After hearing their verbal testimony and looking over their written statements, did the commission conclude that those publishers were liars?
If so, why did it spend the people’s money to collate, digest and file the testimony of liars for the information of Mr. Cortelyou, the then Postmaster General, Mr. Meyer and Mr. Hitchcock, his successor, and other Postmaster Generals who will follow Mr. Hitchcock?
Again—If those commissioners of 1906-7 concluded, either before or after hearing them, that the publishers were or are liars, why may not, or should not, those publishers conclude (after reading their report) that the commissioners are liars?
FOOTNOTES
[2] Covers are included in the total for pages given.
[3] One cover page included in count for periodicals carrying cover with no advertising matter on title page of same.
[4] Three pages of cover are counted as advertising.
[5] The weight of supplements to Sunday Editions of newspapers (when mentioned as supplements in list), is included in the gross weight of the issue as given.