Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1945 — Page 3
} near quite likely n for short in winter, dhog is the dchuck, or mot. The d by sclene his former
IOTIVES (U, P) ~~ )f the 14th locomotives ese planes ommunique
A.
{ Capy righ
| of
TUESDAY, JAN. 3, 1948
1 TRIUMPH FOR THO. Of Serb King By EDWARD P. MORGAN Times Foreign Correspondent LONDON, Jan, 30.—The sYugoslay government crisis is rapidiy blowing over today and Marshal Tito's liberation forces have wrested victory from King Peter HH. Although King Peter. may have saved his face, has almost certainly has lost his throne. “The story--of this affair is a : classic in the
best Balkan -
tradition, full of court intrigues, sleeve tuggings by queens and princesses and whispered conferences among ministers-of state— not to mention bustling activities of envoys of- great powers. Having resigned and been reappointed by the king, so everything would look nice, the Subasic government is expected to fly to Belgrade within four or five days to join Tito. They would have done this anyway whether the king had approved or not, n 5 THE COMP OM.GE which broke the crisis between the court and. the cabinet, provided that the government “might” be broadened to include one or two of the king's henchmen. But, then again, it might not. The latter seems the more probable since Tito, in his speech on Sunday, indicated that-he was not interested. There is still speculation here, however, that the Serb leader Milan Grol might eventually join" the cabinet.
Mr. Morgan
QECHNICALLY, the. king himself Wl choose a three-man regency in which the royal powers will be vested during the transition period until Yugoslavs can hold national election to determine their permanent form of government. But the fact that he has signed an order approving the regency is more important than whom he might appoint. It was the legal act which Tito and Subasic and; Indeed, the major allies wanted. Having agreed to that, it is doubtful that the young king would become too difficult about personalities. 8 & » YUGOSLAV sources say that Premier Ivan subasic and Marshal Tito previously had agreed on the following regents: Dr.*Alexander Belle, professor of the University of Belgrade, representing Serbia; Dr. Antg Mandic representing Croatia; Dr. Dusan Sernecs, of the Slovenain Popular (Catholic) party, representing Slovenia.
- There are indication. that the |
king would like to substitute somebody else for Belic. That might be p®ssible, but it is. not
"likely that Tito would agree to
any radical changes. All three of these elderly men “are now in Yugoslavia and have been $here virtually through the entire! ficrman occupation.
+945, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Dally News, Ine.
FOREST E.. HARRISON, INSPECTOR, IS DEAD
Forest E. Harrison, an inspector at Curtiss-Wright. died today. He lived at 1451 Central ave. and was 39. Born in Hamilton county, he spent maqst of his life'in the geighborhood road Ripple and was graduated from Broad Ripple high school. He
i was a. world war II veteran and a | member of the American Legion,
Survivors are his wife, Helen; his mother, Mrs. Oscar Harrison; a sister, Mrs. J. T. Hughes; two uncles, George E. and A. V. Harrison, and two aunts, Mrs. Hazel Whelchel and Mrs. William Mills, all of Indianapolis, and another aunt, Mrs. Ruth Timmons, Lewisville, Services will be held in Planner & Buchanan mortuary.
BIRTH CONTROL
. May Imperil Manpower Needs of Future.
—Catholic. leaders,
of birth control information to servicemen, “Opening & three-day “family life” conference sponsored by the National Catholic: Welfare conference, Bishop Joseph P. Hurley of St. Augustine said American fathers were being given birth control information in the army “on the vastest scale known to history.” “Lectures, distribution, called prophylactic these methods, tioned by Catholics and many oth-
motion pictures, often forced, of sopackets—all
tect the health of our youngsters,” Bishop Hurley said.
Scores Promiscuity “It is common knowledge,”
ceeded very well in their announced
ceeded in teaching the undesirable lessons of promiscuity and birth control.” Asserting that the present man-
power shortage .was due to “birthcontrollers of two decades ago,” Bishop Hurley said “if present anti-
to 10 million potential American fathers . . . it is entirely conceivdble that we shall not have sufficient manpower to defend ourselves by the end of this century.” He added that talk of increased consumption, expanded foreign trade and adequate military power were well and good “in ‘their place and measure,” but would have little permanence or reality “if we are to become a nation of elderly men."
Rural Families Largest
Dr. Olivet E. Baker, professor of economic geography at the University of Maryland, told the conference that census figures showed families living in the country or in small villages, but not necessarily farmers, were rearing 10 or 12 children to each seven brought up by city families.
tending toward extinction,” he urged the Catholic church, to encourage families of city workers to move outside the cities where they work, choosing a homesite with space for a garden, chickens, “if possible, a cow.”
DROP TO 5 ABOVE
(Continued From Page One)
mal through Sunday. Normal for Indianapolis is 29, Local streets and ‘sidewalks were covered with 1.4 in.lhes
early morning hours, A total of 2.3] inches of snow has fallen since Sunday. From one to. two. inches of additional snow have fallen in the state south of rd. 36 and in the Vincennes and Seymour districts. The: state highway department reported the main roads partially clear of ice and snow in the Ft. Wayne and La Porte districts with scattered slick spots in the Crawfordsville and Greenfield areas. Roads are slippery inv spots near Seymour and Paoli, Two more persons were injured in falls on the ice, Charles Hatch, 77, of 225 E. Iowa st., fractured his hip and injured. his deg when he fell in front of 1726 8. Meridian st. George Mouring, 46, of 827 Bradshaw st, broke his left wrist in a, fall near Prospect st. and Churchman ave, Both were taken to City hospital. Mr. Mouring was treated
and then released.
Hitler Begins His 13th Year Of Nazi Rule Facing Disaster
By BRUCE ‘W. MUNN United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, Jan. 30.—Adolf Hitler began his 13th—and undoubtedly ladM--year as ruler of Germany today. The empire he once boasted
fF would last 1000 years was crum-
bling about him. Though the anniversary of his ise to chancellor has been a day or one of his major speeches, Hitler was silent. Only once since 1933 had he failed to speak on Jan. 30. That was in 1943, a few weeks after the disaster at Stalingrad. p - Nn ey HITLER'S whereabouts were a myst He was reported variously In Berlin, touring the East ern front, and holing up for a last-stand in his mountain-top pu'ace at Berchtesgaden. But wherever he was, he must have realized that within the next few months—perhaps weeks—his eountry would go down to possinly its greatest defeat. He himself probably faced death, exile or trial as a war
. CL
» » THE RED ARMY fast was clos
- Ing. in on. Bgrlin*and a massive
offensive- was in preparation in
“the west.
Stockholm Sisputehies ny the
and southern: districts of Berlin, Fires kindled by R. A. F. bombs raged in the capital, hampering civilians frantically digging trenches and tank traps for the impending battle. » ” ” EVEN the southerm front was threatened, A Nazi D. N. B. dispatch said the German high command was
contingents of troops from Italy” to plug the gaps in the path of the Red army, D. N. B, said Field Marshal Albert Kesselring, supreme commander in Italy, was demanding the mobilization of Italians from 18 '» 60 to replace the withdrawn units, - :It was certain that the Italians would not match them in either quality or quantity.
IT APPEARED that Prime Minister Churchill's prediction ‘| that the Germans would yield northern Italy “anytime now” was about to be fulfilled. Of the once great network of satellites and allies with which Hitler had ringed Germany, only puppet-ruled Slovakia and Nor-
IS DENOUNCED
Catholic Leaders Warn U.S.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 (U, P.). |} denouncing birth control as “race suicide,” said today that this country might be left without enough manpower for national defense by the end of the century as result of dissemination
10,000,000 future
the
which are ques-
ers, are pressed into service to pro-
he | declared, “that they have not suc- |
purpose but have all too often suc-
family practices continue to be taught
Stating that. “urban families are
IS PREDICTED HERE
of new snow during the night and |
“considering withdrawing certain”
New America
Fi oak. Adon Ee hernach \] \ v Ah
Lusemboueg »
7 Thionville & \ pg
of! 3 FRANCE St Avold
owe MILES 2]
n Bridgehead
JF ’ SP
Hotten ® Ty 7 r
enhausen. lished a bridgehead across the Our : o
(Continued From Page One)
real fight was at Kesternich, indi-|* cating that the general German fallback into the Siegfried line had | extended to that sector. “Casualties were virtually nonexistent, primarily because German artillery was strangely silent,” the | dispatch reported. It was the 78th division which! took Kesternich in the short-lived | attack northeast of Monschau in! December, just before the German counter-offensive opened. The first victory in Germany reported by Lt. Gen. George S. Patton’s 3d army was the capture of | Welchenhausen, eight miles southeast of St. Vith, Belgium.
Reach West Wall
Front reports said ‘the attack across the Our hdd penefrated within a little over two miles of the first main pillboxes of the Siegfried line. The Yanks probably were already in contact with the first defenses of
The U. 8. 3d army cracked into Germany today, capturing WelchSetting the pace for the Yank comeback, the 3d estab-
river two miles wide. ”
Doughboys Carve Out New Advances Inside Germany
ingle and Saar were more or less
ane spotlight of battle remained {focused on the «American 1st and 3d army comeback from the collapsed Ardennes salient. “+ Lashing out in a swirling snow- | storm that hampewsed their air support, the Americans were reported i driving eastward with gathering i speed.
They were rounding up hundreds:
of prisoners and overrunning town
after town along the Belgian and Luxembourg borders of the Reich. Field dispatches said the Germans were pulling back ali but a;
few rear guard detachments.
They were massing their strength behind the Siegfried fortifications in the apparent belief that a major
allied offensive was imminent.
At the northern end of the assault
line, doughboys of the “fighting 1st”
infantry division paced the 1st army drive with advances running to two
miles or more in 24 hours. Bullange, Herresbach, Holzheiin,
the west wall.
Germany once held by the ist army. Troops of the 1st had advanced six miles beyond the border within two and a half miles of Prum when the Nazi offensive began. The 3d army vahguard in Germany was’ setting the pace for American troops mushing throughi: knee-deep snow up to or across the border on a 35-mile front. i The Yank advance appeared to be. preliminary to a major allied offensive in the west.
Medendorf and Wereth were among the border towns overrun by the The attack marked the beginning|advancing 1st division, all lying in|to the Union Pacific terminal” the of the reconquest of the. strip’ ofan arc five to 11 miles northeast of | President's oldest son said.
St. Vith.
the -air, following yesterday's 3500-
the Siegfried works, . Spearheaded by more than 1150 American bombers and 700-odd fighters, the allied air flegts bombed and burned rail and road installations along a 400-mile arc ‘rom Bremen down to the Swiss border.
The German high command said the allies were engaged in opera-/ tions “aiming at the establishment! | of favorable initial positions for | | major operations, which already are! foreshadowed on the northern wing! of the front.”
Bridgehead Won The northern wing of Patton's 3d army already had carved out a bridgehead across the Our river in Germany. The bridgehead was two miles wide and three-quarters of a mile deep, a front dispatch reported. To thé northwest, a Berlin comimunique said, Canadian attacks against a German bridgehead in the Gertruidenberg area of the lower Maas were broken up by artillery fire. The Germans reported heavy fighting in that sector, and said several allied attacks were repulsed along the Roer river.
French @rumple_ Pocket
Simultaneously, French 1st army forces in Alsace crumpled-in both sides of the Colmar pocket with a concerted drive frem the north and south, 8wiss- border reports said the French had recaptured Colmar, the last major French city in German hands. The British and Canadian fronts to the north and the -U. 8. Tth army’s lines along the Rhine Pala-
EVENTS TODAY
Presbyterian Young People of Indianapolis, midwinter conference, Memorial Presbyterian church. Indiana State Bottlers Frowstive association, convention, Severin hote Indiana Federation 2. Clubs, Tnldwinter meeting, Claypool h lce-O-Rama, city recreation department carnival, Coliseum 7 p, m. Indiana tail Hardware association, convention, Lincoln hotel. Indianapolis ¥ Men's club, International, meeting, Central Y. M.C. A. 12:15p. m Indianapolis and Marion County Girl Scouts, annual meeting, Indiana Word War Memorial auditorium, 8:15 p. m
-
‘EVENTS TOMORROW
Municipal concert, Indianapolis Jymphony ‘orchestra, Cadle tabernacle, pm, Presbyterian Young People of Indians polis, mi Winter Seujerence, Memorial Presby-
terian ¢ a Federviton hi Clubs, midwinter mee Indiana " meta Hardware association, convention, Lincoln h Real Estate board, installation ohn Juet, 130 p.m
Indianapolis club, 8 \ po
MARRIAGE LICENSES : vin Aldred. Vevay; Anna Louise ots Jal Brookside. A Anderton, 2154 N. Dlinois; i Ln BS Alavamy . aN
o ’
Athletic | ci,
PAY INCREASE FOR
GOVERNOR JOB URGED
A report to be submitted tomorrow by the legislative committee
ion fees and salaries will recommend
an increase in’ pay for the Indiana governor, it was learned today, The pay, hike propesal will be “outside” for the committee's official report since it is empowered
to suggest pay scales for county and township officials only. Reason for the recommendation 1s that many local officers, whose expenses are relatively low, are receiving as much as the governor's $8000 a year salary. The commitice believes that $15,000 more nearly approaches a suitable salary tor the governor's office. Any Eilbertiatorial salary boost, however, would not affect Governor Gates. A present law forbids administrative pay hikes during the term of office of those fixing the increased scales.
BREAKDOWN OF PETROLEUM HOUSTON~A hundred gallons of crude petroleum yields approximates ly 44 gallons of gasoline, 36 gallons of fuel oils, 8 gallons of kerosene, 3 gallons of lubricants, and 8 gallons of coke, asphalt, wax and other products,
Addis 8. T. Chislom, 833 8. Kapitol; Lovella Mae Patterson, 1533 Oliv Simon Joseph Clark, Milner Yotel: Opal Maxine Heiner, 2619 N. Illinois. Rudo) h ogener, 720 8. Meridian; Vivian esler, 1021 Central, Apt. Mo J. Glaspie Jr,, 1225 Harlan; Marian Belle Gregory, 1413 N. Arsenal, Arthur Andrew Jackson Jr, U. 8. navy; Naam) Katherine - Landis, '268 Hendricks Jones, Chicago, Ill;
Everett Emily 1735. Howard, hotel; Olive Irene Park; Mafjorie L. ‘Nl.; Victoria Broadway; 1238 Co
Henry
cPherNew Jer-
John "Andrew Ardway, 602 E. Washington; Mar: Pruitt, 931 roRiuce. rker, 21 New Jersey; Eva Chandler, 926 E.
Ira Soseph. 18 ndinrapoia, Thd.; Maime E pl
Roy 1553 Nelson; Elnora Akins, 1582 Nelson. arence Elliott , Prifies, R..R. 1, Madison, | Ro 0.; Dorothy Urbas, 2061 Bosarty Charles ’ rank Rice, 817 Coffey: Elizabeth Louise LR. Box 35.
Monroe 1, 1923 8, 8. Dershing; Lilly
James Emil Acker} Jusnits Clark, 1s B. Rah Alice M. Neal,
mburn, hy
BIRTHS :
Te Prancis.| anemia
T! 7 INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
The first phase of the offensive was believed already under way in
«| George Myers, 4
. PAGE
ELLIOTT GIVEN
Senate Group Recommends FDR’s Son for Rank
Of General. . (Continued From Page One)
tions, with about 5000 officers: and men under him, “That means he has been doing the job of a brigadier,” Thomas told newsmen.
Jimmy Denies Asking
For Delay of Train LOS-ANGELES, Jan. 30 (U.P.).— Col. James Roosevelt hastened to rejoin his marine amphibious unit today, puzzled by the commotion caused when the. Union Pacific - streamliner City of Los Angeles was delayed for his departure from Chicago. “I don’t know what's so awful about it,” Rooseevlit sald yesterday when he arrived here with his wife after attending his father’s inauguration. He denied requiring railroad officials to hold up the fast train, but
“consider the fact that my wife and I had reservations on the train.”
Railroad Official Silent
(At Chicago, John Pollock, a Union Pacific official, refused to comment on the matter, saying he considered the President's son military personnel and he was not allowed to comment on his movements.) The City of Los Angeles was held up an hour and seven -minutes waiting for Roosevelt to arrive in Chicago on the Pennsylvania railroad’s Manhattan Limited.
“It was scheduled to leave at about the time my train was due in from New York,” he said. “We did not know our train would be late.” Nine other persons on the Mane hattan out of New York also made connections with the streamliner with Roosevelt and his wife, railroad officials said. Roosevelt said that the Manhattan was running late and when it . reached Crestline, O., the Puliman conductor began making a list of passengers going west of Chicago.
Explanation Wired
“I told him we had reservations on the streamliner out of Chicago at 6 p. m. “The conductor then suggested that I send a telegram to the terminal explaining. “He asked if I was traveling on duty status and when I said I was, he said he'd send a wire for me
APPROVAL VOTE,
said he had merely asked that they |
13 Organizations in State.
Thirteen Indiana organizations brought pressure on the legislature today for enactment of a local option law as a “home rule” principle in the sale of liquor.
given J P. h
he blessing of the G. 0. command.
of the Indiana Central college,
$x,
committee, . committee ed “igo complicated Right to Decid the already highly controversial ght Be liquor and beer picture in the assembly,
The Republican high command
the recognized rule in the ‘Nquér traffic.” Dr. Good said passage of a Joca
caucus with the G. O. P. house and senate majority membership on the sizzling hot legislation to revamp the alcoholic beverage system in order that Republicans can wrest control of the beer wholesale business from Democrats.
Two Bills Introduced
Some decision is expected to be reached on the type of legislation to be sponsored by G. O. P. majority leaders. Two bills already have been introduced in the house to shakeup the present bi-partisan liquor administration and give the Republicans control. But these bills have not yet been | Nazarene churches.
N.Y. Bank Thief |WOMEN'S SERVICES Gets Counterfeits | . "RRIVE IN HAWA
HONOLUAU, Jan. 30 (U. P).NEW YORK, Jan. 30 (U P= | The first contingents of
legislator to a dry cause.
Women's Christian
and the United Brethren Church.
were the Synod, Methodist churches, Baptis Church of Indiana, Christ churches,
Building and Savings preached since 1388 that there is no easy road to riches. Today its offices believed they had a convert. A thief broke the societv's plate glass window in early morning and took a mounted display of eight counterfeit treasury notes in $1 to $100 denominations with genuine bills displayed alongside for contrast. The counterfeits were poor
examles in which flaws were easily detected. The genuine bills were for treasury displays only— printed with one side blank.
WACS and WAVES already sta- | tioned here,
marched ashore yesterday to report for duty with the Hawaii gar rison forces. : The same liner brought 42 Spar
other
States.
than
summer Sseersuckers.
eral weeks ago.
STRAUSS SAYS: —IT'S ONE DAY
Roosevelt said he understood the procedure was not uftommon and he and the conductor worded a telegram telling officials “we'd ap-
plane strike against communica- preciate it if they would consider tions and transport in and behind | the fact we'd like to take the wi train.”
He said that when the Manhattan fell further behind, he gave up hope and wired for hotel reservations. The City of Los Angeles picked up the hour and seven minutes on the run west but was held up by a derailed freight car at Sands, Nev, and arrived two hours and 5 minutes late in Los Arigeles:
USE FOR ASPARAGUS BUTTS
WASHINGTON, — Asparagus | butts, now wasted, yield, when |pressed, a juice that can be used as a culture medium to produce bacterial proteinase, an enzyme that splits proteins. It. is used in the brewing, textile, leather and rubber industries.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
U. 8. Weather Burean
(All Data in Central War Time) Jan. 30, 1945 7:55 | Sunset. .....
Precipitation 24 hrs. end 7:30 A. M 08 Total precipitation since Jan. 1... 19 Deficiency since Jan.
The following table shows the highest temperatures for 12 hours ending at 7:30 p. m. yesterday and the lowest temperahues for 12 hours ending at 7:30 a. m. oday:
Boston Chicago . Cincinnati Cleveland Denver Evansville Pl. Wayne ........v.ss Indianapolis (city) Kansas City,~ Mo. Miami, Fla. Minneapolis- St. Paul New Orleans .. . New York . Oklahoma city . Omaha, Neb, Pittsburgh ... Cr easissanrens San JAntonis; Tex. St. ns D.C.
IN INDIANAPOLIS—EVENTS—VITALS
Walter, Martha Kibler, at Coleman, George, Alberta Baugh, at Methodist, Kenneth! Paula Brown, at Methodist. Clifford, Belma Connerley. at Methodist. Carroll, Julia Muck, at Methodist. Delmer. Emyerl Stout, at Methodist, Thomas, Violet Toon, at Methodist. Grover, Wilma Brashear, at 8t. Vincent's. Richard, Carolyn Cassell, at 8t. Vincent's. Irwin, Bertha Parker, at 8t. Vincent's. Boys Charles, Thelma Griffith, at City, Carl, Jean Marts, at Coleman. Leo, Anne Ridge. at Methodist, Arthur. Lavina Henschen, at 8t. Vincent's. Maurice, Betty Pare; at SnGERYs. Raymond. Ruth McKay, at Ei pone. Elouise Bryant, at 939 N rds Salle.
DEATHS Genevy Xilliaus, 51, at 3021 Martindale,
Gladys" ifrey HSE, 48, at 2024 Hoyt, coronary usion Wel Jal, 1, us City, meningoccic men-
i? 'Wiison Smith, 85, at 2122 N. New Sriy; cardio vascular renal. bert L. ®fiver, 15, at City, Shreliifina. Eatherine Conner, 67, at 1828 N. ic myocard Cora May Smith, 0, at 1333 Naomi, carma.
Crystal Db, 2 human, 61, at 4902 Evanston, cardio vascular ren Larue Sends, 77, at 6360 Tilford, carci
at V
rans. carcinoma, Stark, Ratt
+ Vincent's, car-| 10, at, Methodist,
"Ba ay J 1. a gt
Flora M. pic ima
on hand (and foot)—
St. Valentine's Day— —it somehow or other brings to
(I hope}—
healthier!
P, S. : x company of ALPAGORA _Topeoats has just come in—to join up with these
In our stocks . . .
Demand Local Option Action
Dr. 1. J. Good, former president
represented six of the groups urging local option before the policy
He said giving counties and townships the right to decide whether they have liquor within their boralso faced a showdown tonight in|ders “is merely an application of rinciple of home
option law does not commit any
He represented the Indiana Coun~of Churches, the Council of | ’ Church Women of Indiana, Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers, Temperance Union, Indiana Anti-Saloon League,
Others represented at the session Indiana Presbyterian |
Disciples of | —Democrats Green, Evangelical | | Senator Tunnell of Delaware being churches, Friends churches, and the fF it and Senator Ball of Minne.
women The Franklin Society for Home marines and coast guard Spars yes- | centers.
has |terday began their overseas service in|
A second group of navy Waves | also arrived on the boat, a supple- | | move from a parliamentary standment to the unit which arrived sev- | | point was both unnecessary and
INDIANA VOTE PROBE DIMMING
WASHINGTON~Jan. 30.-—Chair« man Green (D. R. L), today poste poned a meeting of his special campaign investigafing committee which was scheduled to act on the Indiana vote inquiry. They will meet on Thursday instead, he said, Reason -given was that Senator Stewart (D. Tenn.), who seems to be the only one anixous not fo drop the matter, said he was too busy to attend as he is a member of the senate military affairs come || mittee which had a “more ime portant meeting” today. The Tennessean, with some help from Hoosier Democrats but not Schricker, is trying to turn the matter over to the senate privileges and election committee, since the special committee no longer has any power ‘except to make a report. It 1s expected that the special come mittee will divide along partisan t|lines on the Stewart proposal— Stewart and
| sota and Ferguson of Michigan | against. This would then require full sene | ate action and it is considered “ne likely that it will he approved. For Senator Homer Capehart (R, Ind), against whoni any action would have to be brought, lost Marion county where the investigation His senior
colleague, Senator
the Hawaiian islands, joining the | Raymond E. Willis (R. Ind.), con=
tends that action—if any-—should | be with a grand jury and not in the | senate of the United States. Some
Wearing forest green uniforms, of the Marion county data already 165 marine corps women reserves has been sent to the justice de-
| partment, Senator Green’ previously | announced. Unseating Capehart “inever has been considered likely | here, although Senator Stewart did s | get Majority Leader Barkley .(D.
—the first to set foot on shores| Ky.) to ask that he (Capehart) be continental United | seated The Spars were dressed in| move to keep the
“without prejudice” as a investigation | alive,
Later it was learned that this
' meaningless.”
NEARER VICTORY
WE don't know why it is—but—the cold
—and the appearance here and there of hearts—red hearts—in our retail
emporiums suggesting the approach of
mind a
Valentine couplet—it's from Longfellow
“Love keeps the cold out—better than a cloak—t serves for food and raiment!”
Don't let it mislead you—please, Sir— Try a good Topcoat and hefty Oxfords and good Socks and other raiment-—it's :
from former Governor: Henry PF.
