C.A.B.

Citizens Against Banksters
"Attacks on McFadden's Life Reported"
Commenting on Former Congressman Louis T. McFaddens's "heart-failure
sudden-death" on Oct. 3, 1936, after a "dose" of "intestinal
flu," "Pelley's Weekly" of Oct. 14 said:
"Now that this sterling American patriot
has made the Passing, it can be revealed that not long after his public utterance against
the encroaching powers of Judah, it became known among his intimates that he had suffered
two attacks against his life. The first attack came in the form of two revolver shots
fired at him from ambush as he was alighting from a cab in front of one of the Capital
hotels. Fortunately both shots missed him, the bullets burying themselves in the structure
of the cab.
"He became violently ill after partaking
of food at a political banquet at Washington. His life was only saved from what was
subsequently announced as a poisoning by the presence of a physician friend at the
banquet, who at once procured a stomach pump and subjected the Congressman to emergency
treatment."
/s/ Robert Edward Edmondson
(Publicist-Economist)
President Andrew Jackson stated in reference to the bankers at the state of his
administration: