South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 109, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 18 April 1920 — Page 31
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
JCXTY. AITJTi 18, 1320 15
Pres id cn tia I Possibil ities FRANK 0. LOWDEN
lftCl Born at finnriT, Mlnn18CÄ Moved to Hardin cewnty, thSo frraduntnl from TnlTrrKlty of I fm a. firadunted fnmi Union Lftv fc-liool. OJeaco. 18Dn Married to Ml Ilorcnco Iullrruin. 1S9S Formed Iruc ürm rtf Ixnrden, Ilvahrook Ä; 1ü1s. -Ar'f"lntr! lieutenant-col-iu I. IIÜiioLh National (iuard. 1011 Defeated for Republican nomination for ovrnior. 1D06 Uf:t"d to C.'onTtH. 1U11 Ueürel from Con:rrcs.s to rruratre In farrnlntr. 101 ü ldYctcd (imm(rr of 1111noU. 1920 Oiridlflato for Ircidcnt of Üio Cnlfrd Stntr.
f'r r
in
Chicago and kept In cat or trained r.ur-es until they regain thtdr health. . Mrs. Lowden, who vras Miss Florence injllman. daughter of tho late Cfforpo M. Pullman, sleeping car builder, la a charming personality, dr-vote'l to her homo and children und at the same tlrno an Interested partlclpnnt In tho social, club and philanthropic life of Chicago and Kprlntrllfld. The dancea, receptions and musicalc-a she has given at the governor's mansion in Springfield hao Leen noteworthy. In tho lato sixties Lowden's parents lr ft their Sunrise homo and wtnt by prairie schooner to Hardin County, Iowa. Most of the trip Pr.ink covered on foot, driving tho cow and horso or two. On the Iowa farm young Lowden assisted his father with crops, but his mind was made up that lie wns point? to fret an education. He attended a few terms of the county nchool near the farm and at 15 he. had ?o far outdistanced his schoolmates, he was made mu-ster of the school, i . . . When ho was 20 years old he en-
; tered the University of Iowa and for four years ho had a constant
turned Into chrs foi Ijwdni. strui?xle to make ooth ends meet.
"I didn't know." f.-jM IcvtU n, j H WIS graduated In 18 S3, however, "that the rontitut'ion rq-iird tho at the hr-ad of his clas.s. Later -overr.or to pos----, th ability to Iwden went to HurlinRton, Iowa, to milk row?, hut if the Kovernorship t'ich school. While there he .spent Is to be threhfd out on those lin"s hi.s odd moments In studying law t hereby challenge all who aspire j tooka he was able to borrow or buy. ?o that h!h ofdec to an open, free- "While I was in Hurlington." for-all public cow-milking content ' J Lowden, recalling his early
down on my farm in 02le co-inty. i days. I was dead set on becoming
a lawyer. One day I ran across a man who said he could Ket me a Job In a law r.riice in Chicago. 1 went to the city and sure enough I
s landed a Job with Herrlck. Dexter tc Alien as clerk at $8 a week, j "That less than I had been earnI Intf as a teacher, but as I was dter- ; mined to learn something while I j worked I considered myself lucky
At the oonuntneement, Lowden was pleased to find he had been picked as one of the, six men to make addresses. More mirprts-a than ever, he ftald, he wa told he had been chosen valedictorian. Then on top of all announced, much to Lowden'a surpriso and delight, that the Iowan had won two $50 prizes, one for oratory and the other for ncholarship. "That guve me a chance to clean up some old debts," Faid Lowden. In the early nineties Iwden started out for himself. He formed the law firm of Lowden. Estabrook & IXivls and it was only a matter of months before he had built up a reputation of an astute and successful practitioner, a leading member of the Chicago tar. In 18 9 came Lowden's marraicre to miss Pullman. When Lowden was firmly estab
lished as an attorney he fcepan to take an Interest In politics. In addition to his activity .In local Republican politics In Chicasro. Lowden was elected as a delegate to the Republican convention of 1900 that nominated McKinley and Roosevelt for president and vice president, respectively. Durin? the campaign of that year he was on the stump on various occasions pleading for their election. In 190 4 Ixwden appeared as a candidate for the republican nomination for governor. He was defeated by a combination of tho Yates and Deneen forces, but when active campaigning apalnst the democrats began Lowden was on the platform ppeaklfisr for Charles R. Deneen, who was ultimately elected. Lowden was elected to congress
Who 'n the Farn Hill
i rariK v. i owdon mill: a row
hecked on of his adversaries during
a poncai rrn'Ciir.s: in a recent pu- (
lrnatorlal campaien in Ulinios. 'Yet he clnlms to be a farmer." Lowden,, the eandM'ito, was on the rostrum and the crowd chuckled at his expense. Hut when he .-hot back h!s oulck rerWy. the chuckles w. re
George Y Kepler
And I aree to abi.le by the retulta" PrJends and fipporters of Lowden, "war roverr.nr." like to tell about the ambitions struct;!' through which the barefoot farmer Toy, nn of the vlllnce blarkymith at Sunrise, Minn., wns ablo to rave through Fils own work enout;h monrv to edu-
rate h!mflf at th Ur.ivfrsity of (to cet even that much." Iowa bcrlnnin a lawyers career and ' Lowden enrolled In the Union ColfinnlJy to pas-s from congressman to l"'ce of lav' nb;ht courses with an
governor of Illinois and to rand Ida t : additional hour in the morning from
J to 9 o'clock. Working In the law ol'Ice from 0 to 5. he was able to
l?o to rl:ire in the evenings from 7 to 10. r.etween 5 and 7, after v rk hours, h'- did his studing. Hy I strict application, be completed the t
in a year. (
for president of th- Tr;itrd States
Iiwflen'd life I th slmp.Ie life -Diese to th farm. Shortly aftr he had entered on his law praotiro in rhIrago, he Trocght Sinn i;-5!p!)i
Parm. one of the largest trans of
land In Illinois If
tock river, near th
pon. ince rie acfji.-srefi tn propr-r-ly, Hovernor Iynvden ha taken in-j tense interebt in its operation and ' development. j When the Lowden family H not , !n Springfield at th governor's, mansion. It is ujally at Sinnl.Irpi- ' In addition to tlieir own farm, the Lowdens built nearby two cottagrsi on "Hilltop," a pretty eminenro on I Itock river, where crippled ami or- I phaned loys and girls arp brought ! from crowded tenement districts of'
is located on j two-year course
Town r s Ore- i
Democratic Candidate for Congress Voters of the Thirteenth District of Indiana:
In this time of reconstruction and of tumult, it li imperative that men of action rather than men of words, should be chosen to represent you In your legislativ bodies, men whohav been tried, and men of experience In public affairs. There isa strongfeelingamong thinking people that Congress needs business men rather than orators. With this tnouRht uppermost, George Y. Hepler, present State Senator cf St. Joseph County is presented for your approval. His age is sixty-two years, and he has been a resident of Indiana forty-two years, started in life as a farm hand, has been a successful contractor and lumberman and farmer, and has won the confidence and respect of the people of the 13th Congressional District and of the State of Indiana by the conscientious manner in which he has fulfilled his duties as a member of the General Assembly of Indiana during the past six years. He has been twice president of the Inter-State Fair Association and Is now a member of our State Board of Agriculture. He is a recognized leader in advancing farm organization and numbers among his friends and acquaint
ances, not only farmers, merchants and business men in all lines, but his record as a legislator has made the laboring men of Indiana his staunch friends and supporters. Let us unite to put a business man and practical farmer in Congress from our District.
Y k. ,
In 1305 from the 13th Illinois district. Ho served two terms and ha;f cf the third and then retired to personally supervise operation of hl3 newly acquired farm at Oregon, 111. From 1 1 1 1 until 191 Lowden, although taking an interest in politics and national affairs, stuck to hLs hoe at Sinnlssipjd. During most of that time ho was a member of the republican national committee, but never Fought off.ee. When the 1315 gubernatorial campaign opened. Lowden was ncain on the battleground. Accepting the republican nomination, he was elected governor by a majority of 14 9.S4 2 votes and In January. 1917, began his term a "war governor." In the first legislature convoking in the Lowden administration, the governor obtained enactment cf the civil administration code, reducing the number of departments, boards and commissions at Springneid from
123 to nine and centralizing duty to such an extent that in ppito cf the high cost cf everything the etato had to Lvy. the stato tax was reduced ZZ per cent.
Other "war measures" Lowden Is Credited with in Illinois are the enactment of a law that will result in the connecting of the Clrcat Likes and Mississippi river waterways, affording ;.n eight-foot channel for through trarncr: convening of a
i i-t.it cons-.itutional convention; or
ganization of the stato council of defence; reorganization of the state's penal and charitable institutions; Initiation of n. $hf 000.000 mid
tulldinar p an. and establishment of
a budget system In Illinois.
ites in Sprinrf.Id nid and younger ets.
Chicago
Philip Olbbs, In a nev T ook. f.hat cr.f day th" Germnu f-rdli r dlsplavf-,1 r pltJiK on which was chalked: "We're all foo!s; b-fs alii go home." Every war writer row i seen.s free to say what he. r .illy ; thinks cf IL i
D'Anrur.7lo Is a Jew fron Calabria, his rt il name beir.r; Ilap.-r- ä nett a, says the Jugo-S'.av Lconomi.-t. ! He n reived tlie r.arn Ca, ri. I l.r.r.ur.zio from likening himself th'-, ar.gei nabrll ann.'Uncing liberty to,'
Italy.
Eyes Tired? If your cjes arc tire I and cnxrworked; if they itch, ache, bum ot rrr.art, ypo tx any Jn stör and grel a bottle of Bon-Opto tablrU. Drcp one tablet Li a fourth cf a kIiäs ol water and um to bathe tbe eys from two to foar times a day. Ycm vrHI be sarpriseil at the res relief nn-i cemfort Ion-Op.o bring?. ijfct se ia a week's tie a tzxzj iattxÄa,
The Lowdens have four children, three daughters and a son. Pullman Lowden Raw service in France as a sergeant in tho 3 2d or Prairie division. The daughters are favor-
Ani- rican trees are being planted over the American doad in Franco by the American Forestry association. American rood will be t:sd
to reforest much of France.
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