The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 46, Ed. 1 Monday, April 29, 1935 Page: 2 of 4
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THE LAMPASAS LEADER
News Review of Current
Events the World Over
Germany Enraged by Her Condemnation by League'
Council—Work Relief Program Going Forward—
Compromise Bonus Measure.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
©, Western Newspaper Union.
mm
Adolf Hitler
/GERMANY was thoroughly enraged
'-J by the action of the League of Na-.
tions council in adopting the tri-power
resolution condemning the reich for
violating the treaty of
Versailles by rearm-
ing, and it was expect-
ed Reichsfuerher Hit-
ler would make a de-
fiant retort. As a first
step he sent from his
Bavarian retreat in-
structions to Secretary
of State Von Buelow
to protest “England’s
defection at Stresa and
Geneva.” This Von
Buelow did, delivering
the message to Ambassador Sir Eric
Phipps for transmission to London.
The German press was loud in denun-
ciation of the league action and Lit-
vinov, the Soviet delegate, came in for
most of the abuse because he deliv-
ered the chief speech in support of the'
resolution at the council session. Just
recently Germany granted to Russia
credits amounting to $SO,000,000. Po-
land also was assailed for “abandon-
ing” Germany, but in Warsaw it was
said by officials that Poland was still
the friend of the reich. One "newspa-
per there said quite truly that the
complaint against Germany was “a
formal matter because the discussiop
could not result in any actual solu-
tion of the problem, but only bring
something like emotional relief.”
Strange as it may seem, the Jews
in Germany are warmly supporting
Hitler in this controversy. The fol-
lowing message was sent to him:
“The League of National German
Jews stands unshaken in its loyalty to
the Fatherland, and hopes the govern-
ment’s defense policy will not be
changed on account of the Geneva
proceedings.”
German resentment against Great
Britain is especially warm because she
feels she was deceived in the recent
negotiations. Consequently she thinks
Britain’s prestige as a mediator in con-
tinental affairs is destroyed.
During the council’s discussion Tew-
fik Arras, the Turkish member, arose
and stated flatly that if any changes
in the existing treaties were made or
tolerated, his country would claim the
right to fortify the Dardanelles in vio-
lation of the treaty of Lausanne. He
even hinted that the Turks might fol-
low Hitler’s example and not wait for
permission. Sir John Simon’s imme-
diate and sharp reply was:
“I feel sure my honorable colleague
will not expect me to say any more at
this stage than that I must naturally
make all reservations regarding it.”
Laval of France and Baron Aloisi of
Italy supported Simon in his rebuke of
the Turkish revisionism.
Laval carried back to Paris a draft
of the mutual assistance pact with
Russia for submission to the French
cabinet Litvinov was still insistent
that the two countries should enter
into a real military alliance, and it may
be that he will carry his point. In the
opinion of many observers such a
treaty would be declared Invalid by the
League of Nations.
TT THEN the administration’s great
VV work relief program gets under
way one of the most important parts
of it, the purchase of material supplies,
will have to be started
at once, ari it is ex-
pected that this will
absorb about $1,700,-
000,000 of the total
sum. According to au-
thoritative sources in
Washington, this part
of the program will
be supervised by Rear
Admiral Christian J.
Peoples, now procure-
ment officer In the
treasury. Peoples en- £amirai
tered the navy supply eop e*
corps in 1900 as assistant paymaster
and later developed the navy’s present
purchasing system. When Franklin
D. Roosevelt was assistant secretary
of the navy he and Peoples became
close friends.
The admiral presumably will have
full charge of drafting the regulations
for material purchases but it is un-
derstood the actual buying of supplies
for work relief projects will In most
instances be handled by the states and
other co-operating agencies. However,
certain commodities, like cement, that
will be needed In immense quantities,
probably will be purchased centrally.
TUST as soon as the President says
the word, the federal ’ bureau of
public roads and the various state
highway departments are ready to
Jump into the work of grade crossing
elimination, the building of arterial
highways and similar projects. The
work relief act earmarks $800,000,000
for such undertakings, and the sum
may be increased by the President to
a billion. The roads bureau already
has $100,000,000 of grade crossing elim-
inations and other projects contracted
for under authority granted by con-
gress last year, officials revealed, and
these contracts are to be met with
work-relief money.
Arthur W. Brandt, president of the
American Association of State High-
way Officials, advised a congressional
committee recently that states were
prepared to wipe out 4,OSS dangerous
crossings if as much as $461,881,500
was made available.
QEVEN agencies of the government
^ are organizing to combat 1:he dam-
age done by the constantly recurring
dust storms. They are the AAA, farm
credit administration, emergency relief
administration, soil erosion service,
bureau of plant industry and bureau
of agricultural engineering.
The efforts, officials said, will in-
clude shipping feed, food and water
into the stricken areas of Texas, Okla-
homa, New Mexico, Kansas and Colo-
rado, starting work relief projects on
roads, private lands and the public do-
main, planting of fast-growing and
hardy crops as ground cover in areas
where moisture conditions permit, and
“listing” operations. This latter work
is an attempt to prevent soil blowing
away, by making alternate ridges and
furrows.
■m
Pat Harrison
f/'TNG BORIS of Bulgaria has foiled
another attempt to force him from
his precarious throne. Upon discovery
of an alleged Fascist plot, he ordered
that three prominent political leaders
be arrested and held in jail. Their
friends sought to free them by storm-
ing the jail but were repulsed. Those
seized are Alexander Zanhofif, leader of
the Democratic entente; Kozma Geor-
gieff, head of the Macedonian party,
and M. Natcheff, former police presi-
dent of Sofia.
TOHN R. McCARL, the able, efficient
and independent comptroller gen-
eral of the United States, has annoyed
the New Dealers on several occasions.
Now he threatens to
block the plans of the
AAA for lifting the re-
strictions on spring
W
\
J't
J. R. McCarl
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT called
* Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi
to the White House for a conference
concerning the veterans’ bonus bill,
which already has
passed the house. Har-
rison is chairman of
the senate finance
committee and the ad-
ministration looked to
him to devise a way
to spike the measure
which is so objection-
able to the President
in its present “green-
4 back” form. rOther
majority leaders in
congress also were
busy with the problem, and the result
was the Introduction in congress of a
compromise bill which it was believed
the President would accept if it were
passed.
This measure would make bonus cer-
tificates mature in 1938, instead of
1945. They could be converted imme-
diately into 3 per cent bonds. Vet-
erans who wanted cash right away
could sell the bonds, losing only the
Interest they otherwise could obtain
until 1938. Harrison said this would
cost $500,000,000 more than the pres-
ent bonus law, but far less than the
Patman bill, passed by the house, to
pay the bonus with $2,500*000,000 in
new money.
Milo Warner, vice commander of the
American Legion, said this bill was
“absolutely not acceptable” to that or-
ganization. Heads of veterans’ organ-
izations and various others were in-
vited to testify at committee hearings
on the bill.
OENATOR HUEY LONG called to-
^ gether his complaisant legislature
in Baton Rouge and ordered it to
pass some new laws that would give
him complete control of city finances,
elections and expenditures of federal
relief funds. Secretary Ickes went
right up in the air and announced that
if the laws were enacted Louisiana
would get none of the public works
money; whereupon the Kingfish told
him he could go to the nether regions,
since the PWA money had already
been deposited to the account of the
New Orleans sewer and water board.
“The state court very properly rec-
ognizes our men as that board now, so
how is Ickes going to get his money
back?” Long asked. “When he starts
that, we’ll show him what a smart
man he ain’t. If Ickes and the bal-
ance of the brain trust cabinet hold
their breaths until we send for them,
there’ll be several corpses and the
country will be better off.”
/''VVER in Turkey the women, until
recently, were forced to lead lives
cf seclusion in the harem and to go
veiled when in public. But all that is
changed. The other day the twelfth
congress of the International Alliance
of Women for Suffrage and Equal Citi-
zenship opened in Istanbul with about
thirty nations represented and Mrs.
Corbett Ashby of England in the chair,
and the women of Turkey, unveiled
and in modish European garb, were
the proud hostesses of the hundreds of
delegates. Among the questions dis-
cussed were: The situation and rights
of women; the position of women in
the liberal professions; the political
and civil rights of women; the means
women can use to prevent war.
Under Kemal’s rule the women of ttie
republic of Turkey have been granted
parliamentary and city votes and have
entered enthusiastically into all
branches of life, civic, professional, In-
dustrial and sporting.
TY7TTHOUT any effort to break
W speed records, Capt. Edward A.
Mustek and five companions landed the
big Pan-American Airway clipper ship
Pioneer In Hawaii 18 hours and 31
minutes after they took off from Ala-
meda, Calif. This was the first explora-
tory flight for a service that will soon
be extended clear across the Pacific
to Canton, the proposed intermediate
stops being Hawaii, Midway islands,
Wake islands, Guam and the Philip-
pines. The operating bases are now
in process of construction.
J| wheat planting and at
|!| the same time contin-
|| uing to pay the farm-
ers for crop reductions
that would not be
called for. Declaring
they wished to avoid
shortages due to the
dust storms, the offi-
cials of the AAA said
the farmers would be paid for the
abandoned reductions in acreage if
they would promise to curtail their
plantings next year. Mr. McCarl asked
for further information on this matter
and Indicated he could not approve of
the plan, though AAA men declared he
had not ruled definitely against it.
Chester C. Davis, AAA administrator,
might net be content to abide by such
a ruling if it were made, and the ad-
ministration might refuse to accept it.
Mr. McCarl, a Republican, holds his
office under a law which specifies that
the comptroller general shall be ap-
pointed to a 15-year term and can be
removed only by death or impeach-
ment. Nevertheless Attorney General
Cummings, it is understood, gave it
as his opinion that, like any other
Presidential appointee, he . could be
removed at the pleasure of the Presi-
dent. He based this opinion on a rul-
ing of the Supreme court in the case
of a postmaster who was ousted by
President Coolidge, the court holding
that the President was within his
rights under Article 2 of the Consti-
tution. So it may be the New Dealers
will seek to have Mr. McCarl ousted
before his term expires in 1936,
It is interesting to read that the Ne-
braska Progressive league, made up of
liberal Republicans, is planning the
organization of “McCarl for President”
clubs in that state and afterward in
all others. George W. Kline, its chair-
man, says he was asked to support
McCarl for President in 1936 by friends
of Senator George W. Norris. The
comptroller general is a graduate of
the University of Nebraska law school
and for years was Mr. Norris’ secre-
tary.
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
Protection Impossible
The Railroad Crossings
Things Are Better
When Russia Is Rich
Europe seeks some network of
“treaties” to prevent a war, or bind
armies and air fleets
of each of those
Signing such trea-
ties to protect the
others in case of
attack.
Unfortunately, In
the new war of
the air, as in secret
gangster war, no
protection is pos-
sible.
Where one crim-
inal has an “auto-
matic” or “subma-
chine gun,” agree-
ments among law-
abiding citizens can-
not protect them. And while one na-
tion can secretly build and suddenly
launch airships with poison gas and ex-
plosive bombs, no city can consider it-
self safe.
Arthur Brisbane
France and England, after elaborate
experiments, announce that there is no
possible way of protecting a modern
city against air attacks, even though
the city knew in advance when to ex-
pect them.
The only safeguard is fear of re-
taliation.
Deeply grieved by the killing of
many school children at a public cross-
ing, the President plans extensive
elimination of railroad grade crossings.
Complete elimination of such crossings
would involve spending hundreds of
millions or billions. The work would
be undertaken with careful concentra-
tion on the fact that railroading itself
is bound to change or disappear so far
as transportation of passengers is con-
cerned.
Railroads in the future must carry
passengers more than one hundred
miles an hour, on light railroad equip-
ment, able to climb steep grades as
easily as automobiles do now. Elimi-
nation of grade crossings will take that
into consideration and include elimina-
tion of existing sharp curves at cross-
ings, that the work may not be done
twice.
A LLEGED teaching of Communism
in some of our universities and
the adoption of that cult by a large
number of half-baked young men and
women In those institutions has long
been debated and denounced by pa-
triotic citizens. Student strikes and '
small riots have been frequent, and
there have been many demands for j
the suppression of these reds and !
pinks. The latest big institution of j
learning to be brought into the lime- j
light in this matter is the University !
of Chicago, whose faculty contains
several decidedly radical instructors
and its student body many youthful
followers of Marx and Lenin. Because
of charges made by a prominent drug
store magnate the Illinois senate has
just adopted a resolution calling for a
“thorough and complete investigation”
by a senatorial committee of five to
determine whether any foundation ex-
ists for charges that “subversive Com-
munistic teachings” are going on in
“wholly or partly tax-exempt colleges
and universities of this state.”
Dun & Bradstreet, well informed
usually, say that a big business rise
is coming. Their weekly survey in-
forms you that before the end of this
quarter business progress will have de-
veloped to a degree beyond the most
sanguine estimates offered at the be-
ginning of the year.
Sir Oswald
Mosley
Interests are
OIR OSWALD MOSLEY, chief of the
0 British Fascists, has committed his
organization to a policy of anti-semit-
ism fully as severe as that of the Hit-
ler Nazis. At a riot-
ous meeting of his gp
Black Shirts in Leices-
ter, Mosley said,; “For
the first time I openly
and publicly chal-
lenge Jewish interests
in this country. Com-
mandlng commerce,
commanding the press,
commanding the cin-
ema, dominating the
city of London, they
are killing industry
with their sweat-
shops. These great
not intimidating and will not intim-
idate the Fascist movement of the
modern age.”
Leaders of more than 200 of Chi-
cago’s 300 Jewish organizations as-
sembled to indorse the campaign of
the American Jewish congress for con-
solidation of all organized Jewish ac-
tion. The chief speaker was the fa-
mous Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, national
president and founder of the congress.
In the course of his address he said:
“I want the day to come when no
Jew shall live in Germany—not one.
1 want the day to come—although I
Shall not live to see it—when the Jew
will be a regretted- memory in Ger-
many, just as their presence was a
blessing and an ennoblement in every
sense.”
DOBERT GORDON SWITZ of New
Jersey and his wife, who had
been in jail in France for abput 16
months on charges of espionage, were
finally tried and found guilty, but were
set free by the court because they had
turned states evidence and helped In
the apprehension of their accomplices
Twenty-two others were convicted and
given prison terms of varying length.
How rich will the Russians become,
with their energetic development of na-
tional resources, all over Russia and
far into Arctic regions?
And what will be the effect on Com-
munism, bolshevism and the proletariat
when Russia becomes, as she may do,
the richest nation on earth, and those
that rule her become the world’s rich-
est men, perhaps the first multiple bil-
lionaires in history?
Expeditions sent into the Arctic have
discovered coal, nickel, zinc, tin, cop-
per, gold and oil, all inside the Arctic
circle.
A regular line of freight ships has
been established through the north-
west passage, gigantic icebreakers go-
ing ahead of the freighters. Already
Russia produces three times as much
gold as the United States. What will
be the psychological effect on Commu-
nism when Russia produces more gold
than any other nation on earth?
Gambling in silver, made inevitable
by this country pushing up the price,
goes on all over the world; poor old
China is buying back at double prices
silver sold too cheap, and Britain
must wish she had been in less of a
hurry to unload below 30 cents an
ounce the hundreds of millions of
ounces taken from India, when Ibdia,
in a foolish moment, was put on the
gold basis, only to fall off again.
An old true saying tells you: “There
is some good in all evil,” and this ap-
plies even to the deadly venom of the
cobra, or “hooded snake of India.”
A full discharge of the cobra’s
poison into the human body means
death, while the scientific use of that
poison supplies a superior substitute
for morphine in diminishing pain.
If you love your British cousins,^re-
joice. Neville Chamberlain, chancel-
lor of the exchequer, says British in-
come taxes will be cut because British
finances show a substantial surplus.
That surplus appears in spite of the
fact that Britain is adding more than
$52,000,000 to the cost of armaments.
Your satisfaction in this good news
may be increased by your knowledge
that the United States had the pleas-
ure of financing the surplus and the
additional armaments to the tnne «f
$5,000,000,000 In war debts not paid.
Senator Wheeler of Montapa has in-
troduced a bill ordering the national
government to take over, own and op-
erate the railroads of the nation be-
ginning January 1,^1936. There is no
doubt that railroad stock and bond
holders would say, "Amen,” if they
could be sure of getting a fair price
for their property. Railroad manage-
ment, naturally, would grieve. To
give up power is always unpleasant
©, King Features Syndicate, Inc.
WNU Service.
X
0
0
National Topics Interpreted
by William Bruckart
National Press Building Washington, D, C.
Washington.—The true purpose of
the Ihvestigation by the senate muni-
tions committee ap-
Light on pears to have come
Nye Inquiry to light. It is seek-
ing the honor of
drafting legislation which will give it
a historical standing as the group of
men who first moved to remove the
incentive of profit as provocative of
war. In presenting its proposal to this
end, however, the committee is regard-
ed as having “started something” which
it is unlikely can be finished by the
group of individual senators making
up that committee.
When the investigating resolution
was adopted by the senate, its spon-
sors made much fuss about conditions
in the munitions industry. There were
many speeches made by Senator Nye
(Rep., N. D.) concerning the wicked-
ness of munitions manufacturers, and
in the course of those speeches, which
were made In a score of different com-
munities, Senator Nye announced con-
clusions which apparently have not
been supported by evidence adduced
by the committee investigators. Fur-
ther, the senator announced plans to
disclose alleged corruption among the
munitions manufacturers and stated
definitely that the purpose of the in-
quiry was to provide the basis for laws
which would control them.
Now, after seven months, we look
back on the committee’s record and
find that it has played a game of
hop-sklp-and-jump from one subject to
another and, I believe, the consensus
is that little of real value either to
the senate or as public information
has been developed.
Since there was the minimum of pub-
licity resulting from the inquiry into
munitions plants, shipbuilding yards
and the aircraft industry, the commit-
tee has taken another tack. Seizing
upon President Roosevelt’s phrase that
profits must be taken out of war, Sen-
ator Nye and his colleagues turned
their so-called “experts” loose on the
track of those illusive profits. The re-
sult Is a piece of proposed legiskition
that goes beyond anything ever offered
before in the way of tax legislation.
Of course, it is entirely likely that
nothing at all will come of the Nye
bill insofar as improvement of our tax-
ation methods is concerned. But its
radical and altogether unworkable
character is looked upon as necessi-
tating a frank examination of its pro-
visions.
Because the committee started out to
investigate the munitions industry and
notwithstanding the fact that since it
has wandered all over the surface of
the earth with its inquiry there is a
widespread belief that its tax bill will
apply only to the munitions industry
during war time. Such is not the case.
It goes far beyond the munitions in-
dustry and, indeed, it affects every
corporation and every individual with
an income of $1,000 or more.
* * *
Probably the Flynn-Nye tax proposal
won’t get anywhere at all. Certainly
it will not be enacted
Flynn-Nye in this session of con-
Tax Bill gress. Nevertheless,
when a senate com-
mittee seriously Introduces a bill that
would limit income of a corporation
to 3 per cent of its peace-time capi-
talization—the government would take
the rest by taxation—it is regarded by
many as time to call a halt. It ought
to be added here that obviously the
country is faced with the highest taxes
it has ever known in consequence of
the tremendous spending that has been
going on during the last two years and
which is to be continued. Those taxes
are due to come along within another
year or two.
I referred above to the 3 per cent
limit on incomes of corporations. This
is brought about through a tax of 50
per cent on the first 6 per cent of
earnings of every corporation. Above
the 6 per cent earnings, it is proposed
in the Flynn-Nye bill to take 100 per
cent of the total.
Tucked away in one section of the
bill Is language that is ordinarily re-
ferred to as a “joker.” It represents
the first attempt by congress, rather
by the sponsors of this legislation, to
circumvent exemption of government
securities from taxation. The federal,
state, municipal, county and other gov-
ernmental jurisdictions have the power
to issue bonds and other securities
free from taxation. This makes such
securities attractive. For quite a
while there has been agitation to do
away with this tax exemption privi-
lege. Nobody has found a way, how-
ever, to get legislative bodies to enact
the necessary provisions into law. So,
we have something like fifty billions of
dollars in securities of this type out-
standing. If this income were taxable,
of course, it would represent a con-
siderable increase in revenue to the
federal government through income
levies. Thus It is stated the Flynn-Nye
proposal is attempting to reach that in-
come without actually violating the
contract which the issuing government
made with the buyers ef those securi-
ties.
* * *
The effort to tax income from these
securities has been worked out in a
fashion that is better
Hou) It illustrated than de-
Would Work fined. Assume that a
corporation had in-
vested a large portion of its surplus
or reserves in tax-exempt bonds. The-
bill proposes first to limit the amount
of income which that corporation may
receive and to tax half of the re-
mainder. The result is that income
from tax-exempt securities would be’
mingled with other forms of income
and the government would dip its hand
into the total and take whatever
amount the law prescribed.
Another provision of the bill would
result in government confiscation in
wartime of every dollar of income that
any official of any corporation, com-
pany or partnership received in excess
of $10,000 per year. It is to be re-
membered here that the above-men-
tioned $10,000 would not be tax-ex-
empt. Those drawing such salaries still
would have to pay the government
$2,800 in taxes on the $10,000 income.
In other words, since nearly every one
receiving salaries of this size serves
In an official capacity with some com-
mercial unit, the tax provision actually
reaches nearly all of the individual in-
come tax payers.
Certainly, the drastic rates affect all
persons receiving any income of con-
sequence because there is a sharp re-
duction in the personal exemption pre-
scribed and the tax rates themselves
are boosted higher than a kite. For
instance, a married man with an in-
come of $3,000 a year would have to
pay a minimum of $300 to the govern-
ment immediately war was declared.
* * *
The lethargy, that continues among
national Republican leaders is begin-
ning to grow irksome
Criticize upon minor Wheel-
Leaders horses and individual
Republicans of lesser
consequence in national affairs. Word
is coming through to Washington from
various sections of the country indi-
cating considerable dissatisfaction with
the management of Republican party
affairs by the present regime, headed
by Henry P. Fletcher, national chair-
man. There is likewise a growing vol-
ume of criticism of the work of Sena-
tor Hastings of Delaware, and Repre-
sentative Bolton of Ohio, joint chair-
men of the Republican-senatorial-con-
gressional committee. Superficially, at
least, it appears that the Republican
pot is about to boil over.
I don’t believe anybody can forecast
at this time what the result is going
to be. It should be said in favor of
Mr. Fletcher and Co-Chairmen Hast-
ings and Bolton that they are in a
tough spot. They are criticized If they
do and criticized if they don’t. Yet the
fact remains and I think it is recog-
nized everywhere that none of these
three has taken a positive position nor
has he initiated any constructive effort
in behalf of his party’s political fu-
ture.
From among Republicans who yet
remain in congress, I have picked up
much private discussion indicating
fear on their part that the Republican
party management is faced with an
upheaval equivalent to the Roosevelt
New Deal among the Democrats unless
the party leaders awaken from their
unperturbed sleep. The point made
most frequently is that President
Roosevelt actually has inaugurated his
campaign for re-election, and the Re-
publicans are doing absolutely noth-
ing about it It is well to recall that
Postmaster General Farley is planning
to retire—just when nobody knows—■
to devote his attention to his other
job which is chairman of the Demo-
cratic national committee. This infor-
mation can be construed in only one
way now that Mr. Fletcher is getting
ready to take his seat again at the
helm of the campaign machine. Some
of the smarter Republicans insist that
this should be notice to the guiding
lights of their own party to begin con-
struction of political trenches.
Something may come of the Repub-
lican sectional meetings now being
planned. It is just possible that out
of these group discussions may be
evolved some national program, or the
makings of a national policy. It Is
likewise possible that from these group
discussions some individual may arise
who would be a worthwhile leader for
the party against Mr. Roosevelt next
year. To date, according to all of the
information I can obtain, that leader
is not in sight. Senator Arthur Van-
denberg of Michigan, who was re-
elected to the senate last year in the
midst of a Democratic landslide, has
been suggested. On the other hand,
wise politicians tell me that because
Senator Vandenberg has been men-
tioned thus early, he is likely to be
out of the running when the conven-
tion time comes because in politics it
is the early bird who catches the curse
instead of the worm.
But to forget the weaknesses of the
Republicans in leadership does not
cause one to forget the palpable fail-
ure made by those in charge at pres-
ent. So far as the public record shows
they have taken no advantage what-
soever of vulnerable spots in the New
Deal armor. No administration has
been or can be perfect President
Roosevelt does not claim that his New
Deal is perfect He has gone so far
as to admit failures in certain of his
countless experiments. It is possible
that the Republican organization has
made note of these failures but it can
be stated as a fact that they have
made very little use of them by way
of political attack.
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 46, Ed. 1 Monday, April 29, 1935, newspaper, April 29, 1935; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth897226/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lampasas Public Library.