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LINDBERGH BABY

MEN AND DOGS GUARD HOME.

EVERY PRECAUTION BEING

taken

NEW YORK, September 24

Two uniformed nurses and a telegraph boy, bearing scores of messages c-f congratulation, are the only persons allowed to pass through the great iron gates of the home at Englewood, New Jersey, of Mrs Dwight Morrow, mother of Mrs Lindbergh, where another son was born this morning to the world’s most tragically bereaved mother.

Tli© house is. closely. .guarded by specially employed watchmen. Two great police dogs are also roving the grounds to keep away intruders. The Lindberghs are planning to return to their own home at Hopewell when the baby is a few weeks old. .Guardis will! then be employed to watch tliia child day and night. The announcement that the mother and child were doing well allayed nation-wid'e anxiety lest the tragedy to Mrs Lindbergh’s first born might rob her of her second.

The baby was born rather earlier than, was expected 1 .

Only yesterday Colonel Lindbergh left hi.s wife’s side for the first time since little Charles was found murdered apart frdm Iris enforced attendance at the trial of Curtis.

He went to Newark Aerodrome to test a new monoplane for a firm for which he acts ais technical adviser. H© was in the a.ir nearly ian hour. All his former enthusiasm had returned,, and reporters with whom he chatted' could hardly recognise in him the bowed, brief-stricken parent they lnul seen follow his child to the crematorium.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19320927.2.76

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 27 September 1932, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
246

LINDBERGH BABY Hokitika Guardian, 27 September 1932, Page 6

LINDBERGH BABY Hokitika Guardian, 27 September 1932, Page 6

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