LITTLE MESSENGERS I W; 1
—jg 1 TH E DUN
i *
v«i •DUK
i_1 mrmmasem __lj. ibmbmbb—^.
Hl’COST 0‘UVDr
DUE FOR TUMBLE
OBSERVERS THINK
Wall Street Senses Change
Pleasing To Oppressed
Consumer.
EUROPE CURTAILS
95 CONSUMPTION
Massifacturer* Disposed T• Tun Alt
Hi|k-Priced Raw Malariala late
Fuiished Pradacti and Market
Tkaei Aa 5ooc As Possibl* la Am<
ticipatioa Of General Desliae.
Nose York. Ftb. to.—The indiffer
ent bank ntat*menU of a week ago
left the financial community btUe in
formed r.n the extent to which , the
two forces driving against high
costs succeeded, and the lack of this
information sharpened the observ
er's perceptibilities to read between
the lines of any irports concerning
manniaetwre and trade that might
come to hand during the week.
The observer In this rase was
every one interested n the manufac
ture and sale of goods as well as the
owneis of or speculators In tha ae
cnrlticu of producing corporations
No one can state tha; signs of a break
in pilccs did not appear without dam
aging his own reputation for observa
tion. Despite the painstaking efforta
of middlemen and jobbers to cover
up tha evidence with counteracting
statements of increased demand and
scarcity of goods Indications af .a
hi raking down of thu upward jiricfe
muvrment and a reactionary tend
ency iif a great number of Unas
tinkled into the financial com
munity and found reflection there,
early in the week, is a nervous specu
lative feeling end damaging sacrifice
of aecunty value.
Ualasky To Basam* Lucky.
- • The time has come when manufac
turers, purveyors and consumers who
have been defeating their own por
* . poses for mnnths by keen bidding for
raw materials and finished products
will be. thankful that they were not
mccesafoi la completing their rf
lion. It showed that concerns last
'feck in the unloading of stocks, oven
whan thoos factors to which avery
one had amMied the weakwaes af the
•ocurtty market in the previous two
weeks, were improved.
What Well street fears i* not that
prices will decline, for It baa recon
ciled Itself to that developmant by
thla time, but that the reaction, being
impelled by one natural force and
one arbitrary force, will get beyond
the control of the letter and lead
to a eondition verging on panic. The
natural foie# In this case it the can
cellation of export contracts and
the determination of Europe not only
to confine ite imports to bare necea
siUcs, but also to practice some ac
tual self denial. The Improvement In
foreign exchange during the week,
wiping out four per cent, of the dis
count at which the English pound
was held, three per. cant of tho
French discount and four per cent of
the Italian, cannot br expected to ad
vance the reuse of American exports
proportionately.
It will require much more drastic
recoveries in the value of foreign
bills. The damage has been done, the
exchange situation having become so
scute ten days ago as to demand ac
tion either by our financiers or Euro
pean consumer*. The latter did act,
and. according to the beat banking
opinion, thty will r.ut retrace their
slept until they are given actual
demonstrations, not mere assurances,
of the purpose of America to finance
its exports.
No Doubt Of Decline.
Eecn conceding nothing more than
‘hot which has actually come to our
knowledge within tho past week or
ten days, thorr can be no doubt
•bout the declining price movement.
It* effect upon Industry will depend
upon He spend. Manufacturers will
endeavor to turn thoir high priced
material* into finished products sod
market them as soon as possible to
take advantage of the highest prices
A Ik Isa I mmVtlm anrl Iknlr axaeou._its j.
pend upon how soon the consuming
public ■•rites the chnngcd order of
thing*. In other word*, there ahould
bo • determined effort to reduce in
rentorieH of goode bought ot price#
which may never again be realised in
thi* generation. Them inventories,
common to all progreaaivo corpora
tion* and apparently large in propor
tion to their progreaslvnneaa, were at
the foundation of all (ho otock mar
kat’a troubles daring the week.
'twins born in different
years in different states
Penn.ylv.nli* Orit. '
When the midnight Orain on New
Ycaria mre waa nearing the Wahaah
itver, which la the line between fi
lm oi* and Indiana, the conductor ran
throagh the train railing for a doc
tor. One re^onded and ha waa tak
en back to a day coach whore a wo
man was In diatraon
Jurt bofora the train ranched Urn
bUr bridge aha gave birth to a baby
bov. and the time waa a few miaotas
hefora midnight, fast after eromfcm
tha river, atae gave birth ta anithaa
iMkteg it twin* This time H waa
after midnight and in another Bute.
One twin waa bon h> Illtnota and
month- of December and hi
ISIS. The other waa born In Indian,
oa, hi Janaary, !#»• Thar wara
hara in dt^rtat BUUa, different
/•am yet they arc twisa.
f 4 t
o ■— I - ■ ■ ■ wm ■- (
MUST WORK TOGETHER MD
SOLVE MARKET FRORlXSt
The grower* of cotton kin
! long line* solved the problem of
prod action, which hes boon
proven by the feet that ample
supplies of row cotton have bona
harvested each year to meet the
requirement* of . the active
spindles of the world consum
ing American eat tan. Tha grow
ers of American cotton have
done thoir fall duty in (apply,
lag tho demands of civilisation
with the silken fiber for ciotb
Ing. This ha* bon dona under
condition] of privation, poverty
end Illiteracy as ths portion of
■ the Southern cotton growers
in the groat raw cotton industry.
Tho conditions fully staph salts
tbo fact that during ths past
half esntury tbs growers have
failed utterly to give proper at
tention to tho marketing of spot
cotton. It is of more vital Im
portance to solve the problem
of profltable marketing than K
is to win out in tha Sold of am
ple production.—Cotton Pacta
*-- --
PRESIDENT MAY BE
CANDIDATE THIRD
TIME, RUMOR SAYS
Belief Aa To WUliagmoas Will
Not B« Permitted To Go
Down In Washing tom.
MANY LIGHTNING
RODS ARE ALOFT
■UpsUlssss Evidence Gaaheoradaasa
Since Administrations Failure To
n s *■ 1°*?! JTr**iy TIVfy
On Cemlng **
th* Republican aomlneilo
ernl Wood and a number of Gov
ernor* of State* havs their llghtaiag
rode aloft. Among the Bepwbliaas*
there appear* to be a 11 -‘-tit i tnm
bom apparently of the rout of th*
Democrats with reference to the
treaty, and the disorganisation
among Democratic leader* aa ahowa
in th* refuaal of the party saaeus
of Congrarniaen to endorse tha
President's proposal for universal
military training. That the Damo
rrat* are eomawhat discouraged 1*
evidenced by Ui* fact that no pep la
being pat behind suggestion* to
nominate any leader In the party.
Praalda.1 sad Mr. Bryan.
In Washington th* belief does net
down that President Wilson is willing
to ran again, la fact hi* position
with regard to the treaty Is takes a*
an indication that be believe* h* caa
go before th* people aezt fall and
win oat on that leant. But again,
there la Mr. Bryan—long (Inca “the
Boy Orator of th* Platts,” end to
day th* grand old man of his party.
Mr. Brysn tried for s long Urn* after
leaving th* Cabinet to -Trail* on
cloee term* with th* President, but
when the coldness towards Ms pro
posal* beesm* notably marked be ft
nelly turned to hi* own way, and
gradually he and Mr. Wilson drifted
apart. No on* knows of in "break”
between the two. It would be bet
ter to say that th* foaling ha* be
come on* of indifference.
Tbqre are seme Democrat* who be
lieve that Mr. Bryaa would like tke
Democratic nomination far kim
*elf, bat mort people ay* inclined to
the opinion that he Is saahiag t*
dominate the next convention, prin
cipally to clinch th* position of Ike
Democrat* a* tha party *f prekibt
w'1* ki* mr. mrjmm i
mar be exported to follow Ue pad
eoune of mlectiag hie own coadl
deto for Proddrnt, joat aa ha did at
tho Baltimore convention. Tha Ne
b,r“**n baa the half# la hie hoot for
the Chatman of tha Democratic No.
tinna) Committee and the Governor
of New Jereey.
loaetfol Mr. C.apwe.
The podtion of organised labor la
* big factor to he reckoned with In
tho coming campaign, and Mr.
Gomp.ri atanda at the head of an
“executive committee" of thru to
paae upon the quel MVea tie aa of all
•and(date# for ogee from Prog,
dent down to mem here of tho legiela
tuw* In till Statu. Tbitc uvm
moo dUm that thw hav, the aa
tborHr of enough anion man In tha
oouatrr to elect or defeat may eea
?W**fr*Sld ^ P^WIeed aad aa
eaaaoa In “darning and bRSdng”
frlanda and ennmlee. Ha wffl .t
tempt to mr who <a tha friend ft tho
rot of tho eommon oitiaen. Meea
whlle acme of tho boat man la tha
counter aTo working on an Imhtdila
plan that Wit! afford court* and
tribunal* far labor aad
propy ry mean tat ion of all aarn
ara la ladnetrr, Mr. Omanon earn
undertook each a jab. at tha iw
KMOon of the Proddrnt, hat aJ3f.
♦d ont of tha Confaraneo of wWeb
1 ha waa a lyaaahor, In a hpff.
Tfc* dlthia. ongtnerra, doctor* and
i poreer* of Atlantic tlaen hare
lt^sxuv&
SAYS NEW RAILROAD
POLICYJS NEEDED
Dr. G. M. Caspar U Advoeat
in* Road From Raleigh To
Wilsningtoo via Clinton.
TOO MANY JERKWATER
ROADS IN STATE NOW
Wears Road That Will Start W
wWa aad Cat Somewhere, and
WOI Do Srauwu Samo Caadi Be
lieve* That Proposed Rail Uaa
Caa Ba Pot Asmt.
New* and Observer.
Deelaria* that railroad construc
tion in North Carolina has been
characterised by tha tame leek of
P’.is? •*“* accompanied the
building highways in the past. Dr.
O. M. Cooper. Sampton County pa
triot and one of the Slata'e soundest
thinkers is advocating a railroad
straight as the erow flies from Ral
eigh to Clinton and thence to Wil
mington.
the News and Observer for
the past three days," said Dr. Coop
fr f"•terday, “there has been appear
ing in both the editorial and news
columns an intensely interesting dis
cussion, at least to many people, of
propoeed railroad development
ta the upper pan of Sampson coun
ty. Therefore, I hope that It may
arouse intern* if the question It
viewed from a little different etand
poht
"To begin with the town of Clin
ton it situated in the centre of one
of the heat agricelluraj countie* in
North Carolina; but for fifty yeara
H has been the victim of what might
be eallad neglected eireumsUncea. I
“°P* * may not ba accused of being
a carping critic, if I my that almost
•p U> the present time is the bufld
lj*g of railroads like the building of
there has been no State -
wide policy, with the consoqaence
that the casternpert of the State at
laa*. Is fall of little jerkwater
roads that start nowhere aad go no
whom As In the building of high
waya It is high time that definite
pofley with a view to the future
Ss%ld d!e *do*>tc<j In any^u^i
»r delay the 3tr w
SSTKU-fSr._^S>»*
clam railroad straight as the crow
from Raleigh via Clinton to Wil
mington. Bach n road could go
through either Dunn or Benson
without getting three mile* off its
oouree, and with three or four ad
ditional miles variation could take in
both of those good towns. It would
be a road which would connect two
if the StaU's finest towns-^Raleigh
and Wilmington—beaidas opening op
the finest fanning territory in the
■it?*#, every acre of Which nevds a
COOD railroad and 1s able to pay
for it. This road at Raleigh would
connect directly with the Southern,
Seaboard and Norfolk Southern and
at Wilmington with water shipping.
It would net interfere la the leant
wtth the Tilghman development and
would net take a dollar out of the
poobrt* of any other concern or rail
road ehcept to divide the gold mine
enjoyed for thirty-three years by
Harry Walters, of Nsw Jeney, or
eouaewfegre, from the two hundred
thousand dollars or more a year aet
income from the little so-called
railroad running from Clinton to
Wuwaw. The rood could be built
without having to erect a single coot
ty bridge except the ono croealng the
Northeast River between Pender and
Now Hanover. This rosd would
°pv» n section of many mile* j„
Wak* and Johnson counties between
Raleigh and Bensoa badly needing
railroad development. It would
,,k* twvmty_flve
*** fa moos Long Creek Jctimi
VJL-.V c,OUBt» ,Bd tor more than
J»*ty miles it would traverse through
H*r»DSOfl PBDnfv AM Af tVm 4—
***■• Wt for roll rood d^rolopmoaC
*ompmon C*• Do It
road and operate tt at a Ml Than
!* •"> o»# thing noodod and that la
wc loadanhlp of oaa man In tho
“•* of Clinton In whom the poopte
ba»* confidence and tho Wiring of
£* rate of tha faDca To come who
do not know Sompaon thay may
Ujlak this la rather a wild aUtetnenf
Jh# aaawar la that the amt fore at
**•* ■*'“*< »«r|r lwen»y-nin* thoo
«nd balaa «f cotton in Sampm late
5“r wfot> kor Mar county of Bal
d«%wHk more load nod much of
5 ***•£ mUu •"**• " litu* over
*Ueej» thouaand balaa, and when
aaothor adjoining eonntr. Duplin,
72? TJX raally good l«*d, mad# Urn
tkan thirtaaa thrammd bales, can
holld a railroad or anything alae» they
JteOlir want to do. And tame
Udn* that makea them apand more
for aaboola par capita, thaa any
ms
ssussi
"Tboy have coeaa banka accord
ing to tho latent count, I believe, and
tha Decani bar ctatamant of the two
{**•< thoaa oi Citato*. ahowad near
frjy dollara an dapocit
koTI worm will get the idaa
that the bolt worm will knock them
*te a boot roar after scat, bat Jud
dt Whan/ wateb tho boll weevil gd
tha aarpriaa of bit life. The woew
*yyi^fd probably Win. deprive them
y.jf* In rottoa prodwctiac
tka^Stata. bart (hay wV\ make
•or* thingi tbaf will , mil for mote
keep up the mrtfrtSwt Ao fi wertk.
only onc foorth of_wfwe» di« really
li worth. HA yi wjefllVU becom
ing too apparent, teo big to hide
even from a three-dollar-e-day lift
Laker. In ton ifeere bar tobacco
acreage hat doubled1 .and the value
of *Her tobacco crop haa Increased
from tl 40.000,000 to f 100,000,000.
In manufacturing tobacco her output
U twice that of New York, her near
eat competitor. Hey revenue tax to
the Federal Government on tobacco
product* It *67,000,000 a year. There
are 100,000 aoMnobUee in the
State, more than 9200,000,000 io
war eaeuritiaa bald by her dtltena.
and $100,000,000 in bank account*
saving# The value of ber crop* in
1919 wee $083,009,000. And ao on.
It It now propoaod to ipeod $60,000,
000 on good road*.
“We arc no longer a poor peo
ple," aaye Frofeaner I. C. Bran eon of
the Univeraity of North Carolina in
the Univeraity Newt Latter,” we are
rich enough to de anything we really
want to do In North Carolina, rich
vnough to Invaet in echoolt, in
chore he«, public health and public
highway# Wa new can act in terms
of mllliona Instead of haggling over
thouaande aa in Ac past."
ffl A tlh- A AAAAh a HAHAA8
PAW AttUUAUUN
ISSUES NEW STOCK
*30,000 To 9m Offnrwd To tko
• SnuD laewoUrt la tko
Cospoica Noxt Wook.
Additional Made to tbo amount of
120,000 win be offered Harnett and
teaspoon County buyer* by tbo Har
nett County Agricultural Pair As
ooeiatlon next week, K »u an
nounced yesterday by EUi* Gold
stein, VMnean manager ef toe too
A^ono-umek rales campaign, under
tko management of Eocene T. Lee,
will be eoedocttdby tbc aoooelotlon
In an effort
two counties wttl be pr raped bite nor
“KtS'Jtcaifirssi
-fbmW T. L CUdM. of tfc.
Chamber of Commerce. Both are
confident that the I me will b* aotd
with little effort since K ha* bees
proren that tbo atook I* a profitable
InToatmnnt adds Crum It* relate-no •
community builder.
The proooot capitalisation of tbi
association It |tlf,ooo A dtrldoni
of • per coat on thU ran was do
elated at th* annual meeting ol
rtockboldor* In January, Additions
prod to amooiting to about • pel
feont .were hold lu tko treasury b
moot contiocopcio. until tbo fair b
to*UmmttS^f^E'alSr * '"r| 1 "**£"**
! «bla«!to tmuV tofcrei tblt^h
:^a?iei=Js3
If- -ft
REPUBLICANS ORDER SIXTY - ONE
"INVESTIGATIONS" COS*JlNG $2*00^000
Taxpayer*' Money Voted to Furnish Campaign
Material for G. O. P. and to Provide Big
Fees for Friendly Legal “Experts."
t . Washington, D. C._The Republi
i can Conyrew has erdtrad sUty-one
1 “Inoostigellan*” at a coat of more
’ 'H»n ‘H.onn.ooo, The Money ex
I pended wee need lent*]/ In efforts to
I yet poKtfeal credit. While rofnrWy
money for the light against the high
, eoM of living the Republican* wasted
it on theee uaalem inquiries.
"It i» very evident," Mid Senator
Hitchcock. Democratic leader ef the
Senate, “that the intec turn of the
Republican* I* to convert ai many at
possible of the sixty-one investiga
tion! that Have already boon ordered
into pert twin proceeding*.
“It U proposed to yo on with thi«
oryy of Investigation* and oaUhlirh
»» many - tribunal! aa poasiUs, and
employ aa many lawyer* as possible,
to wort oat aa many caaaa aa possi
ble I *m In favor of haring the
OWMWggW who deeir* thasa lnvoa
tiyatioa* snmy them on. I appose the
practice sf having Republican politi
cian! and Ri publican party loodsrv
called In on the pay of the Renata or
Honao to condact thaao ease*."
Th* inventiyatiny nsnnnfttoaa an
paying expert* at tho rata of $20.POO
» ymr. The prat of Benddw^h
Soddder of Now York ha* tenTw
yand at $100 .a day. .
- Explaininr the employment of
8r*dyer d Rcmddar, William Tyler
Rag*, dark of the House, said: "Whan
oaa of tho firm i* amyjnyid ha wUI
apt |SD a day, ‘md wfceo both ar*
•«pH>yed they wfi each got $$P a
rfav, nnd than their assistant* gat
emcunU ranging from $10 to a
rat* lea* than $50 a day." -
I. The Democrat* Hava favored all In
Ttiriae whar* aoahlclo* afi Sarong do
:og existed bad «»y. bora court*odad
that the BapabStaaa had no right
to waste th* taxpayers' money la
yaw* •< a.llttlo political capital,
Recently proohM Maamm .- ad
fray* worker* came to WflMagtm.
from weitaen state! to-afloa' aotfcel
on their Repobnean friends Chat the
nomination of a* Old' Guard leader
for Presidency woeMiaae thaa
■ of party worker* dominated by Ban
i a*ar Boisei Fnna wlB control the
aort BcpebUean naboaal convention,
aad name the mao the booses can
“ *M thlo very thteTSS tK
•offrajnrtj fear.
eridesce that tha etandpai Re
poUlcaa* ere gala* to rids rougb
*ad over any other sort of ttepub
■04 hoisted the danger eternal.
*hoaa whs hava anaaeSiS
2S* SSkS" “* l°Piy< .« rtaod
pat Republican are suffragist* whs
»£****• White Heumjcriticlsed
the President, and deciarvd they
would vote with the Republicans
Members, of Co ureas frfaa pro
tr*oot*e etetes are alarmed over the
drift that wrecked their party tea
ya*»a ago, but they are afraid te
■aka an outcry lari they stir *
trouble far themselves. The women ,
■■ ort efreid te teste their views.
The RepoMcao party to bard
Prt—ed for campaign material. ||
will try te divert the aUeatioa of Wte
| people from Ju sorry legislative rocs
It to the same old etery; hleimi to ‘
t&S&lZIL !
trol of the Washington gJv-TT.moat.
Including both .teeRWt* House aad 1
tbeC^teL The people drew the
booby prise to that arm of KemMb 1
cu rmm.
Th« Democrat* same la and mads !
a wonderful showing aa the testate
kook*. They passed the Federal Re
serve act aad other ret “
live measures. The i I
GODWIN MAY HAVE
CLEAR J) ONCE
V a rear and Lyon May Not
Oppose Local Man for
CqpgraM.
Tbo resignation of Judge W. P.
Stacy from the Superior Court
bench and the Indication from the
Wilmington dispatches that ha would
not be a candidate for Coograao nays
Red Howell in the News and Ob
server, is accepted ia Washington aa
» certainty that L R. Vpiwr, af
Lumbrrtan, will not b« a candidate
ngiiMt Congressmen Godwin for the
nomination.
If Mr. Varser does not eater the
lace, It has been intimated on a
number of occasions that Uoan
Lyon, of Whltevillo, would with
draw and learn only negligible OP
nosKicm to the prc.aut incumbent in
the field.
The determination of Judge Stacy
not te seek the nomination at this
time, but to retain te private prac
tice instead, does net altogether
eliminate kia Congressional aspira
tions, according to those who know
him
Judge Stacy may decide te beeem*
a candidate for the . Congraoeinnal
nomination the next time, sad
whenever he announces himself It Is
practically certain that Mr. Vaiaar
will announce himself.
. A report ia Washington, following
the announcement af Judge Stacy's
resignation from the bench, that
Solicitor Lyon would route* goes
without confirmation, although it has
gained considerable currency at the
Capitol. It U said bars that the
friends of Mr. Lyon arc urging him
te withdraw now and leave the field
te Mr. Godwin for the next primary
end make the race against the Dunn
statesman two years from aaw.
m -iji-m_t__ — J _ _
■tnasiTo BeVUCWvOV*,
Waahingtan. "BTcT-Of the Iltr
25« men in Urn eompa and poat* af
the Army an Detimber St, ISIS,
I nearly *8.000 *n« taking iaiime
. tion in educational mhjwt- More
than 10,000 af tha total anliotod
. Mrenyth of 1*^*4 fa tha Philip
, pinai win atodying tpacial rak
! >*». _
' Harm Caat U. t. SISI ImL
I Wathingtaa,' D. C.—la tha soar*
- of tha World Wor, and until Fabro
f ary 1. 1SS0. tha Gorarnmaat pur
I cbaaed o total of SM,SiS horaaw am
r male* at on approximate com of SIS!
• 0 head.
a ■ i . .
U. S. Sawtag Army Praparty.
■ ‘ Waahiagton, D. C. ppaetal train
hMng I* balnc giwan U rfrrna mthmf
it anita which hart bare eryanixad «
• rre lata waate material*, dam ago
h tyuipmaat and anaorwfcaabU pro*
i- efty at the rartoua dMaianal eaakp
of tha army.
^ •
ALFRED If LEAN TO ■
REMAIN IN SERVICE
- I
Captain Boyd Start* Hi* R*.
Ori«*ii«tion Plan* la 1
. North Carolina. j
— (
Starting bis work of ir-organirinf <
th* income tax fore* hi Nor* '
Carolina, Captain Prank L. Boyd I
yaeterday conferred with fifteen tag
men new in th* department, ex- I
plained come of M* plana and —:
a good beginnhig by inducing one In- 1
com* expert to recon aider Mi rerig- !
notion tent In a few day) ago. The 1
conference, in the word* of eereral 4
tax men, we* highly aucreaafa) and ,
will mean much for the Internal ‘
Revenue Department in the State.
The income tax man who ia to re
main with the department la Alfred
McLean, of LiMogton. After a :
number of yean of Nrrkt, be had '
reeaatly aent in hia reeignatlon to 1
enter private beaiaeia aa advleer in
income tax matter*. Captain Boyd,
“Pfn hU arrival In Raleigh, confer- 1
red with Mr. McLean ia regard to
continuing with th* department. Mr.
McLean will retain hia regular port
Hen a* income tax inapector, with !
Euhm North Corollaa oa hi* tor
Captain Boyd eoaridcra th* rotah
Hon of Mr. McLean n* one of the
heet move* toward the rw-organfxa
Uon of the In com* tax force in the
State The LOUngton maa ha* had
nmual exportoaea with ieaoma mad
other tax** tine* hi* connection with
use nwvnst * MMI RM
•twwjt km regardS/ii u pointed
eat, ee one of the atroogeat men of
the North Carolina force under
Cnmmlmiaivor Roper.
While Captain Boyd it getting hie
plana into action, reranu* agents, la
aweetors aad dlatrlet agonta now
ideaURed with the department will
•tart out this amok on their tours of
the State to Instruct tax payers how
to make oat ratoms properly. TMo
WOA will keep Income toTmlJa’borr
until after March I. By that time
Captain Boyd expects to hare the
entire force wolf okgmniaed for n
strenuous campaign.
CHARLES E. HUGHES NOT
^ RUNNING FOR FRESIDKNT
Omaha. Nek., Fab. IT—Charles
E Hughes has written a letter to
Connty Clark Frank Dowry asking
> Mm not to proceed with pleas to
• present Mr. Hughes' name fat the
: £"U Jr**"’7 *• * •—*j*te tor the
I BcpaMteaa aomtaatton for the ytui
^PeerdiaB* appreciate pour per.
aoual .to tor sat and friendly sent!
moot Tau rxprcoa" Mr. H^haa'M
J* muda. *”l am utterly un will I nr.
boworur. to undertake p asoeod eau
wMny,