Review of reviews and world's work . of the so-called conservation pol-and there are bitter personal animosities that icies as his predecessor. Mr. Ballingersthreaten discord. Speaker Cannon has been work in the Interior Department is partunder fire, and he is never meek when his and parcel of Mr. Tafts administration,enemies attack him. It is said that there The country wishes things adjusted rightly,will be a Congressional investigation of the but also hopes for harmony in the adminis-Custom House matters involved in the sugar tration. It hopes all the more for harmonyfrauds. Such an inquiry


Review of reviews and world's work . of the so-called conservation pol-and there are bitter personal animosities that icies as his predecessor. Mr. Ballingersthreaten discord. Speaker Cannon has been work in the Interior Department is partunder fire, and he is never meek when his and parcel of Mr. Tafts administration,enemies attack him. It is said that there The country wishes things adjusted rightly,will be a Congressional investigation of the but also hopes for harmony in the adminis-Custom House matters involved in the sugar tration. It hopes all the more for harmonyfrauds. Such an inquiry would be distract- in the executive family, because it knows soing and time-consuming, and perhaps not well that there will be no harmony thisuseful. It might be better to investigate the coming winter in the halls of Congress,influences that have for so long a time sur- Next November comes a Congressional elec-rounded the making by Congress of tariff tion, and both parties will have it in mind. 652 THE AMERICAN REVIEW OF RE^ Whose Copyright, lyus, by Pach Bros., N. J. GAYNOR, MAYOR-ELECT OF NEW YORK. New Yorks Election. Events crowd upon each otherwith such rapidity and insist-ence in the American metropo-lis that to-days sensation quickly drives yes-terdays out of mind. New Yorks greatmunicipal election occurred on November 2,after one of the most energetic campaignsof many ^ears. The matter was absorbingfor the time, but by another week the news-papers had disposed of it and the public hadforgotten it. When, however, William takes up his duties as Mayor at thebeginning of next month and the other newofficials are installed, the significance of whathappened at the polls on November 2 willcome up as a fresh topic. Judge Gaynor ranas the Democratic-Tammany candidate forMajor and received 250,000 votes. T. Bannard ran as the Republican-Fusion candidate and received 178,000 William Randolph Hearst ran inde-pendently as the Civic Allian


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