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Show THE T.FIH SUN. LEHI. UTAH WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS BY JOSEPH W. LaBlNE Cabinet Shifts, Bombing Raids Presage Big Spring Offensives; Russia Draws Closer to Italy (EDITOR'S NOTE When opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.) Released by Western Newipaper EUROPE: From Axis to Triangle If foreign observers hoped the Finnish peace would place quietus on western warfare, their mistake was clearly evident by late March. Not by secret maneuvers but by leaps and bounds the Rome-Berlin axis was merging into a Russian-German-Italian coalition designed to force a dictators' peace down the Anglo-French throat At London and Paris the populace protested, demanding de-manding more aggressive pursuit of the war. Their parliaments fumed, and one government fell completely. complete-ly. The other, sorely afraid. Jumped into the conflict head first. Mr. Welles Goes Home Nobody knew what was in his briefcase but U. S. Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles boarded the Contt di Savoia at Genoa, homeward home-ward bound to tell Franklin Roosevelt Roose-velt about the chances for a European Euro-pean peace. Sidetracked by France r f . ! - ' ' ' f I i t . I. its ' PAUL REYNATJD lit got the call. (See below.) and Britain, he had more luck with Germany and Italy whose dictators, Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini, met at the Brenner pass and presumably pre-sumably framed a set of abortive terms. Also discussed at Brenner was an Italo-Russ compromise calling for sphere-of-influence division In the Balkans. A few days later, when Soviet Ambassador Alexander Schkvarzev flew from Berlin to Moscow Mos-cow on a secret mission, It was clearly evident that Germany was drawing Rome and Moscow closer together. As if gloating over this diplomatic victory, Hitler sent his raiders to bomb the British naval base at Scapa Flow. Reaction In England. When press and public pub-lic began yelling for action, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain got mad. He gave parliament the fightingest speech of his career and promised to North I p Sed DENMARK , Heligoland!? r GERMANY strike back. For the umpteenth time in three years he averted a government collapse, this time by ending planes on a retaliatory air raid against the Nazi base at Sylt (set map). Wave after wave of bombers poured tons of explosives on the island fortress; next day reconnaissance planes brought back pictures to prove the damage. Hastily the Germans took precautions at their other vulner able base, Heligoland. Then they In the HEADLINES OKLAHOMA The U. S. obtained a preliminary order restraining Gov. Leon C Phillips from using troops to prevent completion of the $20,000,000 Grand River dam. Phillips' Phil-lips' contention: . That the U. S. should pay the state $889,000 for property to be damaged. TAXATION At Washington, the U. S. treasury figured early 1939 income tax returns showed a 28 per cent boost over last year, with heaviest heav-iest collections still to be reported. AVIATION American Airlines, Inc., asked the civil aeronautics authority for permission to operate the first complete airline from Chicago Chi-cago to Mexico City. COMMUNICATIONS MaJ. Edwin Ed-win Armstrong, inventor of static-free static-free "frequency modulation" broadcasting, broad-casting, asked the Federal Communications Commu-nications commission to give his "F-M" the broadcasting channels now used for television. Argument: That television, now impractical commercially, stands in the way of radio progress. TRADEMARK At Baltimore federal district court injunction ordered or-dered makers of five other soft drinks w cease using the words "coca" or "cola," because it infringed in-fringed on Coca Cola's trademark. took revenge by raiding British convoy con-voy ships in the North sea. In France. Fighting Increased on the western front but there was a bigger fight in Paris. Called on the carpet as a result of the Russian threat, Premier Edouard Daladier emerged with such a weak vote of confidence (311 deputies had not voted) that his cabinet resigned. This was a victory for democracy, because the Daladier government has ruled for seven months under dictatorial decrees. Quickly President Presi-dent Albert Lebrun summoned Paul Reynaud, conservative ex-finance minister, bitter foe of Naziism and distaster of the politics-ridden Daladier Dala-dier cabinet Next day Premier Reynaud Rey-naud emerged with a well publicized, psychologically sound "victory" cabinet dedicated to trouncing the Nazis. Edouard Daladier was still war minister, and all parties were so thoroughly represented that the chamber's confidence seemed assured. as-sured. In Finland While 500,000 Finns hastened evacuation of territory ceded to Russia, Rus-sia, the battered little nation began patching her defenses and counting noses. Total war casualties were placed at 58,500, of which 29,700 were dead or seriously disabled. (Total army: 360,000.) Meanwhile new troubles were arising with Russia. The Finnish cabinet, about to resign, heard that the Kremlin opposed formation of a Norwegian-Swedish-Finnish mutual defense alliance on the ground that it would be aimed at the Soviet. Obviously Russia was not willing to surrender her new-found domination over Scandinavia. In Poland Numerous and unpleasant are the atrocity stories coming out of Poland Po-land since German occupation last autumn. Much of this information probably came from consular officials of-ficials of neutral nations, a possibility possi-bility which might explain the latest Nazi order: Effective immediately, immediate-ly, all foreign consular offices in Poland must be evacuated, making Germany the sole source of official information on conditions in the area. At Washington the state department de-partment announced the Reich had been adamant to its protests. Left without official representation were 532 Americans living in Poland. ASIA: V Crow Eaters For two and one-half years Japanese Jap-anese troops fighting in north China have reported after every encounter encoun-ter that the enemy has been "routed," "rout-ed," "given a stunning blow," "wiped out" or "annihilated." In late March the Japanese army was forced to eat crow. An official survey sur-vey admitted that more than a million mil-lion Chinese troops were still fighting fight-ing in north China under leadership of Gen. Cheng Chien, whom the Japs reported killed in 1938. In the south, Nippon had better luck, capturing the walled city of LIngshan and encircling a large Chinese force east of the Nanning-Yamchow Nanning-Yamchow railroad. Meanwhile the puppet regime of Wang Ching-wei, turncoat ex-Chinese ex-Chinese premier, summoned a central cen-tral political council and established a government at Nanking under Japan's watchful eye. POLITICS: . F arley's Inning In late March Columnist Ernest Lindley wrote from Washington that President Roosevelt had told an unidentified un-identified southern legislator (1) that he wanted to retire; (2) that Cordell Hull should succeed him; (3) that Jim Farley's Catholicism would make impossible a successful race by the postmaster general. Next day Franklin Roosevelt protested. pro-tested. Said he: The remark about Farley and the rest of the article all came from whole cloth it was utterly false. While this was no recommendation, it at least let Farley's Far-ley's friends believe that he would have an equal chance for the job if Mr. Roosevelt turns it down. Farley himself took heart Next day, stepping from his train at Springfield, Mass., where Demo crats have entered a full slate of delegates for him in the forthcom ing primary, he said flatly: "To clear up any misunderstanding, let me say that my name will be presented pre-sented to the national convention at Chicago, and that's that" And it was. Other political news: C Secretary of the Navy Charles Edison announced "after weeks of earnest consideration" his candidacy in the New Jersey Democratic gubernatorial primary May 21. C. Sen. Arthur Vandenberg (R., Mich.) a G. O. P. presidential hopeful, turned down invitations to campaign in Wisconsin and Nebraska Nebras-ka (where he is a primary candidate). candi-date). Reason: "The choice of the (G. O. P.) convention should flow from the deliberate judgment of the people, and not from ... a campaign tour." Women in the Ncivs DORIS DUKE CROMWELL, "world's wealthiest girl," found Husband Jimmy Cromwell in trouble. As U. S. minister to Canada he criticized American Isolationists and denounced Germany, Ger-many, prompting congressmen to demand his recall. MRS. FRANKLIN ROOSE-VELT ROOSE-VELT JR. fell from a horse, fractured frac-tured her pelvis and suffered a slight concussion. JACQUELINE COCHRAN, ace aviatrix, tried to better the world's air speed record of 311 miles an hour. JOAN FONTAINE, actress wife of Actor Brian Aherne, sister of Actress Olivia de Havilland, was seriously ill in a Hollywood hospital. CONGRESS: Farm Fund Passed by the senate (and certain cer-tain to pass the house) was a $923,-000,000 $923,-000,000 agriculture appropriation bill carrying $212,000,000 for parity payments pay-ments and another $85,000,000 for the surplus commodities program. It was more than $200,000,000 above either the house bill or the President's Presi-dent's budget, and wiped out most of the $300,000,000 earlier savings through which the house planned to avoid new taxes or a boost in the national debt limit. Though congress hoped to offset the farm boost by slashing defense and relief appropriations, even this possibility was fading fast. Europe's Eu-rope's war was forcing U. S. attention atten-tion to her armed strength and metropolitan congressmen were demanding de-manding at least a $500,000,000 boost in WPA's appropriation. Some observers ob-servers predicted the deficit for next fiscal year would be at least $2,500,000,000, compared with the $1,716,000,000 estimate by President Roosevelt. Treasury Secretary Mor-genthau, Mor-genthau, hearing that congress was looking covetously at this $2,000,000,-000 $2,000,000,-000 stabilization fund, hastened to protect it. Also in congress: C Indicating a lessening of administration admin-istration opposition to Wagner act amendments, the pro-New Deal house labor committee voted to expand ex-pand the labor board from three men to five. Earlier the committee 51 J S J" i MICHIGAN'S HOFFMAN -UelFs bells, noln rejected 9 to 8 a motion for establishment estab-lishment of a new board, but there was skullduggery in this. Rep. Clare Hoffman (R., Mich.) learned his proxy vote had been cast against the proposal by error. Asked if he would have voted as his proxy was cast, Hoffman replied: "Hell's bells, no! Everybody knows what I think of this board!" C After passing the farm bill, the senate took up the house-approved resolution to extend for three years the reciprocal trade act Its support sup-port diminished, the bill stood only a 50-50 chance of passing as the administration wanted it, minus a clause requiring senate ratification of each pact C. The senate banking and currency committee approved 14 to 4 the bill of Sen. John G. Townsend (R., Del.) to repeal the silver purchase act of 1934. Reasons: (1) Too costly; (2) it has subsidized Chinese, Mexican Mex-ican and Canadian silver; (3) heavy gold purchases have made it impossible im-possible to attain the goal of 25 per cent silver in the U. S. monetary mone-tary stock. C An amendment to the Hatch "clean politics" act designed to bar political activity on the part of state employees paid with U. S. funds, passed the senate and headed head-ed for a pigeonhole in the house. CThe house military committee began investigating foreign purchases pur-chases of U. S. airplanes, fearing vital defense mechanism was being be-ing sold abroad. Meanwhile the allied al-lied purchasing committee begged the U. S. to sell $1,000,000,000 worth of its newest secret planes. Reason: Present models would be obsolete by the 1941 delivery date. SUPERLATIVES in the ncivs . . . BIGGEST CARGO U. S. navy tugs began towing a 6,500-ton floating float-ing dry dock from New Orleans to Pearl Harbor. Honolulu 6,000 miles away. SUREST DATE As they have for 100 years, a band of swallows returned re-turned on the appointed day to San Juan Capistrano, Calif., waich they leave reeularlv each October 23. B rue hart's Washington Digest All 'Labor-Displacing' Machinery Would Be Taxed Under New Bill Wyoming's Senator O'Mahoney Presents Congress With the Latest 'Cure-All' for Aiding America's Unemployed. By WILLIAM BRUCKART YVNU Service, National Press Bid;., Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON. - I am writing this dispatch, as usual, on my typewriter. type-writer. If I wrote it with pen or pencil, many hours of time would be required. Moreover, with my penmanship, there certainly would be difficulties ahead for the linotype lino-type operator in the print shop. So, the typewriter from my viewpoint is a great labor saver as well as a great time saver. It Is both of those things despite my method of typing. I hunt 'em and hit 'em. I am grateful to whomever invented in-vented the typewriter. It has contributed con-tributed much to our economic life. It never complains or goes on strike, especially a sit-down strike, unless some part is broken. As far as I know, there has never been a union of typewriters, headed by a paid agitator whose tenure of office depended largely upon how much trouble he could cause. Yet, it is conceivable that I may have to pay a tax because I own this weather-beaten, creaky old machine that has served me welL There was a bill Introduced in the senate some days ago that places a tax on the use of machinery that "displaces labor." I am displacing labor by using my own typewriter. Of course, the use of the typewriter type-writer illustration was thoroughly exaggerated. I entertain no fears that such a tax ever will be' laid. ! w " ' J'' ' ; V AJ h : t A fx I A SEN. JOSEPH C. O'MAHONET Yet, I insist that such an end is conceivable under the bill sponsored spon-sored by Senator O'Mahoney, Wyoming Democrat. I say it is conceivable because for a quarter of a century I have observed how sometimes the most innocent use of government power spawns and grows and becomes an octopus with tentacles that reach far beyond any one's wildest fancy of the day the original law was passed. The O'Mahoney bill contemplates no such extension of the tax to me in my capacity as a correspondent It is designed to deal with and lay a tax on machines that for instance, in-stance, may do the work of a thousand thou-sand men and require only one attendant at-tendant Object of O'Mahoney' Bill ts to Reduce Unemployment The objective of Senator O'Ma-ooney's O'Ma-ooney's bill is to reduce unemployment unemploy-ment It proposes to levy a tax where machines of the type just mentioned are used. It would be "fair" with business, according to the senator's explanation in debate, by allowing a "tax credit" a tax reduction where an employer used the maximum of hand labor, although al-though I do lot know how such industries in-dustries as the automobile manufacturers, manu-facturers, for example, could build the cars we have today with hand labor. The cost would be out of sight and I, among thousands of others, would be unable to own a motor car. Senator O'Mahoney made one statement while discussing his bill that seems to have full merit He said "it seems clear to me that the only way to reduce unemployment is to stimulate private industry for our experience has demonstrated that government cannot provide the Jobs that are needed to restore prosperity." pros-perity." But he argued that his proposal would provide that stimulation stimu-lation Decause of the system of "rewards" "re-wards" that gave tax reduction to employers who used the largest possible number of workers." Aiding Unemployment. William Bruckart today discusses dis-cusses a bill introduced into the senate by Sen. Joseph C O'Mahoney O'Ma-honey of Wyoming, in which the senator proposes a tax on all machinery ma-chinery that "displaces labor." According to Bruckart there is very little likelihood of the bill passing but he writes about it because he feels it is typical of a trend in present-day law-making. The famous census "income" "in-come" question is also reviewed. On the other hand, Senator Nor-ris, Nor-ris, of Nebraska, had an idea that the O'Mahoney bill would act as a stop sign on general progress. He thought that there would be little reason for any one to Invent new things. The Nebraskan thought the nation ought "to hesitate long perhaps per-haps forever unless there is real compulsion under conditions that we cannot resist before we erect a 'stop' sign of that kind." There can be no doubt that the general human reaction to the O'Mahoney bill would be even more severe than pictured by Senator Norris. Peo- SENATOR NORRIS pie are like ly to feel that there is no further need for any one to seek progress and attempt projects that would mean better things at lower prices. That lower price thing long has represented a great clamor in this country, iviy own opinion is that the O'Mahoney bill is about as silly as any that have come into the legislative mill in my experience. ex-perience. Classification of Machinery Would Be Superhuman Task As I said at the outset hi referring refer-ring to the use of a typewriter, that was a bald exaggeration. But let me ask who is there that can say it is outside of the realm of possibility possibil-ity when a law is enacted that permits per-mits a group of individuals in Washington Wash-ington to determine what is and what is not labor-saving machinery? machin-ery? That in itself, is a superhuman super-human task. Labor-saving machinery machin-ery may be an absolute necessity in one place and a luxury in another. an-other. But in either case, the general gen-eral public gets the benefit The theory advanced in the O'Mahoney bill is part and parcel of the category of alleged "new and progressive ideas" about which we have so often heard recently the things that are gurgled over and made the subject of great propaganda propa-ganda and that has flopped. As I see it and according to the judgment judg-ment of many persons with whom I have talked, here is an example of government run wild. The only answer I have been able to find is that somebody with a screwy brain "sold" Senator O'Mahoney a bill of goods. Those fellowsand Washington is overflowing over-flowing with that type of crackpot these days have a capacity for making things appear beautiful. Even though the proposal is ridiculous ridic-ulous and there is no chance whatsoever what-soever of congress ever enacting it into law, I have devoted space to the subject because of the implications implica-tions that are given by introduction of such legislation. It indicates a deterioriation of national thinking and it shows unmistakably a tendency tend-ency on the part of a great many people to throw overboard the very essentials of the system that has made the United States the greatest nation in the world and the best place in which to live. Income Question in Census Is Example of New Trend There was another evidence of this tendency disclosed in the forms to be used by the census takers. Much stink has been raised around here by such as Senator Tobey, of New Hampshire, who fought vigorously vigor-ously against allowing the census bureau to ask every one what his income is and where it comes from. Of course, those questions were forced onto the census bureau by Harry Hopkins, former professional "reliever" turned secretary of commerce. com-merce. Mr. Hopkins would glory in such details as the situation of every individual in the United States; but why he thought people would tell the truth about their income in-come is quite beyond my understanding. under-standing. It would make more liars than prohibition did. I believe there has been a compromise com-promise reached on the income questions for the census so that individuals can write their incomes on a plain piece of paper and mail it to Washington, without any signature. signa-ture. That is better. If still represents repre-sents too much government in my opinion. Also, it illustrates how government can expand and creep and soon become boss. The real danger then, as l see it, is that politicians will go out in the forthcoming campaign and employ their best brand of demagoguery to sell more of this trash if they think that such campaigning will get votes. The difficulty, it must be admitted, is that voters will hear the glowing description of proposed political panaceas, curealls and quack remedies without having the real possibilities told to them. Using the O'Mahoney bill again as an example, the senator's explanation explana-tion of it made a picture of a prosperous pros-perous and harpy America. k lj Yjj DREVTPEAfySCH WHO GETS THE PLANES? WASHINGTON. Backstage, all the stew over whether the allies are getting planes ahead of the U. S. army and navy bolls down to t pergonal per-gonal vendetta between the secretary secre-tary of war and the secretary of the treasury, plus some needling by younger army air corps officers. It happens that Treasury Bos Henry Morgenthau asked for and got the job of co-ordinating airplane purchases, and his bouncing little cabinet colleague, Henry Woodring, didn't like it If you note the congressmen con-gressmen who are stirring up the investigation on Capitol HilL they are chiefly friends of Secretary Woodring. Real fact is that although Morgenthau Mor-genthau has made some minor mistakes, mis-takes, his chief error has been in offending people. Army and navy plane purchases have not suffered. Both Secretary of the Navy Edison, and Assistant War Secretary Johnson, John-son, who has charge of purchases, testify to this. U. S. planes have been delivered on time, and no secret planes are getting to the allies. Morgenthau's chief boner was in asking the quartermaster general of the army, Maj. Gen. Henry Gibbins, and the paymaster general of the navy, Rear Adm. Ray Spear, to sit in on his allied purchasing coordinating co-ordinating committee. Neither one knows anything about airplanes. Younger officers in the air corps resent re-sent this, and have been squawking, though the able chief of air corps, General Arnold, hasn't Worried Morgenthau. Morgenthau got into the airplane picture because this is the one big commodity the allies are purchasing purchas-ing and he told the President he didn't want their financing operations opera-tions to upset the U. S. money market mar-ket To pay for the planes, the allies'are dumping American securities, securi-ties, plus U. S. government bonds and Morgenthau didn't want them to depress his own government offerings. of-ferings. (He has to issue new ones constantly.) Siding with Morgenthau are several sev-eral big shot army-navy men, including in-cluding Johnson and Edison, who say that the more planes the allies buy here, the more it helps the U. S. army and navy to develop better planes. For instance, the Glenn Martin company is building a brand new bomber for the French. But as a partial result of experimenting for the French, Martin also has developed devel-oped a new bomber for the U. S. which will almost fly circles around the French planes. Also Lockheed is selling several hundred tip-top planes to the British and French. This has helped it -develop a new pursuit plane, which will make about 400 miles per hour. It is the first twin-motored pursuit plane, has a liquid-cooled engine and is expected to astound the world's fighting forces. CAPITAL CHAFF At the annual stunt party of the National Women's Press club every one of the 500 women present rose when Mrs. Roosevelt was presented, except her cousin and bitter administration administra-tion hater, Mrs. Alice Roosevelt T - . i. Among those who did rise were Mrs. Thomas Dewey, Mrs. Bob Taft, and Mrs. Arthur Vandenberg. Vanden-berg. Mrs. Long-worth Long-worth not only ostentatiously remained seated but talked to others near her during Mrs. Roosevelt's little speech. MERRY-GO-ROUND Whether his membership on the Dies committee has anything to do with it is conjectural, but it is a fact that Rep. Noah Mason has no opposition in either the G. O. P. or Democratic primary in his Illinois district Handsome Rep. Jennings Randolph, Ran-dolph, who through his chairmanship chairman-ship of the District of Columbia committee is known as "mayor" of Washington, is being strongly urged to run for governor of West Virginia, Vir-ginia, but is holding off because of the bitter factional split among local Democrats. Only 37, a former newsman and professor, Randolph has his eye on the U. S. senate. Speaking of horse-and-buggy days, Henry Wallace points out that his father, secretary of agriculture under un-der Harding, was the last member of the cabinet to give up a team of horses. This was late in 192L The man to watch in Louisiana is Eugene Stanley, who will be the new attorney general. Reason the federal government had to step in to clean up louisiana was that the attorney general hitherto was under the thumb of the Huey Long machine. ma-chine. But most of the scandal falls under the jurisdiction of the state, and the federal men were limited. Now, Stanley is ready to dig into a lot more scandals . . . Latest Dip- raD,er,am: "Lord C" founded the British empire. Nelson saved it and Chamberlain lost it" Alice Longworth fr-V NEWS THIS WEEK (Consolidated Feature, "VIEW YORTT FHL, I . - in , has lanV u "." "".lot, nd all ,uc7S citementsandjZt vmcioz Artist not Clt P, . n iMtnt vvar Has Experience -V. . . . n A h. British traditionalism vails. Sir MuirhJrf VSiul fc artist of the World Wa7 officially appointed , 1 the navv. an . ! . e he also will re, ZZE T0H bo Scottish birth, is most distinguished etchers. also a painter. h,,t t . ai tween the big wars he ha,T war is decidedly . lt9 Skeleton trees on a blasted zig-zagtrenches, the splintered of peasants' huts, the anguw namics of war machinery, U w themselves to Sir Muirhead'gste lative drypoint. There isn't w. uiu gamier s mass and cote - ai u-m-uaie war-no gay p! bright uniforms and snorti w..' horses. There are, instead, the t ieu monoenromes ol desolaUta, fc Inert black and white oi sha.-traven sha.-traven ruin. There were plenty of batfe playing when Sir Muirhead w appointed official war artist t 1916. He painted boldly etched deeply his pictures ft the war museum, for whick a later became trustee. Much wis made, not only of the Important of a minutely observed pictoriil record of the war, bat of lb availability of so great an artist to render its full aesthetic vatoes, This time, there is a perfunctory perfunc-tory announcement only i fn lines, of Sir Muirhead's appoint ment. Not even in the graphic arts is war getting its im tomed fanfare. This writer remembers well k Muirhead's masterful drawings the "international studio" of an ear lier and happier day mellow art tectural studies, or placid landica:- in English byways where no li raid siren ever sounded. Ee re the son of a Glasgow Journals studying art at a night school was in 1901 that he went to &! land, to become an honorary do- tor of letters at Oxford and om the most famous artists of Bs&- land. He has exhibited in Hp York several times and has an e thusiastic following amon cm and the American art public. TN 1937. Rep. John E. Milli A Arkansas made his camps for the United States against the "New Deal patrona! machine" Arkansas Senator Is Ardent Foe of charged to n . j lt-.-Z. AM oppose'' Bailey, had the active support his "organization of 5,000 state en- ployees," and of various members of the New Deal cabinet Bep sentative Miller, running as sa independent in-dependent against "machine p ticians," achieved a sensational w tory, as he won the seat of the as Joe T. Robinson. He was the K independent elected to a major litical office in Arkansas since b early reconstruction days. His cess was acclaimed as a trims' over patronage politics. Today, by one of those curio reversals of political form wlia make news, Senator MiD the most conspicuous oppoa of the extension and strength ing of the Hatch law, direct against political job-holders i ing in politics. He would only block its extension is & state Job-holders support part by federal funds, would repeal section bars- governmental em! ..mhwi activity. The lean, bespectacled :J Miller is somewhat profc appearance, and. tagj graauateu v.lK!rs: Teachers' college in WP Ind. However. u rtcis the law and has been attorney in Searcy, ArK-,.i & He was prosecuting county judge before hi i Stoddard County. Mo. N THE light oi : ;a mine Presid' Sates, Execul interes career facts v Hev dent 1 upon t Execu' s Kev ' dent ti office i ' stage' ;the ne to sur "Brail fessori tbougt beenc ing so D. w bundr He' who u berso were ing ' Roose ed"p He-whoe He-whoe giano Aft Hous est of Presii seer. His dent's Bouse, In i Death patter death John I Tyler' vac an' sen tat on th The d result' let to ed in 1 his f was i ; death ' made ed St more into i ; drape jh w: jwhod ' finallj his ho he w ship i . feder: I TyL Chart Marc! Tyler co a IN THE ligm ar A history, it is Q" ,:rVS ought to get rid of toe rw hioh commissioner Grand . . bat Elephant Less P; be teresting is the xa is a knight commander o Klav. ana These titles were F toe eariy i- to -i Krom Matri. hoctnwpd on him Riam. when, in Sayre was adviser to aided in many treaty w- Mt ( 1803 later junio: Virgi era State of m the brck iron By schis Not dot fcoun large iatt Sta'.e to tl the i I In Stati Ptes Ear; til tan De- it t '.'oh; E it:; P5r lej tar |