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Biographical profile of US politician Martin H. Glynn, appointed to a Washington industrial conference, and a Japanese viewpoint by Ryntaro Naga on global rivalry between Anglo-Saxonism and Bolshevism, with alleged US-England collaboration for world dominance.
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Prominent among those named by President Wilson to take part in the industrial conference to be held in Washington in December is Martin H. Glynn, of Albany, N.Y.
Mr. Glynn has long taken an active part in the Democratic politics of New York. He has been editor of the Albany Times-Union since 1895. He was a member of congress from 1899 to 1901, was controller of New York state from 1906 to 1908, and was governor of New York from Aug 14, 1913, to Dec. 31, 1914. He was vice-president of the United States commission at the St. Louis exposition in 1904.
Mr. Glynn was born in Kinderhook, N. Y., in 1871, graduated from St. John's college, Fordham, N. Y., in 1894, and was admitted to the bar in 1897. He is married.
JAP'S VIEWPOINT.
One of the two rival forces struggling to get control of the world is Anglo-Saxonism, and the other Bolshevism. The one aspires to make Anglo-American civilization shine over the whole world and the other to reconstruct the social organization of the whole world through a labor revolution.
In any case it is undoubted that there is a tacit understanding between America and England to go hand in hand in their scheme to bring that world under their combined control.—Ryntaro Naga, in Chu Koron.
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One of the two rival forces struggling to get control of the world is Anglo-Saxonism, and the other Bolshevism. The one aspires to make Anglo-American civilization shine over the whole world and the other to reconstruct the social organization of the whole world through a labor revolution. In any case it is undoubted that there is a tacit understanding between America and England to go hand in hand in their scheme to bring that world under their combined control.—Ryntaro Naga, in Chu Koron.