The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 28, 1928, Page 7

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SMUT _TILUTUUU UT tt Leen [aughters of thegk Shades ‘ot Famous American War Horses Bryan, Mark Hanna and Roosevelt Stomp’ Once More in Political Halls 2 As Their Brilliant Daughters : Ate Boomed to ‘Carry on Battles of Their Fathers go mv ccttre cece ; ' uf = => = = = = = = => = => = = => = = SE: ES =. os i = T has taken modera ience to confirm the observation tha in Washing jety. e= Pea appro my oan me 7 os vg lt liter nets uw | Birones nee and sons ; of all young girls when she and some Science now tells us that daughters are much more likely to crony took an automobile ride “way to —— follow in their fathers’ footsteps than are sons, and that if a father” Baltimore.” “Sister” didn't care = = haé a son and a daughter he should plan on taking the girl into business - much of her ankle she showed == with him ri the boy. : : photographed entering or leaving a a In the first place, because of this natural affinity between father and © White House carriage. And even daughter, the father spends when “Sister” became Mrs. more time with his daughter, \ Nicholas Longworth, and the ares his, interests . scandalized mamas prophesied = top wir sn aie the dignity ning a matron, Sires father and gon is estab- a is! 5 . RS. NICHOLAS LONG- ality his: interests, his While every woman even . *, ‘g memerizt ie ated dh 'che ones te Eoagwei anid dig Sut te amen 02 such Ube ber futher ple,” say the social as she can fad. And if she their false teeth for an invitation to one of doesn't. marry, Alice's famous Sunday night suppers. e for herself as similar to her father’s as possible. Pen =... Be an «yoy tongue in the cheek or not, = eta tal’ leaders, have’ descended of their three ve daughters, who will in the steps of their fathers in * thid year of national elections. — RUTH HANNA McCORMICK, daughter of the “lic poral Mark Hansa ‘and widow of: the late of congressman-at-large district. f the late. Wijliam Jenni eee pte ci ees Alice Roosevelt istinguished daughter of a distinguished < en Renee (eat ieee ee edhe of tan Fives ol = Reepresestativen, while running for po ‘ofice herelf, will, during the = : coming conpeien, comhees bee poate] selon, ellsences foce wich = = "* "And if a turn of the political wheel should bring “Nick £ : = = the i secnination for president. sure aig that Teddy's - ? = = ter ‘& real power'to’be reckoned with by the leaders of the Mia Alice Restate Leapeagh, cod deathics = = pasty. Sry lute “= = = those ‘and here, are—three illustrious fathers, naliiiaa phn shine es sl Ee cata sl uno ow Saf sol rng 2d ajous , 22 ay defect Pag — individual beand of sa “Eels for names wants “Tears” avon cd, wy be bore Familias geal me ae intimates, It was she who, cost the first Mri, Theodore Roose- : = velt’s life.on February $2, § » She was 16 when her father went IE name of Ruth Hanna McCormick is invariably a to the White House, and fair od enacted sn ame Mrs, Ruth Bryan Oven. . . . Gifted with her coupled with that of Alice orth, are ee after she was born, and Roosevelt was a person - father’s eloquence, energy and _statesmanship, the same type, Mrs. is pos- = of and much more than “a mere housewife and mother" to she will try again for a seat in Congress. He 8 RS eae ot ee than a? pf te lay hy: tea Alcs Linge Peep : s 3 have very oe In Roosevelt's famous:book of letters to his he ends many Alice Roosevelt Longworth knows i friends, excluding those periods when, due to two vivid = = 8 ive, Hoses vecortion,.« site Cast 8 Same sigtieg potestitt,.ce in’ ington are said to seek her hold her sense nck sapncielly Stnndly sine. bis 4 ‘97, ss like-with gaa te t opitions in respect. Mar Fg pada, Pies é hed is e "Sister behaved well. and 1: was proud of hes,” indicating that The of ” making Won Help, went Wat ° = & frequent tothe t was joer how “sister” would behave. Me erect, ey aise! cee ton, ostensibly as a senator, but really as one of i 4 Te was not a perfect record 40 far as the standard of the was See, tare oes oF Se De patent political forces in the capital. —s for, youn lion the times decreed. publican but she made it i His Ruth was just 17 then, and her dad i smoked about the first cigaret ever publicly smoked by any _ that she would have none of this job. She ber. - found plenty of work for her to do in the famous:“Little : 6 ” : (Copyright, 1928, NBA Magazine) : Stes Hal . e NHN AA R= AUT ARAL GC " “i ALE TTT ‘aters Medill Mrs. McCort White House,” the old Cameron Club, where Hanna's cook, Maggie, served her famous hash and 5 breakfasts at which the nation’s political destinies were said to be settled. ; Mrs. Hanna refused to rise before noon, 20 daughter Ruth Lorre 4 ven eles fl ies - show whether daughter Rut! ‘ially rel d or at these carly risings, but if she did she now realizes that her future was largely wrought over Maggie 's appetizing hash as she listened to the nation’s “best minds” discuss and decide this or that political issue. i : But daughter Ruth's duties did not end with pouring coffee and urging Mark Hanna's guests to have mere hash or pancakes; she was his office assistant, too. But her job was not one of parental aire entirely. She “lo 's office” herself. The “father fixation” was working, and she was patterning her own life after her eesti ee eae a ler political career really began when she was 16 and had to “‘pinch hit” for her father from the rear platform of a McKinley campaign train which was tour- ing ibe ety pee cae ate ata esta ae where ls of people were congres . y ©! them had driven over Git roads for cir leaving before dawn in order to hear Mark Hanna speak. Hanna went to the rear platform, o| his meyth, but no woyd came forth, He had spoken so much his voice was utterly gone. With no hesitation, his slight little daughter, who had typed and re-typed and heard him give the speech dozeas of times, stepped into the breach and addressed the as- sembled citizens. IE fact that political leaders either detest or love Mark Hanna's daughter, proves McCormick detests Governor Len Small of Illinois and makes no. bones of telling him and the world how detestable she thinks him. “If that man is a candidate for re-election I will run myself,” she said after Small’s last election. There was no pride in that statement. Ruth McCormick felt, and many another politician was sure that, if she ran, she would doubtless be First Lady of Illinois. But evidently Ruth McCormick decided it was politically better to run for Sig (een from Illinois, the seat which her bus- band, Medill McCormick, held for so many years before he was senator. It is said that she has her heart set on a seat in the Senate. Mrs. McCormick is against the World Court, is a member of the ‘Women’s Trade Union League, an ardent champion of the worklag woman. She hates bunk in its many insidious disguises. She has three children, ranging from 16 to 5, and says, “It's ab- surd to say that any woman is ‘free’; if the baby’s sick, a woman must and will choose to stay home, and that spoils that argument.” has preached, electionee: i cows, camped out, ee rowed, played tennis and baseball, and was engaged to Medill mick from the time she was 14. IHERE’S another Ruth who aspires to the ing of a politically prominent father This is Mrs Oe da of the late William Jennings Bryan. She is gifted with hér iy ip and insistence on sticking to her side ~OAUHUTTSURUUOSUAEAS AA AAA UN AAET OV RELAIS cOLOE ARIE AEA opt Tervvverevevevyevyyrervrvecrrvrverv iri Vreven vtrvrr viii vr ty Teter Perepemenmteamaseenne sor mor , ‘ cee

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