p til 1111- 85th Congress, [ HOUSE OF REPRESl , 1st Session. \ NQUIRY INTO CHARGES ' MADE BY HOi HEFLIN. D 619 .3 1917o Copy 1 October 6, 1917. — Ordered to be printed. Mr. Barnhart, from tlie^ special committee on investigation of charges made by Hon. J. Thomas Heflin, submitted the following KEPORT. Your committee, appointed to inquire into the allegations and charges made by J. Thomas Heflin, Member of Congress from the fifth clistrict of Alabama, on the floor of the House on September 21, 1917, and also to incjuire into the allegations or charges made in an alleged interview or statement alleged to have been furnished by the said J. Thomas Heflin and printed in the Washington Post of Septem- ber 22, 1917, respectfully ask leave to report as follows: The investigation made by the committee has necessarily been hurried, due to the fact that the resolution authorizing the appoint- ment of your committee to make the investigation was introduced early in the afternoon of Thursday, October 4, 1917. Afterwards, on the same afternoon, a resolution was passed by the House fixing the hour of adjournment at 3 o'clock on the following Saturday. The resolution authorizing the appointment of the committee and vesting them with authority is as follows: Be it resolved, That the Speaker of the House of Representatives is hereby authorized and empowered to appoint a select committee of five Members of the House who shall make inquiry into the allegations and charges made by J. Thomas Heflin, a Member of Congress from the fifth district of Alabarna, on the floor of the House on September L'l, 1917, which is in part as follows: "I do not know what Members of Congress, if any, have been influenced by this mysterious German organization. If I were permitted to express my opinion, I could name 13 or 14 men in the two bodies who, in my judgment, have acted in a suspicious manner by the introduction of resolutions or bills or by speeches in the Congress or I lut of it that lead to the conviction that they are not loyal to this Government in the hour of its peril. They ought to be investigated, and if found guilty, they ought to 1)6 expelled from the House and the Senate of the United States." Also into the allegations and charges made in an inter\iew or statement alleged to have been furnished by the said J. Thomas Heflin and printed in the Washington Tost of September 21, 1917, as follows: ■'I have heard a story that there is a gambling room in Washington where pro- German and peace-at-any-price Members of Congress get their piy by being extiaor-