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Show MEXICAN COMMENT ON INVASION Newspapers Do Not Relish Turn in Affairs. El Paso. With the exception of La Constitucion, the publication of which has been stopped by the police, the newspapers published here in Spanish have refrained from editorial comment com-ment on the action of the United States government in pursuing Francisco Fran-cisco Villa into Mexico. In an editorial, the Constitucion declares de-clares that the United States has intervened in-tervened officially in the recent Mexi-ican Mexi-ican revolutions; its newspapers have published articles and 'cartoons to stir up American popular feeling in regard to Mexican affairs, and that not long ago the press praised Villa as the Napoleon Na-poleon of Mexico; and that American business interests have helped to finance and equip various revolutionary revolution-ary parties for selfish reasons. Then, In heavily leaded type, the the paper recalls the case of French intervention interven-tion in Mexico in 1862 under treaties that were afterward entirely disregarded disre-garded in the forcing of Maximilian upon a throne. La Constitucion implies im-plies that the pending invasion is likely like-ly to result in the same way as in '62. |