Evening Star Newspaper, November 4, 1928, Page 5

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THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON. D. €. NOVEMBER 4. 1928_PART 1. FOURTH PROPHECY MAYBE FULFILLED. SMITH ON TARIFF | Presidential Campaign May Spell Justification of Re- | markable Forecast. A remarkable prophecy, penned in| 1732 during the month that George Washington was born. maybe the same day, thrice fulfilled in startling clarity, | may find its fourth and final fulfillment | in the present presidential campaign. Perhaps, however. the final phase of the prophecy already has been fu'filled. for the name Thomas Woodrow Wilson, | which was that under which the war- | time President was christened, fits the | probhecy and Wilson's character is well | defined by the document. | The prophecy is embodied in a poem of Sir Willlam Hope, once deputy gov-| ernor of Edinburgh Castle, who wrote it on the fiyleaves of his book entitled “A Vindication of the True Art of Self- Defence, With a Proposal to the Hon- orable Members :f Parliament for Erect ing & Court of Honor in Great Britain,” and is a defense of duelling The book with the fivieaf manuseript now rests in the files of the Library of | Congress { Already accuracy Lincoln it has forecast with uncanny the rise of Washington, of ani of Benjamin Harrison. Arthur R. Colburn. 41 Carroll avenue | ‘Takema Park, D. C.. who dug un the phophecy for this campaign, sers in it ! {orecast of the victory of the Hoover- Curtis tickst The Prophecy. The prophecy s as follows One starred by fate to rule both bond and free. And double four, this fix the destined ay When servile knees unbend ‘neath freedom's sway. Pla then read the six ‘fore ten, patriot’s name Whoss deeds shall link him to a deathless fame. Whose growing love and ceaseless trust wrong none. And catch truth’s colors from glowing sun. 's door shall clang whil> vet hi ntury wait His planets point the pending fates, Tl all the names from Freedom's s~roll shall fade, Two tombs be built, his lofty cen- otaph b2 made. Full six times ten ths years must onward glide, Nature their portent held a constant guide. Then fat>ful seven 'fore shall sizn heroick son Whom Mars and Jupiter strike down before his work is done, ‘Whom cruel fate shall p'erce, though ertless of its sword, ‘Who lysbyd (left) life's zloomy stage without one farewell word. A softly beaming star, half vei'ed by Mars’ red cloud, Virtue. his noblest cloak, shall form hiz fitting shroud. Then eight fore eigh® a later gen- eration rules, And with 1'ght undimmed shed from progress’ schools. Then'slx again, with added six shall rise, Rydplendent (r=splendent) good and great and wise. Four six=s hold a glittering star that on his way shall shin», And twize four s'xes mark his years from birth to manhood's prime. These truths prophetic shall com- pletion see Ere time's desp grave receives the 19th Century, All plansts, stars; twslve signs and horoscope Attost thess certsin’ truths foretold br William Hope. The pocm is prefaced by the follow- Ing: 'Tis Chaldee savs his fat~ is great Whes» stars do bear him fortunate. Of thy near fot», Amerika, I read in stars a prophecv. Fourteen divided, twelve th> same. Sixteen in halfs. each holds a neme. Pour'.’ eight, saven, six, with added n. The lif= lines mark of four great men. Written on Washington's Birthday. Faded almost to illegibility by the | pascage of 198 years, the lines of the | rophecy still stand for themsslves. ey were written the same month and the same vear, possibly the same day. that Georgs Washington was born. The 6 before 10 of the patriot’s name coula only be George Washington, who, with | 6 letters in his first name and 10 in | the surname, became the ruler of free | men and s'aves. was a patriot, had two tombs built for him and a lofty centotaph built for him before the signatures should fade from freedom’s | seroll. The scroll referred to bears out | the prophecy in that the names of the signers of the Declaration of In- dependence have all but faded from the | paper, whereas the text remains. The lofty nature of hs character and | work ere told and his death, Dacember | 14, 1799, ile vet his century waits,” | bear out the prophecy The word cenotaph was chogen. It | seems, with pointed accuracy. It means | 2 memorial shaft not containing the remains of the person for whom 1 is| a memorial. The prophecy is correct in even this small detail. Then comes his prophscy of the rise | of Lincoln. “Full 6 times 10 the vears | onward glide. * * * Then fateful | even ‘'fore seven the letters in the name (Abraham Lincoln) shall sign heroick son.” The poem ‘goes on to tell how Mars end Jupiter shall strike him down be- | fore his work iz don: its way to others’ ruler, gtar would veilsd by Mars’ red cloud. Then. finally, that virtue would be his shreud. The date is right, a little more than 60 years after the death of ashington. Lincoln spoke no work 5 shot by Booth, bearing prophecy in that he gloomy stage without one fare- well word.” Then comes what has general secredited to Benjamin Harrison. The is not s5 cleariy borne out he “cight “fore eight” fits only the lawyer-president’s name. Most euthorities point out that while h fame i3 not so great as that of predecessors in the prophacy. neither €4 he have the opportunity for eter- cizine th= brilliznce of his intelle His time w2z not so troublous. Next comes the “six n added with reznlendent rlar. great and gr0d 2ng wize, Colburn points out that the six 15 Hoover, with added six, Cortiz The only sing twn sixes would apply in the present campzign, however, is Norman Thomas, Eccialist cendidate at the Library of Congress d to th® view that the final prophecy already has been fulfilled in the election and passing of Woodrow Wilson, who was christened Thomas Woodrow Wilscn. The original name ‘Thomes Wilson would jibe correctly with the “six and addsd six” proph- ecv, and the deeds of the war-time President would fit him for the title “rssplendent ruler, great and good and wise " Of the four s here. holding a glitter- ing star en hiz way it will be noted that Wilson, who was born in 1856, was graduated from the University cf Vir- ginia Law Schonl when h» was 24 vears old. Of the twice four s mention=d in the prophecy there is little to go by Wilson was 46 when he was chosen president of Princeton University. Lt for the manufacture of un- breskable glass, the invention of an Austrian, are to be built at Liverpool, *mmm. | patriotic air and a great shout went i day iz cradled far beyond the | { | sver. Hoover is makin | demonstrations staged at the dozen o | has a town band. above »ll. single person tn whom the | HOOVER ATTACKS Enthusiastic Crowd Hears Candidate Exoress Con- fidence in Electorate. helpl: The Domocratiz candidates for Congiecs are pleczed by their to another ‘competitive tariff. A check-up on the prospective Demo- cratic personnel of the House ways and means commiitee, he stated. will reveal a preponderance of “the » leaders who wrote the Underwood tarift unnd who opposed the Republican tariff. “I do not balieve for one moment that you are orcpared to entr to these men a revision of th> taris h» remarked, as the crowd burst into ap- plaude, “To me America 1s entering a new cra,” the nominee said in conclision. ‘It entering an era of development of ideas In industry and commerce whirh affe~t our whoi= 1ational life. 1 should hope, if elected, to give that constructive aevelopriont.” Greeted With Cheer. As the Hoover train arrived in the station at _Pueblo a bond siruck up 2 up. Hoover wes estoced briween line | of Mahonal Guarc.men to 2 spocfaily erecicd aaa in frent of the depot ssod arcund th> siand were thou bui cheering next Presid " The throng roared it: added to th® noisc by akinz cownelis and rlap;;::.hl i oover paid tribute to eblo's wel = 5 . Dr. Work, stating that victory is certain to come,” the nominee asserted, with emphasis. Another dem- onstration was precipitated by the re- mark. v While his formal plan of campalgn i: of dozens ol stops in his dach ac: polls next Tucsdey as he has come s- far to do himself. He will repeat this logic to the electorate at large in © short radio address Mond: evening from his home near Palo Alto. Group after group of station crowds representing A picturssque cross-sec tion of inhabitanis of the great prairie country of Kansas, re given this mes- sage today as the special train erossed the dreary snow-spotted flat-lands of Senator Curtis’ native State. To all of e tan-faced corn-fed folk the Republican standard-bearer de- clared that whatever the outcome of the election, he knew that “the ma- jority of the American pzople usually choose right.” Prairie Towns Enthusiastic. The sparsely-settled prairies through which the Hoover train mads its some- what monotonous way may contain few votes, compared to more thickly inhab- ited sections of th= country. but the im pression gamned from the succession of so httle towns along the routs is that most of these votes are going to be cas for Herbert Hoover. » As tokens of the good will of the! farmers and cattlemen of the wide open spaces beyond the Mississippi, Hoover is accumulating an interesting but cum- bercome assortment of curios and me- mentos, handed to him by admirers. He has a menagerie of small elephants in his private car, and a novel and val- ued addition to the zoo today was an appetizing string of Mallard ducks, the gift of the Izaak Walton League at | Hoisington, Kans. “I have ben honorary president of the Izzak Walton Lesgue for a number of years” Hoover told the denors, “but | *his is the first time T evar rol'ent~d | anything for holding down that job." He added with a chuckle that his noxt meal | would reflect the “high standard of | lving proposed by the Republican | party.” | Mrs. Hoover has done her share of | souv-nir collecting. too. which the nominee's car capacity with Autumn flowers of every | description. Mrs. Hoover gets huge en- joyment out of these station celebrations. and she never miss-s an opportunity to | join her hushand on the rear p'atform | in greeting the crowds. The first of these demonstrations to- day occurred b=fore hreakfast 2t Counef’ | Grove, Kans. Council Grove has a post | office, goneral store and everything. It | Its five | pieces were oompahing for all they were worth when the Hoover train came to parts | hammer hom> to the individual citizens | the supreme imporiance of going to the | | | (Contimet From Pt Paxed | L f coutte /érw Hieu %'— W%flm 4 Ty 15 Cony of a prophecy penned in 1732 H0ds ploeil ferei %, Z‘z/:fwz:flw 0:7 L dd e Z— 2% & 7, =~ READS LIKE THE ANCESTOR OF ALL STRAW BALLOTS pescrcss -y ol 7o sl T el S e aZs 74 Do ctiodds Hoatt Lol R T & Aea Bl e L. oy A g .:‘ Z ol %o, /e zeeale | /)“W%‘% = WW/]/ i or pH which is inferpreted as havinz forecast the rise of Washington, Lincoln and | Harrison, and now is cern as having its complete fulfillment in the present campaizn. bodied in a hook in the Library of Conzress. The manuscript itself is em- | —Star Staff Photo. | age from the President, which was reccived as the nominee moved across Kansas, the home State of his running mate, Seniior Curtis. | His advisers are known to have hailed the expression with jubilation, however. The first duty of every American citi= zen now is to 20 to fhe polls next Tuss- day and cast his vote in the presidential elertion, Hoover told a stalion-platform audience at Hoisington, Kans., this afternoon. | The informal talk was made from the | rear platform of Hoover's private car | and was amplified so that th~ thousand | or s0 Kansons gathered about the train | could hear it. He received a hearty | cheer as he appeared. and repeated calls for Mrs. Hoover brousht her to | the platform, also. with a large bouquet | of yellow chrysanthemums in her arms. | “I’em not going to make a political speech,” the nominee sald. “There s nothinz more to add to that, except to tell you that the first duty of every American citizen now is to go to the polls and vote “1 will be satisfied with the decision | of the majority of the American people, for whatever the majority decides usu- ally is right.” CITES NEED OF TARIFF. prise mo: Hoover in Pueblo Speech Savs Nation Is Entering New Era. PUEBLO, Colo., November 3 ().— Reminding the pecple of Colorado of their “need for tariff protection of their industries,” Herbsrt Hoover in the last set speech of his Westward trip, de-| clared here tonight that th> Demo- cratic candidates tor Congress were pledzed by their party platform {o an- other “competitive tariff.” | The Republican presidential candi- dat> condemned the Underwood bill, which he said had been a competitive | tariff measure, and ad reduced the duties of commodities produced in Colo- rado to such a lack of protection that your Industries were crippled or help- | less.” “If the people of Colorado will check | up the prespective Democratic person- nel of the next Heuse ways and means committee they will find the member- ship will compris> mush th me lead- ers who wrote the Underwood tariff and who opposed the Republican tariff,” he said. Cites Party Record. a halt amid a cheering throng of several hundred leading citiz=ns. Thare were even two women in the musical quintet. | Band Plays “Page Five.” After _exhausting its repertol memorized pirces by n'aving what turned out to b> “The Star Spangled Banner.” the pening leager s2id: “Wel boys. 1l w2 play next?” The trom- bonist: Five” which preved to be Here” The gang was there, all Tight, not only with its choers, but with wide- brimmed hats, Jrather boots and ear- muffs. The measure against frizid falling snow. “Pagn ceeding villag=s across the State. Several times men and boys climbed to 'h’:‘ raiting of the platform and shook hand: with the neminee and his wife, and g peesib! Hoover's rotundity is not given to much bending. ho day he told hurt him to lean over the rail. agreed, however, to stand t: liszomfort in order to reach th» han4s of three old ladies jammed into the forefront of a crowd at Eads, Colo. The Hoover party w find itsell the object of Louis. President L. W. | his executive assistant, F. H. McRey. | nolds, had met Mr. Hoover on numerous | occesions during the Miss and they -]t that “things one up righ Special Conrtesies Extended. y evers member of the | narty found a fras supper got for them in the di the trofn at = since Toni=. Fach meal then has had a dscorative meanu | folder esvecially prepared for the “trip of the Hon. H-rbert Hoover, Republi- can nominee for President.” The Baltimore & Ohio Reilroad also paid {'s rezpects in cerrying t s tracks from Washington to St. pensive cigars re sunplied y afier each meal with the ‘personal compliments” of Daniel Wil- lard, president of the road. During a halt at Horace, Kans., this afterncca Heover showed his apprecia- tion for the faithfuness of the train crew by consenting to pos: with the engineer, conductor and flagman. The conductor, H. E. Redding, and the en- i J. B. McIlwaine, posed with the m first, n wes taken of him with ths fireman, H. K. | When th ts in E; with pride my countr an- thase my people.” The crowd of husky looking eowboys and heaithy looking woman folk sent un a shouktin true Western style, en- train | | Temnle, 2nd ihe fiagman, J. W. Nelson. | trein cressed frem Kansas | |into Colorado and stopped for a few | At | upon which we other places Hoover leaned over the rail | atmosphere of sped as many extended hands as ation wit | the world surprised to | ployment, e special | tariff and immigration laws, veterans ~ourtssiss whan the train switched onto Telief legislation and inland waterways been | the lines of the Missouri Pacific at St.|aS among the variety of things he said Baldwin and | the Republicans had accomplished. | | | “In 1922 they voted against all the | provisions of the Republican Party for protection of the industries of Colo- rado. They have continuously preached jagainst it, and 2s late as nine months of | ago nearly all of them voted to bring about the Insiant reduction of the taril. I do not believe for one moment that you are prepared to entrust to these man a revision of the tari Unless the high standards of living Hail, Hail. the Gang's All | are preserved in the United States, the candidate continued, Colorado goods would be forced to comvete in foreign countries with products made with latter was a protactive | cheaper labor. Hoover declared that the Republican Bands clamored for notice in suc- | party had always been one of progress. and he added, “I need only to remind you of the peace treaties with our for mer foe which builded the foundations ve weighd in to an liness and co-oper- them in the upbuilding of | Continuing, he pointed to the arma- er, and later in th- | ment treaty as another step of the Re- eager friends that it| publicans toward world peace, “and we | He | now propose a new, step toward the | outlawry of war,” he added. | Cites Employment Gains. | rchearsed a decrease in unem- tax reduction, protective He The candidate paid a tribute to Dr. Hubert Work, chairman of the Repub- ippi. flood | lican national committee, whose home s in Pueblo. know from seven and a half vears of intimate association, through many trying occasions his real greatness of heart and mind.” he said. “I never en'er the horders of Colorado ing c2r wien he got back on | without a feeling of mental expansion. rarified and bracing atmosphere el- ys stimulates myv memories of the happy d when, more than 30 yea | p20, 5 2 young engincer, I worked in mountains and valleys. could not pass through Pusblo without taking the opportunity of pa ing tribute to my good friend and your | townsman, Secretary Work. I know from seven and one-half years' cf inti- ociation, through many trying his real greatness of heart 2m_en route to vote. You will ize that in a 10-minute pauss tr greet you T shall not sttempt to make 2n extended address. My personal con- tribution to the campaign was concluded | last night. ‘ k Tariff He'd Necessary. know of no State in the Union “re continuation of the Republican party in power 's of more vital import- ance than to the people of Coloradn ds, Chairman Work ac- | There is hardly a product in your whole - the platform and | State that is not dependent upon the tariff for its very existence. Lead and other minerals could sacrcely b~ produced except for the protective tariff Of your agricultural products, eattle, di products, sheep, wool, sugar beets and’ fruit are absolutely dependent on livening it with eries of “Yipi-i-ip-ee.” | the tariff for whatever Hoover had no statemens.to make to profit there is in t! the press in connection wjth the sur- in mind that when market and industries, Bear e Underwood tariff | Colorado is the United Stats |the peace treaties with our former foe | |our stree 9 {remind you of the reduction of six bil- law was enacted by the Democratic party it was described by thal perty a a “competitive tariff.” and throngh it »1 h-se commodtiies were reduced to such lack of profection that your mdusc: were crippled or helpiess, and in_thi whole debate we have not heard from any representative of the Demoeratic party the complete acceptance of th: term_“protective tariff” as defined by | the Republican party, and as a matter of fact. the Democratic_candidates for Congress are pledged by their party platform to another “compstitive tariff.” If the people of Colorado will check up the prospective Democratic per- sonnel of the next House ways and meons committee they will find membership will comprise much me leaders who wrote the Underwood | tariff and who opposed the Repub-| lican tariff. n 1922, they .voted egainst all the provizions of the Republican party for protection of the industries of Colorado. They have continually preached against it. and as late as nine months ago nearly all of them voted to bring about the instant reduction of the tariff. I | do not believe for one moment that you are prepared to intrust to these men a revision of the tariff. Nation's Market. “Furthermore, the great market of | and un- | less wa preserve the standards of living among the workers in our great urban | and manufacturing populations of the | Fact—because if their buying power | were to be decreased they will consume less of your produce—you will find | yourselves seeking a market in foreign | countries, in compeiition with ths prod- | uets produced under cheaper labor and | cheaper land, more favorably situated | for ransportation than is the State of | Colorado. “This I8 no idle assertion. De- | will decrcase the demand for your products. If you will study the con- | umption of meat, dairy products and | fruit during the great depression and unemployment of 1920, you will find | {hat in the necessary tightening of | the first economy was in the re- | fined products of agriculture, and thoss are the ones upon which you are largely dependent. Nor is my reference to your interest an advancing of sec- tionalism. It is the very essence of nationalism for vours if a_mutual de- pendence upon the prosperity with our | other States. “The Republican party has ever been a perty of pregress. Never has it done | more for the advancement of funda- mental progress than in the last seven and one-haif years, sinee we took over the Government amid the ruin left by the war. I need only to remind you of | which builded the foundations upon which we have emerged into an atmos- phere of friendliness and_co-operation with them in the upbuilding of the world. I could go further and point out the first practical steps taken in the history of the world for the limitation of armament, and therefore of funda- mental peace, which was carried through by this administration. And we now propose a new step {o- ward the outlewry of war. I need not | remind you of the restoration of em- ployment to the millisns who walked in idleness in 1921. T could ZATEAAAAALTLLARLLATATTRLATTALALLAALLTLLLATLLALAALLALARLLEAAR LA A AR S AL ERRANRANRNCANANS lions of national debt, the transfer of from nonproductive Gov- to the productive use of irdustry and commerce, has contrib- uted much to the upbuilding of the country. 1 could mention four sequent reductions mn taxes whereby the burden has _been lifted from the shoulders of CHRISTIAN PSY HSOI!O(IgY How to Develop Your Individual Powers Taught by A. E. Lord, Ph. D. Classes for those aspire_to bizzer and hetter things in life. The master way. 4 kevs that never fail. Begin Monday 4to 6 p.m., 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Phone Franklin 6360 Suite 1. Second Floor Front 0 929 G 5t. N.W, PR S S SR % Christmas Jewelry Shop at the friendly store you're always greeted with mile—with no _obligation to buy. Specializing in Perfect Diamonds Large essortment bar pins, @carf pins, with complete lin® of jewsiry novelties. Charge Accounts Invited M. Wurtzburger Co. 742 Ninth St. N.W. e | support. | every breadwinner. I could remind you of the enactment of adequate protective | tariff and immigration laws which have safeguarded cur workers from the flood of goods and labor from foreign coun- tries. T could remind vou of a score of steps taken in aid ol agriculture, the upbuilding of foreign trade, the ms | nificent development in th care of vet- ns, the develapment of our inland waterways. of our national highway: of aviation and a score of other con- | tributions. I could recount to you at | great length the activities in human weliare in making safer highways, safer mines, better homes, the promotion of public nealth, the care of children and a long series of actions definitely erect- | 0 make living better in America. { “These things have bsen accom- | plished with adherence to t great principles of our American system. We | have strengthened these principles both | in our relations abroad and in develop- | ment of our economic and moral life | at home. It is by this test that you should judge whether you desire to change these policies in respect to the mest precious of all things to the American citizen—the future of our ! country. Involves Future Progress. “This election is one of more than local fissue. It involves whether we shall leave the road of sure and estab- lished progress or whether the funda- mental policies by which America has | come to the leadership of the world are to be halted while we substitute a period | of confusion and hesitation in the com- | vletion of the great national task of human betterment. | “Our opponents advocate taking a different route of progress from that we are now traveling. They must do that or they have no reason for asking The first result of such a departure is to destroy confidence in |ereased wages and standards of living | the future and confidence in that which | is the very pavement of the road to progress. There is always room for improvement. ‘There is always need | for corrective legislation, for con- structive policies. These improvements are to be brought about, however, not by a change in the policies which, on e whole, are working, extraordinarily well, but by their further and consist- ent_development. “To me America is entering a new era. It is an era of development of ideas in industry and commerce which affect our whole national life. We are set in a changing world. But we must maintain the fundamental principles of ordered liberty and freedom if we are to maintain constructive progress. I should hope, if clected, to guide that constructive development. If we guide our country aright, we shall go forward to a nobler America, and we shall carry the whole of humanity forward by our example and influence. NN Overlooking Chevy Chase Two-Car Prices Chase Circle two 1621 K St. N.W. M\\N\\\W“\\\\mm\\\\mm | —————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— Distinctive—Charming New Chevy Chase Home Opportunities Four Different Period Designs Beautifully Landscaped Sites Very Enchanting Approach Six to Nine Large Rooms Side and Center Hall Entrance Open Until 9 P.M. Drive west on Grafton St. from Chev 9. €. Bouglass Co. Realtors-Builders BB RGES AL | T0 CAST BALLDTS Senator Points to Duty, No Matter What Party Is to ’ Receive Vote. “ | | By the Ascociated Press. UTICA, N. Y., November 3.—In the last of his 20 speeches in behalf of the candidacy of Herbert Hoover for Presi- dent, Senator William E. Borah of Idaho tonight urged every man and woman, “Vhether 'Republican, Demo- crat or Socialist.” to racord a vote, and “have a voice and exert an influence in the affairs of the country.” | Th> Idaho Senator addressed a | crowded house at the Majestic Theater | here, where he wound up a stumping tour that has carried him through 15 States, He predicted a tremendous victory, “a vietory which will insure four years of administration at the hands of a man who has been tested, who holds a diploma from the university of ex- perience; one who has earned. in the wide field of public service, your confi- | dence and I believe he has your confi- | dence.” Senator Borah, urged the electorate | to exercise its voting franchise, likened | the Government to the most “stupen- | dous corporation on earth.” | "I doubt if you were a stockhalder | |in ‘a great business organization. an organization which had to do not only with your salaries and wages and profits. but with vour health and your moral welfare.” the Senator said, “I doubt, I say, if you were a stockholde: in such a corporation whether vou | would hssitate for a moment if you had an opportunity to secure as presi- dent of manager for your ccrporation | Herbert Hoover.” CANNON DEMANDS | REPLY FROM SMITH| Bishop Says Failure of Candidate| to State Position Will Brand Him Bigot. By the Associated Pross. | CHARLOTTE, N. C., November 3.— Demanding that a “prompt answer” to his open letter of October 31 be “given the press.” Bishop James E. Cannon | of the Methodist Episcopal Churc South_today sent telegrams to G I- fred E. Smith. Democratic presidential candidate, and John J. Raskob. chair- man of the Democratic national com- mittee. The bishop, who was here fo deliver an address tonight against the candi- dacy of Gov. Smith reiterated in th> telegram to Gov. Smith the questions contained in his letter relating to encyc- lical letters of various Roman Catholic Popes and as to whether or not Gov. | Smith is “tolerant or intolerant.” 1 “You probably realize," he said in| closing his telegram to Gov. Smith, “that if you do not answer my ques- | tion, you will brand yourself as such | an infolerant bigot that you will have | no right to denounce any one opposing you for any reason whatsoever.” The telegram to Mr. Raskob was sim- ilar in content to that to Gov. 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