Items of Interest

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Franklin K.
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"Give Alaska home rule and it will solve the great problems of the country," says Gifford Pinchot, who has returned from his trip to Alaska.
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A petition asking for the dissolution of the United States Steel Corporation and some of its subsidiaries has been filed in the United States court in Trenton, N.
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Judge Killits of the United States district court has rendered a decree in favor of the government in the case brought by the United States attorney-general in Cleveland against the General Electric Company and about forty subsidiary companies controlled by the General Electric Company.
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Frank Lyon, attorney for the interstate commerce commission, who has just returned from Oklahoma, where he has been hearing the pipe line case, says that this case promises to be one of the most important undertaken by the commission.
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The National Municipal League has established an annual prize of one hundred dollars, called the "William H.
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The government is ready to permit the International Harvester Company voluntarily to readjust its organization to conform to recent interpretations of the Sherman law.
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The New Orleans-Netherlands Company, owner of a five-thousand-acre tract of land ten miles southwest of New Orleans, will be ready to bring about two hundred families of Hollanders to colonize some time next year.
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The Southern Pacific Railroad Company has filed its answer in the suit of the United States, to declare forfeited to the government for alleged violations of the conditions of the grant, 2,373,000 acres of timber and agricultural land, valued at sixty million dollars.
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In his message vetoing the farmers' free list bill, President Taft declares that the same reasons which impelled him to decline to sign the wool bill, controlled him in this case, and in his summary objects to it because he thinks it should not be considered until the tariff board shall make report upon the schedules it affects; because the bill is so loosely drawn as to involve the government in endless litigation and to leave the commercial community in disastrous doubt ; because it places the finished product on the free list, but retains on the dutiable list the raw material and the machinery with which such finished product is made, and thus puts at a needless disadvantage our American manufacturers; that, while purporting, by putting agricultural implements, meat, and flour on the free list, to reduce their price to the consumers, it does not do so, but only gives to Canada valuable concessions which might be used by the executive to expand reciprocity with that country in accordance with the direction of Congress.
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Encouraged by its success in its campaign for the national pure food law, the International Stewards Association is now planning for a hotel training school and promotion of the movement to protect consumers against short weight and measurement in the purchase of goods sold in containers.
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Urging a constructive national policy in the matter of business, George W.