The following are comments of The North American of Philadelphia on my resolution :
The North American, PHILADELPHIA, Wednesday, April 30, 1913. WOULD EXCLUDE BANKERS FROM FRAMING MONEY BILL REPRESENTATIVE LINDBERGH TO FIGHT TO KEEP THEM OFF HOUSE COMMITTEE—QUOTES FROM HISTORY TO SHOW DANGER By Angus McSween.
WASHINGTON, April 29.
Exclusive of bankers or
muncy bank and trust and the representatives of banking interests from
new haven savings bank and membership in the Banking and
muncy bank and trust as well Currency Committee, as
mt bank locations a step to prevent the bankers from
muncy bank and trust and further controlling legislation relating to banking and
open a business bank account as well currency, is the purpose of a resolution introduced in the House today by Representative Lindbergh, of Minnesota.
Mr. Lindbergh is an independent Republican who has declared his intention of co-operating with the Progressives. He introduced the first resolution calling for an investigation of the money trust, and
muncy bank and trust as well more than any other man in Congress forced that investigation.
It is largely as
open an offshore bank account the result of the money trust investigation and
muncy bank and trust as well the disclosures made of money and
national bank abu dhabi as well business monopolization by a combination of New York bankers that Mr. Lindbergh has offered his resolution.
The reasons he gives are set forth in a preamble of important bearing upon the whole question of banking reform now engaging the attention of the President and
muncy bank and trust as well his advisers.
Mr. Lindbergh declares in his resolution that all banking and
national bank of alaska as well currency legislation since the Civil War has been controlled by the bankers of the country.
CONTROLLED CONGRESS COMMITTEES.
He charges that they have controlled the Finance Committee of the Senate and
muncy bank and trust as well the Banking and
payday bank as well Currency Committee of the House. Not only
muncy bank and trust and have they directed the shaping of legislation in these committees of direct advantage to themselves, but
on jordan"s bank and as members of the committees they have had charge of steering the measures framed by themselves through the two houses.
He cites three tremendously important instances in the history of the country since the Civil War, in which the bankers themselves have shown interests and
muncy bank and trust as well views diametrically opposed to those of the general public.
The first of these was when Jay Cooke attempted to impose the bankers’ view of the public debt upon the public in a circular in which he declared that the debt was a public blessing, “making an addition of three billions to the wealth of the nation in the form of three billion of actual available capital.”