ARMY & NAVY: The Art of Crookery

Congressional investigation of the conduct of the Veterans' Bureau (TIME, Nov. 5) continued with more hearings before a sub-committee of the Senate. The evidence presented, while almost entirely that of the investigators, pointed to a network of graft and political " pull." Some of the charges were:

¶That a hospital site at Excelsior Springs, Mo., had been purchased by the Government for $173,000 although it was worth only about half that sum.

¶That in passing on the transaction, Ewing Laporte, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, had torn out a sheet from the lease on which the sum of $77,000 was mentioned for one parcel of land and substituted a sheet on which the sum was $90,000. (This was emphatically denied by Laporte.)

¶That Laporte had rushed the transaction through on March 3,1921, the last day of the Wilson Administration.

¶That Matthew O'Brien, a San Francisco architect who had been paid $64,000 for hospital plans never used, had been paid an additional $33,000 by order of an official in the Controller General's office, al- though the present officers of the Veterans' Bureau protested that O'Brien had already been overpaid by $5,000.

It was reported that the evidence of graft submitted in the inquiry has convinced President Coolidge that the Veterans' Bureau, which spends one-sixth of the Federal revenue, should be deprived of its independent status and placed under the control of a Cabinet officer.

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MANOJ, a police officer stationed in Mumbai, on why he and other police don't criticize their leaders for failing to meet promises to improve dire working conditions after last fall's deadly attacks on the Taj hotel

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