Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME XXXII. NO. 63.
II
BETTER: DANGER
IE IS PASSED
President=I£lect Suffering With
Cold Confined to His Bed in
New York s Executive Man=
sion
COMPLETE REST IS
ORDERED BY STAFF|
Slight Temperature Vanished
and Doctors Report There is
. No Lung Infection and No;
Cause of Worry.
Albany, N. Y., Nov. 12. t/P)—Presi- i
dent-elect Roosevelt, suffering from a •
void, was “much improved,” his start'
at the executive mansion said today,
Although he had thrown oft the
worst effects of the cold he contracted
in the closing, arduous days of the j
presidential campaign, Mrs. Roosevelt
prevailed upon him to remain in bed
for the second day.
Vistors at the mansion were asked i
to put off their engagements with Mr.
Roosevelt to allow him a complete i
rest over the week-end.
terday The slight had disappeared temperature today. he had yes- Mr. j
Roosevelt was attended yesterday by :
the Roosevelt physician in Albany, I
Dr. L. W. Gorman. The doctor had !
not called at the mansion during the :
morning today'.
Mr. Roosevelt hoped to he able to
continue today, with his secretary at I
his bedside, some of the correspond- I !
ence he dictated yesterday when he
was not sloping or resting. He spent j
part of the day reading more of the
congratulartory messages that have )
been pouring in since his election. To j
some of these he dictated replies. j
The governor thought until y'ester- i
day that he had shaken off the cold, !
contracted during the last day of his
campaign when he rode bareheaded !
in an open car during a rain. He had :
planned Hyde Park to spend residence, this week-end but cancelled at his j
j
the trip. : j
At the end of his swing through
some of the* southern states shortly
before election, he lost his voice for a
few hours after making speeches
from an observation platform on a
rainy day in North Carolina and Vir¬
ginia, but he quickly recovered.
When the governor returns to his
desk he plans to proceed with prep¬
aration of the state budget, and after
about a week to leave for Warm
Springs to remain there until early in
December.
LAUDS 0E j i j
j ]
j
j
VETERAN OF NATIONAL CAM¬
PAIGNS SAYS PARTY HAS ITS
GREATEST OPPORTUNITY
Buffalo, N. Y„ Nov. 12. f/P)—Nor¬
man E. Mack, veteran of a dozen na¬
tional political campaigns, believes “if
the Democratic party will do for the
nation what it has done for New York
state, long, it will longer, be in than power it has nationally been in j
as or
control in Albany.”
New York state has had Demo¬
cratic governors for the past 10 years
and her next governor will be a Dem¬
ocrat.
Mack, a former Democratic national
chairman, feels that Governor Roose¬
velt as president will give the nation
a program such as that which he says
gave New' York Democracy its suc¬
cesses. He said last night Mr. Roose¬
velt “will have the benefit of the
brightest minds from every walk of
life to aid him.”
nt said m part: j
“The success of the Democratic par- j
ty at the polls on November 8 was by '■
all intents and purposes the voice of j
the people mostly of all political
faiths and it left no doubt that they
wanted expect the a change Democrats and to in lead good us faith out j
•
of the depression at the earliest pos- •
sible time. !
“Already the people in general feel j
the effect of the promised change and ;
where there was fear before the elec-;
tion, it shows now replaced with the 1
smiles of hope because of the elec -1
tion of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the |
knowledge that he will have the ben- j
efit of the brightest minds from every i
walk of life to aid him.
“The people should take heart and
begin to applaud the success of the 1
new deal, and those who have money j
hoarded should start to use it and ,
give their best efforts to the senate !
and congress in their advocacy to re- ;
duce the expenditure of the govern- j
ment by reducting the many overlap
ping bureaus and to refuse to appro- j
priate any more money to the useless
prohibition enforcement agency that
has east a blight over all the land.”
-----.
TWENTY-FOUR KILLED
-
Wigan, Lancashire, England, Nov.
12. OP)— Twenty-four miners were
killed early today in an explosion at
the Edgegreen colliery at Ashton-in
Makerfield.
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
Nevada Senator
1
McCarren, former stale su "
prenie court justice, who was elected
United States senator from Nevada
in the Democratic landslide,
He succeeds Tasker L. Oddie, Repub
ii ca „, w ho has been in the senate for
„iany years.
_____
Cooperation fo Continue Eco=
nomic Recovery Expressed in
Speech Delivered on Return
Trip East.
---—
By JOHN F. CHESTER
Associated Press Staff Writer
With President Hoover En Route
Washington at Glendale, Cal., Nov.
12. (,/P) —President Hoover broke his
return journey to the White House lo¬
day with a speech here pledging co¬
operation to continue economic recov
ery.
Speaking from the rear platform of
his train, the executive said:
“ ‘If If we are to continue tho the recovery
so evidently in progress during the
past few months by overcoming the
many difficulties which still confront
us, we must have continued unity in
constructive action all along the econ¬
omic front,
“I shall work for that unity during
the remaining four months of this ad¬
ministration. Furthermore, it is our
duty after the fourth of March to co¬
operate with our opponents in every
sound measure for the restoration of
prosperity.”
Mr. Hoover declared he was return
ing early to Washington from his
home in Palo Alto, Cal., “in special
concern that the measures and instru
mentalities which we have in motion
on an entirely non-partisan basis shall
continue to function vigorously and
contribute their utmost.” <
In the crowd at the train was a
group of friends in southern Califor¬
nia who had asked the opportunity to
greet him.
After the speech, the president and
Mrs. Hoover drove to the new home
of their son, Herbert Hoover, Jr., at
Sierra Madre. Mrs. Hoover had ex¬
pressed a desire to see the newly built
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hoover, Jr.,
and their three small children rode
from Palo Alto on the special train.
Allan Hoover, the President’s young¬
er son, also left the train here to re¬
turn to his work in Los Angeles.
Republicans should not be discour¬
aged by defeat, the president said,
but “should at once strengthen all
forms of national, state, county and
precinct organization for militant ac¬
tion.”
The party “will return to power,”
he said.
Mr. Hoover extended his thanks to
those “who have given so freely of
their time and effort in this campaign
a nd in supporting the principles for
which we stand.”
POST-ELECTION BOOM OF PRIC
ES FEATURE ACTIVITIES
DURING PAST WEEK
By JOHN L. COOLEY
Associated Press Financial Writer
New York, Nov. 12. <7P)-.-After mo
mentary pause, while results of the
national poll were being digested, the
stock market revived the old tradition
of a post-election rally this week, thus
carrying along a record of 36 years
standing.
It is axiomatic in Wall street that
termination of a political campaign
brings relief from some uncertainties
even if others are inevitably created
through a change in administration.
" Several ’ prominent ! ’ industrial ' ’ ' ' ’ fig- ~
ures stated that in their opinion end
ing of pre-election uncertainty should
help amalgamate gains made thus
far, although some commentators, in
(Continuec, on Page 5.)
10 HINDER WEI
IN THEIR PLANS
! Brief Period in December Will
! Permit Drys to Block Any
Attenipt to « Pass Beer
Measures
DIFFICULTIES FACE
ANTIS IN CONGRESS
Beer Possibiliies Forming Prime
Topic of Political Conversa*
tion in All Sections of Na=
tion.
Washington, Nov. 12. (/Pi—While
enthusiasts in and out of congres,. are
interpreting the immense Democratic
vote as forecasting beer by' Christ¬
mas, some sponsors of the Volstead
act modification join their opponents
in conceding that grave difficulties lie
in the wav
The r '" primary one, recognized by
drys, wets and everybody in between,
is that the session of congress which
next month is so short as to
make it possible for even a handful of
members to block anything they
‘
pose.
This lias not kept beer possibilties
from forming a prime topic of
ical conversations. In vapid sucres
•sion have come expressions from such
as Senators Borah (R., Idaho). Reed
(R., I'a.), Byrnes (D., S. C.),
son (D., Ark.), Bingham (R., Conn.)
and Representative McDuffie of Ala¬
bama, Democratic whip of the house.
Representative Oliver (D„ Ala.),
told newspapermen today he felt it
the “duty of every Democrat to -earry
out the party’s platform and pledges”
on prohibition as well as other things.
The Alabama Democrat said he had
“resented the slur made by President
Hoover in his St. Louis speech that
we southern Democrats would not
carry out our party’s platform.”
Oliver said it was his purpose to
“cooperate fully with the president
a ad vice president-elect in carrying
out the platform” and modification
planks.
The Alabaman is chairman of the
house appropriations sub-committee
which shapes the bill for the state,
commerce, labor and justice depart¬
ments, which includes the prohibition
unit.
Their statements have all but ob¬
scured from the continual sifting in
of election returns that have pushed
Franklin D. Roosevelt’s popular vote
above 21,000,000, for a plurality of
more than 6,000,000 over President
Hoover. Norman Thomas, Socialist,
topped other minor candidates easily
with over 500,000 votes in the half of
the nation’s precincts reporting.
The thoroughness of the Democrat¬
ic sweep has meant: A record Demo¬
cratic margin of over 200 in the next
house; a senate majority that prob¬
ably will last until 1939; a still-doubt¬
ful short-term senate with the decis¬
ion resting on the close Colorado con¬
test between Karl C. Schuyler, Repub
can, and Walter Walker, Democrat,
and the vote of Senator Shipstead,
Minnesota Farmer-Laborite.
With the exception of Borah, the
congressional leaders named have
voiced the opinion that beer legisla¬
tion should be considered and enacted
at the December session. Borah’s
comment that he does not expect beei
to prove an exception to the general
rule that eontroversal questions arc
not disposed of in short sessions was
concurred in not only by dry organi
zation leaders but even by a few 1 anti
prohibition chiefs.
Binkhain said “the only way drys
can defeat her legislation at the short
session is by filibuster” and added
that he was informed Borah would not
use these tactics. But even without
them, it was recognized on both sides
that the time left to the dying con¬
gress will be crowded with annual
appropriaion bills, economy efforts
and other essential legislation.
WOMAN IS ELECTED
STATE’S ATTORNEY
Trenton, Mo., Nov. 12. (/P)—A
former country school teacher is the
first woman to be elected a prosecut¬
ing attorney in Missouri.
Miss Agnes Mae Wilson of Tren¬
ton, a slender, attractive young wo¬
man, bucked the tide of Democratic
tfotes last Tuesday and won as the Re
publican nominee in Grundy county,
She ran on a “bone dry” platform,
with the main plank pledging strict
law enforcement.
Formerly a school teacher at Or
rick, Mo., Miss Wilson studied law
and began practicing with a Trenton
law firm in 1928. Later she served
as assistant prosecuting attorney and
then established her own office, in the
same rooms formerly occupied by Ar
thur M. Hyde, secretary of
ture.
------------
FOUR TON SAFE STOLEN
j Decatur, Ark. ,Nov. 12. l/P)—A four
ton safe literally was “lifted” from
j the today Bank by of six Decatur who just before dawn
| men used a winch
s equipped truck. The robbers escaped
I with the safe, containing almost $1,
'000 after binding a night watchman,
BRUNSWICK, CA., SUNDAY. NOV. 13. 1932.
Florida Beauty
|
i
Upholding an old custom, Mary
iFernandez, Spanish beauty from Tam
ri’ 11 - wo » ,h ‘‘ HHe of must beautiful
f| c‘shman at Florida State College for
! Women.
j
i
!
1
\
i
I
j
,
I Tells Court That Illicit Rela*
tions Between Wife anil Man
He Slew “Drove Him to Dis¬
traction.”
Mobile, Ala., Nov. 12. CP)—Ray¬
mond Dyson, Fnirhope contractor,
today told a jury trying him on charg¬
es of mudering H. M. Butler, Jr., Mo¬
bile society leader, that knowledge of
the illicit relations between his wife
and the slain man “drove me to dis¬
traction. Mrs!"
’ Dyson ' who yesterday ’ ‘ with
tear lined and choking sobs bared the
intimate details of her clandestine re¬
lations with Butler, walked to the
stand hand*and“k^sedlim with her husband, hT^aT squeezed his
aa down.
While Dyson related the intimate
dimmed eyes, sobbing occasionally.'
In clear tones Dvson told the jury
of hearing ~ gossip 1 concerning *’ his wife
and Butler when he returned from
college in 1930, and later how he con¬
fronted her with it and she admitted
indiscretions.
Dyson described the storms that
came after these admissions, tracing
his troubles through to the night of
August 22, when the state charges he
lured Butler to a hotel room iti which
he and his brother Sam, had register¬
ed under an assumed name.
“We made numerous attempts to
patch things up,” Dyson told the jury,
but added that knowledge of his
wife’s infidelity drove him to distrac¬
tion,'and finally into the meeting with
Butler in which the real estate man
was slain.
“Our home life had been happy un¬
til then,” he said with reference to
the admission of Mrs Dyson that, she
had been intimate with Butler.
!
;
i j ATTEMPT TO STEAL
j
EFFORTS \ M ADE Vvivr TO BREAK vi INTO
M vi ' w 11 v< i- ’’
tovu IONSOI m,' evp EM LOSIV nAvr.s LB
Atlanta, Nov. 12. CIV C. H. Mitch¬
ell, manager of the DuPont Powder
Company plant near Bolton, said to¬
day that an attempt had been made
about ten days ago to break into the
firm’s big dynamite magazine where
15 tons of the explosive was stored.
The announcement was made as the
Atlanta federation of trades and the
city club adopted resolutions con¬
demning recent bombing of Georgia
Power Company transmission lines
near here.
Mitchell said a shallow hole was
eut in one side of the dynamite
azine, but the would-be thieves gave
up the task. He said they broke into
the company garage nearby and
searched the armored trucks in which
the The explosive, executive is hauled. committee of the
federation of trades made public a
resolution condemning all acts of
ence ity which arid deploring “placed the type Atlanta of in
has a
j false Danger light to before life the well country.” property
as as
damage were cited in the city club
resolution which asked all Atlanta
civic organizations to unite in a cam¬
' paign against .such vandalism.
The club went on record as encour
j j aging the city, “the county use of and all state the facilities iri
(lending'such criminal.- and to urge
j 1 the Atlanta newspapers to conduct
sustained campaign against vandal
j ism.”
IN G. 0. P. STATES
Hearings Will Open al
ton on November IS
Charges From Pennsylvania
and Delaware
MANY COMPLAINTS
HAVE BEEN
i Republicans Charged With
I ing Paid Negroes Dollar Each
For Their Votes on Last
i day.
| Washington, Nov. 12. t/l’i Kepi-e
'sentative Heartslill Ragon, of Arkan¬
sas, chairman of the house campaign
: fund committee, today announced ........... that
an investigation into the Delaware
and eastern Pennsylvania elections i
Tuesday would open hero November
15.
Ragan said numerous complaints
had been filed with him on elections
in both states, particularly about Phil¬
adelphia. Apparently, he said, con¬
siderable evidence attempting to show
that votes wore purchased in Philadel¬
phia and Delaware also would be
soiled at the hearings.
Representative Black (1)., N. Y.)
headed a group of investigators who
gathered the evidence, Ragan said.
One investigator for the committee,
the Arkansan added, had
him that negroes in Delaware were
paid a dollar each for their votes and
that an investigator had been com
ladled to close the polls at once at one
place because of apparent irregulari¬
ties.
Investigators were sent into I he
two states before election day after
tho committee had been warned of
possible irregularities.
Reports on election day’ that depart
meat, of justice agents were cooperat
ing with committee agents were
nied by the department and the com
I ties mitteo of had its little to say of the aetivi
men.
Ragan said then, however, that lie
understood that Black had sent some
investigators into the hard coal Penn
I *y>vania regions. whether He added he of was he
j m,t /'^T, any one
I I 1 **® f ! ,ar isbu »’*•. Democratic
' Ktate chairman. °. ' £*> 11 '' informed chair-
1 ,na ". that he possessed tnfoe
mation mid lell that i 1m i attempts 111 I mtkld were ICO I*. I to i Zl he I . , , made .1 , L.
to influence (lie voters on last Tues¬
day.
The inquiry into (lie Delaware sit
nation not only will he directed into
the filial election of the congressmen
from that stale but into the
ies, Ragan said.
He added that in 1930 it had been
charged that Democrats were seeking
to buy votes in Delaware but. that the
complaints this year were that Re¬
publicans had sought to purchase
votes.
SURGEONS REMOVE
TWO EXTRA RIBS
IN GIRL’S BODY
Omaha, Neb., Nov. 12. l/P) -Carol
Nelson is one up on Adam. She lost
two ribs.
After surgeons had removed the
pair, Carol still had one more than
Adam, her’s were extra ribs.
Several months ago physicians at
St. Edward, Neb., Carol's home, were
puzzled when the 16-year-old girl’s
left arm and hand began to shrivel
and shrink. X-ray pictures wevualed
the two extra l ibs pressing on nerves
^ the doubters.
I Surgeons who removed them at a
! loeal hospital said the operation was
one (l f f our on record. She is
convalescing and soon will be permit¬
ted to return home to her parents and
nine older brothers and sisters.
LEWIS REPORTED
ILL AT CHICAGO
Chicago, Nov. 12. l/P)- United
States Senator James Hamilton Lew¬
is, Democrat, of Illinois, is in a hospi¬
tal.
He went there last Thursday, it
j was learned today, merely, as his phy
sician put it, “for a rest.”
j i well Despite the senator the fact did he didn’t his bit feel for very his
j party on election day. He left
j | home, the where polls to he vote had been only ill, to and find he
to
j wasn’t registered. So he found a
I publican friend, who “paired”
him and by abstaining from
the final vote count the same
1 if the senator had voted.
MESSENGER ROBBED
Little Rock, Ark., Nov. 12. t/P) A
young messenger and negro porter
the Peoples Trust Company were rob
bed of $1,000 which they were
to their rank from the Federal
serve branch bank today. Forced
! an automobile in the downtown
| tion, the two were driven into the
idential section, relieved of the
jey and released.
Noble Prize Winner
!
!
*
| John Gal.su (frlhy, British novelist
.and author of “The Forsyte Sage,’’
j .was awarded the 1932 Nobel prize ' for
literature. .. I
!
WAR DEBT NOTES
Messa K es Min __ S With
I of Obligations Given United;
! States Britain. By France and Greatj
|
; Paris, Nov. 12. I/Pl Notes dealing
I with payment of war debts already
j liuve been presented to the American j
j government by France and Great
j jhtr Britain, and it is reported that simi- j
communications may be expected
I from Italy and Belgium, but a
eign official assorted this morning j
that France had joined in colic '
no
tive action concerning the debt issiu . I
i j It was reported in London yester
I day that the French government, as.j
well - us i hose of -<• Italy and — 1 Belgium ..... had '• 1
(of been informed of the general natui e
the British note to Washington at
the time it was sent, but the spoke.x
man said today that the government
here is not aware of (lie contents oi
| rotary of State Stimson. The i
man declined to divulge its contents, j
j entirely hut he said isolated I AL .1 Claudel’s from i* t those L action of I* was
l . 4 .1 ....... ..... . , . any .1 t.l'
other government.
“We are maintaining contact in our
representatives in Washington.” said
i i Louis Germain-Alartin, the finance
minister, as he left a cabinet meeting
this afternoon, “but since, President |
Hoover will not In* in Washington tin- i
til Tuesday we cannot, expect a reply
to our communication before then.”
— ________— _ ......... - j
I I AW-IVlAIvNn All! AAAI/DID '
Lnli lilniiiliu
;
I
j
CEORCE KEITH SAYS EX< 'Ll -1
SIVE WHIST CLUB SHOULD
NOT HAVE ENTIRE POWER
By TOM O’NEIL
New York, Nov. 12. I/P) Wide |
spread criticism of the new rules for
contract bridge prompted a prediction
today by George Keith that future i
changes’would be made l.y a repre
senlative body instead of the exelu
sive whist dub.
He suggested, however, that those,
, ! , th<* new code would
1 ‘ ,0 * public I ’ ub,K ' service «“* V by accepting them j
for the time being at least.
Mr. Keith is chairman of the card
committee of the Knickerbocker Club i
and was among those called into con¬
sultation by the whist club of New ;
j York after it bad formulated the new j
code with the Portland club of London
and the commission francise du j
bridge. j
Ife is actively engaged in seeking
cooperation between the American
Bridge League and the United States
Bridge Association with a view to
regulation of championships and fu¬
ture changes in rules . j
For t he past three years,” he said,
‘I have done what I could to
izc sentiment in favor of the creation
of a representative law-making body.
“While it is true that the code eon
tains a number of English penalty j
ideas, such as the frequent rail for
new deal, which are not likely to he
popular here, the new laws as a while
are a great improvement upon the old j
ones, anil include many principles
which have been developed since
old code was issued.
"It is clubs certain and that the will vast major*-1 the
ity of players adopt
new laws and in order to promote
harmony and prevent confusion, those
! who disapprove of details will per¬
form a public service if they accept
them for the time being at least. Then
if they would express their individual¬
ity, they may become members of the
national law-making of formation body and either now di¬ in
progress
rectly or by representation take part
tn future revisions and modifica
| tions.”
HURRICANE HUS
l atest Reports of Disturbance
Come From Kingston Which
Show Additional Death Toll
From Storm
NEARING
TWO THOUSAND MARK
lake Hold of Prob
lem of Relief and Rehabilita¬
tion For Homeless and Desti
lute People.
Kingston, Jamaica* Nov. 12. (/P)—
Sixty-seven persons are Known to
have been killed aivd more than 1(1(1
injured when the hurricane
....... 1 . . hl 'iamage Cuna
'“ v 3" in
1 , i lick i I, • , I Cayman f '■> t • Brine I) Island 1.1... 1 and ...1 the A. I.
island of Cayman,
These estimates of the casualties
reported today by the island com
as soon as commuriication
with Kingston were restored
The hurricane struck the two islands
Tuesday night with a wind which
times blew a hundred miles an
or more.
All the dwellings! on Cayman Brae
Little Cayman were destroyed.
" 1 .' 1 additional fiuuf and medical sup
ra yi;(?n l!nil , 0ayman and
(layman form the group known
the Cayman Inlands about 200
i,cs northwest of Jamaica. Grand
"Small, Hie largest, is about .1(1 miles
R aml “ miles wide.
Havana, Culm, Nov. 12. f/P)-—Cen
Cuba’s hurricajic dead was neat’
2,000 mark today as military and
a11ifiy'i 1 ilies took hold
,1 "' problem of nelief and i-ehabili
. I" thousands; and
*" n 1 ' of homeless
But ii was not neoesxay to figure th*
„ coast town .Santa Cru
ot - z
el Bur in these plains, for the tidal'
wave that followed; the storm left ifc
for habitation; It may never bfX
rebuilt The on the sandy shore.
town presented a picture of
pitiful desolation. 1( was nothing
but a shambles and where 3,500 per
bail lived *,,,* «„, y
workers, and a few city
“IK Mis.
Here and there rqse the smoke of a
funeral _ since it became
pyre, nec¬
to burn boduf. The grave dig¬
could not bpry th> dead fast
for the saiularv safety of the
who remained on guard,
i'apt. Frederieo Tomeu on bis
here said 8(10 bodies were buried
and Thursday, but erema
was ordered when every pile of
disclosed further dead.
The official estimates of the dead in
H,orm ros< ' t0 L700 during the
r ht, but th<' exact number may nev
be known, as many in Santa Cruz
probably carried to sea by the
tidal waters.
Cheered by reports from Havana
governmental agencies were per-*
relief plans rapidly, local au
kies cooperated with physicians
avert epidemic, the dangerous aft¬
of disaster.
The last relief train from Santa
arrived around midnight, bring¬
ing in 150 refugees, most of whom
wounds. This arrival lifted the
casualties in Oainagujy along
1,000.
«-'maguey province bore !c 1 >-,int
th, ‘ wmd« and waves. Everywhere
and banana plantations wore
and mills damaged or destroy
T
ENT
NORTH DAKOTA SOLON HECEIV
ED SLIGHT INJURIES NEAR
ST. PAUL SATURDAY
St. Paul, Nov. 12. l/P)- Senator
Gerald P. N.ve, of North Dakota was
brought to a hospital today with in
juries suffered when his automobile
on a sharp curve near Hud
son, Wis. Physicians said he was not
seriously injured.
He was taken t< the X-ray room,
however, to determine the exact ex¬
of his hurts.
With David . Horliek, of Fargo, who
accompanying him to Chicago,
Senator Nye was picked out of the
wreckage of his car by a passing mu
and taken to Hudson, two miles
where he was injured.
A physician gave him first aid and
then brought him here.
Horliek was cut and hruiied. Ha
was given first aid treatment.
Senator Nye’s automobile was dam¬
aged badly.
Nye suffered cuts on bis back, ona
on his head, one on his hand, and ex¬
tensive bruises.
He said he was “knocked out for a
moment” after his car skidded as id
rounded a curve. He became uncon¬
scious at Hudson but recovered qutcklJ!
and then came on to St. Paul. i
PRICE FIVE CENTS