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VOL. 1. NO. 25.
HUERTA rWW
TMTEIS
TO DELO
ELECTION
Fiery President Says He Will Dis
solve Congress Un less Chamber
of Deputies Confirms Appoint
ment of Minister of Instruction.
Recall of Felix Diaz Is Regarded
as Shrewd Political Move to
Put Himself Back in Chair.
Stormy Session Is Probable.
Special Cable to The American.
MEXICO CITY, Sept. 20.—Presi
dent Huerta to-day threatened to dis
solve Congress and postpone the na
tional election unless the Chamber of
Deputies confirmed his appointment
of Senor Tamariz to the Ministry, of
Public Instruction.
In a message Huerta declared that
he had reforms in mind for the en
lightenment of the people, and he felt
confident that Tamariz is better suit
ed than any other man to carry them
out.
Tin* recall of Felix Diaz was de
viated to be a shrewd political move
on Huerta’s part. It is reported that
Huerta will appoint Diaz Foreign
Minister to succeed Senor Gamboa.
l rider the Constitution a President
of Mexico can not succeed himself.
If Diaz is appointed Foreign Minis
ter and Huerta resigns to be a can
didate for re-election, Diaz would
succeed to the President’s chair in
the interim.
Consequently Diaz could not be
elected President because he could
not legally succeed himself. On the
c»ther hand, Huerta could be elected
and could constlutionally take his
place in the National Palace.
A stormy session of the Catholic
party is looked for to-morrow, when
its convention will be held here.
Americans in Mexico
Halt U. S. Intervention.
By JONATHAN WINFIELD.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—" Come
home."
So said President Wilson to about
46,000 Americans in Mexico a few
weeks ago.
"All right."
This was the answer of about 30,-
000, and they at once left the land of
sands and sombreros for the States.
“No." replied 10,000-odd Americans
with stubbornness in their make-up
and their money in Mexican invest
ments; “we won’t come home until
you tell us why we should.”
And there you have one of the odd
est little problems that a nation ever
had to face. It is a problem that
causes President Wilson to think ills
brow into worried furrows and take
frequent rests on the golf links.
It is a problem that causes Secre
tary Bryan to look bwk on old po
litical battles as chiles play and go
out on the Chautauqua circuit for re
laxation and rest. It is a problem
that also baffles John Bassett Moore,
sage counselor of the State Depart
ment.
Congress Dodges Issue.
Congress? Why. Congress has
taken one or two frightened glances
at the problem and gone back to tar
iff .inti currency legislation with vis
fab- . lief and alacrity. Congress has
gone just far enough into the problem
' •(. < onvince herself that it is one to r.e
i. \--n up only after studious coflsid
n-.'.’.n-n. ■••nd then handled only with
kid gloves.
Ar Government official, any army
or n 'Vol officer, any foreign diplomat,
:.d in short anyone who has given
th<- subject serious thought and is
competent to speak, will tell you that
jlioae lO’OOO contrary Americans who
I. . ■ i ted to stay in Mexico in the
f ; -e of the presidential request have
furnished the United States with a
problem so baffling as to discourage
efforts of its solution.
And here is the reason why: As
long as Americans remain in Mexico
the United States practically is pow
erless to take any action that might
Invite Mexico to war or even cause
a banditti outbreak. As long as there
are Americans on Mexican soil tne
hands of the United States are tied.
Huerta may flaunt sassy diplomatic
words in the face of President Wd
son and cause his Minister, Gambn.
to frame caustic notes. Huerta may
mobilize the Mexican Army, arouse
Continued on Page 6, Column 6.
Wedded 3 Weeks:
Keeps Divorce Diary
Bride Shows Record of Cpnnubia!
Infelicity Which She Began
Shortly After Marriage.
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 20.—Mrs. Charles
Hufschmidt. formerly Miss Margaret
Ryan, for several years cashier at
loading hotels, said to-day that three
weeks after her marriage, in anticipa
tion of being compelled to sue for di
vorce. she began keeping a diary to
be used as evidence against her hus
band. He is a soda water manufac
turer In East St. Louis. Her divorce
petition was filed recently.
The first entry in the diary is dated
February 24 of this year and. accuses
her husband of nagging and fault
finding. Later entries relate that he
stayed out late at night without giv
ing excuses, and that on June 30 he
seized from the supper table a steak
she had cooked and threw it at her ■
Wealthy Rag Picker
Seeks Title as Count
Italian, Who Made Fortune in Brook
lyn, Now Claims Noble
Lineage,
NEW YORK, Sept. 20.—Vincenzo
D' Ambrosio, of R 4 Navy street, Brook
lyn. who has made a fortune in the
rag picking business since he came
from Italy when 20 years old 40 years
ago, has applied to the King of Italy
for the title of count, claiming that
his family Is of noble lineage and
has been traced back 700 years.
Directly after arriving In this coun
try he started picking rags in the
neighborhood of the Brooklyn Navy
Yard and has outstripped. It Is said,
all his competitors in th** country at
the job. He branched out to Manhat
tan and employed an army of labor
ers. Now that he has enough wealth
to support a noble title, he wants |
one.
‘Pure City’ Blamed I
For Luring of Girls
Philadelphia Coroner Declares More
Go Astray Than Did Under
Old Conditions.
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 20.—De
claring that more young girls are
being misled under the so-called
“pure city” than ever in the history
of the tolerated Tenderloin, Coroner
Arthur Sellers demanded that the po
lice act. He said that an organized
gang maintains houses in the residen
tial section, to which young girls are
lured, afterward being sent on the
streets as white slaves.
The Coroner's declaration came fol
lowing an Investigation of the death
from an Illegal operation of Miss
Meredith Dukes, of Bishopville, Md„
at the hands of an alleged gang of
malpractitioners.
Archbishop Attacks
Bare-Legged Drama
Church Dignitary Declares Theater
Is ‘Debauching Influence Upon
the Public.’
ST. LOUIS. Sept. 20.—1 n condemn
ing what he pictured as “a criminal
conspiracy to flood the modern world
with a tidal wave of profanity, ob
scenity and vulgarity,” Archbishop
Glennon, in an address to-day, de
nounced the theater as a “debauching
influence upon the public.’’
“There is a theatrical junta which
appears to want to educate the public
downward,’’ he said.
“About the grandeur of grand opera
I have doubts. There are <*ood produc
tions for good people and productions
not so good for those who are less
good. Do nt be trapped by bare
faced. bare-legged people."
Evelyn Thaw’s Own
Story of Her Real Life
This woman, perhaps the most widely known in the ? j
‘ world, and the central figure in history’s most remarkable; I
< romance and tragedy, will tell her story in her own words in S < |
Next Sunday’s American
It-is a story that no one can afford to miss, and it will ; ■
j be superbly illustrated.
ORDER FROM YOUR DEALER TODAY| i
Or call up 'he Circulation Department
of the Sunday American— MAlN 100
'ZZZZ
Ini —3
SUNDAY ” AMERICAN
Jopyrigtit. 1313. by
The Georgian Company
SULZER NEAR
COLLAPSE 15
BATTLE WHS
Governor, However, Feels Sure
He Will Be Acquitted by
Impeachment Court.
ENEMIES ARE JUBILANT
Recognition of Glynn as Legal
Acting Executive Regarded
as Sign of Weakening.
ALBANY, N. Y.. Sept. 20.—William
Sulzer, the impeached Governor of
New York, was reported to-day to be
on the verge of a physical collapse.
Worry over the bitter political fight
which Tammany Hall is waging
against him, coupled with* anxiety
over the outcome of the impeachment
trial, caused the Governor’s health to
break.
A close friend of the executive de
clared to-day that there is no truth
in reports that Mr. Sulzer will re
sign under fire. This person, who in
timated strongly that he spoke for the
Governor, said that Mr. Sulzer feels
sure that the impeachment court will
acquit him of the “high crimes and
misdemeanors” charged against him
Governor Sulzer believes that his
foes in the Senate lack fifteen votes
<>f the number necessary to find him
guilty.
It is learned that the Governor
wrote a lung statement to Judge D.
!<’ady Herrick, his chief counsel, re
i fusing to allow him to give it out.
As a result of Mr. Sulzer’s acknowl-
I edgement of Lieutenant Governor
I Glynn as the legal acting Governor.
' the anti-Sulzer Legislators were ju-
I bllant. They declared thKt Mr. Sulzer
is fast weakening ami that if It were
not for the support of Mrs. Sulzer and
his lawyers the Governor would not
undertake to fight against his politi
cal adversaries
Heart Barometer
Now Used in London
Electro-Cardiograph Automatically
Measures and Records Waves
Sent by Each Beat.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 20. —A wonderful
heart barometer is being used suc
cessfully In a London hospital. It is
technically known as an "electro
cardiograph," and automatically
measures and records waves set up by
each heart-beat. It is useful In diag
nosing diseases of the heart and also
in Indicating the effect on the heart
of different drugs.
The cardiograph is elects-lcally con
nected with two baths filled with salt
water, in which the patient places his
right foot and left hand.
Only Radium in
West Canada Stolen
Particle Worth $1,500 Is Taken From
Drawer in Office of
Physician.
VANCOUVER, B. C.. Sept. 20.—The
only particle of radium in Western
Canada was stolen from Dr. De Ver
teuil. a madical practitioner, who after
Treating a patient in his consulting
loom, left the drawer containing the
radium open while he loft the room
for a moment with the patient. The
radium, which is worth $1,500, and
which is quite dangerous to handle,
was abstracted in his absence.
ATLANTA, GA.. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1913
Seizes Pew as Pay
For Grocery Bill
S Creditor Who Couldn't Got Cash j
Takes Seat in Synagogue
Instead.
NEWARK. N. J., Sept. 30.—T0 sat- j
I I isfy a judgment for an unpaid cheese
I i bill obtained against John Kirchman.
a grocer of 34 Jackson street, two ,
j pews in the Synagogue of the Con- ;
! gregation Anshe Russia have been
levied upon.
In the papers of the suit ft is stated I
that Kirchman owes the Columbia ,
Cheese Company, of 190 Ferry street, j
$63 for merchandise. It is alleged I
. that the executors of the judgment '
did not find enough in the defendant's j
store to cover the judgment. It was I
• learned that Kltchman had two pews I
in the Synagogue valued at SSOO and I
Sheriff s officers attached them
Human Ashes Made
Into ‘Life’ Picture.
, Denver Artist Says This Is Good
Way to Perpetuate Memory
of Relation.
DENVI'TR. Sept. 30—A picture male!
, from human ashes is the curious i
> handiwork of Myron A. Root. Th.
picture is 24 by 36 inches in size.
Root has called his picture “T::o
i Awakening.” It portrays a young
woman awakening from tTie death
sleep.
. The picture will be off* red tn th<
. City Park Museum. Il was mad* 3
I from the ashes of a cremated young
] woman.
Root suggests that persons having
; dead relatives should have their aihe*
. rriade into pictures of them instead of
i putting them in a grave or a vault.
'Maxixe Momente'
To Succeed Tango
New Dance Seen at Mrs. Clarence
Moore’s Affair Pronounced Ex
tremely Graceful.
NEW YORK, Sept. 20—“Maxixe
, momente" is the name of n new dance
| launched in society to-night. It had
its premiere at the dance given by
Mrs. Clarence Moore at Prides
Crossing. Mass., and its real or confi
dently expects it to supersede the
tango, turkey trot and other terpsl
chorean creations of the past year.
L Many members of the cottage set
tlement at Newport were among the
, simple in movemnt. embodying the
guests. The new dance Is extremely
principal steps of the tango and Pa
risian maxixe.
Balkan Starvation
Reported by Miles
Retired General Writes of Untold
Suffering Among Bulgarians Fol
lowing War of Allies.
ASHINGTON. Sept, 20.—General
Nelson A. Miles, retired, by letter
confirms reports of suffering in the
Balkans.
"Starvation, inadequate hospital
facilities and absence of medical
stores are among the calamities the
Bulgarian people ate facing," wrote
Genet-al Mlles. "I have seen 4.000
wounded men lying without shelter
from the sun.or rain."
General MIleY letter was Incor
porated in an appeal for funds is
sued by the American Red Cross.
Experts to Examine
City's Candidates
Tests Will ge Made of Their Effi
ciency in Matters of
, Government.
I
PITTSBURG, PA., Sept. 20.—Effl-|
ciency in municipal government will
go so far here as to import experts to,
< scrutinize the qualifications of the)
S candidates for Mayor. Thomas Li
S Howell, a wealthy retired mining en- 1
) gineer, is arranging to invite noted,
j experts from New York, Chicago and |
> Philadelphia to examine the candi-1
! dates on their qualifications.
The two candidates are Joseph G. j
’ Armstrong, Republican, and Stephen
' G. Porter, Progressive.
New Comet Located
By Lick Scientists
Wanderer in Constellation Lynx Dis
covered by Minister Is Invisible
to Naked Eye.
SAN JOSE. CAL., Sept. 20.—A new
comet, invisible to the naked eye, has
been located in the northeastern
heavens by :hp astronomers at Lick
Observatory on Mount Hamilton. It
is in the constellation I.vnx and was
fir nt discovered by the Rev. Joel Met
calf, at South Hero. Vt.. who tele
graphed th? Lick astronomers asking
them to confirm his discovery.
The cornet rise* about midnight, i
Astronomers say it n ■ n* ver beconn 1
! vi-ible io the naked eye. j
SEAT IN FHSTF.
SEEMS SMITH'S
FORTH®
Foes Fail to Develop Any Serious
Opposition Against Atlantan
Up to Present Time.
JOE BROWN KEEPING QUIET
Governor Slaton Apparently Is
Satisfied With His Position.
Will Not Ask for Toga.
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
I he impression is becoming mor >
, and more firmly fixed throughout j
• reorgia that Senator Hoke Smith is ■
I to have no opposition for re-election !
I to the United States Senate.
| Certainly, If opposition Is brewing. ]
| ’t has been k. pt amazingly quiet so !
| far, and x no authoritative hint of tti
I has < scaped from any quarter direct
ly concerned.
To be sure, there ar? those in
Georgia, and quite a respectable com
pany of them, who have not yet
learned to love Hoke Smith, and who |
never maj. Thf-re are thosp? wno
would enjoy nothing so much as see- '
mg the junior Senator stripped of h *
toga and relegated to (he darkest
shades, or whatever it is, of puhlh
life. *
Whether they are destined to m e
that performance enacted is highly
probh matical, however, anti th
j doubt in favor of the Senator is wa\-
, ing bigger and more impressive ev**rv
da \.
Th? truth of the matter is. the
opposition to Senator Smith n alizee I
tha the accomplishment of his de- I
feat, if possible In any event, will b* !
an undertaking pregnant with ex - j
tr« me difficulty
Friends Still Enthusiastic.
Th» Senator has his enemies
throughout Georgia, always has hil
at!<i always will have, perhaps. At
ih< >ame time his frlr-nd<» are appar
ently as numerous as eve - , and quite
as enthusiastically for him.
Moreover, he is an undisputed lead
er in th? Senate as it is organised
to-day. and wields a far-re<u?hing ini
potent influence that can not bp ra
tionally discounted
If the impression prevailed at one
time that the Senator damaged him
self particularly in Georgia by reason
of th? part he played in the reor
ganization of th? United States Sen
.■it«- l ist spring, that impression seems
i to have been thoroughly dissipated.
’true enough, the Senator, in hand
ling the always delicate and vexing
question of Tmlpral patronage, man
aged to “get in bad" with divers and I
sundry political leaders of one so»-t
and another hither and yon through- I
out Georgia, but it does not appe.tr I
that he has managed to “gpt in bad” I
enough, at that, to encourage his no- I
litcal opponents In the belief that 1
an avalanche might be started guar
ante»-d to overwhelm the Senator.
While the Senator’s part in the re
organization of the Senate of the
Unltesl States undoubtedly brought
forth a number of pained and mildly
astonished peculations of protest
hero and there, it appears to b
agreed now that that part was per
fectly logical an<l in line with th» 3
-nator’s professed political Ideals
and that, therefore, he is not to hr
censured for It.
Few Panels Broken.
Moreover, the Senator’s disposition ,
of the problems of patronage coming
to his attention, while at times dii«-
tres lng to him and distasteful is
matters to he passed U’on. seems t
have demolished few, if any, panels >r.
his pretty well set up politic;)!
fences, and hence the wind blows f<; r !
enough in that quarter.
Opposition to Senator Smith j,as .
been anthipated from two quarters,
if it developed at all.
Rumor has had it persistently
• nough that former Governor Joseph
M. Blown cherishes Senatorial am
bitions. And It is a fact th >t the
former Chief Magistrate has receive
since his retirement from the execu
tive office hundreds of lett< rs urg
ing him to make the race against I
$ Senator Smith.
| If "Little Jo?” should hearken to
these appeals, and as to that he has
indicated nothing whatever, either by
* word of mouth or written document
4 that anybody knows of. there is no
j sort of doubt that th? subseqm nt pro
[ ceedings would be thrilling and ex-
• t iting enough to satisfy the most ex
t acting.
Brown Boom Languishes.
j But of late the Broun Senatorial
| boom has seemyd to languish. Th<
•femur Governor is taking life easily
I and comfortable, dividing his time
: unostentatiously between his home in
Marietta and his farm in Cherokee
i-County if he is figuring upon the
I Senatorial proposition from any an
gle, he is keeping hiR figures mighty
dark: if he is sawing much wood, he
also is saying nothing.
Tiie Brown boom thus tentatively,
if not conclusively, disposed of. those
who still would see opposition to Sen
ator Smith have turned their eyes in
the din t tion of Governor Slaton.
There has not been much comfort
to them forthcoming front that quar
ter.
Governor Slaton barely has got his
guia rn.itorial bonn» on straight, an 1
so far he likes the looks of it far
too well to let it be suspected that he
thinks a Senatorial toga might be
even more iNcoming to his style of po
litical make-up.
Besides, under an unwritten and
rar h nroken law of• Dernoctacy m
Georgia th» (Jovtinvr is .sun- to h«
awarded a second term in the Gov
ernorship. if io wlslu .*• it. without
$ pposltion. and Gierefi.it- John Ma -
i shall Sir »n should \mrrv about
thing'- S-’natoi’iai now.idavs, oi
American Boy Wins Golf Title
Francis Ouimet Is Champion!
Defeats Two Veteran Britons
Francis Ouimet, the youthful American amateur, who won |
the nation's highest goltiug honors by defeating the famous Eng
lish professionals, Harry Vardon and Edward Kay.
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Massachusetts Youth Cool Against Great I larry
Vardon and Kay and Is Kasy Victor.
BROOKLINE, MASS., Sept. 20.—1
! Francis Ouimet, aged 20. former cal- I
I die and present Massachusetts ama-|
i teur <'hampion. to-day won th** nine
| toenth annual open golf championship ,
| of the United States with surprising
i<ase at the Brooklyn Country Club
His medal play total for 18 holes w is
72 to 77 for Barry Vardon. of Eng
land, and 78 for Edward Ray. also of
England.
It was thought possible that Oui
met, who was raised on the edge of
the course, ip i r the sixteenth to?,
might end or tie for second place, but
not even the most sanguine dared
whisper a lead of fiv* strokes for him
over the five times winner of the
British open, the best known plap-r
in the world.
Going out there was nothing to
choose between them, all lalng 38 to
the turn. Coming In. however, ‘he
youthful American played a marv 1-
ous game, fairly sweeping the two
English stars off their feet and win
ning in comparatively easy fashion.
From the tenth hole, where Ouimet
gained a stroke on his two rivals, the
English golfers began to realise that
in this American boy Ouimet th?y
had met their equals if not their mas
ter. Ouimet played surely, steadily,
without a trace of real nervousness.
The United S‘at( s Golf Association;
saved the *.'<•••» offered «s tir*t prize
money through Ouimet’s victory as
|he is an am* cur. H. aa • aw rded
! a medal and his 'duo. the Wood! in 1.
lof Boston, will get the championship I
• up to be b« Id f* r on* year.
omm. t is the first American ama-
. .1
I tour to win the national open title.
I Four years ago ‘‘Chick” Evans too*;
t open honor, which never
I attracts anything like as strong .• ■
field .is the national oi»eh, and t i ■
'season it was skimpier than usual.
Ouimet’s caddie, Eddie Laurie, g .
a contribution of $25 immediately aft
er the play was over, and Vardon re- ;
reived $l5O for second place and Riy
Sl’iO fur third place.
‘Ornis Dip' Latest
Os the Bird Dances
Partners May Be Changed at Fancy
of Men. and Everybody Looks
Satisfied.
WASHINGTON, Sept 20. Bird
dances, such as the “ornis dtp.” orig
inated by .Miss Eleanor Wilson at
Cornish, promises to be the fashion
here this winter. Miss Katherine
Britton and Miss Margaret Britton,
who have returned here for the sea
son. are dancing the “bluebird dip.”
named after the favorite pet of Miss
Margaret Britton.
One of the peculiarities of this new
dance is that if one of the men
'lancers fancies the partner of an- '
I other man he can stop in the middle I
of the dance, leave his partner ami '
lake the other mans, and both the
deserte*! man and maid have to look
1 pleased This exchange, however, has
to take place during the dip and at
no other tim< of the dam ,
PRICE FIVE CENTS
M’NAUGHTON
CHANCE FOR
PBONIS
SLENDER
Governor Slaton Announces He
Will Make His Ruling on Appli
cation for ClemencyThisWeek.
Wants to Review All Evidence.
Lawyers for Accused Physician
and Those Who Are Striving to
Send Him to Gallows Fight
Desperately Before Executive.
Governor Sinton wifi announce hi?
decision in th? cane of Dr. J W. Mc-
Naughton, for whom a pardon !•
nought, some time this week. Thj*
assurance wan given by him at noon
Saturday, following n two-hour con
fprence with the attorneys on both
f sides From ail th? Indications the
chance* of the convicted physician
for a full pardon slender.
Tfie conference followed a consul
j tat ion between the attorneys regard
ing certain part® of the testimony
1 which the Governor requested them
to (insider and. If possible, agree tip
on It. so that It could be embodied in
written form.
The attorneys met early Saturdux
morning, but reported tn the Govern
or that they could not agree. Govern
or Sinton then reviewed the particu
lar evidence to them as lie under
stood It, and his construction of l‘
proved acceptable tn both sides.
“1 will announce m> decision in the
McNaughton case some time nezi
i week.” sgjd the Governor to a group
of reporters. “I will review the writ
ten testimony again and go into the
ru w evidence which was submitted to
me Friday. I will make a written
statement of my action In the mat
ter.”
Many C®ll at Capitol
A large number of visitors called at
the Capitol Saturday morning. In the
expectation that the McNaughton
hearing would be continued to-day
Many of the visitors were from Em
anuel County and had not heard of
the conclusion of the case at mid
night.
Both Judge Baftold and Attorney J
\V. Bennett, attorneys for McNaugh
ton. and Attorney A. S. Bradley and
Solicitor General R Lee Moore were
present at the conference Saturday.
With the prisoner branded on the
one hand as the most cunning of poi
soners and on the other as the victim
of an astounding conspiracy and mis
directed public wrath, the Gov
ernor faced an exceedingly hard prob
lem.
It was 12:3ft a. m. Saturday when
Judge Frank II Saftold concluded his
argument for the physician. The
night sessi-m was held at the re
quest of Judge Saffold, who desired
to leave for Savannah at 12:15 o’clock.
In the earnestness of his pleading for
executive clemency, however, he
failed to recognize the flight of time
am] spoke for fifteen minutes beyond
the time his train was due to leave.
Slaton Quizzes Lawyers.
Governor Slaton canceled an en
, gagement to deliver an address at the
Auditorium to hold the night session
11,? afternoon session lasted until
3:45 o’clock, when a recess was taken
; until 7 o’clock.
Solicitor General R. Lee Moore and
. A S Bradley made the arguments for
j the State, while Colonel J. W. Ben
nett and Judge Saffold made the plea
; forth? applicant. Governor Slaton
■ interrupted at frequent intervals to
; ask questions, quizzing all of the law -
' yers and the Emanuel County resi
dents who had come to Atlanta to
j protest against the issuance of a par
! don.
Schwab Raps Tariff,
But Buys More Ships
Steel Magnate Sails for Europe to
Contract for Fleet to Import
Ore to U. S.
NEW YORK. Sept. 20.—Charles AL
Schwab, president of the Bethlehem
Steel Company, sailed to-day for
Paris in connection with the placing
contracts for the first ter; vessels
I «>f the proposed ore fleet which will
bring ore from the Chile mines to the
I’nited States.
Schwab was j>essimistic regarding
the trade outlook because of the bust
dpss unsettlement due to the tariff
revision, anu declared the steel re
ductions were too drastic