Newspaper Page Text
politically independent; always for
the best interest of the whole people
of the county.
Purity of politics; purity of the bal
|.-t box, and clean administration of all
•'sees of public trust. Only paper in
county.
r F. TATUM, Editor.
\ OLUMB XVI.
LIES ABOUT SOUTH
Regarding Alleged Peonage
Exposed in the House,
DENUNCIATION IS SEVERE
Southern Congressmen Declare Rank
Stories Are Told to Divert Immigra
tion —Clark Roasts Department
-*• WB Agents.
-
A Washington special says: An in
vestigation by the immigration com
mission of labor of conditions in tur
pentine camps, plantations and other
dustries of the south, especially the
. xistence of peonage, is provided for in
a resolution taken up by the house
; ii lay under suspension of the rules,
iWilliams of Mississippi said that
circulation abroad of stories re
ling peonage had done harm to the
nth, and he desired an investigation
.n important body. In reply to a
ion by Mr. Mann of Illinois, he
1 he believed the stories had been
o < it by labor agents in New York
order to divert immigrants to other
ms of the country. Mr. Hum
.3 of Mississippi supported the
resolution.
!1h charged that a systematic-cam
had been waged for the past
■lvo months throughout the press of
untry “by those whose interests
i be best served in that way,” for
purpose of discouraging immigra
te the south. Stories of peonage
! white slavery, he said, had been
■ njured up and given to the press
v. : h sensational coloring, and the state
.Mississippi especially held up to the
Id as a slave camp. Agents of the
I;:.ban government, he said, had busied
.mn.-elves “in concocting and circulat
; g these stories. When I deny them,
I do now most vehemently deny
tii ra,” he said, “I want some tribunal
ttod and authorized to swear wit
's and hear testimony, and before
■ bch this issue may bo tried, to the
and that those .who have uttered these
libels may be compelled to appear and
i er substantiate them or stand con
' ed as common slanderers.”
In a bitter criticism of the govem
i cut and some of its officials, Mr.
t’lirk of Florida declared that the
t e of Florida was prepared to an
r “the accounts of ‘peonage,’
very,’ ‘involuntary servitude,’ ‘bru
■ .1 and inhuman treatment of labor
( . s,’ and other publications which
.~iu<-ll of the ‘slums’ and 1n some of
t most remarkable documents ema
i ting from the department of justice
i the United States,” which, he charg
d were absolutely false in all es
sential particulars.
The people of Florida, he asserted,
courted the fullest investigation of a
in itt r which had been of so much
injury to the fair name of their state.
Me predicted that these people “will
me through the ordeal of investiga
tion” without the smell of fire upon
t ir garments and in spite of the bat
teries of slander which for the past
oar have been belching their infam
ous ‘slum begotten” fabrications.
The department of justice, Mr. Clark
barged, had never been especially dis
imulshed “for the legal knowledge of
alleged lawyers who are generally
Ppod to be housed therein,” but he
id that usually “something of a law
yer” had been at its head. He feared
i at the country had fallen into ‘‘evil
times” with reference to the “big chief”
< that department. Whatever may bo
the Qualifications of Attorney General
maparte, he said, that official had
en unfortunate in the selection of
s< me of his inferiors to whom had been
committed peonage prosecuticgb in
Florida and other states. He referred
t 1 Attorney General Bonaparte as “this
transplanted bud of alleged French no
bility,” who had become acquainted
“with a lady bearing the euphonious
cognomen of Mrs. Mary Grace Quack
f'libos, whose field of labor previous to
her acquaintance with the great Balti
more lawyer was in the slums of the
“east side” of ‘dear old Manhattan
Me.’” He presumed, therefore, that
Mr. Bonaparte considered “this great
slum worker” a very, proper person to
• nd to Florida to regulate conditions
in the south.
Mr. Clark next turned his attention
to Assistant Attorney General Charles
W. Russell, who was given charge of
the investigation, and who, he said,
quickly called to his aid Mrs. Quack*
enbos. “My God,” he exclaimed ,“what
a comibnation! In normal times it
would be an affliction upon any people
to send into their midst Charles W.
Russell, ‘a southern man and a demo
crat,’ and Mary Grace Quackaribos, in
combination or separately.’’
IMPROVEMENTS POSTPONED,
The Norfolk and Western Decides Not
to Spend $2,000,000.
( The Norfolk and Western railway
at a meeting T'.T'iioanoke "Fri
day announced that the matter of
spending $2,000,000 in Improvements
on the Pocahontas division, which has
for come time been considered, has
been abandoned for the present, owing
to the general depression no / prevail
ing.
DADE COUNTY SENTINcB
WOMEN CRY FOR BALLOT.
Delegation of Female Suffragists Be
siege the House and Senate With
Demand for Right to Vote.
The advocates of female suffrage
were Tuesday given their annual, op
portunity to present pleas to con
gress, the presentation to the senate
being made before the committee on
woman’s suffrage, and to the house
before the judiciary committee.
Senator Clay of Georgia presided
over the senate committee, and Rev.
Anna Shaw, as the president of the
National Female Suffrage Association,
introduced the speakers, the first of
whom was Mrs. Halva Lockwood,
who has the distinction of being the
only woman who ever made the race
for the presidency. Mrs. Lockwood
expressed confidence in the support of
her cause by the committee.
Mrs. Fannie Fernald, president of
the Maine Woman’s Suffrage Associa
tion, made an eloquent, plea for “A
voice in government which controls
every interest we hold dear.”
The house hearing was presided
ver by Chairman Jenkins of the ju
diciary emmittee, and was in charge
of Mrs. Harriet Upon of Ohio. The
speakers before the house committee
were Miss Emma Gullette of Wash
ington, Mrs. Chapman Catt of New
York, Mrs. Richmond W. Fitzgerald
of Massachusetts, Senator Owen of
Oklahoma, Mrs. Emma Funk of Mary
land, Mrs. Mary E. Craigle of New
York, Mrs. Ida Porter Boyer of Penn
sylvania and Miss Kate Gordon of
Louisiana.
Mrs. Catt showed that the condition
of women in countries, and
even in Great Britain where such agi
tation of woman suffrage was now go
ing on, was better than in the United
States. She claimed that the male riff
raff of foreign countries who emi
grated to these shores, after a year or
two ot residence, was given the ballot
and allowed to vote on questions vital
ly affecting woman. Still, woman her
self is denied the right to ballot.
Most of the speakers claimed that
woman should be given the ballot as a
matter of right. They pointed out that
her education was equal, and in a
great many cases superior, to that of
man; claimed that to her was entrust
ed the training of tho future voters of
the country, and contend and that if
sho was .competent to raise her sons so
that they might become good citizens,
she cevtainlv was competent to be
given the of ballot.
GARY L-D ON FIRST BALLOT.
:>
South Carolina Legislature Meets to
Elect Successor to Latimer.
The general assembly of South Car
olina convened in extra session at
Columbia at 7:45 ociock Tuesday
evening for the purpose of electing a
successor to the late Senator Asbury
C. Latimer.
One ballot was taken in each house
without result, and adjournment taken
to Wednesday. The total vote was
as follows; F. B. Gary 60, LeGrand G.
Walker 42, W. L. Mauldin 18, J. L.
Cokern 20, Wilie Jones 7, Joshua H.
Hudson 3, James H. Carlisle 1.
CHICAGO OFFICIALS ARMING.
Heads of Municipal and Judicial De
partments Prepare for the “Reds.”
Following the attack on Chief Sh;p
py, at Chicago by Anarchist Averbuch,
whom he killed, the high authorities
in the city and local branches of the
state ihave made plans to prepare
themselves for a repetition of the as
sassination attempt.
Mayor Busse, Judge Kerston of the
criminal court, and Associate States
Attorney B. J. Short, have all pur
chased and are carrying revolvers.
GOTHAM LINKED TO JERSEY
By Great and Costly Tunnel Under the
Hudson River.
A tunnel and subway station con
necting Hoboken with New York city
by tubes under the Hudson river was
formaly ope'ne dTuesday when Presi
dent Roosevelt pressed a button in
Washington, thus starting an official
train from New York to Hoboken.
The train carried the governors of
New York and New Jersey and offi
cials of the three cities interested to
the new station of the Delaware, Lack
awanna an-d Western in Hoboken,
where exercises were held in celebra
tion of the beginning of the operation
of the new system.
There a letter from President Roose
velt was read and speeches were de
livered by the two governors and sev
eral city officials.
OHIO REPUBLICANS MEET.
State Convention Assembles in Co
lumbus with Taft Men in Control.
The republicans of Ohio, who met
in state convention at Columbus on
Tuesday placed the entire party ma
chinery of the state in the hands or
Williams H. Taft and his political fol
lowers, and eliminated the interests
of Senators Foraker and Dick by wip
ing off the state central committee
every man who was known to have
any bias in their favor. Every mem
ber of the new state committee's a
Taft man.
Georgia Briefs
Items of State Interest Culled
From Random Sources.
Locker Club Members Indicted.
Tho federal grand jury at Savannah
Saturday returned sixteen indictments
containing the names of forty indi
viduals connected with locker clubs in
Savannah. Arrests will follow.
* * *
G. A. R. Organized at St. George.
A branch of the Grand Army of the
Republic wa3 organized at St. George
Saturday with a membership of twen
ty-five veterans. P. Q. Stoner of Ohio
was chosen commander and Smith
Warren of lowa, vice commander.
* * *
We3leyan’s First Graduate Dead.
Mrs. Katherine E. Benson is dead
at her home in Macon after several
weeks’ illness. She was the first grad
uate of eWsloyan college, and was the
first woman in the world to receive
a diploma from a chartered college.
She was widely known and beloved as
a woman of excellent Christian char
acter. She had reached the advanc
ed of 86.
* * *
A., B. & A. Approves Mileage Books.
It is announced by the Atlanta, Bir
mingham and Atlantic Railroad com
pany that tho new mileage books of
the Southern railway will be honored
on their lines under certain conditions.
The action of this road makes the third
road to become a party to the books
as the Seaboard and the Atlantic Coast
Line have already agreed to the South
ern’s plan.
* * *
Can Run Only 10 Miles an Hour.
Following the report of an inspec
tion made by one of the track walk
ers in the employ of the railroad com
mission, the commission has issued an
order to the Fitzgerald, Ocilla and
Broxton railway company, operating
between those points in south Geor
gia, to reduce the speed of all pas
senger trains over its line to ten miles
an hour until certain repairs which
the commission deems necessary shall
have been made.
* * •
Brewers to Ask Modification of Law.
There is a movement on foot, back
ed by the brewers of the. state, which
contemplates urging the legislature at
its next session to modify -the state
prohibition law so as to permit tho
sale within the state of beers and light
wines. Those urging the modification
of th'a law, it is reported, base their
hope in a large measure upon a pub
lic statement of Governor Smith, made
last December, to the effect that he
hoped to see the standing saloon elim
inated everywhere and such modifica
tion of the law as would permit only
the use of light drinks, such as wines
and beer, at the table as food.
* * *
Auditor Resigns Temporarily.
Special Auditor L. C. Mathews, who
has be:n in the employ of the rail
road commission for some months, has
severed his connection with the com
mission, at least for the present,
though it is said to be with the un
derstanding that he will be recalled
whenever the commission has occa
sion to require his services.
It is stated that the position 0$ spe
cial auditor was not intended to be
permanent, but that he was employed
for certain work which has now been
completed. The principal part of this
work is said to have been an examina
tion into the baoks and accounts of
the Central of Georgia Railway com
pany in Savannah, upon which the
commission now has a complete re
port. The Central afforded Mr. Math
ews every facility for making this ex
amination, although ‘it does not con
cede the right o ! the commission to
make such inquiry.
George Barton Captured.
George Barton, one of the prisoners
who made a sensational escape from
the Fulton county tower, Atlanta, on
Sunday night, February 2d, has been
captured in Bessemer, Ala., and re
turned to tho Atlanta jail.
John Harper, the other prisoner who
escaped with Barton, is still at largo
The escape of Barton and Harper re
sulted in the grand finding indict
ments against James Brown, the night
jailer at the tower, and two trusties,
Joe Williams and Eulace Wallace. One
of the trusties has made a written
confession, in which he says that he,
with the connivance of the night jail
er, opened the cells of the two pris
ones, thus making their escape possi
ble.
Harper was under sentence for mur
der, and was held awaiting an ap
peal to the supreme court. Barton was
charged with robbing a safe. There
Is an outstanding reward of $250 for
the arrest of Barton, and one of S6OO
for the capture of Harper.
* * *
Want Fair to Be National.
Enthusiastic plans by which the an
nual state fair, to be held in Atlanta
next October, will be given under the
auspices of the farmers of the state
will be proposed at a meeting of the
district managers of the unions in At
lanta during the present month.
It is believed the farmers of the
state will enthusiastically favor the
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF DADE COUNTY.
TRENTON, GA., FRIDAY. MARCH (5, 11)08.
plan of holding the fair under the
auspices of the union. Among
plans that will be proposed will be
that of a mammoth national
convention of farmers in Atlanta dur
ing the fair. Two thousand delegates,
representing a membership of 2,000,-
000 people, will be present if the meet
ing is held.
President R. F. Duckworth of the
Georgia division will Issue a call for
the various district executive commit
tees in the state to vote on the sub-
holding a state fair in Atlanta
tnis fall, in connection with the At
lanta Fair Association.
Following this action National Pres
ident Barrett will take a poll of the
various state organizations in regard
to making the fair national in Us
scope.
* * *
Cotton Seed Mea! in Great Demand.
According to the Febiuary report of
the tag sales given out at the depart
ment cf agriculture the sale of cotton
seed meal tax has increased by twen
ty per cent over the amount sold up
to this time last year.
This report also shows a corrcs
sponding decrease in the sale of fer
tilizer tags under the number dis
posed of a year ago. This tremendous
increase iu the sale of cotton seed
meal tags, which it is estimated will
bring the total sale of tags up to
200,000 tons over 170,000 tons for 1906-
1907 is attributed by the officials for
the greatly increased per cent which
is being used as a cattle feed in Geor
gia.
The pure food analysis shows that
cotton seed meal has 33.G2 protein,
whereas tho most generally marketed
is pure wheat bran, which has only
14.50 protein or about one-third as
much. | -
This is the great thing for Geor
gia, and the south, as it is turning
over our southern product and keeping
the farmers’ money close at home.
Another consignment of cotton seed
meals tags, which go twenty tags to
the ton, has bc-c-n ordered for the
spring use of the department.
* * *
To Enforce Pure Fcod Law.
State Commissioner Hudson has is
sued a statement in which he calls
attention to the fact that, beginning
March Ist, all violations of the pure
food and drugs act, passed in 1906, will
be hereafter certified to the proper
court for settlement as provided by
law.
The statement points cut that since
the law went into effect last August
the department has c onducted a Rigor
ous campaign of .education, with a
view to inform the public of the re
quirements of the lav/, but that the
time has row come when further vio
lations must be looked after in the
usual legal manner in the courts.
The order will he one of the great
est interest to manufacturers, jobbers
and dealers in meats, milk, sausages,
other foodstuffs and beverages. The
order states that if the manufacturers,
Jobbers and dealers are not familiar
with the law they should.inform inei/*-
selves without delay, as from this datt*
on no excuse whatever will be accept
ed for the violation of the law, because
the ‘ignorance of the law is no ex
cuse.’ The order closes as follows:
“The one great fundamental princi
ple of this law is truthfully labeling
and thus putting the consumer on no
tice of the exact character of tile ar
ticle he is buying. Injurious sub
stances and harmful coloring must riot
be used in any food product; for ex
ample, preservatives in milk, sausage,
meats and other foods as well as
beverages.
“All manufacturers, jobbers a V- deal
ers in stock feeds should
seives of the provisions of thl^^^Besj^
dating the stile of their proM
should not offer for sale
contains any of those substances spe
cifically forbidden by law.”
MILLION IN BACK TAX£S
Paid Chicago by Trustees
lionaire Field’s Estate^^^
A check for sl,Ooflßo in payment
of back taxes on of the
late Marshall Field was delivered to
John Tv. Thompson, treasurer df Cook
county, at Chicago Monday. The pay
ment is made in accordance with an
agreement entered into by the trus
tees with county "officials several weeks
ago by which suits aggregating sl,-
700,000 were comprised.
UNCLE SAM’S FINANCES.
Government Gives Out Receipts and
Expenditures for February.
The monthly statement of the gov
ennjnent receipts and expenditures
shows that for' the month of February,
1908, the total receipts were KN324,-
899, and the expenditures $5G,730,007,
which leaves a deficit for the month
of $8,405,118.
GRAFTERS COME TO GRIEF.
New York Grand Jury Indicts High
Finance Insurance Jugglers.
Edward R. Thomas and Orlando F.
Thomas, financiers of extensive inter
ests, were indicted at New York on
charges growing out of their manage
ment of the funds of the Provident Sav
ings Life Assurance Society, which
they controlled.
TAMPA FIRE-SWEPT
Fifty-Five Acres in Florida
City Laid in Ashes,
EIGHTEEN BLOCKS BURN
Northeastern Section of City Hard Hit.
Over 300 Buildings, Including Sev
eral Large Cigar Factories,
Destroyed—Loss Heavy.
The entire northeastern section of
Tampa, Fla., composing the city prop
er, was destroyed by fire, which raged
from 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. Sunday. The
area burned covered fifty-five acres or
eighteen and one-half blocks and three
hundred and eight buildings were de
stroyed, with a total loss estimated
at SOOO,OOO.
The burned section included four
large and one smaller cigar factories
and numerous restaurants, saloons,
boarding houses and over two hundred
dwellings occupied by cigar maker;3.
The factories burned were M. Stachel
berg & Cos., 1033 $100,000; M. Perez &
Cos., loss $50,000; Gonzalez Fisher &
Cos., loss $40,000; Esberg Gunst & Cos.,
branch of Stachelberg, loss $40,000 ;
Fernandez & Brother, loss $20,000.
All factories carried large stocks of
tobacco and cigars. The area swept
by fire embraced all that portion of
the city between Twelfth and Michigan
avenues and Sixteenth and Twentieth
streets.
It originated in a boarding house
on Twelfth avenue, and fanned by a
strong wind, spread out, fan shaped,
defying the force of the fire depart
ment, which was crippled by very
weak water pressure, owing to the
smallness of the mains In that sec
tion. Occupants of over two hundred
dwelling houses thrown into a panic
rushed out, attempting to save but lit
tle of their belongings. One fatality
is reported, a Cuban woman in a deli
cate condition, who dropped dead from
the shock, her body being reecued from
her burning home with difficulty. In
!ue big factories R was possible only
to save the most v.nxble of records,
books, etc., and the valuable stocks of
leaf tobacco and manufactured cigars
ready for shipment was left jjo the
mercy of the flames.
Citizens volunteered assistance to
the hard-working firemen, but the
spread of the flames was so rapid that
little effectual work could be done.
Among buildings, other than facto
ries destroyed, were the hotels and
safes of Perez & Castro and Maximo
Caras, six saloons, twelve restaurants
and ten boarding houses. The fire
finally burned itself out at the ex
treme northeastern corner of the city.
Fully half of the people rendered
homeless were out of work, owing to
the dull season in the factories, and
also practically out of funds and their
shelter became an immediate prob
lem.
The insurance is estimated at not
more than half of the loss. Telegrams
were sent to Lakeland, Bartow and
other nearby towns for fire apparatus,
but later were countermanded.
In the Stachelberg factory was de
stroyed a sdlid silver case, In which
cigars of the firm were displayed at the
world’s fairs and expositions, valued
at $25,000.
At the home of Miguel a
cigar maker, the corpse ir. a
coffin awaiting funeral was
cremated. The state militia vms placed
on guard Sunday night in the burned
..district to prevent depredations;
kills prieAH^
Murder Was Corrmittced^U*
Flic
priest was-
ment in St. Elizabeth's Roman Catho
lic Church. •
Kneeling'at tho altar rail, between
two men, Gnarnaccto pressed the muz
zle‘of a revolver against the body of
the priest and shot him through the
heart. Tile assassin was promptly ar
rested. .
FOUR VICTIMS OF FIRE.
Father and Three of His Children Per
ish in Burning Home.
Anthony Schultz and three of his
Children, Nellie, thirteen years old;
Joseph, eleven, and May, eight, wers
burned to death in a fire in their home
in Depew, N. Y., Sunday. Mrs. Schultz
and the four youngest children were
rescued.
TO ARRANGE FOR PRIMARY.
Alabama Democratic Campaign Com
mittee Meets in Montgomery.
Members of the Alabama state dem
ocratic campaign committee gathered
!n Montgomery Friday, at which time
final arrangements were made for the
state primary on May Assessments
on all candidates %ill bo mads and
headqua/iers opened.
BY THE OF CASH
- t-
Bryan Alleges Oppi *>on Will Attempt
His Undoing—Scores Democrats
Who Defeated Beckham.
Before the members of the state
legislature and several thousand Mis
sissipplians, William J. Bryan made a
characteristic speech at Jackson Sat
urday. Mr. Bryan arrived from Mem
phis at an early hour and was met
by Governor Noel and a reception
! committee. He was escorted to the
| governor’s mansion, where he spent
the forenoon. Mr. Bryan was asked
concerning a paragraph in the current
issue of The Commoner, reading as
follows:
“Watch tho personnel of the dele
gations to Denver. Money is being
used in some of the states of the Mis
sissippi valley to secure delegations
who will be obedient to the predatory
interests. The democratic masses must
not be betrayed by representatives of
that system.’
When asked concerning the evidence
in support of this charge, Mr. Bryan
said :
“I wrote that paragraph myself and
know what I am talking about. I have
my information from a man who over
heard a conversation on the subject.”
When asked what interests he
charged with being behind the move
ment, Mr. Bryan said:
“I am convinced that it is the inter
ests representing the trusts and the
railroads. They do not hope to® revent
instructed delegates in the Mississippi
valley states, but they are trying to
get a personnel of delegates who will
be unfriendly to my nomination.”
Mr. Bryan then went to the Century
theater, where the members of the
house and senate, together with a
large number of spectators, were gath
ered. He was introduced by Governor
Noel, who pa* the democratic leader
a glowing tribu.e.
Mr. Bryan’s address throughout was
a repetition of subject matter dealt
with in former addresses. The only
new phase was his caustic reference
to the four democrats in the Kentucky
legislature who, by casting their votes
with the republicans, elected Mr. Brad
ley, republican, United States senator.
He referred to them as embezzlers of
power,” and declared that the embez
zler of power is a worse malefactor
than the man who embezzles, money.
At the conclusion of the address a
resolution endorsing Mr. Bryan, as the
democratic candidate, was adopted by
a rlsifng vote, every man, woman and
child in the theater rising and ap
plauding the Nebraskan.
WILL CLOSE MANY STATIONS.
Initial Effect of Operation of the New
Nine-Hour Law. Jtf]
A Washington pfBB
can railways ha\e
to comply with the provisions^]
“nine hour law.” The ojwraiivjß
law will mean the
railroad companies of s-ev.-ra! jHHH|
additional operators and
a lam-' number of--
Tiie ili.-a O'.finuauc o of r:iilu^B
at many points, it is realizJß
the ' ' V
t, in order to -
pen.-os. Whit 1; mov ggjJ*
the op.•ratine dais
believe thats this is •-
;Jj
: ’ 4M
% J
B . obi
Ciiiu^^l
country arrived at Fan
Friday, on the Pacific ' ’ j^HHBB]
beria with a large
ries, consuls and at : m■..
seventy persona. Ho broulSßl '
new consuls for Mexico, IlavanaH and
York and San Francisco, besides iMy;-.,
nephews, three secretaries and £<BBN
other nttarhes for the Chinese legaM
tlon at Washington, and twenty-foum
students who will enter various schials
and colleges in this country.
ED TURNER DIES ON GALLOWS.
Kentucky Feudist Pays Pnalty For
Murder of Faithless Wife/
■J,
Ed Turner, the - Kentucky feddist,
was hanged in the county Jail at
Chattanooga, Tenn., Thursday. His
neck was broken by the fall. He
went to the scaffold without a tremor.
Turner killed liis wife, Lillian Tur
ner, on Lookout mountain, April 2,
1907. He cut her throat from ear Jgg
ear with a pocket knife. On
Tunmr made a confession suyh.SKjj
his wife had been unfaithful.
NEW GEORGIA GEOLC]B
/ ■;
Prof. McCallic Appointed b * SHI
to Succeed Late Prof.
Governor Smith nun c £ '
pointment of
V Wj Jm
ad visor \^^B
Professor jH
ant state großf
Effort to Kill
Chief Arouses Am
SAv;
Secretary Straus Orrjfl|
Off *. : to bin: C
mg All Known
Confines cf Un:sMS;v,b ;
J
At M ■ Mil'll \ . W
*■
V
by an anarchist who
sassinate the police official
Jm
- ‘
' mHh
was later iden^^l
M ■. - . ■
4H
lP
t k
fa
riu rci: '
■ ’
> ijflfl
fl
:: )•)•• 'l',. !&■’;!;
home.
Ur.clo Sara
’ JH
■ M -
mk
t ‘ M ■ ill
1 ■
a view to “securing the
the police and detective
effort to rid the country of alien al
archists and criminals filing witkJ
the law relating to deportation.” V
Tho order of Secretary Straus, J
pprt. follows: mk
“To All Commissioners of
tion and Immigrant Inspectors
Charge:
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mu' 1." J '-'
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