than ships or ocean. He killed the poet. His attorneys said he had done "only what any normal man would have done." The state asked the death penalty. Helen Louise Doke. 26. the wife, to whom Hollingshead once wrote, "Our love shall live forever,” remained in hiding during the entire trial. Prosecuting Attorney C. C. McDonald, in his final address to tha jury, criticised her for not coming to her husband s side. She successfully avoided a state subpena which would have made her a prosecution witness. In her hiding place the "woman in the case ’ waited anxiously for the verdict. •I'm praying for his acquittal." she said. “If he is convicted it will be my fault." Mrs. Doke had refused to go with her husband when he went to a Dur.nigan ranch last July 26 to see Hellingshead about breaking off relations with the pretty young matron. At the ranch the San Leandro city official confronted the University of California student, writer of the “White Hibiscus" and other poetry, with letters addressed to "Helen Louise." Doke demanded that Hollingshead renounce his love as "purely physical." The youth started to write, according to testimony at the trial. Then he stopped and cried. “I’ll b* damned if I will.” “Something came over me.” Doke said in testifying as the only defense witness. “The next thing I knew Lamar was lying at my feet. I never saw him fall nor heard the shot' The defense stressed the unwritten law in pleading with the jury fcr acquittal. McDonald, demanding the death penalty, charged Doke had gone to the ranch “with the deliberate, premeditated intendent” of killing the campus poet who wrote in lync lines of bis love for pretty Helen Louise.
Generally fair tonisrht and tomorrow, somewhat warmer tonight and tomorrow, colder tomorrow afternoon and night.
“It will take more than a few generations to produce them, though,” he added. ' Future generations will see he Ithier adults, both physically and mentally, because of the care given babies now. These future men and women will have better general health, finer teeth and will be free from so-called degenerative diseases.” Dr. Hippensteel exploded the theory that babies weighed moie in the good old days than they do now. '* . ’ "It used to be considered a great feat for the family physician to deliver an eleven or twelve-pound baby, especially if it were the
Today’s Escape
The Indianapolis police force was informed by the state police today that Vernon Coffman escaped from the Indiana state farm. Pendleton, yesterday afternoon.
15 INJURED IN OIL BLAST ON TANKER Rescue Ships Rush to Aid of Flaming Craft. By United Press MOBILE. Ala.. Nov. 9—Fifteen seamen were seriously injured today when high-test airplane gasoline exploded and caught fire on the tanker Caliche twelve mi es at sea. Most seriously injured was the veteran master Captain J. J. Fitzgerald. Three coast guard vessels rushed to the scene. The explosion occurred in the control room. Cause was unknown. The blast tore upward, hurling asunder the bridge, where the captain stood. The highly inflammable cargo took fire rapidly. 4 WORKMEN PERISH IN GRAIN ELEVATOR FIRE Newport News Structure Bums With Huge Loss. 8* L nited Pres* NEWPORT NEWS. Va.. Nov. 9 Four men were burned to death in a fire which started last night in grain elevator B of the Chesapeake & Ohio railroad here and still was burning today. The dead: J. F. Martin, foreman of the elevator plant, and three inspectors. J. Ellis Sr.. C. B. Shelton and C. E Thomasson.
INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1934
first one born to a young mother,” he said. “So, the physician obligingly added a few pounds when he guessed the weight, which was customary in those days, or when he weighed it on the inaccurate scales which were common then. “Physicians now don't want to deliver unusually large babies. They realize the dangqr.of injury to. both mother and child. The average weight of a new-born child is the same now as it was really in the days of our grandparents; seven pounds for a girl, and seven and a half pounds for a boy. “This average varies little in great numbers of new-born infants.” >t a a DR. HIPPENSTEEL’S opinion was echoed by Dr. A. M. Mendenhall, 3304 Broadway, also a pediatrician. “It will take years for the improvement in the human race to show in the general population,” Dr. Mendenhall said, “but there is no doubt that the future will see larger and better adults. “It is difficult to say how soon, for it is not known what percentage of babies are getting not only proper food, but adequate care and the correct vitamins in satisfactory proportions. “In my opinion, there are relatively few babies receiving all that is available in proper baby care. Developments in this field are relatively new. and discoveries are being made daily in vitamins and foods which will add to the health of the human race. “Even among physicians, only the most up-to-the-minute obstreticians and pediatricians are aware of all of the developments in vitamins and foods.” The isolation of vitamins in foods, and the knowledge of their action in the prevention of disease and the general building-up of health, is the most outstanding development in the care of babies, Dr. Charles Myers, city hospital superintendent, believes. “These discoveries will make the human race resistant to diseases which in the past attacked people, sweeping them to death like straw before a wind. ’ Dr. Myers said. ‘ Much harm has been done to children in the past, I believe, by lack of proper care, which has affected them in adult life. Modern baby care will eliminate this condition.”
SPEEDWAY CITY TAX LEVY SET BY STATE 72-Cent Rate Approved: Beech Grove Figures Also Passed. County Auditor Charles A. Grossart was notified today of the approval of the school-town tax levy of 72 cents for Speedway City and the civil-town rate of 95 cents for Beech Grove by the state tax board The two rates in Beech Grove and Speedway City were fixed at those figures and approved by the Marion county board of adjustment. Possibility of litigation resulting from the tax approval of the Speedway City rate is seen by observers. Citizens of Speedway City, it is understood, expected a 10-cent reduction in the levy. Kansas City Banker Dead By Unitrd Press ALTON. 111.. Nov. 9—Walter Brown, prominent Kansas City investment banker, died in St. Anthony's hospital here today.
PROGRESSIVES HURL ‘LIBERALIZE OR PERISH’ BROADSIDE AT G. 0. P. AS FIGHT TO OUST ‘OLD GUARD’ OPENS
FOUCEQHF SEiEcnm is KEMPpat High Democratic Command Favors Morrissey, Say Men on ‘lnside.’ Mayor-Elect John W. Kern was confronted today with the necessity of surveying the Indianapolis executive department personnel to find appropriate places for political supporters. His patronage problem complicated by the fact a Democratic administration has occupied city hall for the last five years and that many present office holders are not objectionable to him, the mayor-elect let it be known he has given the matter of personal appointments no thought whatever. ‘‘l have been devoting all of my time to winning the election.’’ Judge Kern said. “I have made no promises of any kind to any one and I don’t know what I will do about appointments.” Talk Morrissey Ouster Meanwhile, , political observers speculated upon probable char ges in the official personnel when Judge Kern takes office Jan. 1. In usually well informed circles it was predicted freely that Michael F. Morrissey, police chief, will be displaced when the Kern administration takes office. Influential county Democratic leaders are reported to favor the retention of Chief Morrissey, whose official record, they say, would cause Mayor-elect Kern no embarrassment. Outstanding among reputed candidates to head the police department is Captain John Mullin. Called Foremost Problem Selection of a police chief, political speculators say, will be Mayor Kern's foremost problem. If, for example, Mayor Kern decides to dismiss Harry E. Voshell, present Are chief, and appoint Roscoe McKinney to that position, complications arise in the selection of a police chief. Mr. McKinney, father of Frank McKinney, successful candidate for county treasurer, was prominently mentioned for fire chief during the administration of L. Ert Slack. In the event Mr. McKinney is named to head the fire fighting forces, political observers held it is unlikely Mayor Kern would name either Captain Mullin or Chief Morrissey. He would seek to avoid criticism that his principal appointments went to Catholics, these political commentators say. According to well-informed persons, if Mr. McKinney is named, Mayor-elect Kern will choose between Detective Chief Fred Simon and Lewis Johnson, present traffic captain. Board to Be Revamped Appointment of the police chief lies, technically, in the hands of the public safety board, reorganization of which is expected. Charles R. Myers, full-time president of the board, was named by Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan because of long acquaintance as much as because of party lines. This also is true of Hubert S. Riley, recently named to fill the vacancy caused by resignation of Frank C. Dailey, and likewise of i Donald S. Morris, Republican mem- ! ber. Walter C. Boetcher, works board ' president, who directed the successful campaign, probably will have his choice of positions. There is little doubt that Evans Woollen Jr., present controller, may retain the post if he wants it. In the event Mr. Woollen determines to retire, however. Mr. Boetcher probably will receive Mayor-elect Kern’s serious consideration for the position. LA FOLLETTE KIN DEAD j Sister of Famed “Fighting Bob” Passes in Madison. j By United Press MADISON. WIS.. Nov. 9—Mrs. Josephine La Follette Siebecker, 81, widow of Justice Robert G. Siebecker of the Wisconsin supreme court and older sister of the late Senator Robert M. La Follette Sr., died last night at her home here.
Dead Man Is Revived, Lives 22 Hours Before End Comes for Second Time
By United Preen PHILADELPHIA. Nov 9—This is the story of a man who died twice. Physicians at the Philadelphia General hospital did not believe Linzie Williams, 46. was dead when he first succumbed to a brain swelling induced by toxic condition Although stethoscopic examination revealed no heart or rung action. Dr. James Greenwood prepared to inject ten minims of adrenalin into Williams’ heart. Not until the needle failed to move after penetrating the organ..
Los Angeles-New York From Dawn to Dusk Is Unforgettable Thrill
Anew Douglas transport plane in charge of Colonel Edward V. Rickenbacker crossed the continent yesterday in IS hours 3 minutes and 30 seconds, establishing anew record for passenger planes. Henry McEemore, United Press staff correspondent, one of the passengers, describes the flight in the following story. n n tt BY HENRY MLEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK. Nov. 9.—You light a cigaret in Los Angeles, and you flick it away in Times Square. New York. Down below you, during puffs, pass the Mojave desert. Grand Canyon of the Colorado. Pike's Peak, the stubbled wheat fields of Kansas. In half a day, twelve hours, you blaze through the brilliant dawn of California, an Arizona sandstorm. Ohio’s glaring sunshine, a drizzling rain in Pennsylvania, to finally swoop down to rest amidst the gargantuan diamond tiara that is Manhattan after nightfall. That was yesterday, Thursday, Nov. 8. for the six of us who, in the eerie light of a Los Angeles dawn, clambered aboard the giant pug-nosed Douglas transport of the Eastern Air Lines, felt the big ship hammer down the concrete runway, lift its legs and light out for
New York. Twelve hours later the spotlights of Newark airport drilled us in midair and followed us until, three minutes and fifty seconds later, we bounced lightly to a stop for anew coast-to-coast passenger plane record. a tt u HOW does it feel to rocket the 2.650 miles from the Pacific to the Atlantic in half a day? How does it feel to climb, climb, climb three and h F miles into the heavens, level oif and span this country with but one stop —and that for only twelve minutes? Colonel Eddie Rickenbacker, America's greatest war ace, and the man in charge of the flight, will tell you that there isn’t any particular feeling; that it’s no more than catching a subway for the Bronx, an elevated to the loop. So will Si Morehouse, chief pilot on the trip, and Captain Charles France, who relieved him at the controls. But what about we three passengers. whose total hours in the air wouldn't equal a month’s flying time? n a a A ND how did we feel when riding up there in the substratosphere some three and a half miles off the earth, all we could see out front was 125 miles of nothing, and all we could see down below were the myriad jagged peaks of the rockies. To tell you the truth, it was a grand feeling—a hair-raising mixture of exhilaration, wonder, amazement, comfort, thrills and fear. It was an experience not to be forgotten, that finding yourself up so high you couldn’t get enough air. You'd be leaning back in your big cushioned seat paying no more attention to breathing than you ordinarily do, and the next thing you knew you’d be sort of gasping like a goldfish does when lifted out of a bowl. Your chest would tingle, and your toes sort of vibrate as though touched with a live wire. And you’d get up, half walk, half float, to the oxygen tank, and plop the big red rubber mouthpiece to your face. You'd take a big swig of the cool, tasteless gas. You’d take another and another. And then, you’d trip back to your seat as though you’d had a shot in the arm. a u a FOR twelve hours of the mad dash, the three passengers, comforted by the assurance of the men in the cockpit and the unceasing hum of the mighty twin motors, felt no fear. The three minutes—and they seemed like hours—came as the Douglas, hitting it up around 225 miles an hour, soared 17,500 feet above the very heart of the Rockies. Without warning, the piercing wail of a siren broke the silence of the cabin. Two red lights glowed on the cockpit dashboard. The motors slowed down to a lazy whirl, and the monoplane began losing altitude, chunk by chunk. The three passengers looked through the open door of the control room and saw the co-pilot vigorously pumping a lever. The Three passengers looked toward the earth and saw a wicked, treacherous stretch so studded with mountains that a bird would have difficulty in making a landing.
indicating that it had stopped beating entirely, was Dr. Greenwood convinced that Williams was dead. The needle was left in the heart for five minutes. Then a second injection of fifteen minutes was made. Two minutes later the needle vibrated slightly. William’s heart had resumed beating, but he was not breathing. Five minutes passed. Then the man who had been dead twelve minutes drew the first breath of his second life. Hour by hour he breathed regu-
Entered * Second-Class Matter at Postoffice. Indianapolia. Ind.
The three passengers’ stomachs turned over, their faces whitened, their hearts skipped beats. t> a a FOR a minute they sat there, frozen. Then, just as quickly as they had quieted down, the motors roared again, and the plane soared up and away. Actually, the plane was in no danger at all. What happened was this: The gas in the auxiliary tanks gave out, and while the pilot was pumping to produce a suction to start the flow of gas from the 400 gallons in the wings, the motors slowed down, and the ship dropped a bit. But even if all the gas had been exhausted, Colonel Rickenbacker explained to the three shaky passengers, the ship had so much altitude it could have easily glided beyond the mountains to a level landing place. Oh, yes, the siren and the red lights were simply signals to warn th£ pilot it was time to switch to another tank. From there on out it was like riding on air. Which, come to think about it, was just what we were doing.
FUND STILL IS 565.393 SHORT Workers Toil to Reach Goal by Tonight; Failure Is Feared. Batlling against time, 3,000 volunteer workers of the Community Fund sought to raise $65,393.75 by 6:15 tonight. Unless the above amount is obtained by the time the last report meeting is held tonight in the Claypool, the drive to care for the city’s indigent will fail. Resolicitation of large donors, an attack to search out nPw donors, were the offensive today by the workers in an effort to lift the drive by its bootstraps over the goal of $727,217. The total reported to date in pledges is $661,824.25. “Every subscription received has been reported. Not one cent has been held back.” asserted Arthur V. Brown, drive chairman. Workers turned in $45,144.33 at yesterday’s report meeting. Increased gifts from those who have not subscribed are needed if the drive is to succeed. Persons or firms who have not been solicited are urged to call the Community Find and workers will be sent to take their pledges. PLANE CRASH REPORTED Searching Parties Seek Mystery Ship in Mountains. By United Press BEACON, N. Y., Nov. 9.—Volunteer searching parties plodded through rough mountain country today seeking an unidentified airplane which police were informed had crashed on Beacon mountain. C. of C. Opens NRA Poll By United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 9—The Chamber of Commerce of the United States today sought to ascertain nation-wide business opinion on operations of NRA in a referendum of its membership.
larly, occasionally moving his arms and moaning while physicians kept hopeful watch. But Williams never fully regained consciousness during his brief second life which lasted twentytwo hours. Physicians at the hospital said they believed this was the first time a person had been revived by adrenalin after a heart had stopped beating sc long before the drug took effect. It also was the first time to their knowledge that a person had lived for almost a day alter such treatment.
HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, 3 Cent*
Republican Ncw-Dealers Are Ready to Take Over Party Control. SNELL TO FACE BATTLE Removal of Fletcher Also Is Part of Program of Liberal Bloc. BY LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright. 1934. bv United Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—Progressive Republicans are maneuvering for control of the party which has been led since 1908 by a masterful conservative faction. After the storm of Democratic ballots Tuesday there sounded from scattered Republican leaders a call for party reorganization. Translated from words to action that means, first, an effort next January to displace Representative Bertrand Snell as Republican leader of the house. Mr. Snell sped to the north country yesterday from his upstate New York home for ten days rest in a wooded camp. In eight weeks he will be fighting for his political position in Washington. The next step in party reorganization as plotted by the progressives is removal of Henry P. Fletcher as chairman of the Republican national committee. Progressives resented his election this year. Senator William E. Borah 'Rep., Idaho) protested in bitter language. Mr. Borah has not changed his mind. Hurrying to Washington yesterday, Senator Borah paused between trains to proclaim that the Republican party must reorganize or die. Governor Gifford Pinchot of Pennsylvania put the proposition this way: “The Republican party must go progressive or stay bust.” Urges Roosevelt Support Senator James Couzens (Rep., Mich.), an independent, told an audience as Tuesday's ballots were being counted that partisanship should be abandoned to enable all to support President Roosevelt. The foregoing represent the more extreme viewpoints expressed so far. Daniel Hastings (Rep., Del. 4 who was jo-chairman of the Republican sen a torial-congressional campaign committee, saw the election as a probable high point of popular sympathy in what he regards as nationally destructive policies. Senator Charles L. McNary (Rep., Ore.), minority senate leader, emerged a moment from the seclusion which enshrouded him throughout the campaign to tell the -United Press: ' The Republican party must have a program and it must be a forwardlooking one. It can not function successfully as a mere party of negation. From progressive beginnings, the party for more than a century was an efficient and faithful servant of the people. Johnson Attacks Leaders “These values henceforth must be its guiding genius. In my opinion it will keep the faith.” Senator McNary took no open part in the Oregon or national campaigns and has not challenged the New Deal since his return to his fruit farm near Sah-m, Ore. Senator Hiram W. Johnson (Rep., Cal.), who was re-elected on Democratic, Republican and minor tickets, similarly boycotted politics. H made no campaign speeches in his own behalf, but has been a bitter progressive critic of Republican party leadership. Senator Lynn J. Frazier (Rep., N. D.), another progressive who escaped the Democratic flood Tuesday, is committed to party reorganization. He left his home yesterday for Washington where the political plots and counter plots will be hatching between now and Jan. 3, when congress meets. La follette Backs President Senator Robert M. La Follette (Prog., Wis.), who joined his brother Phil in founding a successful third party in Wisconsin, also sped to Washington after the election for a conference with President Roosevelt. Senator La Follette said party realignment was unavoidable. He expects his new party to attract the masses, *but explains that he and Mr. Roosevelt are in accord. All talk of party re-alignments arises for the time being among Republicans. But the variety of viewpoints represented in Mr. Roosevelt's top heavy senate and house majorities will force serious Democratic consideration of the problem before the new congress is many weeks old. Senator Arthur Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.), who distinguished himself Tuesday by holding his senate job, is steering a middle course, apparently aimed at the presidential nomination in 1936. Senator Vandenoerg compromised with the New Deal in his campaign. After election he said; “Liberal Republicanism is called to serve the mass welfare of our whole people and the stabilities of constitutional government in the true Lincoln tradition. In such a role it will one day deserve to return to national power.” Baby Fractures Arm in Fall Rose Marie Davis, 3. of 519 Marion avenue, is in city hospital today suffering frpm a fracture of the left arm received yesterday when she toppled from her high chair. |
