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The Pittsburgh Press du lieu suivant : Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 6

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EI3C TTant Ad Headquarters, Court 4900 Other Press Departments, Court 5450 SATURDAY, APRIL, 9. 1333 PITTSBURGH PRESS Mr. Fixlt Elephant Sees Pink One After Bootleg Drink Society Couple Weds WOMAN PLEADS FOR REPAIRS TO i HOOVER, HOUSE JOIN IN MOVE TO CUTBUDGET Committee Seeks to Cut More Than 200 Millions From Appropriations 1 1 1 1. IMIHWlWUMII VOTE MACHINES BEING PREPARED FOR NOVEMBER Use in Primary Balked by Court's Addition of Name To Delegate List CARR1GK STREET 4 Highways Bureau Orr-M Gut ters and Cinders SEEKS LAW CHANGES BALLOTS REPRINTED rl II II I 1 Tl I AfcsS 1 Jv r'lt 3 RESCUE LEAGUE ACTS v. President Has Own Plan to Offer; Cut Dry Law Funds To $10,000,000 Polling Place Changes' Throughout County Are Announced i Mr.

Fixit Helps Adjust Com- plaints From Many Citizens 7- Cloverdale Street, Carrick, has Mechanics and voting officials of the Elections Department 1 tctiav started preparing the 1.100 machines for use in the general eiec- tion r.exr. November. i Plans to ir.srall the machines in McKf.icrt and four North Side wards for the April C6 primary were i been repaired by the Bureau of Highways and Sewers, following complaints made to Mr. Fixti of The Press. 2" -V Superintendent T.

L. Pillow of the i Highways Bureau said the street. By The United Press WASHINGTON, April President Hoover" and the Pemocratic-controlled economy committee of the House joined today in a non-partisan effort to slash more than from government appropriations. A saving of this amount Is imperative, or the new billion-dollar tax bill must be made even higher to balance the budget. Chairman McDuffie of the House committee had a list cf 55 or 60 economy items to propose to the President at the WTiite House conference.

These included the controversial plan to reduce by 11 per cent all government salaries in excess of $1,000. This would, save about $67,000,000. extending Nobles Lane to Mos- Zoobu after taking bootleg rum for coli and breaking leg on whoopee sprint. exp.oc.ea yesieroay oy the aaditicn cf another name to the list cf candidate? Or. order of Dvir hin County Court the name cf Robert Gray Taylor, Med.

will c.e acded to the list of fever, who see it as to the Republican national convention. Space abetted to the Republican rsny on the machine already had been, taken by other candidates. After an inspection of "hich are undergoing alterations, Fe temn 's A id To Ru in Treasury In 21 Years Seeks Law Changes. Mr. Fixit Can Help You If yovi have any trouble involving city departments or public utilities.

write Mr. Fixit. care The Press: state your complaint clearly; and he'll attempt to have it straightened out lor you. It is absolutely essential that you give your name and address completely. Your name -will be omitted when replying if so desired.

Anonymous letters will not be recognized. nty Commissioners decided to re- President Hoover had ready his own proposals, worked out in conferences with Cabinet secretaries and fiscal experts. They were kept secret, but the President was known Block and Tackle Sets Broken Bone for Baby Pachyderm Special tn The Pittsburgh Press ATLANTIC CITY. April 9 Zoobu, the Steel Pier's 350-pound baby elephant probably is an ardent teetotaler today. When colic doubled her, Karl Rasquin, her trainer, chose a pint of bootleg rye as her medicine.

She lost her balance it was from weakness, said Rasquin broke her leg and they had to use a block and tackle to set it in a plaster cast. (Continued from Page 1) the temporary force cf mechan- r.d inspectors recently employed. The administration is still Republi--oie En srir.ee Company officials can. rted 252 machines have been a little more than a year later the r.eted and ready for use. Demon- cycle ends with a cut in relief costs.

will bo continued sched- General economic conditions then Pc rpo com Etra' tf d. are in fair shape. Once more there The county nvift pay the cost of is a substantail treasury surplus of grove Street, was cindered and the gutters opened. reprinting more than 100.000 ballots 13 ner cent. The administration is 13 per cent.

Complaint about the street was made by Mrs. Margaret A. Park. 1515 Cloverdale Street, who wrote: "This street is in a terrible condition. It is filled with ruts and holes.

of which the following oration is typical: "Permit not him, who, in the pride and vigor of youth, wasted his health and shed his blood in freedom's cause, with desponding heart and palsied limbs to totter from door to door, bowing his yet untamed soul to meet the frozen bosom of reluctant charity." Pressure for additional pensions increased after this act, and in 1830 Senator Hayne of South Carolina launched an attack in which he said pending legislation would admit a multitude of "mere sunshine and holiday soldiers." His argument was of no avail, for pensions by 1833 were costing four and a half million dollars, having quadrupled since 1829. The Civil War brought a repetition on a larger scale of this same constant liberalization of pension politicies the more remote the war becomes. In the 70's a group of lawyers specializing in veteran leg Some cinders or "red dog" would to favor revision of laws which compel the government to spend certain sums each year. It was said or $60,000,000 could be saved in the veterans" bureau alone if the laws were changed. A million dollars was clipped from the prohibition enforcement fund for next year as the Senate Appropriations Committee continued its own economy program.

This left for enforcement. Drys on the committee approved the reduction and believed the Senate and House would accept it. The navy also continued to trim expenses. It announced the operating bases at Key West, and New Orleans would be reduced to a bare maintenance status to save $40,000. Deluged With Protests.

On the other front In the battle to balance the budget, the new tax bill was bombarded with propa place the street in good condition." live on East Ohio Street, and STEVENS, BONUS FOE, EXPLAINS Legion Chief Declares He Is Following Orders of Convention every night when I come home I have to cross the street to avoid a German police dog owned by a resident in the 1600 block," wrote S. J. "Will you have them chain the dog or keep it in the yard." "The owner was notified to keep Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Cameron Church, Jr.

made useless by failure of the State Elections Bureau to include Taylor's name on the ballot. County Lacks Recourse Ralph H. Frank and J. P. Fife, county solicitors, said the county has r.o recourse against the state.

Nineteen polling places were or-cercd changed by the Commissioners last night after a series of hea r-Decisions were postponed on three other petitions for changes and lour p-titions were refused. The principal dispute of the hearings developed over the proposal to change the polling place of the Second Distrltt. Thirty-second Ward. The petition was granted. Voters, including the judge of elections, urgd the polls be located in a room at 2400 Saw Mill Run Boulevard, due to the noi.se and in- onveniences at the Municipal Building, where past elections were held.

Barr Plans Removal Commissioner C. M. Barr declared his mv-n'ion to move all polling nut of municipal buddings, police stations and engine houses. I'niling places relocated were the dog in his yard," said Superintendent J. Robb Snyder of the Animal Rescue League.

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D. Boardman, of Boston to Bif The United Hress Frederic Cameron Church, Jr. Church formerly was the hus Special to The Pittsburgh Press nOSTON, April 9 Only mem-bers of the immediate families and a small group of friends witnessed the marriage recently of Miss Agnes Devens Boardman, ganda, complaints and amendments.

Senators are being deluged with protests from the many interests that would be affected by the proposed levies. Among the Senate amend band of Mrs. Henry Delafield Phelps, before her marriage Miss R. B. Noll asked about transfer privileges in the Wilkinsburg district.

"There is no transfer privilege in effect from route 76 to route 66 in the Wilkinsburg district on account Muriel Vanderbilt. ments already offered, some would add copper and other items to the protective tariff list. Some would State Holds Dry Repeal still Republican. The seven cycles which make up the mosaic reached their peaks in 1820, 1833, 1880, 1393, 1909, 1926 and 1931. Present indications are that the 1931 movement is far from spent and that it will reach new heights, but for the purpose of striking an average it was assumed to be at the top.

In 1893 the Civil War veterans absorbed over a third of the national revenue. Four years of treasury deficits and five years of business depression followed. Investigation of these cycles indicates that soldiers who have served in a national emergency ask, and get. increased bounties when there is a treasury susplus. although at the same time business generally is poor.

There is no evidence that economic conditions improve with the distribution of these huge government funds. On the other hand, business appears to get worse and it is not until veterans' relief is reduced that an improvement sets in. Rome Had Its System Until the United States began writing new theories into such relief the history of caring for old soldiers has been the same. It has been based upon disability received in the service and the need of the individual veteran. Careful search revealed no cases until the nineteenth century, in which expenditures in behalf of old soldiers were permitted to cripple a nation's treasury.

i Rome had the first carefully organized veteran relief system. It levies a five per cent inheritance tax on all legacies not to direct heirs and a one per cent sales tax on goods sold at auction. Each disabled legionnaire got a proportionate share of these two taxes. When economic conditions were generally bad he received less. In boom times eliminate all tariff items.

Others would increase personal income tax exemptions above the low limits Key, Say Temperance Heads of the present fare collection system." explained J. B. Donley, public relations director for the Pittsburgh Railways Company. "You can, however, transfer from route 76 to route 64. If any trainman refuses such a transfer we would be glad to have his number so we could properly instruct him." fixed by the House.

friM folnmbi! 1 The United States Chamber of Commerce, demanding a balanced budget, reported a referendum Pennsylvania holds a strategic Li said. "A wet President will never enter the White House if the Christian people come out and vote. showed 1,200 business associations in all parts of the country joining Kifth Vr(: ions Fii'ii Ann position in the fight to repeal or retain prohibition, speakers last night told a Christian Citizenship meet in a plea for reduced Federal ex it 8.11 A-ie- MIAMI BEACH. April 9 Opposition of National Commander Henry L. Stevens, of the American Legion, to the proposed cash bonus is based on "a mandate from supreme authority" the Detroit convention he told Florida Legionnaires in convention here yesterday.

"Regardless of my personal opinion, I'm bound to live up to the convention vote," the national commander said in answering protests against his stand, "in support of President Hoover's announced intention to veto the pending bonus bill. "My action is in accord with the action taken at the Legion's last convention at Detroit which went on record as not asking for immediate cash payment of service men's bonus. "That is a mandate from the supreme authority. It is not a question of standing, or of not standing behind the President. It is living up to the mandate of the national convention enacted by duly elected delegates, representative men and women of the Legion.

"The national commander and all posts are bound by the national convention, and any action which fails to come up to the convention mandate is 'ultra vires. islation began lobbying for more money. Newspaper Founded One, George Lemen, who made $40,000 a month handling soldiers' claims, even founded a newspaper to promote the cause. The Grand Army of the Republic joined forces with him and formed a steam roller which nothing could stop. President Garfield pleaded in vain that he believed one-sixth of all the Civil War pensions were fraudulent.

President Cleveland warned the country again and again that the pension system made the high protective tariff necessary and held the general level of taxes at an abnormal plane. The spirit at that time is best illustrated by a remark attributed by William H. Glassen, in his study of pensions for the Carnegie Foundation, to James Tanner. United States Pension Commissioner. Tanner had been a G.

A. R. lobbyist for years and was himself a disabled veteran. will drive a six mule team through the Treasury!" he exclaimed. "God help the surplus!" By the time Civil War pension costs began to fall off the Spanish War veterans were taking up Cinders were placed on Leister Street.

Spring Hill, by the Bureau of Highways and Sewers, following a complaint from K. Lacher. Mil- VIOVE IN SPRINGDALE penditures. The chamber indorsed "moderate I'i ''lOtH it ly" higher income taxes and sales vmlh rll Htii- i inu.i:iy taxes on "articles of wide use but not of first necessity." It opposed ing in Carnegie United Presbyterian Church. Washington Avenue.

Mrs. Ella B. Black of Beaverdale. state president of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, and Dr. Mary Wolfe of Laurelton, state director of Christian Citizenship, both attacked Senator James J.

Nhip An'rrje. increased estate taxes. 1 TO OUST POLICE HEAD Burgess Would Shift Night and Day Men; Hint Politics Tr.f 'lO-A M' BANK'S REOPENING J' I Davis and urged election of General "The sewer in front of 637 Mel-wood Street needs to be cleaned." WTOte John W. Fiedermann, 643 Mel-wood. "It has been clogged for months." "The drop has been cleaned and is now in good shape," said District Supervisor John Dittmar of the Highways Bureau.

Repairs were made to Valley View Street. North Side, by the Bureau of Highways and Sewers, following a complaint from Mrs. M. Blumenstein. Tor'h 1013 Lin- 1 I i Av.jiiue.

f'revi- DUE INBELLEVUE t.i Pi' ric 1 351 I': Smedley D. Butler, avowed dry. Dr. Wolfe directed the greater portion of her speech to the prohibition poll conducted by The Literary Digest and insisted that its figures showing a preponderant wet sentiment meant nothing. "It didn't take me very long to reach a conclusion when I heard Depositors and Stockholders 1 A move to name Patrolman Harry Lloyd a chief of Springdale police department is being sponsored by Burgess J.

W. Johnston. The plan is believed to be a political move by Johnston to oust Patrolman Clarence Shearer, long considered ranking officer in the District Street. Previous i-'i 110 i F-leral Str. t.

-11 t-irV XU-l TOO sftWJii. Fif-h tvtin Ut-' t. mn-r if j.rcvu.'.is i- Trying to Raise $300,000 his share was larger. He shared with the taxpayer adversities and I advantages of business conditions in "Regardless of economic conditions, women and children and sick persons should come first." Stockholders and depositors in the closed Citizens Trust Company of Bellevue last night agreed to raise mi PiaTi.t tl to borough. the slack and more.

Wilson Blocks Tension Evil i With America's entry into the World War the Wilson administra-i tion decided to block the pension SJOO.ooo in stock subscriptions to The borough has been without a i It 1 I I i i a reopen the institution. DRIVER NOT GUILTY IN FATAL COLLISION police chief several years. Johnston's plan would relegate Shearer i Ki-nntu Ai ime. i i tii' i I i'-v Mil! R.iti v. fi tn 1 lull lUh vlliilH dlUUVPli by Approximately 500 stockholders and depositors met in the borough to the night force position now i hall to hear E.

H. Wicks, attorney held by Lloyd. the empire. In medieval times the church cared for veterans. In exceptional cases princes made desultory grants for this purpose, but most of the wars were of a religious nature and the bishops assumed relief obligations.

During the reign of Queen Elizabeth the British government formally took over the aid of ex-soldiers and in 1592 the first statute was passed. It provided for the disabled who had served since March say sponsors of the reorganization In the Novmeber election Shearer l.Si; Norlii Hiii'h AM-ii'i" have been assured of co-operation decisively defeated Lloyd in the fight for constable. of the State Banking Department if Lowell Thomas, their radio announcer, say that Georgia voted 3 to 1 wet and North Carolina 2 to 1. No one could make me believe that," she said. Each of the speakers said the nation would lose by the return of beer, since the money devoted to the purchase of beer would be money taken from other industries.

Mrs. Black centered her address on the necessity of all prohibitionists voting in the April 26 primaries and in the November election. "The wets tell us that we will elect a wet President at this time," she Drinks Poison for Rum, Dies Poison allegedly mistaken for liquor caused the death last night of Michael Butler, 37, of 3519 Boulevard of Allies, in St. Francis Illness has been given by Johns the money is raised. It is proposed to divide the $300.

ton for his inability to take active charge of the police department. 000 into $150,000 capital and $150,000 I'. 'l hun-e at te- lri- -lulls In. lltlun -i Ki.ur'ti to renn i-i-i'inii too Kt'1 I.U'wi Frank 'avi-u to 'iinnysiiie a' ion mm v.nii b''. evil in advance.

The War Risk Insurance Act was passed to take care of the whole problem, putting it on an. actuarial basis. Congress has completely upset these plans by authorizing expenditures far in excess, both in money and liberality to the veteran who was uninjured in service, of anything the world has ever known. In the past the nation has been able to meet the increasing demands of its ex-soldiers through windfalls that came into the Treasury by expansion of the frontier and industry. Today there is no frontier and Industry is expanded to surplus, if it is collected.

Already The council police committee- is $10,000 of the amount needed has -ri i-'1 -ii 'ii- Braddock Man Ordered to Pay Costs In Wilkinsburg Crash Joseph Krevy, 33, of Braddock, was found not guilty and ordered to pay the costs on a charge of manslaughter by a jury in Criminal Court before Visiting Judge J. Frank Graff of Armstrong County, yesterday. He was charged with the death of William Kost, 17, of 300 Camp Avenue, Braddock, killed while riding in a car driven by Krevy in a collision at the intersection of Coal Street and Rebecca Avenue, Wilkinsburg, on Jan. 1. studying his proposal.

in the year or tne aeieat or tne Spanish armada. Only those who i.i been subscribed. Thir.l Uistii "adventured their lives and lost The following committee was BL00MFIELD WOMEN PAR.Tr formed to receive subscriptions their limbs or disabled their bodies' got the pensions which amounted to 'lt jvi i 1 1 1 1 i ii C.al New l.sii i.i"'fl ami will save the mi n-ii t.ii. tO ,1 1 II' to It, Thomas A. McNary, chairman; Park OVERCOME BY FUMES 10 pounds a year to a private and H.

Martin. W. V. Shoemaker, H. Petitions re Refused refused 20 to a lieutenant.

Dennison and H. E. Kirk, witn Commissioners 2 Victims Awakened by Gas Odors; Wicks and H. R. McCullough as ex Theory Brought to America This theory was brought to the limit.

officio members. PEANUT PIETRO Revived at Hospital Partially overcome by gas leaking from a pipe in their home, two Bloomfield women were revived in West Penn Hospital early today. Communists War For Are Waging Ruthless Victory Of 5-Year Program fo- rhanes these aisirit-Lb. Tenth District of the Seventeenth Ward Sixth District of the Twenty Ward, Enhth District of the Twr -ntv-second Ward and Fourth DKtrict of the Twenty-fifth Ward. Action was postponed on changes proposed in the Sixth District of the Twelfth Ward, Third District of the Twenty-fifth Ward and Sixth District of the Twenty-fifth Ward.

NEWl INSTRUCTOR Mrs. Minnie Weiher, 57, and Mrs. America and in 1676 the Massachusetts Bay colony appointed a permanent committee to care for disabled soldiers for life at the expense of the colony. Maryland followed two years later, amplifying the Massachusetts plan to include dependents of those who died in the service. With the outbreak of the Revolution, the Continental Congress immediately provided for care of Anna Martin, 54, were awakened by the odor of gas in their home at 170 Pearl Street.

Mrs. Martin's screams awakened Michael Haff-ner, a roomer, who called an to "levelling of wages" and P.M. E.S.T. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Is Appointed to Faculty of Russia Compared to Nation at War With Every District And Every Person Affected by Schedules Of Five-Year Plan Kabbi Patrolmen from Forty-third Street Westminster College WLW SURA Station were called later and shut off the gas after findinc a leaking vrw WILMINGTON. April 9 wounded soldiers and dependents of the dead.

Then, in 1778, Washington wrote the Congress during that Revolutionary officers be granted half-pay for life at the end of the war. He was frank in declaring that this was necessary as an inducement to hold pipe. 7 1 1 4 These things are explained as entirely compatible with socialism in its early stage. Sooner or later these "survivals" will have to be forcibly eradicated in line with the Party's political tasks for the second Five Year Plan. 'Liquidate.

Confusion Collectivist attitudes are being -Westminster College, a United institution, has ap will not be softened but will be Increased. The faintest deviation from the authorized ways of thinking will be punished summarily. Communist leaders feel that the stake involved is too large to permit the slightest risk. The purpose of the first half decade was to lay the foundation for socialist construction. That of the second half decade is even more important from their viewpoint.

It is the actual introduction of socialism. Officially that objective has been stated by TUNE IN TO-NIGHTI Christian Weiher, husband of Mrs. Weiher, has been a patient in West Penn Hospital since Jan. 15, with an infected foot. pointed a Jewish Rabbi as one of its instructors.

Rr.bbi Avery Jonah nf Trmnle Israel. New The following article is the sixth in a series describing the Sovicti' program for a new Five-Year Plan and telling of the successes and failures of the first plan. TEACHERS GIVE By EUGENE LYONS United Press Staff Writer fortified at the same time, of course. The "shock brigades" in factories and on farms, "socialist competition" among different en Castle, is new tutor Hebrew at the school. Gt-ossfield.

graduate of the Uni-ver4'y of Cincinnati and Hebrew Union Colleee. will start a course in e'ementary Hebrew Monday. 730 wjas COLUMBIA NETWORK EVERY SATURDAY the recent party conclave thus: Charts Not Significant MOSCOW, April 9 No one, who has not experienced it terprises, the whole trend of the education of the new generation his officers in the Army and keep a fighting force in the field. Confronted with increasing desertions and resignations, he told the Congressmen in desperation: do most religiously believe that the salvation of the cause depends upon it and without it your officers will moulder to nothing or be composed of low and illiterate men void of capacity for this or any other business." Opposition Is Defeated The conference holds that the chief political task of the second strengthen the collectivist mentality. Five Year Plan is to do away com A personally, can understand tne coiossai concentration oi purpose and energy that is being brought by Russia to its Five Year Plan.

The only analogy is war. France and Germany at the sharpest stage of the World war For the time being there is doubtless some confusion in the pletely with the capitalist elements 0 FOR FOR ENAMEUPORCELAIN and with classes general; to de minds of "shock brigadiers." Pos stroy fully the causes giving rise to sibly many of them cannot them Offer 10 Per Cent of Wages to Relieve Penn Twp. Taxpayers A voluntary offer to reduce their wages 10 per cent for 1932 and 1933 has been made by Penn Township school teachers to assist the school board in relieving taxpayers in the district. No effort has been made to cut teachers salaries in the township because none of the wages are above the minimum provided by the state law. The school board is considering the teachers' generis considering the teachers' offer.

witnessed a concentration of all na- Coming! Woodrow Wilson Film selves decide whether they joined class distinctions and exploitation; to abolish the survivals of capital- ism in economy and in the con-! sciousness of the people; to trans Under great opposition the law tional economic, mental and cultural was passed, but it promUed fcalf -pay i resource3 like the one now under the brigades out of socialist enthusiasm, or for the sake of extra food and other privileges available to the Joiners. By the end of the second plan such confusion must be ior seven vears ony. nitci vac Liuort of the Revolution, the New England Hear the PRIZE WINNING TOASTS 5-45 P. M. WJAS liquidated.

obstacles, against large layers of the population, against mental attitudes. The "General Staff" which conducts it has practically limitless power and its orders are based solely upon the desire for victory at any price. In balancing up the costs money is the least of the items. The punishment meted out to millions of the "class enemy" must be added. So must increasing centralization of political power in an ever smaller and more dictatorial group.

The country not only has harnessed its physical strength for the achievement of the plan. It has WATCH for the date when the great memorial film of Woodrow Wilson's life and career will be shown in a downtown theater proceeds to go to charity. States rebelled against these payments, riotous meetings of protest were held in which it was charged that the pensions were against the whole theory of American government in that they set up a favored class. Finally the officers had to settle for five years' half-pay. Despite the fact that Washington urged the pensions as a special measure to meet a' unique and grave situation, the precedent was estab way here.

But with them the fighting was largely restricted to the war areas. Far behind the lines life was profoundly disturbed, yet some of its r.Aace-time features remained. The old class lines, the old economic relations, other aspects of existence continued as before. "War Covers Country Here literally nothing is unaffected. The war zone covers every inch of the gigantic country and includes every department of hu form the whole working population of the country into conscious and active builders of a classless socialist society." Figures of coal and steel and machines to be produced In the second plan are not nearly 83 significant as this declaration of pol'tical purposes.

It amounts to a new declaration of war against many stratas of the population. One of the more striking contradictions of the present time is that the government itself, under the lash of conditions, is encouraging Delivered :8 by the a Unique! HIS great movie is literally a full a screen uiwiapiij lished that uninjured men who had served in war were entitled to government largess. It has remained and May 7 TO FRANCE ENGLAND OOK THRU YOU LOCAL AGENT. NO ONE CAN) SIHVI YOU 1ETTE. CUHARD harnessed its intellect, its moral i sense, its esthetic sense, everything that could conceivably be turned film of one ot Americas most and most tense periods of history.

some of the "survivals of capitalism in the consciousness of the people." I refer to piece-work, personal re man existence, it is a rutnless and terrible struggle against natural into motor power for the immediate tasks of the revolution. Hope Fading The hope that this strain, both HYKLAS TOASTMASTER Presented hy the Maker ot HykUs Ginger Ale Product sponsibility for work performed and relaxed with the end of the Five Year Plan is fading. In the outline of the second Five Year Plan notice has been served that there can be as a fulcrum on which veterans of all other wars have rested a lever to pry money from the public funds. In 1818 all needy men who served in the Revolution were granted pensions after a discussion in Congress other seemingly capitalist ideas Watch The Press! An. 4 which are being vigorously propa wmm uUUlfuuuLILfu tm.

7tk rim Way. Atliatit 8670 1 gated since Stalin called for an end physical and intellectual, would be no let up. The dictatorship not only.

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