OCR Text |
Show o Tin: rvso m:. paypon. gnronk SAMUEL P. COWLET E. Hollis of the of bin eiiu of tnxesi ig.itbui, Justice, eng iged In a gun battle with -tir (, .is belter known Us George Nel-u- i, Public Enemy ( Bale No. , ami a coiopan.Mii, mar Hairing-tonmen were 111., a d both tie- - fed-r.- d shot to dt ii li m.iel.iii" guns in the bands of the b.imli's. 'i he k IVrs, accompanied by a xxom.in esc qed for the time being in the eg- ids' mr, their OX' II belli g Next day Nelson's body was found utaii fNSITRTdlt News Review of Current Events the World Over I and Agent Herman l.oe) BRISBANE this . week i The Swi,8 An,wer i : Robinson Plans No New laws Sas Agreement Conerrning the Saar Reported Vinsons anting to Japan. I Pre.-ide- nt ranco-Gcrina- n W. PICKARD By EDWARD rr. fill U'vit' Ji'i; robinson of mmuvlour hour-- , in Ronexelt n aiIwiimn lender, .pout it conference with Warm Springs, and emoi'.,i'd Fre-im'i- w e that 1 j.tU'T c a in o with tho t.Sttr;iiii No tho o Deal xv ho pro program t sen ted to congress in .Tanimi y contemplate poMthm nut tl n o s tho of noxv ini tax"' or tho subMantlnl in crease of e x i s t i n -taxes. IJo a.hioii tti it he boiioxoi! expenditures for normal p n rp sos xxoiihl h( kopt vxi'il xx. thin nation it tin Income. Of course, tills does not menu a balanced budget, for this cannot ho had while enormous sums are bom-- : spent for relief and but the senator would not admit Hint the cost of these would go above tin ten billion dollar mark. Unemployment relief Is to bo pro A rea ferred to the dole, he .said. sonably consorvatixe program should be adopted xvith a view to tapering olT the deficit. Senator Robinson said that the bonus was discussed at some length hut no conclusion was reached. Intimates of the White House have expressed that a bonus program calling for expenditure of more than txvo billion dollars may be passed over a veto. Senator lat Harrison of Mississippi, chairman of the senate finance com mlttee, who was also present at the conference, left for Washington to begin a study of unemployment insurance. Next day the President's chief caller ,was Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. 'Itoper, and he told Mr. Roosevelt that business would move rapidly on the ,roud to recovery If only it were as Bured of a safe and sane federal program of expenditures. To correspondents Mr. Roper said he was greatly cheered by Senator Robinson's statement He felt that the left wing de-- , Bland for vast sums of money for relief of the unemployed must be checked and that there must he a further shifting of relief control to communities. lulled to meet on Dcicmhcr .'! to dis cns tin- foi tin oiuiiig plebiscite In the Saar, so that Hungary might "defend its Mia r against proceedings which haw- ii" other purpose than to compromise the genii name of the xxlude Hungarian nation." he d". iiment then pointed out that the iiaiiiiil, under Artiele IV of the coxen.mt of the league, may deal with any ipiestiuu aflecling the peace of the world. It is, therefore, the duty of the coun-- i as il to lace this tpiistien as soon possible, it asserted, 'anil thus guard against the graxe dangeis which might arise from the situation that Hungary is still bound to bung to the attention of the council." The Jugoslax ian charges xxere supported by the other two states of the Czechoslovakia and Utile entente, Rumania. Italy, which has stood by Hungary, was expected to refuse to grant extradition to Trance of Dr. Ante 1avclh h, alleged leader of the gang that planned and carried out the assassination of Ki: g Alexander. The court of appeals at Turin denied the application of France, and It xxas heliexcd the minister of justice would confirm this rul- , - 1 ing. tin-fea- r LEON be- fore the chamber of deputies that It xxas undeniable that an understanding exists bet ween France and Russia, and that the Sox let government had offered armed aid to Frame in case of a conflict xvltli Germany. This caused great excite m e n t and the French office contented itself xxith a denial that there was any military accord. The Russian offer was gen- Col. Jean Fabry erally hcliexed to have been made by Maxim Litvinov, Russian foreign commissar, last spring to the late Louis Hartbou and again to his successor, Pierre luival. Col. Jean Fabry, former French minister of war, gave support to Archimbaud's state-meri- t by asserting that Frances knoxxl-edgof German rearmament, the details of German troops and information concerning the secret manufacture of arms and airplanes In the reich was supplied by Russia. The txvo men were arguing for a large war budget, and Archlmbaud pictured Russia's huge military machine working xvith France as the only means of preserving peace In Europe. e 'ROUBLE over the Saar plebiscite may be averted after all the nlartn, for It Is reported unofficially that Chancellor Hitler of Cermuuy and Foreign Minister 1ierre I.aval of France have y reached an accord providing that will pay for French mining properties in the Saar If France abandons the effort to keep the region under the Jurisdiction of the League of Nntions. Substance was given this report when Keichsfut-hre- r Hitler Instructed from Germany tell all the Nazi propaganda forces In the DISPATCHES in tho reich, and Saar to cease their activities. He orthough the government calls them madered that disturbances must he avoid- licious lies," It is a fact that the army ed and that the Nazis must relv largely and police forces are being held under on the press to keep the sxvnstlka fly- emergency orders. A long smoldering feud hetween the ing In the disputed territory after the plebiscite. This would seem to Insure reiehsxvehr (regular army) and the an Impartial vote on January 13. schutzstaffel (black shirt picked Nazi guards) was believed responsible lor having given unofficial notice the orders, which Involved suspension JAPAN, she xx ill withdraw from the of Christmas furloughs for soldiers and Washington naval treaty, still seems military police. to have hope that the United States Drilling of Nazi storm troops has and Great Britain will Increased, reports said, xvhile all maragree to give her naval riages of army men and police set for the Christmas holidays, popular wedparity. I!ut Just In case, she has now Invited ding period for Germany's military France and Italy to men, have been postponed. Baron Werner von Fritsch, chief of Join her In denouncing the reiehsxvehr, In a memorandum to the pact. Those nntions Hitler, said plainly In discussing Nazi may consent, but the two great Anglo Saxon suppressive methods t lint, unless a more liberal spirit prex ailed, the govtuitions are as one In ernment would face opposition from demanding that the all sides In case of war. He told Hitratio be maintained. ler something must he done about the Representative Carl Vinson of Georgia, who Representative had blood betxvoon the schutzstaffel Carl Vinson Is chairman of the and the reiehsxvehr. bouse committee on uaval affairs, has made plain the policy he will insist BOLIVIA'S troops In the Chaco were upon. whipped by the I sincerely hope it will not be necand Iresident Daniel Salaessary to scrap the treaty, he said, manca was blamed. He visited the xxar but It seems noxv we cannot hope very front and xxas arrested h.v Gen. EnStrongly for anything else. We cannot rique Ienaranda and forced to resign. grant uaval equality to Japan at any Meantime Vice Iresident Jose Sorzano price. If the Tokyo government does had taken over the presidential powers Insist upon wrecking the treaty 1 will by decree and Installed a nexv cabinet. Insist Unit the house naval nffairs comJenarandn appeared to he the virtual mittee and congress make enough dictator and it seemed likely he would money available to build five ships for take steps to bring nliout peace xvith each three laid down by Japan. Inrnguay. Japan, be said, had once agreed to be satisfied with three xvarships for CARDENAS, xxho pKN. LAZAIO thirty-nineach five built by the United States though only years old y Is a veteran of the Mexican revolujr Great Britain. "Officially and it said that was all It needed, tion, xxas installed as president of Mexiinson said, yet now It wants more." ico on November 30. He Is of Spanish and Tarasean Indian stock, a tine solA GAIN it may he said that If or dier and statesman and has held office when xxar under the revolutionary another European government renks out, It will start among the for fixe years. The blaze lighted outhern nations. y the assassinations of King Alexan-e- r A trill lasting only a few minutes. and Louis Barthou In Marseilles Is INLord .xshley won a divorce from his till smoldering. Jugoslavia's dele-ate- s wife, the former Sylvia Hawke, actress, in the League of Nations formal- and thp costs, estimated at $1n.i)tX, charged Hungary with eompliffity In were ordered paid by Douglas Fairle murder of the king, asserting she banks. xvbo xxas named as id hnrhored Balkan terrorists. Httn-ir- y cnt. Neither Lady Ashley nor the demanded immediate action by American film star made any defense e leagues c uncil on tills accusation, and there xvere hut txvo witnesses, Lord daring the peace of the xxorld Ashley nnd George Edwards, FairThe Hungarian banks secretary. A decree nisi was lght be affected. te asked that the matter be placed granted by Justice Sir Boyd Merrlmnn, the agenda of the councils session and It may b made final In six months. 1 Ger-Itian- e for-nall- A. Wallace, sec-o- t Washington agriculture, is girding his armor to light off a Wallace drixo to rxxise the ID-nr- x , Will ment act. adjustMr. Wal- inaiix sinister tnoxes noxv beand be is i. ado in that direction prep.r tig to meet Ids adx ersjiries In the ngressional battle that noxv flp pears certain to come. q be secretary freely admits now that there may be some changes necessary in the adjustment act, but his position xx ill he boldly against too much whittling wlicn agricultural legislation is before congress in January. The conviction is held by him that the agri- i America was wedding day in London for the it i he of Kent, fourth son of the k'ng and queen of England, and Ptlncess M M'itia of Greece. The metropolis swarmed wit H royalty nnd nubility from many lands, and vast ilirongs of ordinary persons xvatebed the parade to Westminster Abbey, where the marriage ceremony xxas performed. TIip church was filled xvith the fortunate ones who bad been invited and the scene xxas glittering. The only Americans present were United States Ambassador and Mrs. Robert W. Bing-ti- a day 'p'ilANKSGIVING 1 Fight agricultural lace ing 11 i i 'C'-""- Is Good x ' French ARCHI.MHAUD, of the budget, declared l!"r Va,lc Dus 'es a xx a In Nih-- ( cn'er. at the entrance t' a cemetery He had d.ej of nine linker wounds from tie guns of the fi- lei al agents be killed and his body bad been left at the lo.v'-id- e icier Ins oiimounions bad e lii the same lus f'n'el to region xx e toi ml Nelson's clothing nnd the cal the bandits bad (led in utter the lia'lle. Cowley was the man who killed John Dil'mger. chief of the gang to which Nelson belonged, and tie also was In command of the posse that ran doxxn ii lid k'lled "Pretty Boy Floyd ill an Indiana cornfield not long ago. m.- I Mo In lias been improxed by tie Noxv Deal program, and he ts avowedly favorable to Us retention in a general xvi.v, although In a recent speech Mr. Wallace told the national grange that probably it would be neees the basis of the sary to been has that operating noxv program more than a year. Exactly what form the drixes ou the adjustment act and administration may take this coining winter, said Mr. Wallace in an interxiexv the other day, "no one of us can say, but from present indications I would anticipate the most tn. potent drive to lie directed at restricThe ceremony tn the abbey was cele- tions on agricultural production. So I brated at 11 oclock in the morning, envision a conflict, a choice between nnd It xvas followed immediately by an- two paths, one leading to unrestricted other, the Greek Orthodox. The bitter agricultural production at the earliest took place In the private chapel of possdde moment, the other leading to Buckingham palace and xvas celebrated oontimiaiue ami perfection of the presby Archbishop Gertnanos, nriliimand ent control methods. Either path may rite of the Greek church In London. very xvell require certain changes in Dnlv a select company of royal witthe Agricultural Adjustment act. Benesses xvas present. fore I discuss unrestricted production in detail, I would I.ke to say parenlheti Y EIORTS of various business groups cally that I am for it, provided the: e Indicate that luxury spending" Is is a sufficient excess of imports over becoming more noticeable nnd is aiding exports to service the debts owed us Industry considerably. This Includes by foreign nations, and in add tiori to ex cry thing from the babys doll to the pay a fair price for our exportable surpalatial yacht and some place In be- plus; and provided, furthermore, that tween is tine furs and all trade organ- shipment of these excess products izations report an increase. Reports abroad does not impoverish our soil to Secretary of (otnmeree Daniel G. Ito beyond repair." While Mr. Wallace is saying that the pee by business leaders indicated that sales in some gift lines this year would drive is on the adjustment act, observbe It) per cent greater than a year ago. ers are finding considerable objection Charity Is not forgotten in this re among farmers to control from Wash vivnl of spending. Community chests ington. I think it is an undoubted fact and councils reported that contribu that the American farmers are tions to community chest drives this individualists and. that being year already are within 10 per cent true, they naturally resent having buof the 1920 total, ami national income reaucrats sittiag in Washington offices has dropped about 30 per cent In that tell them xxhat to do and how to do it. time. Because the farm industry xvas so flat on Its back when the adjustment act was passed, the bulk of the farmers it from the of Department TAKE that American farmers were willing to accept anything that huxe these reasons to he thankful tills promised a measure of relief, according to the considered judgment of students year: Cash farm Income from sales of who have watched the whole picture. crops nnd live stock, AAA benefit pay- They have found now, however, that ments, nnd emergency drouth snles of unhappy consequences have resulted, cattle to the gox eminent totaled $730. and I am told by many members of 0M),UO0 in October, compared with congress that they are uncertain whether there is a majority of farm$0.7.),(Mhi,000 in September and $020, 000,-ooers in this country now favorable to in October, 1033. Tefal farm cash Income for ten the New Deal farm program. months this year was $3,043,000,000 comIt seems reasonably certain, therepared to $4,000, (H)0,( KK) for the corresponding period last year, of which fore, that the discussion of farm $1,014,000,000 xvas derived from mar in the nexv Consumer congress will devel- ketlngs and $133, Otto, 000 from benefit payments and emergency cattle sales, to Be Heard op that which has compared to $3,007,000,000 and $132, not been developed 000,000, respectively. In 1033. before, namely, the voice of the con sumer. There is aDo likely to be vioand fits sixteen lent expressions from the corn and hog SAMUEL INSLLI. In the great mail fraud producers because of the processing trial In Chicago xxere acquitted by the taxes on hogs. A goodly number of :nrm leaders believe, after surveys Jury, despite the long work of the govern men t officials in among actual farmers, that the procpreparing nnd presentessing taxes on hogs have been taken out of file farmer's bide and not the ing the case at an esti mated cost of $100,000 hog. I told The verdict was you some weeks ago that there readied on the third was every prospect of a proposal to ballot, and the attor repeal the Bankhead cotton law That movement has gained in momentum be neys for the prosecu tlon could say only vend belief. The Department of Agri that they had done tilture, under Mr. Wallaces direction, their best. It was ap is taking a ceri-u- s, a vote. on the ques-- t on whether this law should be conparent that the Jurors xxere not convinced tinued. The result is that congress that Insult and bis '.II find that question on Its door-stenidos had an Intent to defraud. There i'so, and dont forget that opponents of are other charges standing against In the Banktiejid law are real lighters. sull, but whether or not there xvill he Ihose who claim to have sulTeted dam ages under it believe that one dose is further prosecution Is undecided. There xvere rumors that the former enough, and if they do not gain their magnate, If cleared of all charges, oo lit one way, they will accomplish I.a Salle street ami 'heir desires in another, much to ttie planned to the utilities field. "h.igrin of Senator Bankhead, of Alabama. who made so many long speeches is bound to be another hot in its behalf. THERE in the senate over the reMr. Wallace stated that be expects the main drive agtinst pre-eagrivamped St. I.nwrenee waterway treaty, cultural laws to be In favor of removal hut it looks now as if President Roosevelt xxere justified in his expectation "f all restrictions on production. He hinks that is a ridiculous course to fob that the treaty will be ratified. Sena low. He proposes to give present tor Janies Hamilton Lewis of Illinois, leader of the opposition that defeated M'l'emes of control time for trial in the pact in the last session, said in order to perfect them. In tills he has he xx support of the New Washington that lie had heard rumors Deal professors who clutter up Depart that some major proxislons involved in tile controversy bad been eliminated in merit of Agriculture offices in numbers greater titan in any ot her government a nexv treaty with Canada that Is be The professors 'epurtnient. have The omitted provisions, lng negotiated. contacts heir at the ('apdel. and they lie understood, have to do xxith the American share of the cost of the sea- 't'c them. Thus, observers here feel "''it opponents of the present adjust-.leti- t way and limitations on the dixersion act nitty net win unless the ot) of water from Lake Michigan for the claimed to exist among tin. ;eet,ons ruChicago drainage canal. He added themselves are made vocal. If 'amors mor also had it that the new pact would 'hat occurs, it Is declared hx authori-- t acknowledge complete American es. xxe may See President Roosevelt oxer Lake Michigan. ik ng a hand because of the publics one of The St. I.nwrenee treaty was uxnlxed. If the Preshlent throws Ids the live topics discussed In the anneal xe.-bin favor of revision, there s convention of the Mississippi Valley D'o doubt but tint changes xv !l come. association In St. I.onis. I" le imlbates that l.e is saisffiffi wdli The association voted to continue it a e present set of the "p the opposition to the treaty unless Its ob- tio'essors will be so strength that multiplied jectionable features are removed h feat of their program will he next cultural situation am-len- rock-ribbe- legis-latio- hole-hearte- d ' 11 x to xessihle n Switzerland is , ng Tying doxxn." sV Rxery ln" President RooseNotwithstanding velts speech at the annual convention Bankers Distrustful of the American a r,.srve fight. f th turn i;,,,' IQ UltIo. V8 nobody "Mlh to run Sxxiss h hotels, excent o0"s Recently Dr. Carl Ran , b3 Pro-t- 0 fessor of theology , P the 'm kai was sent as a boy, lrussias mtnister Id Doctor Barth would not taketh?118 ath off personal loyalty to Hitler Z ",7 Ihe Sxxiss government tw Promptly, saying to CenaaL .o? you dismiss a Swiss teacher' fr'Pul 5 cal reasons, the Swiss , tediatei; processors in Swiss unlverJtU'i No hemming and hawing there. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt wt , energetic lady, adxises gixlng children as young as six or ! seven weekly allowance, because it them to be independent. They lei how to spend, when to save, what pay, and grow up independent, self reliant individuals. That is a good thought that some wise professors high up in governmenl might adopt. If it Is wise to teach individual lnde pendence to young children, why not encourage it in grown-uAmericans instead of training them to spend tht rest of their lives In any Nra babi p carriage? As the laws noxv stand, it apparently would be difficult for the treasury, acts ing through the Again there Is cheerfulness. United since October were highest In three years. Fncie Sam sold $200, 332, 000 xvorth of goods to other countries, $70,723,0 Hj less than he took in. T lint is called a favorable trade bal- anee, and is supposed to be a good tiling. Absit omen, but the French revolu-- ! tion started at a time xxhen France, for the first time In a long while, found herself exporting more than she bought fed-Glas- g - ? J Swiss army, xith a rill1"'r that he can 'urn. Independence, ''rags, ,. "S tliat It would cost more n lund tf,:'n Switzerland Wmi'lTv Swit2er Bankers association hurt, a speech that wuis believed at the time to have salved the bankers feelings, considerable distrust of administration policies has begun to aeeunni late among ttie banking fraternity. It was noticed before the appointment of M. S. Bedes as governor of the federal reserve board, but it has become much more evident and more vocal since. The reason is that Mr. Eccles Is considerably more of a liberal than men. most bankers and business Frankly, some of the Important bankers of the country fear that Mr. Eccles will go far to the radical side In directing affairs of the greatest banking system in the world. While most financial authorities are not now alarmed over the prospect of any inflation by means of reckless running of printing presses, they do fear that the banks of the country will be forced into the position of buying government bonds whether they desire to do so or not. I xvas told by one banker, a man who lias served in oilicial capacity in Washington, and therefore knows tills field as well as banking, that lie would not be surprised if banks were assigned certain blocks of bonds which they must purchase in the course of financing by the treasury in the next txvo years. All of the conservative thought in the country looks upon this, of course, as next to printing press money in its inflationary tendencies. era! reserve hoard. Would Fight to tell any particular bank how many government bonds it must absorb. But it would not be difficult to change the law so that any bank could be allocated a stated amount of bonds and be given the privilege of turning over those securities to the federal reserve bank for currency. Obviously, such financial students as the veteran Senator Carter Glass, Virginia riemocrat, would fight to the death against what he believes to be misuse of the federal reserve system and the country's bank ng structure. There are several other Democrats, both In the house and senate, who would follow the Virginia senator's lead. The belief, however, is that there are not enough to defeat such a proposal were it sent to congress xvith t he administration's blessing. There is banking legislation scheduled for this coming session. Its scope has not yet Dam determined but it xvill be more than the previous legislation and, in all probability, there xvill be some brand nexv pet schemes put forward by professional advisers xvbo have been called into conference by Secretary Morgenthau and Ills aides. Then there are the findings of the senate committee on bank and currency to be considered. That committee, as xvill be remembered, held lengthy hearings and exposed much corruption in certain types of banks. Whether the members of that committee and the administration xvill attempt to bind the whole banking structure band and foot because of the rotten spots found in several apples in the barrel, it is too early to forecast. Vet it is to tie remembered that there were investigators included in the staff of men xvbo operated under Ferdinand Iecura, the committee's counsel. Mr. Ieeora, of course, is noxv a member of the securities commission and therefore not In direct touch with his former employer, but there are those here who say his influ once is just as great. If that lie true, the senate committee can be expected to go off at a tangent in drafting legislation to hamstring not only the bad banks but the good ones. " NexxS States exports j j ' j Edsel Ford, son of Henry, and a great help to his father as president of the Ford company, dined xvith Trest- -' dent Roosevelt in Warm Springs, Ga.. and told him the nation is out of the trough. The two Fords are good judges of returning prosperity. They expect to sell at least l,000,(Myi other Fords this coming year. IVinrhrop 4V. Aldrich, head of the York Chase National bank, biggest private bank in the world, teii Nexv reporters In Seattle: Business men and bankers in all tbe cities we have visited believe that there has been a real improvement since September." Prosperity is climbing up, according to Mr. Aldrich, nnd he ought to know. He hn3 on hand more than a billion dollars that he will gladly lend you, if you can prove your ability to pay It back. Samuel Insull and sixteen ants nre acquitted of using the malls majority of the Jury, hours to decide, voted for acquittal from the start. have Apparently Mr. Insull might Greece. to avoided that tiring trip to defraud. which took A txvo ultra-radic- Because weather affects our daily lives as nothing else, It proves an ever fascinating subject It is alxvays interesting as well, really a fascinating occupation, to look ahead. While we cannot definitely foretell the weather this winter, tho American Nature association and the United States xveather bureau haxe compiled some records about other winters that are most interesting. Take fur example, the country wide blizzard ot 1888. 'llte boys and girls of those days, those xxho now say, do you remember way hark when," insist that that was a winter xxliich really xvas winter. The later generations point to the war winter" of 1017-18- , a period of excessive cold and of great snoxv throughout the United States east of the Rocky mountains. The Tar West was much warmer. Txvo outstanding winters xvere: 1012 Severe cold weather during the first three months of the year when unprecedented ice formed on all north ern lakes and rivers. It xvas during ibis cold spell that Iaike Superior was frozen from shore to shore nnd moose crossed on the Ice. hike Michigan nnd Lake l.ne were completely spanned with ice in some places. 1800 A record cold wave from February 11 to February 13, xvith zero temperatures extending from the Gulf const northward. Mobile, Ala., recorded below zero; Vicksburg. Miss,, zero; Washington, D. C., 13 degrees below; St. Louis. ID below; Chicago, '21 below; nnd Ottawa, Can., 24 below. 1 , Western Newspaper Union. There is war talk xvith a meaning Hungary is filled with rage because Jugoslavia accuses HungarAians of plotting the murder of King The Hungarians are fighters, lexander. but not murderers. by England and France are agitated is arming alleged news that Germany of with all possible speed, regardless the Versailles treaty. war There are a dozen causes for no paand floating around Europe, no rticular cause for pence, except that war another afford well nation could buUncle Sams pockets being tightly ttoned, at present. In Europe. man deSenator Nye, an earnest at not "any PrIce-voted to peace, but company Aircraft United sirs tbe big constant its In mind just what It has in bettennen. and In production expansion to of airplanes. The senator semismind in fear that United Aircraft has the possibility of xxar. exact y Let us all hope that it has goxerntnent a that and that In mind, or mitmtt'e o showing little energy at least P xvill defense Its own in air tmt itittve. predate help from private DO. of New Jersey draws a panel th, for G3 of them women, L"f trial. kidnaping and murder ' M11 V thorities, without hoin K agairwt evidence have they to tne ard Hauptmann not rexealed xx laxx.'ers public. Hauptmann's men on t.io probably prefer all n i Women feel more keenly than children. about kidnaping JJ t ? ts When President Rooexe tffi1 f Inmeans to give tlte people means lie states cheap power, Warm Springs he has been "n' rv a broad national pn.gnim he that or power. It Is ttndersood he xxtll P not be too drastic, but need. th" people what they Next in importance to five free water is cheap f"nn n r- - , Kin Feature Svnillrate. XU Sen Ve |