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Show MEASURES KILLED IN RAPID-FIRE ORDER Six bills were killed in rapid-fire order yesterday afternoon in the lower I house. In each instance they were dis-I dis-I posed of by the adoption of unfavorable unfavor-able committee reports. Four bills, adversely reported upon by the education committee, went under 1 the house ax. Two of them were by , Representative Emil Lund, who pro-i pro-i tested with little support. House bill 150, by L-und, provided for the support of children of school age who could pot be supported and kept in school by their parents. House bill 156, by Lund, a companion measure to No: loD, made it compulsory for children to attend school. Both were killed. House bill 167, by Lay, regulating the practice of architecture, was killed on the advice ad-vice of the education committee. Representative Rep-resentative Day smilingly voted himself to kill his measure. House bill 1SG, by Barker, appropriating $7000 for the compilation of a history of Utah, was also killed on recommendation of the education committee. On recommendation of the public utilities committee, house bill 80, providing pro-viding regulations for the erection of poles apd transmission lines for electric, elec-tric, telephone and telegraph purposes, was killed. The same committee presented pre-sented a majority and minority report on house bill 31, regulating construction construc-tion of underground conduits for the same purpose. Because of the two reports re-ports the bill was placed on the calendar. cal-endar. House bill 119, by Taylor, creating the office of state boiler inspector, was killed on the uni'avovable report of the public utilities committee. |