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Show Latest Photo of Lindbergh Baby " 1j ; i 1 . , ,V I r 'U t ') V? 11 ; ' 1 J;A v . ' ' " l - V V A , I t VV , : r v " v X ; i, vV v,y - v'V-v V- ' tSiA; v' W t . " v ' X - - I X' Vk 1 $ . .-. v-- VJ kidnapers of her son and broadcast through the press of the nation. In it she said: "To the kidnaper of the Lindbergh baby : "Here is a heartbroken appeal direct' di-rect' from the mother of the child you stole. "The baby has been sick and its recovery re-covery may depend on the treatment It gets from you. You must be especially espe-cially careful about the diet. "Mrs. Lindbergh issued to the press today the strict diet she has been following fol-lowing since the baby fell ill. She did this in the hope you might read this story and that there was some spark of humanity even in the heart of a baby thief. "Here is the diet, accompanied by the fervent prayer of a grieving mother: "One quart of milk during the day. "Three tablespoons of cooked cereal morning and night. "One yolk of egg daily. "One baked potato or rice once a day. "Two tablespoons of stewed fruit daily. "Half a cup of orange juice on waking. wak-ing. "Half a cup of prune juice after the afternoon nap. "And fourteen drops of medicine called viosterol during the day. "That's all, kidnaper of the Lindbergh Lind-bergh baliy. That's what the baby's mother wants you to give the hoy. Follow her request and you may in some small part redeem yourself in the eyes (if a contemptuous world." The fathers of the nation in spirit tramped witli Colonel Lindbergh the woods about the large estate, searching search-ing with hi in for clews that would lead to the recovery of the stolen child. In spirit they repeated his prayers and his curses. To the mothers moth-ers of the nation the abduction was a real, a personal tragedy. Not one of .them but felt with Anne Morrow Lind- I first activity in trying to run to earth the criminals was, of course, on the part of local police near the Lindbergh Lind-bergh home in New Jersey. Through the agency of the teletype the alarm reached the police of New York, Newark, Jersey City, Elizabeth, Camden, and Philadelphia within a few minutes of the receipt of the first news at Trenton. All of them quickly swung into action, as did the New York and Pennsylvania state police. Orders were flashed to every precinct pre-cinct by the police telegraph system to be on the alert for suspicious cars, while the new police radio station WPEG flashed word to the short wave station of the patrolling detective cars to Join in the watch. Similar steps, though on a smaller scale, were being repeated simultaneously simultane-ously in every city for many miles around the Lindbergh home. Posses of motorcycle and bandit squad policemen police-men from Philadelphia, Pa., and New Jersey state troopers, clamped down a heavy guard on every bridge over the Delaware river. But the circle of activity soon widened wid-ened beyond state borders! Within a few hours the news reached Washington, Wash-ington, the full co-operation of the federal government in hunting down the kidnapers was oR'ered to the New Jersey state authorities. Attorney-General Attorney-General William D. Mitchell hurried to the White House for a conference with President Hoover and immediately immedi-ately afterwards the Department of Justice announced that every agency of the department would co-operate to the utmost with the state authorities. authori-ties. Following a second conference between be-tween the President and his attorney-general, attorney-general, it was announced that the government had placed its prohibition enforcement ollicers as well as all of the other department of justice agents on the case. All agents in the eastern section of the country, acting under i direct orders from the President, |