Evening Star Newspaper, July 13, 1936, Page 9

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Landon Keeps His Common Sense Views Kansan Displays No Personality Changes Since Nomination. BY DAVID LAWRENCE. OVERNOR LANDON has had s0 many people coming out to size him up that I wondered, as I visited Topeka over the week end, whether I should find the same modest man I met more than a year ago or a presidential candidate self-conscious and impressed with his own impor- tance. I have known a dozen preéiden- tial nominees. Something us- ually happens to them when they Wwin a presidential nomination. In- voluntarily some- times . they ac- quire an unnatu- ral manner. !s:'l’l‘;;‘:“is g;e‘;_‘ David Lawrence ent. I am convinced that if he is elected President he will be the same even-tempered, mild-mannered, natu- Tal person that he is today. This is because the most important quality in Gov. Landon’s whole make- up is common sense. I have often tried, in my quarter of a century of observation of men and affairs in ‘Washington, to pick out just what sin- gle quality of a human being is most essential to the making of a good President of the United States. I would say common sense. I would put it over and above experience in govern- mental affairs or technical knowledge of national problems. For every President of the United States gets an abundance of technical advice—good, bad and indifferent. He can get all the knowledge and data that a great governmental mechan- ism can furnish. But can he tell good advice from bad advice, the good ef- fects of a proposed policy and the harmful effects? If he has common sense, he can tell in advance what the repercussion of a given policy will be on the average man. Common sense will tell him the average Amer- ican’s reaction, if he is a good aver- age American himself with no delu- sions or illusions of grandeur or with &ny superman complex. Landon “One of the Folks.” One has to talk with Gov. Landon only a little while to realize that he | He is one | of those middle-class Americans who | is “just one of the folks.” make up the backbone of the Nation. He has that sort of objectivity which the man of the prairies possesses. Far from the crowds of modern cities, far from the turmoil of congestion that has bred friction and dissension in the populous centers, here out in the open spaces all of the people seem s0 much better balanced in their poli- tics, so much less partisan and less | fanatical. I found, as I talked with the Gov- | ernor, that he has a lively apprecia- tion of what President Roosevelt has | attempted, but I found also a keen| and penetrating understanding of why Mr. Roosevelt has failed to mesh | the various elements in our economic | system 30 as to get jobs for the 10,- | 000,000 persons now on relief or on the dole. | Not long ago Mr. Roosevelt, in a| public letter, said it was essential | nowadays in Government to have a| man with his “heart in the right| place,” and that mistakes of the heart were readily forgiven. But the true| public servant is the man with his head, as well as his heart in the right place, because when the people’s money is wasted or when govern- mental power arbitrarily exerc!aed; works grave injustice, the ill effects are such that the voters think only of the wreckage and not of the in- tent. Sees Big Task Ahead. I found as we motored along—we rode from Topeka to Kansas City— that Gov. Landon belives the time has come for one of those painstak- ing, plodding, follow-through jobs to | be done in the White House that come after a period of panic and | depression. He is a different type| from President Roosevelt. Many a | business with a good idea has been started by a person of the promoter type. The promoter has the original idea. He pioneers, but he does not have the capacity to follow through and do the organizing tasks necessary to financial and ldmimstr’five suc- cess. Gov. Landon has no flair for publicity nor any flair for ballyhoo. Nor does he criticize those who have it. On the contrary, he strikes me as the kind of a man who believes in approaching problems, however big and however challenging, by the sim- ple rules of common sense and nat- uralness. For a man with common sense is fundamentally honest and sincere. He is, above all, honest with himself. In Government, and especially in politics, as we see it nowadays in ‘Washington, hypocrisy and deception are the rule rather than the excep- tion, so that the observer is rightly tempted to grow cynical about public policies, seeing often in them a bid for votes or a play to the galleries. Refuses to Be Made Over. Some of Gov. Landon's friends would make him over to fit the pat- tern of the modern political person- ality. But the Kansas Governor will not be made over. He remains what he was before the nomination—a plain person, an able person, & man from & “typical prairie State,” where the rugged Americanism which won its way in covered wagon days is just as virile, just as fair, just as honorable ‘when applied to these streamline days. As & man, as a possible chief ex- ecutive of the Nation, I like Gov. Landon’s manner and poise. Like others who must preserve an inde- pedet attitude, I am looking forward to reading his speeches to learn just what his solutions are to be, what he would retain in the New Deal and what he would scrap, how he intends to manage the enormous public debt that has accumulated, and above all what sort of leadership he will exert in the vast operations of our Federal Government. On these things there will doubtless be a disclosure in his forthcoming acceptance speegh. (Copyright, 1936.) Launch Propeller in Loot. Police today searched for week end thieves, whose loot include $128 and the propeller of a small launch moored at the foot of Sixth street southwest. ‘The owner of the propeller was Wil- liam W. Brantley of the Coast Artil- T Behind the News Drought Declared Aid to Roosevelt—Emergency Used to Justify Resettlement Plan. BY PAUL MALLON. spirit of President Roosevelt’s Social Democrats here has perked I up considerably since the drought. Most of them seem to be actually gleeful, on the side. They call it “one of those Roosevelt breaks of luck.” In their interpretation, the situation has provided Mr. Roosevelt with an opportunity to display his cam- paign wares in the best possible light. For example, the Rural Resettle- ment Administration of Prof. Tug- well was dying on its feet. It was being soft-pedaled to a considerable extent; its publicity force was re- cently dismantled; Tugwell was be- ing kept in hiding from the public sight. Few of Mr. Roosevelt’s Social Democrats were sufficiently social to ¢ want to defend it or Tugwell on their record of achievement. Since the drought, Mr. Roosevelt has resuscitated both Tugwell and resettlement. Rushed them forward as one of the most impor- tant Federal activities. He has carefully outlined at every oppore tunity the work they will do in remeving afficted farmers to water and more productive enterprise elsewhere. The emergency has thus furnished justification and use for an entere prise which was being carried on the New Deal books as a liability. Note—Another buried bureau which the drought similarly brought forth from the grave is the Commodity Credit Corp. e A contributing factor in the new glee is the Oklahoma primary results. The surprising showing of Representative Lee in the senatorial race was gratifying because he went down the line for everything Mr. Roosevelt wanted in his congressional term. No less pleasing were the results showing the Townsendite polled only a fraction of the total number of Democratic votes and the votes cast in the Republican primary were not comparable to the Democratic total. R Postmaster General Farley's selection of Representative Sam Rayburn as chairman of the Democratic Speakers’ Bureau had more behind it than the choice of a speakermaster who knows the ropes. Democratic Congressmen recognized it as a move to build up Mr, Rayburn in the event he decides to seek either the speakership or the majority leadership of the House at the mext session. Vice President Garner is believed to have had something to do with it. Mr. Rayburn, in his new party job, will be in close contact throughout the campajgn with Democratic candidates for Congress who will elect the next Speaker and floor leader. It is an excellent move for him because he has not been much in the public eye lately. Note—Four years ago Mr. Farley named Representative John McDuf- fie to an important post at Democratic headquarters. Mr. McDuffie was then Garner’s candidate for the speakership. McDuffie handled congres- sional phases of the campaign, more or less overlapping the activities of the regular Congressional Campaign Committee appointed by the House leaders. The move, however, was not successful, as he lost the speaker- ship contest. s e The score on political propaganda is now: Democrats, 54; Re= publicans, 5. You can confirm the totals with the latest copies of the Congressional Record, an adding machine and a little patience. It is customary at the end of congressional sessions for the politicians to pack that official transcript of House and Senate proceedings with all kinds of speech-making material. This year several supplements of the Record have been issued since Con- gress expired and debate necessarily closed. More are coming. But so far, 54 of the 89 published pages have been occupied with all those speeches delivered at the Philadelphia Na- tional Convention, together with po- litical statements by Senators Robin- son and Hayden. Republicans slipped in five pages of their competing prop- aganda, while the other 30 pages went to small-fry Congressmen, who published personal boosts for themselves and their causes. Only one Con- gressman used the space for the laudable purpose of setting forth his full voting record on every important item of legislation since he was elected. Note—The Congressional Record is 5o highly favored because reprints of it can be mailed free to all the 38,000,000 voters and their friends. s e The reason General Farley has such a kindly feeling toward Senator Borah is because Mr. Borah was one of the few Republican Senators who voted against Huey Long’s resolution for an investigation of Farley last year. (Copyright, 1936.) 60,000 CRIPPLES AIDED | RELATIONS SCRAMBLED Shrine Philanthropic Corporation | Confusion Exists as Son Weds Fa- ther's Wife's Sister. WEST. PALM BEACH, Fla. (®).— | Given Figures of 14 Years. SEATTLE, July 13 (®#)—Sixty thousand crippled children in the| The Paul Brown situation is some- United States and Canada have re- | what complicated. | ceived aid from the Shrine Philan-| Ppaul Brown, sr., married a second thopic Corp. in the last 14 years, the , time about three years ago. A few corporation’s trustees were told today. | months later Paul Brown, jr., macried W. Freeland Kendrick, former mayor | g younger sister of the new Mrs. Paul of Pmlmielpm.,u chal(rr::n of the | Brown, sr. board, said operation of the organiza- s 5 £ tion's’ three Ganadian snd 12 United oo he Jimion Fanl Browns now have States hospitals cost $1,000,000 in 1935. | “s;“‘;";; = o;;“‘;“’;“h:‘;" i Investment in buildings, land and | the ln‘1 = é i aiother of equipment, he said, totaled $6,500,000, :" et S0 08 ';‘ h‘ t‘::“ =G with a permanent endowment of about er nephew, and tha Just a start | $3,500,000. on the list of scrambled relations. BAR LEADER DIES CHARLOTTE, N. C., July 13 (P).— C. W. Tillett, sr,, dean of the Char- lotte bar, died suddenly last night at his home here. He was 79 years old. His widow and five children, Dun- can, Charles W., John, William, and Mrs. Osborne Bethea, survive. Throughout his life he was inter- ested in liberalism and often contrib- uted his views to newspapers. In 1928, during the bitter presiden- tial campaign, he addressed a plea for religious tolerance. Prior to that time, when an anti-evolution bill was before the General Assembly of North Caro- lina, he wrote a biting article against the law. Make Hair Grow while the sun Taking the |CIVIL SERVICE EXAM? we deliver at McKinley High Tables” and Typewriters | s $1.95 L] for *Regulation, individual, new tabdles, not merely a place at a bench! United Typewriter Co. Phone NA. 6063 for Reservation 813 14th St. PR UE Our Room Is the Coolest in the 10 P.M. 2nd ilding shines” <~ “It {s a well known phenomenon that in the summer the growth of hair is morerapid,”saysDr. Arnold Lorand, Vi- enna Dermatologist. <~ [ i 3 TH.AT Hair grows faster in the summer than at any otherseason is an established scientific fact. You can take advantage of this seasonal peculiarity by starting Thomas® hair and scalp treatment at once. Your hair will respond more quickly to this famous ved method of treatment now !I:ln atany other time. ithin an unusually short time your will dis- appear, hairfall will ltoi,.?nd new hair will actually be visible on the thin and bald spots. Call at the Thomas’ office and talk your problem over with the specialist in charge. He will gladly examine your scalp without charge or obligation and frankly tell you what Thomas’ treat- ment can do for vou. World’s Leading Hair end Scalp Specialiste=Forty -five Offices Suite 1050-51 Washington Building lery Barracks, Water and O streets southwest. 4 (Corner N. Y. Avenue and 15th St., N. W.) HOURS—9 A. M. to 7T P.M. SATURDAY to 3:30 P. M. ; A HE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Price of Land Is Stability Factor Towa Economic Woes May Be Linked to False Values. BY MARK SULLIVAN. N A journey which brings me into the University of Iowa for less than 24 hours I am not going to try to tell the world what's the matter with Iowa. Yet, far from Washington and the minatory eye of Secretary Wallace, I am tempted to a wise-cracking gen- eralization. The trouble with Iowa f is not evergreen ! trees in the farm- ers’ front yards rebuked by Sec- retary Wallace's publicity staff. I may read in a day or two that if the average num- ber. of evergreens on Iowa farm lawns is four and nine- teen-twentieths, whereas the number on farms in my own Pennsylvania is only four and two-tenths. Nevertheless, I think there is some- thing in my evergreen theory and in what it symbolizes. Iowa farmers have not had, to as great an extent as Pennsylvania and the East, the in- stinct of permanence of firmly root- ing themselves on the soil they oc- cupy. They have not thought of the farm as home, as a piece of land to own, to avold mortgaging it as they would avoid sin, to stay on it until they die, and to see their children and their grandchildren occupy it after them. It may be that on this point also statistics would confuse me. But I should like to see figures showing the average length of occupancy, or the frequency of change, on Iowa farms, compared with Pennsylvania farms or New York ones. And the Des Moines Register might add an- other to its services to Towa by en- couraging hereditary occupancy of the farms. It would find out what Iowa farms have been longest in the hands of*one family. How many Iowa farms are still occupied by descendants of the pioneers who settled them? Price of Land Is Factor. Possibly the frequent change of ownership and occupancy may be due to too great enrapture about high prices for land. Possibly some of the economic griefs of Iowa agriculture may be due to the same cause. An- other risky wisecrack might venture to suggest that an Jowa farmer would rather be in distress on land priced | at $200 an acre, while a Pennsylvania one prefers to be comfortable and se- cure on land priced at $50 an acre. Maybe Iowa would be better off if its } in the Daily Iowan, a streamer head- | land had never risen above $100 an | line says, “Heat Damage at $300,000,- | acre. Certainly Iowa has usually been pre- occupied with price of land; and us- ually, perhaps mistakenly thought it was happiest when land was highest. During one presidential campaign when I came to Iowa to observe, all the talk was about young men going to Canada because farms in Iowa were too dear to buy. Iowa seemed to think that condition was something to be pleased about, and duly voted the Republican ticket. On another occasion, & year or two before the Harding-Cox campaign of 1920, Iowa farm land was quoted at two, three and even.four hundred dollars an acre. Iowa liked that, and again went Republican. About that time, one of the most prominent citizens of Iowa told me that Iowa land must not be regarded as farm land, nor priced as farm land. It was something unique. It was like land containing a valuable mineral, and there was no saying kow high a proper price might be—maybe a thousand dollars an acre, maybe two thousand. Iowa land, he said was a limited area, unique on the surface of the earth, better adapted to raising corn than any other land anywhere. It gave its owners, in effect, a monop- oly of growing a maximum yield of corn on a given acreage. Such land, he assured me, was like-the South Af- rican gold flelds. No conceivable price could be too high for it. So They Take the $48,000. A frequent experience on Iowa farms has been for the owner to see | the ruling price go to say $300 an acre. For a 160-acre farm, that was $48,000. It was a fortune. The farmer sold, or rented on the basis of that price. With his rental lease in his pocket, or with a mortgage taken on the farm, or with something else he thought was an investment, he went to Southern California, think- ing himself securely fixed for the rest of his days and able to live the life of Riley. I recall the late Senator LaFayette Young telling me that Southern California was known as “Iowa-by-the-Sea.” Now that Jowa farm was trying to support two families, the retired farm capitalist in California and the man, renter or mortgaged owner, who oc- cupied the land. It couldn’t be done. The retired farmer saw his interest check fail to arrive, saw his compe- tence wiped out. Too old to return to farming, and knowing no other occupation, he is the most distressing of California's relief problems. He forms the core of those who pass under the spell of the Townsend plan of $200 a month for the aged. Meanwhile, in Iowa, the occupant of the farm, renter or owner under mortgage, struggled pitiably under an impossible burden. To pay the rent or meet interest on a fantastic mort- gage was more than the land could do. He has neither comfort nor pride. He planted two evergreen trees on the | front lawn. He let the buildings go | unpainted and the farm run down. Seeks Steady Income. The Pennsylvania farmer has the better way. He is a farmer, not a land speculator, or land investor. He does not count on making a fortune, but only a secure living. He stays on his land, improves it steadily, and passes it on to his children. The | Pennsylvania farms, seen from the train window between Philadelphia | and Harrisburg, are well-kept and | well-fenced. The houses and barns are kept painted, the lawns gay with | flowers. The Iowa farms seen from | a train window of the Rock Island Railroad between the Mississippi River and Jowa City are by no means | so well-kept. Yet the Iowa land,| as land, is richer. One other observation of a traveler | 000.” On the same day dispatches | from Wall Street say, “Stock prices advance hundreds of millions.” Just what does it mean when real national | wealth in the form of crops de-| creases, while national wealth in the form of price quotations seems to | increase? 1 (Copyright. 1936 ) i CHURCH EXTENDS CALL TO REPLACED PASTOR Acceptance Would Amount to Exchange of Christian Lead- ing Ministers. By the Associated Press. RALEIGH, N. C.. July congregation of Hillyer 13.—The Memorial | R. M. Simms of Bristol to replace Dr. | Christian Church accepted yesterday the resignation of its pastor, Rev. Dr. J. Randall Farris, who recently ac- cepted a call to the First Christian Church of Bristol, Tenn., and immedi- | ately voted to extend a call to Rev.| Farris here. Dr. Farris said he would leave Ra- leigh in August. Members of Hillyer Memorial said they expected Dr. Simms, who has preached here, to accept the call. service. No Extra Charge for Shirts! Particular care is shown men’s shirts, which are starched according to request at no extra cost. rapidly becoming one of the most popular in Washington. call ATlantic 24 2 You, too, can save money with this remarkable laundry Everything is returned finished and ready for use. Flat work is completely finished. All wear- ing apparel, including men’s shirts, children’s clothes, dresses, are properly starched and finished. This service is D. C, MONDAY, JULY 13, 1936. Liberty League Lonely Republicans Refuse to Recognize Efforts, Though Both War on New Deal. BY CARLISLE BARGERON. T WOULD tear one’s heart out to go around to the office of the Liberty League. It seems to be the Little Orphan Annie of the campaign. The New Dealers despise it, of course, but the Republicans will have nothing to do with it. Its offices in the National Press Building are the same beehive of activity, pamphlets are still issuing forth, and radio speeches are still being made, but you can tell the league is as lonesome as it can be. The big battle of the century gets under way. Every day we hear of what the Republicans plan to do and what the New Dealers plan to do, but < little, if any, account is taken of the league. As if to say “we are in the fight, 00" it issued & little statement the other day expressing indignation at something Jim Farley had said about it and adding that it was in the fight to the finish. But if this statement was called to Gov. Landon’s atten- tion he didn't say he was glad, as he did when Senator Borah an- nounced he would support the ticket. No, if the Republicans made any comment at all it was unprintable, That's the way they seem to feel about the league. You would think the league would feel disgusted about the in- gratitude of the Republicans by this time and be in a mood to quit and say to them: “Very well, if that's the way you feel, you can have Mr. Roosevelt for four more years.” But it is apparent the league has never entertained such a thought and that, regardless of the abuse to which it is subjected, it intends to carry on, martyrlike, undoubtedly sustained in the belief that if living politiclans won't give it its due, history will. One thing is certain, history will say it could certainly take the rebuffs. “ e e Time after time it has come to the Republicans’ rescue by doing a job they were afraid to tackle, and then it would turn hopefully to them for praise only to have the Republicans walk scornfully away. There was the Black committee, which aroused about as much indignation as anything the New Deal has done. But the Republicans were afraid to develop it. The league came forward and did the job. Outwardly the League professes not to want any praise jrom the Republicans. It professes, in fact, to want to stay just as far away from them as they want to stay from it. But you know this is not the case. Engaged in common cause with them it is bound to want to associate with them sometimes—at nights when it is off or on week ends. It can’t associate with the New Dealers and nobody wants to be by himself all the time. What this writer hates to see is when the election is over and if Landon has been elected, the heartbreak which the league will get. It will go running up to the Republicans enthusiastically exclaiming: “Well, we won!” And the Republicans are sure to say: “What do you mean—we?" The paradox of the whole thing is that the Republicans insist the league embarrasses them and the New Dealers say it has meant thousands of votes for them. If the New Dealers really believed this they would hardly have the hatred for the league which they have. At Philadelphia it was apparent they had more feeling against the Liberty League than they did against the Republicans. You would think they would fall on its neck and hug it if they really thought it had meant votes Jor them * x * % The truth of it is that the league carried the opposition when #t looked as though there never would be another Republican who could open his mouth. It was virtually the sole opposition to the New Deal until one day when Senator Vandenberg rather belatedly decided to chal- lenge the Florida ship canal and the Passamaquoddy project. The New Deal propagandists claim the league's effectiveness was destroyed with its “billion-dollar” dinner here last January, and they cite in support of their argument the fact that Mr. Roosevelt's strength began to pick up shortly afterward. What very probably caused his pick-up was the fact that he went away on a fishing trip and Wash- ington calmed down and the impression went out that maybe the excite- ment and reform phase of the New Deal was over. The league dinner didn't get any recruits from the wage earners, of course. But it served to bolster up the courage of the conservatives. Up until that time any man earning more than $5,000 a year was afraid to open his mouth. This dinner showed him that he could come out of the storm cellar without being arrested. From that time on the oppo- sition has become more and more articulate. So the league did some good. SLAIN IN KELLY’S YARD | him on suspicion. Despite a bullet wound inflicted by\‘ the officer, the powerfully built man | grappled with Stevens and attempted | to drown him in an ornamental pool. | Thomas Naughton, a watchman, who joined in the chase, killed the colored man as the latter was holding the po- liceman’s head beneath the water. . Colored Man Almost Drowns Of- | ficer in Chicago Pool. CHICAGO, July 13 ().—An un- identified colored man was shot and killed yesterday in the rear yard of Mayor Edward J. Kelly's home when Individual Seat Coaches Broad, roomy, upholstered seats Clean, spacious washrooms Free soap; individual towels Filtered Drinking Water Light Lunch served to your seat Air-conditioning—cool, clean, quiet Leave on time—arrive on time Safety—no highway hazards B & O Courtesy and Hospitality Now ... lowest fares ever offered to more than 1000 B & O cities and towns in 13 States. Go places...see things...take the family along. Liberal stop-overs. Consult Ticket Agent. a mile in Pulimans, plus Puliman fare. No surcharge. D. L. MOORMAN, General Passenger Agent 15th & H Sts, N. W, Phone District 3300, Natienal 7370 A4 ENDLY RAILROAD WASHINGTON to New York Philadelphia Wilmington Pittsburgh Youngstown Akron Cleveland Toledo Detroit Chicago Cincinnati Louisville Headline Folk and What They Do R. Wal:on Moore Guid- ing Evolution of World Air Law. BY LEMUEL F. PARTON. | y NTERNATIONAL air law is still pretty vague. A new code evolves l as the Clipper ships start shuate tling around the world. Uncle Sam has looking after his end of all this a 75-year-old Southern gentle- man of the old school, an easy prac- titicaer of pleasant amenities who likes to see barriers down and free and friendly intercourse among the nations. He is R. Walton Moore, As- sistant Secretary of State. At pres- ent he is arranging routes and lend- ing flelds, with aviation mag- nates for the British - Ameri- can trans - At- lantic service, to * start possibly within six weeks. The old-fash- ioned man who has in hend these new-fangled do- ings is a tall, erect Virginian of military bearing, whose easy cour- tesy suggests that he might fend off war with a few mint juleps. In the State Department, he replaced the somewhat less diplomatic Prof. Ray- mond Moley. He is a low tariff advo- cate, whose interunationalism consists of a belief in a free flow of goods, very much in the picture of Secretary Hull's reciprocity program. He is the Secretary’s personal appointee and is singularly aloof from the Washing- ton political associations. He is a bachelor, lives in his native Fairfax, | Va., County and drives 15 miles to | work every day. He thiaks sensible, | courteous international understand- ings will help world aviation a lot. He was in Congress from 1918 to 1930, retiring voluntarily. R. Walton Moore. Jesse Owens’ rash of record-break- ing puts him away out in front as a potential point-getter for the Ameri- can delegation at the Olympic meet. A year ago, in the running broad | jump, sprints and hurdles, he broke imree world records in one day. He was an Alabama cotton picker, | one of eight children, with no other athlete among them. He began romp- ing away with athletic medals in the East Technical High School of Cleve- land, and kept it up at the University of Ohio. Last year the A. A. U. was | badgering him hesitantly about tak- ing money as a page for the Ohio State Legislature. Just why this should disqualify him as an amateur bystanders couldn't see, and the main point is that it didn't. He still has his amateur standing. He is a form runner, a stylist, not a power runner, with the deceptive grace of a leisurely coyote—tall and \lanky, with a tremendous stride. A year ago he married Minnie Ruth | Solomon, a maid in a Cleveland hair- | dressing parlor. “Flying Ebony.” they call him. His regular name is i | James Cleveland Ovwens, but nobody e atte esca ol | e 0 ape from Police. ! ever called him anything but Jesse. (Copyright. 1936 ) Hotels on New Highway. Hotels and restaurants are being constructed in Monterey, Ciadad Vic- toria, Valles and Tamasunchale, Mex- ico, along the new Laredo-Mexico City Highway. COACH PASSENGERS SAVE 44c ON EVERY DOLLAR OLD NEW FARE FARE $8.14 $4.55 49 275 394 220 1090 6.10 1324 7.40 1516 845 1563 8.70 1948 10.85 2155 12.00 2178 1545 .15 11.20 2255 12.15 2818 18.10 you SAVE $3.59 215 174 4.80 5.84 6.71 6.93 8.63 9.55 12.33 8.95 10.40 10.08

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