Nearly ten years after the beginning of the Mexican revolution, the United States Senate got around to investigating "the Mexican situation", sending a subcommittee to El Paso to find out what Norman Walker thought about it.

COMMITTEE STOPS MEXICAN HEARINGS

El Paso, Texas, February 12.— The senate subcommittee investigating the Mexican situation suspended the hearings here today. The only testimony taken in public was that of Norman Walker, formerly a correspondent of the Associated Press.

He told the committee that from time to time for ten years the residents of El Paso had been forced to take extraordinary precautions to safeguard their lives and property because of the many attacks and rumors of attacks on Juarez, the Mexican town opposite El Paso.

Whether the committee will resume its hearings in Arizona or in California has not been determined.

The Atlanta Constitution 13 Feb 1920 page 4