Newspaper Page Text
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
Eckener, a Real Man
Wasted Mail Advertising
One Happy Man
How Many Would Die?
Dr. Hugo Eckener, who has flown
GOo,000 miles in his Zeppelins and
about 400,000 more miles teaching I
young pilots, is in New York.
It is a pleasure to see such a power¬
ful person, well past sixty, planning
a new line through the air between
the United States and Europe, “coast-
to-coaat in 48 hours.” He, of course,
would run the ships on the first few
trips himself.
A government spokesman urges ad¬
vertisers to advertise by mail, writing
nice “Dear Mr. Jones" letters, telling
what the advertiser lias for sale.
Eugene Meyer, Jr., who owns the
Washington Post, says that is wrong
and mentis government competing with
honest, long-suffering newspapers and
their advertising profits.
He asks, by Implication, how can the
press be free if you take away Its
money?
That worry is unnecessary. The ad¬
vertiser who tries to advertise by mail
throws money out of tiie window and
800 n finds it out. And advertisers are
Intelligent.
One happy man exists in spite of de¬
pression; his name, familiar to you,
Henry Ford. As far as he is con¬
cerned the depression is ended. To
prove it he will build one million cars
"or more” this coming year. That is
a good sign, since it proves that there
must be people able to buy oue million
cars.
Henry Ford says truly that Amer¬
icans don’t “want a dole," arid those
that take the dole always turn against
those that give It.
There is, however, the fact that
America doesn't want revolution, or i
too many dangerous riots, and you may ;
take it from the British that the dole is j
cheaper enough than revolution. the French England revolution was J j
rear to
to realize that.
President Church Knubel of America of the worries United about Iaith- j ’,
eran
the future of religion. Anti-religious j
forces, he says, are growing constantly
In this and other countries; hundreds j
of millions of people are “spiritually
Mind.” Hev. Dr. Knubel asks, "How
do you know that in two years from
row you might not be asked to die for
your faith?"
Let us hope it will not be as bad
as that, while wondering respectfully
how many would be willing to die, or,
like the ancient martyrs, court death
for Hie sake of martyrdom.
There are various ways of making
a living In America, that finds it so
difficult to conquer lawlessness. One
way is to smuggle in Chinese, inflicting
fearful hardships upon the unfortunate
Immigrant Chinese uud charging them
from $1,000 to $1,500 for bringing them
here. Smuggling Chinese is connected
with the opium traffic. While smuggling
jn Chinese you can also smuggle with
each one a considerable amount of
opium. for opium
Federal agents looking
found eighteen frightened Chinese in
an isolated house in New Jersey,
guarded by a powerful negro from
Trinidad and five police dogs ttiat
would have mangled the unfortunate
creatures had they tried to escape.
Friends expected to bring the fee for
smuggling them in failed to appear,
hence their detention.
Doctor Eahy of the New England
hospital says the much discussed ex¬
periment of transplanting in men the
glands of monkeys is a failure. How¬
ever, partial transplanting of the
parathyroid gland, from one human
being to another, has proved success
ful. opening up great possibilities.
Failure of monkey gland trans¬
plantation is not bad news. There is
enough of the monkey in man up to
sixty years of age to make any monkey
gland transplanting at that age seem
unnecessary. Somebody said, long
ego, that <uan is one-third man, one-
third monkey, one-third hog. That Is
a little severe, but the monkey part
Is sufficiently accurate.
Japan Is busy fortifying South Sea
Islands that she holds under mandate
of the league of Nations, and com¬
plaint is made aimlessly.
Nothing to surprise anybody in that
fortification news. Japan is an intelli¬
gent country.
It takes a country with statesman¬
ship in the dodo class, like ourselves,
to possess Guam and fall to fortify
the place because polite Britishers,
acting as mouthpiece for Japan, re
quested us not to do so.
The achievement of the admirable
fivers. Sir Charles Kingsford-Smith
end his aid, Capt. F. G. Taylor, proves
that the United States knows how to
build airplanes. The plane that came
across the Pacific from Honolulu.
2.408 miles, in fifteen hours, beating
by ten hours the best record, is an
American Loekhead plane built at
Glendale. Calif., and the engine was
built by the American Pratt & Whit¬
ney Aircraft company.
If the United States should ever get
really Interested In building the world's
greatest air fleet, as it will do. or bit¬
terly regret it. the material is at hand.
Kin* Features Syndicate, Inc.
WNU Service.
PISS l» REVIEW
MANUFACTURERS START DRIVE
TO PREVENT "COERCION" BY
THE LABOR UNIONS.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
©. Western Newspaper Union.
r TNDER the auspices of the National
Association of Manufacturers, a
drive has been started "to prevent la¬
bor union coercion,” and all state leg¬
islatures, when they convene, are to
be asked to enact six specific pro¬
visions “for the purpose of fixing the
legal responsibility of labor organiza¬
tions for their acts.” The association
says it is moved to this course because
it believes the federal government is at
last aware of the “terrorism” practiced
by union members against other em¬
ployees who desire to act.
The laws to be asked of legislatures
are;
1. To make sympathetic strikes and
sympathetic lockouts illegal.
2. To make both employers and
unions equally responsible for the ob¬
servance of contracts.
3. To make It illegal for any associ¬
ation of employers or employees to ex¬
pel, suspend, fine or otherwise punish
members refusing to participate in an
Illegal strike or lockout.
4. To make picketing illegal when it
is carried on in such a manner as to
intimidate or coerce employees or cus¬
tomers.
5. To declare illegal employment
contracts requiring a person either to
join or not to join any labor organi¬
zation.
6. To require written consent of the
employee before the deduction of any
part of his wages for the payment of
organization dues may be made.
FRANCIS J. GORMAN, head of the
^ United Textile Workers’ commit¬
tee that directed the recent strike, in
a letter to George A. Sloan, head of
the Cotton Textile in¬
stitute, said that
union labor would be
glad to co-operate
with the Industry in
developing new mar¬
kets for the output of
the factories.
He declared that
after controversies
had been ironed out
by the federal board
F. J. Gorman named as a result of
the strike, represent¬
atives of the two sides could “begin
conferences looking toward the im¬
provement of the industry.”
Mentioning the increased competition
from Japanese goods and other factors
which caused demand for American
textiles to fall “millions of yards” be¬
low production capacity, he said:
“A part of the purpose of the con¬
ferences which I have in mind would
be to creute joint employer-union ma¬
chinery for the expansion and exten¬
sion of the textile market. Such a pro¬
gram would be in furtherance of the
interests of workers and employers
alike.
"The union has a definite contribu¬
tion to make in the development of
marketing possibilities and the exten¬
sion of consuming power. But, of
course, the union cannot contribute its
effort except in co-operation with the
organized employers."
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT agreed to
* extend the automobile industry
code until February 1 without changing
its wage or hours provisions. The
American Federation of Labor had de¬
manded an immediate and drastic re¬
vision of the code, and this the Presi¬
dent refused. Mr. Roosevelt, however,
said he believes the code needs revamp¬
ing, and he hinted that on February 1
he may demand that the industry stabi¬
lize employment and pay rolls.
“I have no hesitation in telling you,”
the President wrote in a letter to Wil¬
liam Green, president of the A. F. of L..
and Alvan Macauley, secretory of the
Automobile Manufacturers’ association,
“that there are a number of matters
connected with this code with which I
have never been fully satisfied.”
He disclosed both in his letter and a
separate formal statement that he is
launching an Investigation into work¬
ing conditions and wages in the indus¬
try, with especial attention to the
workers' annual earnings.
On behalf of the federation, F. J.
Dillon, general organizer, registered a
protest against the President’s ruling,
but pledged support for his promised
Investigation.
m. ENRY FORD, who says that what
done in Washington doesn’t
mutter much so far as recovery is con¬
cerned, came out with a statement that
should be encourag¬
ing to the American
business man. He told
the Ford managers
gathered in Detroit
that his company was
out of the depression,
and they In turn told
him of generally Im¬
proved business con¬
ditions in all parts of
the country. <ak
“The depression,” Henry Ford
Ford set forth in a
statement, “would be over for the
whole country very soon If American
industrialists would Just forget the
phabet schemes and take hold of
Industries and run them with good,
sound American business sense.
“They should take hold of their
DADE COUNTY TIMES: NOVEMBER 15. 1934
country, too. in the same way. and run
it with good sound American common
sense.”
r'OI.r,OWING a week's conference
w with agricultural economists from
40 states, officials of the Department
of Agriculture and leaders of the AAA,
the bureau of agricultural economics
has issued a bulky report forecasting
generally improved conditions for the
farm industry during the coming year. ;
Here are the chief points in the pre-
dictions:
1. Greatly reduced supplies of most
farm products will be seen, which,
with improvement in consumer pur¬
chasing power, will probably bring a
higher level of farm income during the
first half of 1935, this despite low for-
elgn demand for American farm prod¬
ucts.
2. Farm production will be larger
than this year's unusually small pro¬
duction.
3. This year’s higher prices may tend
to stimulate excessive planting of some
crops not under production control
next year.
4. Continued improvement in demand
late next year will depend primarily
on recovery In the durable goods in¬
dustries.
5. “A small Improvement In the pur¬
chasing power of farm families may,
in general, be expected."
6. Prices of goods used in farm pro¬
duction are expected to average some¬
what higher, at least until June, 19So.
7. The farm credit situation “will
continue to show gradual improvement
above the bad conditions of the past
several years.”
8. Next year’s wheat crop is expect¬
ed to result in an export surplus, with
prices hanging close to an export basis.
9. Substantial advance in prices of
meat animals is expected, with no ma¬
terial expansion in live stock numbers
sighted before 1930.
10. Next year’s wool clip will be the
smallest in several years, with prices
dependent on world production.
11. “A generally favorable” outlook
is seen for poultry raisers, with prices
remaining at seasonably high levels un¬
til next summer.
12. An unfavorable outlook is sighted
for dairymen because of tbe shortage
of hay and grain.
The bureau predicted some further
improvement in the total cash income j
of farm families available for living
expenses, although less than that from
1933 to 1934.
/CONVERSATIONS in i
paratory to the scheduled naval r,.... i 11 I
conference have been quite unsatisfac¬
tory so far, for neither the United
States nor Great Britain shows any
disposition to accord to Japan the
equality that nation demands, even
though it be merely in principle with
the Japanese agreeing not to build up
to parity with them. Well-posted ob¬
servers do not believe the conference
will accomplish anything valuable, and
Secretary of the Navy Claude A. Swan¬
son says that, regardless of its out¬
come, his department plans to bring
the American fleet up to full treaty
strength and will ask congress for the
necessary appropriations.
rvR ERNEST GRUENING, chief of
JL/ the bureau of territories and in¬
sular affairs, has gone rather hurriedly
to the Virgin Islands to make a per¬
sonal Investigation Into
a state of affairs that
has led to the filing of
serious charges before
committees of both
houses of congress. In
a petition for a con¬
gressional inquiry, Paul
C. Yates, who recently
resigned as executive
assistant to Gov. Paul
M. Pearson, charges
that the present ad¬ Gov. Pearson
ministration of the is¬
lands is “wasteful, extravagant, ineffi- |
cient. and tainted with corruption.”
Yates was recently suspended and
ordered to Washington for an inquiry
by Secretary Ickes, who accused him
of “disloyalty, insubordination, and
gross inefficiency,” and in general of
being a trouble maker. Yates resigned
immediately and came to Washington,
but chose to ignore Secretary Ickes’
office, carrying his plaints Instead di¬
rectly to congress.
He charges that Mr. Ickes has been
“outrageously deceived” by Governor
Pearson and subordinate officials of
the Interior department, has Ignored
“complaints, petitions, and specific
charges” presented by the citizens of
the Islands, and hns dealt with officials
“in a peculiarly harsh, cruel, and die-
tatorial manner.”
The petition further charges that
minor officials In the Interior depart-
ment aided and abetted Governor Pear¬
son to “whitewash a major public
works scandal and deceived the secre¬
tary of the interior regarding public
works and the general situation, and
were criminally negligent in the per¬
formance of their duty.”
qIR CHARLES KINGSFORD-SMITH,
O the famous Australian aviator, and
Capt. P. G. Taylor, his navigator. land¬
ed their monoplane. Lady Southern
Cross, at Oakland, Calif., thus com¬
pleting a notable flight from Brisbane.
Australia. They stopped on the way
at Suva in tbe Fiji islands and at
Honolulu.
rp RANGE is having a lot of trouble
U with Syria, for which country she
holds a mandate from the League of
Nations, and the French high commis¬
sioner has suspended the Syrian par-
llament sine die and assumed virtual
dictatorship, There have been serious
disturbances there, due to both eco¬
nomic complications and the national¬
istic aspirations of the native popula¬
tion.
DREMfUn MUSSOLINI’S corporative
* system of government for Italy has
gone into effect, and the duce has
on 22 more important state jobs,
namely, the presidency of that number
corporations into which Italy’s
of working activity have been
To assure proper co-ordina¬
each corporation will be headed
for an indefinite period by the min¬
ister of corporations, who is Mussolini
himself. The corporations' portfolio is
of seven cabinet posts he holds
personally.
The actual management of the cor¬
is to be left to vice presi¬
who will be appointed by the
from among three represents- of j
tives of the Fascist party on each I
the corporations’ governing boards.
-
D EGA USE of her personal achieve-
roents and not because she Is the
of the President, Mrs. Frankliu
Roosevelt has been awarded the
Gimbel prize of $1,000 and a
for outstanding work for Amer¬
She will receive the award in
on December 12.
Mrs. Roosevelt has requested that
$1,000 be applied toward sending
child suffering from the effects of
paralysis to Warm Springs,
for six months of muscular re¬
C REEDY ruling by the United States
Supreme court on constitutionality
the NRA act and the code of fair
for the lumber and timber
industry may be expected.
W. L Grubb of the Federal Dis¬
court at Birmingham, Ala., has
ruled them unconstitutional and dis¬
missed an indictment against an oper-
nter of several sawmills. The action
was taken by agreement of both sides
so as to expedite an appeal to the Su-
preme court j
'
■
rV! E S I O E N T ROOSEVELT an-
nonnced that, beginning July , . . 1.
,
1935, he will eliminate the 5 per cent j
pay cut that is now taken out of the
salaries of all federal employees. The
pay restoration, he explained, is being
planned on the assumption that in¬
creases in the cost of living will ne¬
cessitate it.
The Treasury department thereupon
admitted frankly that this means the
taxpayers will be called on to pay an
additional fifty million dollars a year
for the benefit of the 700.000 federal
employees who will benefit by the res¬
toration in salaries.
Mr. Roosevelt predicted flatly that
the cost of living will advance substan¬
tially within the next eight months.
When he made this statement at his
regular press conference he also cau¬
tioned reporters to remember that an
increase in the cost of living meant
an increase in commodity and property
values, thereby lessening the difficulty
of paying debts. This is one of the
avowed aims of the Roosevelt program.
He said he expected the rise of food,
clothing, fuel, housing, and other living
costs to be large enough by next July 1
to justify the 5 per cent restoration.
He refused to say whether the increase
in government pay, which is being al¬
lowed for in the 1935 federal budget,
is to be taken as an example for in¬
dustry to follow.
AyfEXICAN governments, both fed-
IVI eral and state, are carrying on a
determined campaign against the Ro¬
man Catholic church, charging that
the latter has been fostering a revolu¬
tionary movement. On the other hand,
a vigorous denial that the Catholic
church had advocated armed resistance
to the Mexican government or Inter¬
vention by the United States in the
religious conflict in Mexico was issued
by Archbishop Ruiz, the apostolic del¬
egate to Mexico, in San Antonio. Texas.
Bishops and priests are being ex¬
pelled from various states, and the
state of Mexico issued nn order limit¬
ing the numlier of churches in the re¬
gion in which services may be held to
34, the same as the number of priests
permitted to officiate in the state. All
churches above this number, the de¬
cree provided, will be used as schools
and public libraries. The action was
believed to have been taken to prevent
priests ousted from other states from
coming to the state of Mexico to offi¬
ciate.
The Supreme court ruled that all
buildings used for Catholic ceremonies
shall become the property of the na¬
tion.
Acting President Rodriguez in a let¬
ter to Attorney General Portes Gil said
the clergy, on pretext of opposing the
initiation of compulsory socialistic ed-
uca tion in Mexico’s schools, has “initi-
ated a frank campaign of sedition
which reveals clearly its intention to
bring about a revolution.”
/CHANCELLOR HITLER has realized
the danger to his regime in the
revolt of the Evangelical Protestant
pastors against the tyrannical rule of
Reiehsbishop Mueller, and has decided
to separate church and state. The gov¬
ernment of the reich. he said, would
not Interfere in the quarrel. Some ob¬
servers in Berlin expressed the fear
that this policy would lead to unre¬
strained growth of German paganism
and also to further acts against the
Jews, under the leadership of Dr. Al¬
fred Rosenberg, philosopher, and Julius
Streicher, publisher of the Stormer,
heads respectively of the pagan faith
and the anti-Semitic movements.
Acceptance of Chancellor Hitler’s
new constitution for the German T.abor
Front, which gives the Labor Front
money and property which once be¬
longed to trade unions and employers’
associations, was celebrated in 1 <
WO demonstrations throughout Ger
many. The biggest was In Lnstgarten,
Berlin, where over 350,000 were assem¬
bled. The Labor Front includes all la¬
borers and office workers.
Washington,—It has been seldom
President Roosevelt took the
helm of government
Jobs, Not that Washington has
so f j^f one yWitnessed such an
upheaval of condi-
aD( j plans as has occurred in the
few weeks. Part of the changes
naturally enough from develop-
t of plans for submission of new
policies to congress which will
again in about six weeks. The
part comes from a sudden de¬
by the administration to
its recovery methods.
Possibly the most significant of the
changes in recovery plans
the determination to try, at least, to
away from direct relief. Instead
plain gifts of money, the adminis¬
is now seeking to find addition¬
means for creating work so that in¬
needing help may obtain
relief in the form of jobs for
the government will pay.
Officials still are loath to discuss ex¬
figures, but they are, nevertheless,
steadily forward with plans for
the vast federal relief ma¬
into an extensive program that
embrace such things as slum clear-
'~low cost housing and rural re¬
Mr Roosevelt wll , walt unti i the last
. before he fixes , n his own
j j low ma ny hundreds of millions
dollars will be needed to carry out
projects. The total cost obvi-
, depend somewhat upon how
the dole can be abandoned. It
may run into billions of dollars be¬
cause, according to some authorities,
removal from the dole is going to be
by certain types of persons.
And, It seepts, they can hardly be
blamed because once the government
altered its traditional policy and made
direct gifts of money it created a new
psychology and the people who bene¬
fited thereby quite naturally will be
unwilling to have the source of the
gifts closed for this easy manner of
living.
One of the plans under consideration
as a part of the whole program is pro¬
vision for employment by direct fed¬
eral subsidy for housing. Under this
plan, the government would advance
part of the cost for individual homes
of low price construction. Estimates
said to he in the hands of the Presi¬
dent indicate that an expenditure of
$1,500,000,000 in this manner would
release more than three times that
amount in private capital and give
work to an estimated four million per¬
sons.
In keeping with the theory that the
number on relief rolls will descend in
direct proportion to the revival of pri¬
vate construction, advocates of this
plan contend that the cost would be
less than outright relief. They say
that with the government advancing
part of the funds needed, private lend¬
ing agencies would feel more secure
and would offer aid In the form of the
remainder of the loans necessary.
• • «
It has long been recognized that re¬
covery cannot be accomplished with¬
out a tremendous in-
Need Private crease in construe-
Construction tlon. Private con¬
struction, however,
wNl not go forward in a period of un¬
certainty now no more than it has in
other years and the experts have de¬
cided that the government must take
the lead in this direction. They have
advised the President there can be no
real upturn in private building opera¬
tions unless a start Is made by the
government. Whether this is the right
theory, of course, none can foretell.
It may turn out to he that the govern¬
ment is pouring additional funds down
just another rat-hole as it has on
numerous other occasions in the course
of recovery experiments. My conver¬
sations with men both in public and
private life, men who are qualified to
judge, lead me to believe that there
will be considerable construction re¬
sulting from this program. The con¬
clusions which have been expressed
to me, it must be said frankly, do pot
indicate that there will be any such
total of new construction development
under the new administration program
as the enthusiastic exponents of the
program now contend.
There are numerous reasons for
these conclusions as they have been
explained to me. One of these reasons,
and perhaps the most important, is
that no one is going to build a house
unless he feels that he can continue to
pay for it. With depression conditions
prevailing and with hundreds of thou¬
sands of potential home owners now
without reserves or resources of any
kind the market for homes naturally
is limited. That is to say there are
hundreds of thousands of families who
would like to have homes but who
have no way of acquiring them.
* • »
Another road which the administra¬
tion is now following in its efforts to
cause money to
Easing Up flow more freely is
on Bank Loans the recent ruling
easing restrictions
en bank loans. Heretofore, banks have
not been permitted to make loans of
more than 10 per cent of their capital
and surplus for industrial purposes to
one borrower. The treasury now has
abbrogated that provision, long regard¬
ed as a sound banking ruling, and has
t*ld the banks they may loan more
than 10 per cent provided the amount
loaned above 10 per cent is guaran-
teed by the Reconstruction Finance
corporation or the federal reserve
system. Treasury officials think this
will encourage banks to extend addi¬
tional credit.
It happened that on almost the same
day that the treasury policy was an
nounced, one of the largest banks in
the United States reported privately
that one of its vice presidents had re¬
turned from a six weeks’ scouting trip
in an effort to find places where it
could loan money. This man visited
important cities in 16 states. He is
a practical banker and he Is thor¬
oughly acquainted with the means of
approach to potential borrowers. But
his six weeks’ tour netted one loan ap¬
plication.
That banks’ report may sound silly
because there are so many people that
need money. Yet, it must be remem¬
bered that a bank is trustee for the
funds placed in its care by its depos¬
itors and it cannot hand out money
with reckless abandon. It must feel
reasonably sure that there will be
a repayment, arid this was the thing
which the bank’s vice president failed
to find. There were plenty of individ¬
uals and corporations that needed
money but they had no security to of¬
fer and little to guarantee that they
could repay the borrowed funds.
Financial experts, therefore, are not
unduly excited about the latest treas¬
ury ruling which was released with
much gusto and with statements that
this will free “many hundreds of mil¬
lions” to business. I am told that the
banks are chock-full of loose cash. Re¬
ports to the treasury certainly indicate
that to be a fact. But when borrowers
who need money have no security ami
when business is at such a low ebb
that only the minimum of funds is
needed, I believe it can hardly he said
ttiat the bankers are wholly to blame.
The bankers have been vigorously crit¬
icized in the last four or five years
and obviously a considerable spanking
was due them. On the other hand, I
think it is a plain statement of fact
that you can no more force neopie to
borrow than you can make a horse
drink after you have led him to the
trough.
• * *
Senator Gerald P. Nye, North Da¬
kota Progressive Republican, has start¬
ed on a speaking
Unusual tour that, as far as
Speaking T our I can find, is with¬
out precedent. The
senator is chairman of the special sen¬
ate committee named to investigate
the munitions, aircraft, and shipbuild¬
ing industries, to determine whether
these businesses have been active la
fomenting trouble between tbe nations
of the world. The committee has held
hearings covering a period of three
weeks, and the hearings will be re¬
sumed later with the prospect that
they may run on for many months.
Senator Nye is making a series of
six speeches in the United States and
one in Canada, dealing with the ques¬
tion of who really starts wars, lie has
announced that he desires to tell the
country how nations are driven into
conflict and the inference is, of course,
that he believes munition makers and
others producing material for war are
at the bottom of the heap.
But the point is that .Mr. Nye per¬
sonally is an advocate of government
ownership of all plants now engaged
in the production of anything used in
wars between nations. He is authen¬
tically reported to have a draft of leg¬
islation in mind which he will present
to the forthcoming congress. He is
not alone in holding this belief for at
least four other members of his com¬
mittee entertain the same general
trend of mind. There are seven mem¬
bers of the committee so that it is ap¬
parent the Nye plan will have a ma¬
jority of that committee supporting it
if arid when it is presented to the sen-
I have examined records rather com¬
prehensively in an effort to Aistover
whether ever before any senator or
member of the house had gone out to
the country with an appeal for support
of legislation under a circumstance
such as this. The committee had three
or four months more of Investigation
ostensibly to ascertain all iiertinent
facts. Despite the fact that the sen¬
ate has voted money for the committee
to make this investigation and toe
will be spent at hearings. Sen¬
money make know
ator Nye has proceeded to
his views in advance.
Disclosures made by the commit
thus far have been accepted general¬
ly. I think, as showing there was some
tire as the cause of the smoke,
tain testimony given before that
mittee linked some of the American
munitions makers with fore gn
ests whose designs were of a P oil!1 ^
character. It was shown how some
of the foreign agents had
provoke trouble between nations or
to assunip loti to
Europe and the logical occurred in two
that if such activities
curbed three instances, they must have
or ^thel^
in many others,
there is a considerable amount ■
_
icism heard in Washington a • £
,»r Wrt plan of critics. .««"« It
is contended by these
hard how the senator can
to see Investigation after
duct an unbiased this un
having committed himself in
equivocable way. Newspaper Lnloo.
©, Weattrn