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...subject (since the American Red Cross had refused succor [TIME, Dec. 10, 1928], and since the U. S. now has its own drought-hunger problems) has become taboo in despatches. Nevertheless 8,000,000 Chinese have starved to death in the present Great Famine (TIME, Jan. 23, 1928 et seq.) and 1,000,000 more soon will starve to death, the China Famine Relief (Manhattan) estimates...
Forty of the 50 Britons who perished on the R-101 (TIME, Oct. 13, et seq.) were members of the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes...
Ever sensitive to British opinion when something vital is involved. Sir Tej Bahadur Sapru, the great mediator who brought Lord Irwin and St. Gandhi together for their truce (TIME, March 2, et seq.). broached the subject last week as delicately as possible...
Baby Bombs. Troubled by the daily succession of "baby bombs" which have made Cuba pandemonium for weeks without doing much real damage (TIME, Jan. 26 et seq.), Dictator-President Gerardo Machado offered last week to compromise with his detonating enemies...
...borrowed?" "Yes, I would say they were." Asking the question was Robert L. McReynolds, counsel of a committee looking into the alleged misuse of Tennessee funds, last week looking especially into the affairs of Col. Luke Lea, publisher, politician, crony of bankrupt Rogers Clark Caldwell (TIME, Nov. 24 et seq.). Answering was M. D. Johnson, assistant cashier of the defunct Liberty Bank & Trust Co. of Nashville, whose president, Ridley Edward Donnell, shot himself after the bank closed. Witness Johnson also testified that Col. Lea opened his bank account in 1925 six days after the bank was formed, deposited...