Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1949 — Page 12
JOY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W, MANZ
PAGE 12 Monday, Aug. §, 1049
= " 4 oy 7 MH is Punish BE I TE Sr ER | . - a gon. 0 os. 5082; “hs 43% | ~repincement ofthe Taft-Hartley law. |“ Tt
a
rea | Delay of Labor |
Bill Expensive
Enforcing Taft-Hartley Law Provisions Costing Big Money
paying for the failure of Congress to enact a
BE A TR RA
s PR
Peck-Peck-Peck
‘| Hoosier F
ee
| @ive Light end the People Wili Fins Thetr Un Woy
general counsel, Robert N. Denham, are going to trouble and expense enforcing provisions which both branches of Congress have voted
|e JITasoourg ney HIS week the foreign ministers and leading statesmen of ~~ 10 European countries will meet in the Rhineland city of Strasbourg in a forthright attempt to do something about the mess that 'is Europe today. That is, the Europe. on this sidé of the Iron Curtain. Lr ; “© 77 They will try to turn into reality the long-cherished { dream of a United States of Europe, or some sort of permanent federation that will mean an end to Europe's too ~~. many frontiers, trade barriers and dizzy monetary systems. "Don’t write this off too quickly as just another visionary “plan” for Europe. There are some practical, hardheaded statesmen behind the movement. Among them are Winston Churchill, Prime Minister Attlee, the capable PaulHenri Spaak of Belgium, Foreign Minister Schuman of. —¥France and others; Our own State Department officially has indorsed the idea of a United Europe, and so have such Re- ...... publican
&
For example; the Taft-Hartley ix “ployees. must “vote for a union shop before = union may negotiate with their employer for a contract clause under’ which all employees _ must be union members after working a specifled period. - fe TT
Elections Costly
THE UNION SHOP elections are practically
:
In the-two years that the law has been effective, the NLRB has conducted €3,000 elections, with more than 3 inillion workers Voting. In about 98 per cent of these cases large majorities of \workers favored the union shop.
The Senate-passed Taft bill dropped the election requiremeat, So did the Wood bill which the House passed and later sent back to its | Labor Committ House Democratic leaders see no chance of er action this session.
Political leaders of organized labor hive said _they would not accept the Taft bill as a repealer of the Taft-Hartley law because it 18 too close | to the original. Also, they are believed to want for next year’s congres-
+& dead letter; and to -hpid them costs money. | -
will defend fo the death your right to say i.
preg re ature ee]
Communists’ - By ©. D. C., Terre Haute i In spite of name calling and claims of twiste ing facts and figures, made by Ronald F. Faus cett in a recent Forum Jette:
“by Ronald ! r, the facts still ree it did 1:
“tion ot 1944 Tom Dewey got-nearly half a lion more votes on the Republican ticket
4 as Mr. Roosevelt and his New Deal rub ber stamp Congress did, is another.
New
' to arm them to the teeth under jend-
York state than Mr. Roosevelt got on the Demo. . cratic ticket, Mr. Roosevelt won in New York, n. however, because he allowed his name to be It: will be placed on the American Labor Party ticket ~§ which by 1944 had been taken over completely * ‘Bob Malloy by the Communists and the Liberal Party, the Tribe me which was a collection of about everything ex- night. : | cept Democrats and Republicans. Personally, I : Droy P| have never been able to find a single public When the statement that Mr. Roosevelt ever made against swept a doul Communists although he made blistering ate A es at tacks against other groups. ‘ terday, 11 te Mr. Faucett claims Mr. Roosevelt did right home boys ar in 1933 by recognizing Russia because we needed antl. lose in to sell them goods, which is merely a matter of ; Tae n | opipfon. However, to sell them goods is one again by two
ing the Red I bus.
ublican Party leaders as Sens. Arthur Vandenberg and. | to keep the issue alive John Foster Dulles. ” ET ion, By ree -_ Mr. Faucettgoes.on to ay the record of a Indian “You as an American taxpayer will have a direct inter- | Labor Can Hold Strength Rovsevelt-Hopkins Wallace Margan aay-Frank) stand they est in these proceedings—for it is no longer a secret that the THAT stems to be the strategy of Demo- his worshippers have moulded in their graves, pied sty 3 : i cratic leaders, too. If organized labor can oe and I heartily agree. History is full of them— billions we are pouring into Europe are not going to do the kept active politically théy can expect to in- such as Peter the Great, Napoleon Bonaparte, the Regal job, alone. 1f our burden is to be lessened in the foreseeable | crease or at least maintain their majorities in ete—while the men who opposed them have Jague by the future, it must come through a remedy to the ills of a tradi- | Congress. = es been-forgott rrr Rpg . Shika) Rep. John Lesinski (D. Mich.) chairman of Then Mr. Faucett tells us they could hardly in front. tionally divided Europe. That Europe must help itself has | the House Labor Committee, says otherwise. be blamed for co-operating with our ally Russia Team been axiomatic with the Marshall Plan—this is the most | “I'm not goirig to bring any labor bill befors. |... as the war Doula have bets Prolonged many Vik one o . i rted i , n vet. the House,” he declared today, “because I know years. That is bologna. The war 1s n fficla . . promising’ conoe action to that i Wyse sen § Kk what the Republicans and Southern Democrats over yet, and we are in more danger from Stalin re Tribe" | ~~. We wish every success to this important spadework | would do to it. They would simply substitute ; today than we were from Hitler in 1940. Belding tell meeting in Strasbourg. a “Mr. Taft's bill from the Senate. Let Mr. Taft : : Furthermore, if Franklin D, Roosevelt had She {eam / worry about that—it isn't our job to ball him | NEWS NOTEBOOK . . . By Peter Edson Seon, less OF un wgotist and 2 Greater mite ha Cn eB s - : : : Ve 2 bs collect ‘-——— er » throats like Hitler and Stalin take their fal 8 How Dumls Can You Gel? _ - . | Kom OF ou Behind Scenes at the Capitol fan son. Th ot inom, | SL ; : . ; terfering on either side. Possibly it wouldn't » <r aaENNISON DUBLE says he was paid only five or six | in LESINSH! uA fear pt seh A MApEUver | WASHINGTON, Aw Chit owns HEL ie hon-handshakers |. be necessary for the Fair Dealers to now keep She 1nians "dollars a week for rigging the CIBGAAL CIEATINg | sirictions on Waion “Miring KAIls™ 1s DeIKg Xepy | PIKETs ou Of American BNOUSTUMTE experts Foray wees othe oe nae of tne_|_ 18, ABCTICZ people SUL STL A ne - A jo off the “3 5 as rden where -they.couldn't. hear. him. i. v - crt ROR AEC house digits for the benefit of New York numbers racketeers Souse Hoot at i i | Tid I I ns TE a EE ea that Tost sre tn high places-have-siready-admitted TR around a million dollars k ; enough / has been going on who raked in a on do a week. emerge from the House as the Taft bill German elections of May 15. Captured coples of ~ year’s Forum came. right at the time of the as s FE : doubles and If the Cincinnati banker tells the truth, he } ger | Amendments-to-the wage-hour law are due | orders issued by the Communists for recounting = Dixlecrat rebellion against Truman. The boys . .more home If the ati or the th, he 1s 3 big for House debate several days this week; the ballots in the province of Saxony-An ‘who wouldn't shake the President's hand nor { 4 R ET Drivers’ 1 —that one. ucker-than the multitude wo C nell o their pennies, 1 or tic parlamentaria thts -Feveal how the results of even-the- listen to him s where the | ‘Teen-Agers | eckless Driv LE nickels, dimes, quarters and dollars for a long, long chance | i, sumcjently unrelated to the Taft bill that any ingly small two-to-one “yes” vote were achieved. Dixiecrat movement was hottest. By Howard Hanson, Lawrence, Ind. . Bob Keg in that poo 's Monte Carlo attempted substitution would be ruled out or “Ballots cast without any marks have to be This year there. was no such incident, snd Acknowledged by the insurance companies of itcher in t! of winning something poor man’s Mon . Pp xs : . p : : order. : considered ‘yes’ votes,” read the Instructions to Dixlecrats, Democrats and Republicans all be- | , ...a' is the fact that many teen-agers in way. to the } It is hard to believe that any banker would be as stupid election officials. Explaining this ruling, the in- haved like little gentlemen. cars are killers. an the sixth an m oney tters verage numbers player, who cer- structions said: “By simply casting a ballot - ..-= = : The accident rate of this group of drivers is He. received ih : na : 48 the hve i 1d P us fool HOOSIER BORN without a mark, the voter made it completely Shah Wants to Visit U.S. many times that of a mature motorist. The tory, howevs tainly qualifies as an siage . 1 we've A tr veled the highways ays and also the Siar ne the Yup Feiited Wn lame "MIDDLE EAST radio broadcasts have been | biame rests squarelyson their paychological un he loser. hd a letters, as the expression of his will, 3 the parents who "neglect the and his money quickly parting. byways, “Ballots with a ifbss mark outside the ~Xicking around a report that His Majesty the HOY n 8 a. aspect of modern life, tor Suk Hu Be . ¥ es = . The mainroads, the backroads of many a o . » » Shah of Iran would soon visit the United States. ficall it is the father and usually : 1000 to] against | ~ state, : circles have to be considered as a ‘yes’ vole, yy, qpingion officials have had no notification of More specifically, ” and Clyde IF YOU bet on a number the odds are 1000 to 1 against state, ~~ TH the instructions went on. “By this tha voter on. .owner of the “death car” who is at fault. Mora starter, was Gi HGMb6F GOMINE UP, even If the game is honest which |The southland nas fed us and then they have | nd eq known his approval of the list of candi. ~ the Shah's coming but some ORhS 480° &F | careful trafhing and & firm hand im dealing with’ — | nt are! A ag 1 us : 7 : A ur x It h "had wanted to re- -official--invitat Was-issued the OL} rortor -gan cut -the-accident PRE, mn : elec imssmraah rm few are. But the pay-off is only 600 to 1. Thus if you Along on our journey, me and my mate! oy a ae Lhe haa va the Jessident Frumas. The Shan Wa Jnep 00 wusy Further, if the son would not/be given the mer Ms et & dime and en oy collect $60. But the | .. toh : mark of his refusal in the ‘no’ circle. = ng ta accept. But he wan . of the family car without the father's com- banged his bet dime and happen to wi, Jo) OR HA0K. ou. | 100 re, fia, ey show wa thee | 7 SL Gein mama remark Does ‘See mei, ommint ve | Pa nih DE geod sft rv, J Bre aay we bet, so that leaves you only $50—a return of only 500 to 1. | The nd the seashore, the mountains uch 34, op Die ous or Jor Derto edom,’ etc, Shah's twin sister—head of the Red Lion and | PHC0 aE te gi gf let Agidin on 2 dro Th ath Nig aigs E ? 3 so bold ; “- ? ham, . ¥ > _ .« Sun, Iranian version of the Bed Cross—was ii | : . Also, it want to keep . *" The numbers game and all such lotteries swell the | ,.. ovely, inspiring, we're strictly admiring | Red Logic Is Confusi the United States last year. The Shah's younger BO PUA SO ibe a out night Fae purses and powers of gangsters,-who use their money and But we're glad to go home, on our state we | Logic Is Loniusing : brother was graduate dfrom Harvard. yn hy” | n With the 3 : ~ influer fi fo col 5 t the police courts ‘and legi slatures. “are sold! : > $= 1 IN THE Russian-occupied German province The Shah himself has never been here and Rermember the truth: Most teen-agers are n ans, “ou = : i . pe EL - eV = ET =! ’ ~-.<'| of Brandenberg, Communist officials added an- he wants to inspect dams, public works and | y,.ey drivers. = : sluggf og > That's a good reason to move: in on the racket occasionally We're native born Hoosiers, have the right“to | other election refinement with this instruction: Military. nstallaying. Reltiny between Iran ik z — Em wr Sg : ihe oo. a : i Fo hn d i be choosers, . NTN By ‘as ‘ves’ I i and the United States have been close ever : ro : : and gend a. few ool 2.280. oe bb 8 we-chonesto-rematn- to the- best tar Copder As ‘Jes’ votes AIL ballots on which IEE Yl 1iieq Nations. showdown, fght with What Others. Say . fine, The, stake, the effort might as well be spared. For neither the Though our winter is snowy and dur summer | other explicit, handwritten ‘no.’ By this double a rar THON IT was only when it became apparent that ~~ . ri $456 ¢ : ie « : i showy, uz / negation, the voter had wanted to express his : : * { nniving to control ] y 4 strictest of laws nor the strictest of enforcement can eVer | wg a tender green spring and a brilliant | infention that he did not want a ‘no’ under any = = = Tammany. HA a at 2 Sn bee ¥8-2verage - . succeed in suppressing the human desire to get something hued fall! ~~ circumstances, because a double megation—is—To—Run—orNot—to—Run?—— same clear—Mayor William O'Dwyer of New ae for nothing, or in easing the consequences of that folly. =-RUTH M. COFFIN, J301. N. Emerson Ave. | actually an affirmation.” ; CONGRESSWOMAN Helen Gahagan Doug- | York, announcing that he would seek re-election. M I eee = ire omni] - Goi cliff ween lms een Ballots on which an “anti-democratic convic- 1 has again put off announce- ® + o . ——— ee —— RR SEREREY tion” was written in were ordered classified as . i inst Sen. EXCESSIVE taxations is about as certain : The Case for Pepper = FOSTER'S FOLLIES Ce To hn Ch an done sry Saati Bouter in the Goan Bie prim | 4 34 toc ng cry Soy ober ven | Ln ‘ RERA : alt a million ballots were. nv : n. Robert A. Taft (R.) o . (“SPRINGFIELD, Mo, — Teeth marks in . : next year. Mrs. Douglas had intended to make | =S ne , 1ELD, Be rd fl rirasrosnss. sateen the Indiana] ie i i | “stolen cheese tfap escapee.”) 8 8: a up her mind by Aug. 1. But now she says she WHEN Sen. Elmer Thomas of Oklahoma was ridiculing He 1s back Wp pee w Juni Dixi ts Decl T has been so busy in Congress she hasn't had a IT (the Public Housing and Slum Clearance 1 —Be : % y e c n 008egOW, : unior ixXiecra clare Iruce bill) opens up the prospect of decent homes in YY the armed services’ stockpiling program, he pointed a | , od g chance to get back to California and talk to uy pana Up Joan Hhoglveneiidiniy 2 —Ga - fiat = rn YI erg FREE NE- TARY DOIONG, — emer ANN ATTOT CRT Legion-offictats-took-their———the-politicos there: mp p—————ai ain nen asians occ SUE esome rroun ” . i - critical finger at an accumulation of 200,000 pounds o f pep And they'll hardly turn him loose now, annual Boys' Forum delegates to visit. President Privately, she explains that she also wants | ilies now living in the squalor of the slums. ’ 3 Tu a ‘per; and snorted: eh ing a ss i Sessa ionrice TOUGH he -sings-this- plaintive song: Truman this year. they took precautions that to talk it over with her husband, Melvyn Doug- President Truman. . 4 —We : “That r is a great defense weapofi.” we Ff there would be no repetition of last year's visit. las of the movies, and their two children; In the emi ®. 0. - 5 —Co : “ peppe : a “177 «your detectives are too breezy, which embarrassed the Legion very much. The meantime, Sen. Downey, whose chances for re- IN order to win (a third world war) nd TTR 6 —Da wk “Put-epokesmen-for- the armed-services say that. pepper f........ YL AES HE LL 00 ME of story. was. hushed. up. atnthe time. but Rout. 8... election. havent. been. considered. too ood, has |. all7. 8 must be yeady at the outset to launch 1. eC “4s one of the most critical of strategic materials in short sup |. I think § u ere § n . an dozen boys refused to shake hands with the been exuding confidence. He say® ‘he dfesa't | T gi reltetves: So . Ti Bn > al a i : “ nk justice here is cheesy — President.” And when the President spoke to the care whether. Mrs. Douglas runs against him assist us truggle. —Ge — ply. It is an indispensable ingredient of all canned meat, as “And that evidence was false!" group ‘of young men—handpicked delegates’ or not. Hoyt S. Vindenberg, Alr Force chief of staff. mM any housewife knows. And canned meat is a major part of : a . i : : 11 —Fe in the field. : i : “ : i 13 —Ka the te ed of natural pepper come from India HOUSE INQUIRY . . . By Earl Richert SIDE GLANCES By Galbraith | POLITICS . ... By Marquis Childs g ie 18 ke A 7 x % wh te * : . - I De ¢ 3 . Indo-China and Indonesia. Since two of these areas are un- Probin Insurance - 1 GOP for Normalcy 9 BE SURE,’ 3 “i h 1a: : ; COMPLETE der Communist attack, the idea of building up our pepper g : ~~ 5 i ’ ! . . telegenic be: i 3 WASHINGTON, Aug. 8—Polite opening shots have been fired WASHINGTON," Aug. 8—By Republican. definition normalcy, ! TagerVes Makes di 2 Soldier Jaret of Nil stomach, at the Capitol in wha * promises to be a long and exhaustive is a happy state-in which you know where you're going with no TT as Napoleon used to say. "And no meat, no march. . “probe of the life-insurance industry. 3 or or foolish or idealistic experigiests, All Lhe signs indicate that the sree . Instead of snorting, the Oklahoma Senator should: give Leroy A. Lincoln, president ofthe huge Metropolitan e. Republican Party . Street «oe. i , Insurance Co. appeared as the first insurance company witness "The dominant group in the Republican-National Committes treet. the pepper program an approving sneeze. If the Reds shut | ‘to say he didn’t know of a single one.of the 584 insurance com- 1s determined to liquidate the experiments of the past. Tt wants a off the sources of supply, he may want to borrow a cup of | panies in the U. 8. that couldn't meet claims. ei no more of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey's “ o-tapigm.” And } re- batlot. You : - X | “So safety for the individual policy holder isn't dependen members with a kind of horror back o r. wey une mployees of it himself. | ‘on the size of the company?” asked Chairman Emanuél Celler happy experiment with the late Wendell Willkiel, : Your entry ; ee: a | "6f the House Judiciary Committee—the man determined, one | The new chairman, Guy George Gabrielson, national coms + The pl w way or another, to have a full Investigation of life insurance 1 mitteermnan from New Jersey, is one of their own, He is re a 3 Victor tele : Hi: " 1: | company practices. ’ shrewd, careful operator and a highly successful business lawyer Millibucks, Billibucks . } . | “I believe companies of ‘all sizes are safe” responded Mr. whose_incorhe is estimated at not less than $200,000 a year, A OME genius in the U. 8. Budget Bureau has added a couple | Lincoln. He sald safety-is assured by the present sound supervi- an . Mi nbd : j sion and regulation by state laws. Co Ardent Taft Man . / of handy words to the American language. The bureau's } 8 | i \ b employees work all day with government revenue and spend. | Inadequate Laws ry CS Ant LC LM, Sol a5 i 3 ; MR. CELLER said he would draw attention later in'the He is a Taft: man today, which is the chief reason he had the Ing figures of astronomical size. And, naturally, they get | hearings to the “inadequacies” in the insurance laws of many support of Sen, Taft's friends on the committee. : AMER} ‘Weary of writing out long strings of digits and ciphers, states : . While he never openly criticized the Dewey campaign of last Tp .8o, in their less formal calculations, they now refer to Mr. Lincois sud hee Saati we. no mopopoly i ls fall, Sen. Taft in private has sired Hie own—sharp analysis of ilvaukes ; ng . a yd » caps {life Insurance business—that the largest company held less than - Got . Dewey's faults and failures. If Mn Taft is the nominee. {nneapolis a million dollars as .A “millibuck,” to a billion dollars as a | 20 per cent of the total amount of insurance in force or total in1952, he certainly will not fall into the error of me-toolsm, ansas City “billibuck.” Saves time and avoids confusion, they say. assets o at companies. Thete also, he pea, » Yo such thing » as which in the Taft view was Gov. Dewey's greatest weakness. Toledo or... ; + absorption by one company of another an ie larger companies Step by step the Senator from Ohio has sought to carve out AMI ; As of Aug. 2, for instance, the federal debt was slightly | yave been showing a much slower rate of growth than the his own position on domestic issues. He means this to be the York more than 254 billibucks plus 226 millibucks, having in- Dawes Companies Bi G i Laat —moderate position between: the right wing of his own-party and : evening es i JeAr. far, there has r. Lincoln-appeared as a witness at the monopoly hearings. | the Truman Fair Deal. Right-wingers in Mr. Taft's party don't = ereased about 817 millibucks in a year Thus i? {before Rep. Celler's monopoly eommittee. | like this stand on housing and ald to education. But they will Betis" been no need for a third addition to Budget Bureau parlance, “I'm just probing,” Mr. Celler told Mr. Lincoln, “as to Fa swallow it. : - : Washington since to date the government is only a little over a quarter | whether it Is to the best interests of the nation to allow such © RY Sen. Taft has taken a big new step toward ending the Dewey Bt. Louis .... ofa “trillibuck” in the red " © great concentrations of wealth in the hands of a few individuals - me-tooism,. In opposing the. foreign policy line of the Vander- NA! : | @ red. to be used as they see fit.” He said-the assets of the 12 largest’ gallaithe Ay berg-Dulles-Dewéy wing, he takes his own stand in the foreign t. Louls ... 3 i - ; ! insurance companies totaled just less Shan $40 billion, §¢ fleld: ? a "¥ Brooklyn oe rn ue Ee “I'm sorry,” Mr, Lincoln replied: “But it isn't disposed of as OW. J ¥ Pea, ! Babies Must Have Shoes they see fit." He pointed to’ state regulation and supervision of COPR. 1540 BY NEA SERVICE. INO. T. W. AG. U 8. PUT. iF Unpopular Look . poston. : CUTH ORBEA Kody p , * . fad | the insurance companies. NF ‘I "I'll bet no other baby in the neighbdrhood less than one year | AT THE present time, with many Republicans and indepen« ~~ gincinnatl: y women are demanding the ouster of a : : : ‘old is far enough advanced to ido that!" +4 dent. voters .strongly in favor of the bipartisan approach to S public officials who have second oe third wives, the | Interlocking Directorships x : ns : - nn? _. | foreign policy, this has an unpopular look. But it is possible GA : : cial : "ec ! { MR. CELLER read into the record a long list of directorships : : | the errors of the Truman administration, such as the provision: : AMER, ~ theory being that an offi who can afford to”keep more | in other companies held by directors of the Metropolitan and | to the criticism and action of the New York state insurance de-'| in the arms aid bill giving the President sweeping powers to Mingespolis. _- than one wife can’ hones | other big insurance companies to show What he called “inter- | partment and that the policy holders can havé something to do | gend s anywhere, may give it quite another look by 1952. hog onest. . ; gun : : This recalls the a f an Arab in Cai h © | loeking directorates.” And he quoted from a prewai Congressional about it any time they choose, : : Mr. Gabrielson’s advantage is that he is a member of the a City an J answer of an Arab in Cairo, Who Was |. committee report stating that the relationship is so close that a Mr. Celler quoted from a prewar Congressional committes | committee, one -of the tried and true familiars. ‘Because of his y an i asked if. he had a “harem. . = Single Soup ot directors .control the banking and insurance | report saying it would require the signatures of 37,000 Metropolis. panuestivhe with big business; he has been a valiant fund raiser pa he: “ os, : ] 2 } A Os Reibinrug . 4 a h he toa he anid, 11ave Tound that toe CAD | weirs not going to get-our directors from the back alleys,” | (47 POlCY NOWers 10 BU UP PH independent ticket of sandidaten, | oxThé hormaley of 1943-and ater woud have Wie vem...) se ge 4 os 0 much for one man. My frie WO Wives, | Mr. Lincoln retorted at one point. ~ «. - ~~ © « . | Mr Lincoln promised to furnish- -gommittes with the-exact | piancve to the normaicy-of 1920-and after The current of world - _. Cine ‘One day, the first wife wants shoes for the children. The | Rep. Celler drew fiom Mr. Lincoln the statement that there | number of policy holders that would be required today under | events fs today far swifter and America's status is far more . | : : day the wife for. thi children. had never been anything but an administration ticket for election | New York law to’ put up an opposition slate ar candidates. | immediately subject to what happens .in distant places with 4 RESUI Re iH, second wants shoes for children. | as officers in Metropolitan. ; gai The New York law requires that onestenth of one per cent |. sauniding names, t - ; 3 Amen pho has to buy so many shoes he can't buy shoes for him- | : a ‘matter, it is a self-perpetuating directorate, | off Ahe policy helders having policies of ovjy $1000 in effect Toe life expectancy of this new normalcy, to use a phrase of’ ! . oT a. , Poor Abdul.” Be : hm eee v0 of IsWERE™ asked Rep. Winfiéld Denton (D. Ind). 5 ! sign a petition to put an opposition slafi.in the ud. Rep, ha ¥muranis 4 Noid be chsiteratiy: Jess Han Ye 1 ‘end A . 3 NE 5 ; 3) oo i ns i EE A Yes, Replied M5. Linéoin, Be suid. the Sampany was subject, Caller 881d thet this was impossible as a practical mat * ) Hille years reel the crash or, 1929, Pitas . bh : ; A v ¢ * L ayy - : ro a] v ; . » FEES UM 3 : : "Lx } vy va 1 LL i aman ssh? “ ; ne. 4 a ‘ Soe kk >
