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News Review of Current
Events the World Over
Von Hindenburg Dies and Hitler Seizes Presidency
Germany—Roosevelt’s Economic Security
Program Is Being Formulated.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
© by Western Newspaper Union.
pAt 7 L VON H1NDENBI KG, "Ger-
* man Gibraltar," has gone to bis long
rest, and Adolf Hitler is now absolute
ruler of the reich. Immediately after
i the death of the
president at his sum¬
mer home in East
Prussia was an¬
nounced the cabinet
met and put forth this
decree:
"The reich govern¬
ment lias passed the
following law, which
is hereby promul¬
gated :
Paul Von “I. The office of
Hindenburg fly* united relchspresident with that of Is
the reichschaneellor. In consequence
thereof, powers heretofore exercised
by the reiehspresident are transferred
to der fuehrer (Hitler) and the vice
chancellor (Franz von Papon). He
(Hitler) determines who shall be his
deputy.”
Hitler for the first time became also
the commander of the reichswehr or
regular army, and Gen. Werner von
Blomberg issued an order that every
soldier must pledge absolute loyalty
to the death to Hitler.
Ever since his great victory at Tan-
nenberg, early In the World war, Von
Hindenburg had been the Idol of tlie
German people and their grief over
hisdeath was general and sincere, Their
expressions of sorrow were mingled
with veiled but anxious discussions
concerning the possible effects on the
reich of the aged leader's death and
the assumption of full power by Hit¬
ler. The president, though forced to
give the Nazi chief the chancellorship,
had been a constant check on extreme
Nazism, and lie had the full con¬
fidence of other nations that lias never
been accorded to any other German
since the war. As Jacob Gould Scliur-
man, former American ambassador to
Berlin, puts it:
“Now that Von Hindenburg Is gone,
no successor, having regard to his
achievements, his prestige, and his
tried and tested character, can, at
least for a considerable time, create
an atmosphere equally favorable to
diplomatic negotiations with foreign
powers."
Doctor Schurman, however, does not
believe tin* Hitler regime is in imager
of falling at this time, fie says the
German people are not naturally rash
and revolutionary and probably will
give Hitler a chance to seek a solu¬
tion of the economic problems that
confront the country.
Von Hindenburg, who was eighty-
six years old, was a patriot all his
life, a veteran of three wars and a
marshal of the empire under Kaiser
Wilhelm. He was a hard tighter but
a kindly gentleman. He supported the
republic when it was created hut nt
heart lie was always faithful to the
self-exiled kaiser. His last days were
clouded by the realization that he had
failed in the effort to really check
Nazism.
fMlANCEl.Um SCHUSUHNIGG of
Austria appeared to have the Nazi
revolt completely under control and
was making overtures to the Social
Democrats and the workers, the lat¬
ter being warmly praised for not tak¬
ing part in the putsch as the Nazis
had expected they would. The trial of
the leaders in the uprising was con¬
ducted with dignity and the condem¬
nation and execution of two of them—
tlie man who actually killed Dollfuss
and the chief of the raid—were taken
ns matters of course. Another Nazi,
who killed a police captain of Inns¬
bruck about the same time the chan¬
cellor was being murdered, also was
found guilty and hanged.
Three thousand Nazis who took part
in the outbreak in Carinthln escaped
to Jugoslavia and were disarmed, and
tlie Belgrade government now wonders
what to do with them.
\ I 7TTH monarchists in control of
V V the Austrian government the roy¬
alists of that country and of Hungary
resumed their schemes for putting the
young Archduke Otto on the old throne
of the Hupstiurgs. There "are reports
that they held a secret meeting in
Yltznau, Switzerland, and formed a
restoration plan which they hoped
would he acceptable to France, Italy,
Great Britain and the little entente.
Their first object was to secure tlie
approval of Premier Mussolini. Lead¬
ers In tlie movement are Colonel Ban¬
da of the Austrian army, Felix Dun-
kel. an Austrian monarchist, and
Count Hojos of Hungary.
According to the story current in
Paris, the condition placed by tlie lit¬
tle entente and tlie big powers to al¬
lowing Otto to assume tlie throne Is
that lie will sign a pledge guarantee¬
ing the present boundaries and other
terms of existing treaties with regard
to Austria and the succession states.
pKESIl>F.NT I to the nin'mand UOOSEVK1.T from returned his Ha
wallan cm- The Hum; n and tlie
New Orl* - novcil up the Oregon
coast, stopped bri< Ilv at Astoria
and entered the Co’.umhia river. The
Presidential party delinked at Port¬
land and almost immediately boarded
a train which carried them rapidly
eastward. Stops were made at tlie
Bonneville project in Oregon and the
Grand Coulee irrigation and power
project in Washington. Mr. Roosevelt
spent Sunday in Glacier national park
and then continued his journey home¬
ward.
IN ITS monthly survey of business
* tlie American Federation of Labor
issued a warning that the enormous
expenditures of the government for
emergency needs and the artificial in¬
crease of buying power, if continued,
will lead to currency inflation to meet
tlie huge accumulating deficits.
It called attention to the steadily
mounting tax burden, the extension
of the relief rolls, the decline in bus¬
iness credit with tlie increase of gov¬
ernment borrowing and the failure of
NKA t^iut men to work In industry.
“The government cannot go on bor¬
rowing more than its income for very
long,” the statement said. “We can
not go on increasing buying [lower
in this way without a general expan¬
sion of production and consumption.
Industry cannot pull itself up by its
own boot straps."
TA NE of Mr. Roosevelt’s pet proj-
ects, the* program for greater
economic and social security, already
is being mapped out by the special
committee, including
several cabinet mem¬
bers, ttiat was named
to get ready the nec¬
essary legislation for
action by the next
congress. Executive
director of this com¬
mittee, and therefore
the most important
member, is Prof. Ed¬
win E. Witte, econo¬
E. E. Witte mist of the Univer¬
sity of Wisconsin fac¬
ulty. Professor Witte has been rather
active in Wisconsin politics as a La
Follette progressive and has advanced
ideas along tlie lines on which lie is
now working.
One of the main points of the pro¬
gram is tlie gradual decentralization
of industry and this has been got un¬
der way al«gady through the estab-
lislinientA;■ loeS ’'.iimcstcad projects In sev¬
eral *’■ The purpose is to re¬
.
move thoiwiftids of workers from tene¬
ment districts in large cities to areas
where their standard of living could
be raised, officials believe that great¬
er economic security will result
through home ownership with small
tracts of land.
There Is now under consideration a
related plan designed to offer to farm¬
ers who have suffered severely from
the drouth a haven in Alaska. Jacob
Baker, assistant chief of the federal
emergency relief administration, lias
just completed a survey of a million
acres of fertile land in the Mantanus-
kn valley and lias been discussing with
Gov. John Troy the feasibility of tak¬
ing 2,500 farm families up there as a
federal colony.
•J qHARI* handling criticism of deportable of tlie aliens tender by
the Department of Labor has brought
results, following the disclosure that
when President Roosevelt recognized
Russia no arrangements were made
for tiie deportation of Russian Reds.
To straighten out this situation Sec-
retary Perkins has called hack into
service Walter W. Husband, a Ver¬
mont Republican who was assistant
secretary of labor under presidents
Hoover and Coolidge. Only a month
or two ago ie was dropped to make
room for Arthur Altmeyer of Wiscon¬
sin. Mr. Husband lias been made
n special assistant to Secretary Per¬
kins and may tie sent to Moscow.
\ T riLLlAM LANGER, deposed as
VV governor of North Dakota lie-
cause of Ids conviction on federal
charges of conspiring to solicit political
contributions from
federal relief work¬
ers. and who was re¬
nominated for gover¬
nor by tlie Repub¬
licans. lias withdrawn
from the race. The
Republican central
committee promptly
selected Mrs. Lunger
to head the ticket, and
if she wins, the vic¬
tory will be hailed as Mrs. William
a vindication of her Langer
husband—just as Jim
Ferguson of Texas once was “vindi¬
cated" by the election of his wife.
Mrs. Lunger, a member of a family
socially prominent in New York, has
never before taken part in politics.
She is a home-loving woman and tlie
mother of four daughters. Her op¬
ponent in tiie fall election will be
Thomas H. Moodie, a VVilliston news¬
paper man who was nominated by the
Democrats.
DAl'L MAY, Belgian ambassador to
* tlie United States, died in a Wash¬
ington hospital following an abdo¬
minal alteration. Mr. May was a vet¬
eran diplomat and had held tlie post
in Washington since April. 1951. lie
was a man of engaging personally.
DADE COUNTY TIMES: AUGUST 9, 1934
MV* Aid \L law !n Minneapolis, de-
i by Gov. Floyd It. Olson be¬
cause of rioting incidental to the
strike of teamsters there, proved ob¬
noxious to almost
everybody and both
the trucking firms
and their 7,000 strik¬
ing drivers asked for
Its dissolution. At
w the same time Adju¬
i, \ tant General Walsh
announced that the
“insurrection” had
been suppressed. Still
/ \ the governor declined
Gov. F. B. to withdraw the state
Olson troops. Additional
trucks were given mil-
itary permits to operate, and a ban
against those In Interstate commerce
was revoked because its legality was
in doubt. Beer trucks, however, were
removed from the privileged list and
were forbidden use of the streets on
the ground that they did not furnish a
necessary service.
At a mass meeting of union laborers
tlie leaders demanded the withdrawal
of the troops, tlie secretary of the
truck drivers’ union charging that the
soldiers were “little more than strike¬
breakers."
Governor Olson’s reply to this was
to have tlie strikers' headquarters
raided and their three leaders arrest¬
ed. This naturally enraged the truck
drivers and there was considerable
violence.
Notwithstanding all this, the federal
mediators, Father Haas and E. J. Dun-
nfgan, were hopeful of bringing about
a peaceful agreement in the near fu¬
ture.
Riots in Kohler Village, Wis., In which
two men were killed, led Gov. A. G.
Schemedeman to place the community
under martial control, and 600 mem¬
bers of the National Guard were sent
there. During the riot the police and
deputies used tear gas bombs and
blank cartridges and where these failed
to disperse the mob, they opened fire
with loaded shells. The officer com¬
manding tlie Guardsmen ordered tiie
disbanding of the force ot special dep¬
uties and permitted the strikers to
resume peaceful picketing of the Koh¬
ler plant.
Longshoremen of tlie Pacific* strilSfc *ast
ended their two-month long ind
returned to their jobs in all the parts,
as did the marine workers. Pending
arbitration by the federal board, steve¬
dores will be employed by employer-
controlled hiring halls under super¬
vision of observers representing the
board. Control of the hiring halls was
(he chief issue in the strike and is
still to be settled by the arbitrators,
along with the questions of Increased
wages, shorter working hours and im¬
proved conditions.
YT EORGE N. PEEK, President Itoose-
velt’s special adviser on foreign
trade, announced that in an effort to
recapture some of America’s markets
abroad the so-called Second Export-
Import bank was ready to finance
American shipments to any country in
the world.
Hitherto this second hank has dealt
only with Cuban trade, while the first
hank was created (o handle Rus¬
sian business. Thus far the Russian
bank has been moribund because Rus¬
sia has failed to pay her war debts to
this country.
Short term, intermediate, and long
term credit will be ottered to Ameri¬
can shippers who need financing to
push through deals abroad. Peek said.
He defined short term credits as those
of less than 180 days, intermediate
credits ns those maturing in 180 days
to 12 months, and long term credits
as those with maturities between one
and five years.
S’ Mayor T. Semiues Walmsley of
New Orleans were having another
lively fight in tlie southern city.
Governor Allen, one of Long’s hench¬
men, mobilized 500 of the state troops
and seized the registration office and
its files, and the soldiers also were
ordered to search out the city’s red
light district and gambling houses.
The mayor increased his police forces
to 1.100 and for a time there was
prospect of "civil war.”
Walmsley said the "moral crusade”
was just a “smoke screen” to conceal
tlie senator's real purpose of taking
over the city government and influ¬
encing tlie primary election in Sep-
| ternber, in which both he and Long are
supporting rival candidates.
•J JAPAN’S with Great hopes Britain for naval and the equality Unit¬
ed States were dashed hy a frank
statement by Secretary of the Navy
Swanson to the effect that, in his per¬
sonal opinion, while tlie United States
) might favor a slash of 20 per cent in
naval armaments, it would strongly
oppose any realignment of existing
naval ratios for the principal powers.
“I take the same position I always
have," Secretary Swanson said. “The
naval powers met in London and dis¬
tributed naval strength as they
thought just and right. Naval strength
is relative. If we abandon the ratios
there is no telling where we shall go.”
<( C'XPLORER,” the huge balloon
constructed to carry three army
officers far into the stratosphere, made
a brave start front near Rapid City,
S. D., rose to a height of 60,000 feet
and then came to grief. Great rips
appeared in the fabric of the bag and
it came down rapidly and erratically,
falling with its gondola 12 miles from
Holdredge, Neb. Maj. W. E. Kepner,
Capt. Orvil Anderson and Capt Al¬
bert Stevens “bailed out" and with
the aid of their parachutes landed un¬
hurt. But all their expensive and
elaborate scientific equipment, with
the exception of the spectograph, was
destroyed when tlie gondola crashed.
Tlie spectograph had been hung out¬
side and floated to earth on a separate
small parachute.
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
Many Are Saving
Some Cheerful News
Short Love Song
Marie Dressier Dead
This is the real midsummer, the
doldrums of human activity.
The President is on his way home
from Hawaii and may have something
cheerful and exciting to tell us.
He will learn that mutual savings
bank accounts have reached a new
high peak throughout the nation, de¬
positors having increased in the past
six months by 273,S98. The total num¬
ber of individual depositors is now
13,686,947, and total deposits are near¬
ly ten thousand million dollars, a good
deal of money.
That is good news for those that
have something and know enough to
save part of it. It means, however,
that many open or increase savings
accounts because they do not know
any other safe way to invest money,
and that is not so cheerful. Good
times depend on new ventures, bring¬
ing more employment.
Steel production, a sort or indus¬
trial and prosperity indicator, is down,
off 5.7 per cent in a week. Total pro¬
duction is only about one-quarter of
what the industry could do. Dull steel
production means n dull labor market.
Steel makers look for improvement
this month and next from automobile
makers.
The automobile news is more cheer¬
ful—pleasant proof that citizens are
“lifting up their hearts” and beginning
to spend again.
The shortest great love song in his¬
tory seems to be the one that Hitler
and Mussolini, with heads thrown
back, sang recently in Venice.
It’s a complete divorce of dictators
now, and because of that little rift
within tiie lute France and Italy are
said to be drawing closer together.
They were far apart before Dollfuss
was killed. Political and other assas¬
sinations nre never profitable. One,
twenty years ago, started the great
war.
This Dollfuss murder breaks up a
beautiful budding friendship between
dictators, and threatens Germany with
complete national isolation.
Marie Dressier is dead, after a brave
fight against death. The world learns
from her that success depends on
brains and courage. She lost the good
looks of youth shortly after forty, so
Mr. Ziegfeld decided that he could not
give her work, as he hoped to do. She
struggled, unsuccessfully, for fourteen
years, lost all her savings, never lost
her courage. And when she died, at
sixty-two, she was one of the greatest
successes in moving pictures, most
highly paid, respected and admired,
with no help from any beauty parlor^
Moving picture men should notice
that Miss Dressier was able to earn
great profits for her producers, in
plays not immoral, clean plays deal¬
ing with the normal interests of nor¬
mal human beings.
The Bible says that to “him that
hath shall be given," and many New
York landlords perhaps remembered
that when they read the gigantic
Rockefeller building enterprise in New
York called “Rockefeller Center” is
“out of the red," self-supporting, with
80 per cent of space rented. Good
news for an undertaking that cynics
called “a great white elephant.”
Optimists look upon Rockefeller
Center success as proof of improve¬
ment in business. Wise men know
that It is another proof of Rockefeller
efficiency.
Not bidding for tenants from other
buildings at cut rates. Mr. Rockefeller
has brought tenants from afar, includ¬
ing extremely important tenants from
Europe, and has built up a business
neighborhood of his own.
The government is willing, and
would like to spend about $600,000,000
on its PWA public works program In
New Y’ork, but strikes may prevent.
Labor leaders complain that men get¬
ting 80 to 90 cents an hour should be
replaced by more highly skilled men
getting $1.45 to $1.85 per hour. There
are internal labor troubles also, based
on quarrels as to jurisdiction among
different unions, two or more claiming
control of the same job.
Soviet Russia finds herself in posses-
| sion of a great treasure, thanks to
the Greek church which she has treat¬
ed so harshly. The churches and
] cathedrals, now government' property,
l are said to contain hundreds of mil-
| lions’ worth of precious objects, sacred
images, “ikons," framed in solid gold,
and huge doors of massive silver. One
Image of the Virgin Is said to have
been ornamented with more than 2,000
diamonds, of which many had been
stolen.
The British government Is learning
more and more about airplanes and
their importance in the next war. A
! recent experimental “air attack on
j London” shows that enemy bombing
planes would do “heavy damage,”
making direct hits on important build¬
ings.
the latest experiment, among
otner buildings destroyed, theoretical¬
ly. was tiie air ministry building.
Of 21 bombers sent to attack the
chemical industries building, seven
"got clean through to the objective
and back again without molestation."
£ King Features Syndicate, Inc.
\YNU Service
0
National Topics Interpreted
by William Bruckart
Washington.—While Europe stews
and wonders what eventually is com¬
ing out of the Aus-
Austria Causes t rian trouble, there
U. S. Worry is man - v a fnr '
rowed brow in
Washington these days concerning our
own nation’s status in case the need
for a sturdy national defense arises.
The worries of our own government
are not lessened by the weaknesses
which Newton D. Baker, former secre¬
tary of war, and his committee of ex¬
perts reported they had observed in
our military air service. But from
what I can learn, there is some satis¬
faction among those charged with re¬
sponsibility of government because the
vulnerable spiffs were pointed out be¬
fore we are called upon to resort to
that branch of our national defense.
Having knowledge of the exact situ¬
ation surely should be of some help.
The Baker board, as it has come to
be known, was the fifteenth in six¬
teen years that has given study to
our air force. It apparently went
straight to the core of tlie trouble and
said tiie chief problem, in effect, was
a hit or miss policy with respect to air
development. Since congress is the
policy-making body of our nation, it
must accept the responsibility, but my
own research and acquaintance with
matters relating to the appropriation
of funds for the government leads me
to believe that the budget bureau has
been none too wise in determining ex¬
penditures for recommendation to con¬
gress.
Recommendations by the Baker
board call first for establishment of a
military air force of more than 2,200
planes, a force second to none in the
world. An air force of young men is
advised, a corps of highly trained men
who know how to handle their planes
that, in event of attacks, the air serv¬
ice will not find itself sacrificing good
blood sucli as occurred in the compar¬
atively safe business of transporting
the mails. The board said the gov¬
ernment should eacourage an air in¬
dustry in the United States to provide
an adequate resource for the nation.
If that is done, tlie report pointed
out, there is a reserve strengtii devel¬
oped that provides for revenue in
peace and strengtii in war.
I have little confidence that con¬
gress is going to pay much attention to
the Baker hoard's conclusions. It sel¬
dom has paid any attention to such
expert advice. President Roosevelt
asked the board to go to the bottom
of the problem, however, and it has
done so. At least the country is in¬
formed, and if its representatives in
the house or the senate do not per¬
form in a way that will correct the
condition, then we all will know where
to place the blame.
For example, tiie report proposes
that there be adequate and continuing
appropriations for expansion of the
air service of the army. In that rec¬
ommendation tlie board struck a key
note. It said “continuing” appropria¬
tions were necessary, and anyone can
see such a view is correct because
otherwise a big sum is appropriated
one year and wasted work results
when the brothers who hold the purse
strings say in the next year that they
are not going to allow any more such
expenditures. It is exactly as though
one started to build a house and after
tlie walls were up. tlie money ran out
and no roof could be put on. The
structure remains incomplete, no good
to anyone.
This question of appropriations has
been tlie bone of contention all along.
I do not mean to say that the “brains”
of the War department always have
been capable of guiding the program
effectively, but if congress had pur¬
sued a sound policy, a policy that at
least was consistent, I am assured by
many competent authorities tlie army
air service would not be where it Is
today.
Tlie Baker board, like most of its
predecessors, declined to support the
much agitated proposal for an air
service detached from tlie army arid
navy. Only one member of tlie board.
James Doolittle, tlie well known
flyer, held that view. The board as
a whole thought the air service ought
to be an integral part of the military
or naval branches of tlie service, and
there is every evidence that this is
one section of tlie recommendation
that will be accepted by congress with¬
out argument. The board saw many
difficulties possible under a separate
air service, the chief of which is tlie
lack of co-ordination in defense, as
well as in attack, in event of war.
But while the Baker report offers
numerous technical improvements for
consideration and advocates changes
here and there in methods of develop¬
ing the air service, those folks in
Washington who have witnessed the
fate of the earlier surveys hold little
hope for good to come from this one.
• • *
Mother nature has her own way of
working things out and in her func-
t i o n s apparently
Mother Nature she does not need
Needs No Help or wish the aid of
professional theo¬
rists. The current proof of this is the
drouth and the effect it is having on
the agricultural adjustment program.
There is very serious consideration be¬
ing given to suspension of the scheme
for curtailing production. Secretary
Wallace and Chester Davis, the agri-
over the pr^pecta^Uhough 6 they 1 ^
are thinking about is abandonment ot
the contracts for curtailment of
because the extreme oron
the drouth has made
reduction plans unworkable and
even dangerous to the country's food
stocks.
So it begins to appear that there
will have to be revision of the agricul-
tural program upon which the admin¬
istration has worked so desperated
and upon which it has expended
much so
money.
Tlie Agricultural department Is au¬
thority for the statement that the
drouth already has removed any prob¬
ability of a wheat surplus. To this
shortage has been added unfavorable
conditions abroad that have resulted
in a general world total of wheat prob¬
ably as much as 400,000.000 bushels
below what is held to be an average
yield. This is happening just when
many of the wheat-growing nations of
the world were approaching the point
of a binding agreement that would
hold down the quantity of wheat en¬
tering into export trade and thereby
force crop reduction. But tlie authori¬
ties tell me the movement for an in¬
ternational agreement naturally is go¬
ing to die. There being no dire neces¬
sity for it, the interest behind it will
lag. I suppose there will be few, if
any, further moves made on it until
years of bumper crops again are upon
us and a gigantic surplus of world
wheat stares farmers in the face.
That is usually the ease.
It likely will be some weeks before
tlie Agricultural department can
formulate a definite course of action
as to revision of the crop reduction
plans.
* * *
President Roosevelt's return is
eagerly awaited among some of the
“brain trust" who
Brain Trust’s are variously re-
Little War I ,orte<1 ln Washing¬
ton as desiring the
Chief Executive to intervene in their
own little war. There are a number of
minor disputes taking shape among
the professors and the so-called young
liberals, and I am informed in what I
believe to be authentic quarters that
anti-administration agents are foment¬
ing more trouble among the group that
lias served as such important advisers
to the President during his term. Ob¬
viously, none will admit it, but there
is every reason to believe that some
keen individuals who are not in sym¬
pathy with the New Deal are spread¬
ing poison among the brain trusters
about each other. The natural result
of this, of course, is to cause the
young liberals to be suspicious of each
other and that kind of suspicion near¬
ly always is followed by an open
break.
The stories in current circulation in
Washington are that some of the brain
trusters are at outs with Raymond
Moley, for a time the No. 1 brain
trust man with the President but now
the editor of a magazine, and that
several of those still in the administra¬
tion are saying unkind things about
others who still are serving here. It
is a situation not without its humor¬
ous side, and from having seen such
factions develop before in tlie govern¬
ment, I imagine this one will turn out
to be a real comedy.
« * *
The economic events of tlie last few
weeks Indicate to some Washington ob¬
servers that a new
See New Crisis crisis is approach-
Nearing . ing In the depres-
sjon Aupugt ig a l-
dull month. September i? lit¬
ways a standpoint.
tle better from a business
After that tilings usually pick up.
get through the next six weeks with
drouth devastating millions of acres
and strikes and riots and military rule
and uncertainties among business in¬
terests as to what tiie New 1 ,pa 1 ®
the future holds, there necessarily
must be a steady hand and calm
nient. On top of this, of cour-t,
the disturbed international snuatW ’
and it is not helping the weary-
world to settle down.
Since the kind of government warn
of business that we laV
lias Dot taken us out of tlie J
the course immediately becomes pro
lematical. Shall we have moreof
or expand it beyond u- P
shall we retrace our steps
or days.
go back to the old
of this turbulent <-' ,n
In the midst cif^
the slimy head of taftal'on
again is arising. ■ tal „.
there are many men no
seriously ^
about inflation . th( , ir
their knowledge and a ‘ 0 f
ordinarily *" ou antagonist^ ‘ nists to
the bitterest of
a course on the P ar ha ve
government. Some o ^
in Washington »“ Bt *
I gathered from the ^
advanced that they - ■ ^ tllf
inflation would do go ^
as a whole, aa {he fS rt
particular. ■' jg that
in ""ssi-*' K
r
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