Show ETS WIN REFERENDUM Carry Proposals Urging State Dry Law Repeal 1 and J nd B Beer r By WILLARD R. R SMITH United Press Staff Correspondent MILWAUKEE Wis April 3 United Press Press Led Led by a tremendous tremendous dous majority in this once famous city of brewers the wets of cf WisCOnsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wis Wis- today had succeeded in roIling roIl roIl- ing Ingup up a ruling vote of yes on tw two proposals In ot oL the Ule states state's 2771 precincts pre pre- the people voted to in favor far of or repealing the thesta sta state e prohibition laws and In 1357 precincts they hey cast votes In favor faor ot or legalizing pcr per cent peer eer and against It 1 In Milwaukee the voters were five to one In favor of or both proposals Thus the inhabitants of or Milwaukee 1 kee Ieee and the industrial cities down the lake lale shore hore between hero here and Chicago were ere raising their empty steins stems today in a toast to the tiro abolition aboU- aboU lion tion ot or all bans on their beloved beer eer I The Tho state dry law remains on the books but the vote means that the 1 people have asked the legislature to remove it The legislature had n 1 the advice of the the voters and now Jis i bound to comply with the f popular vote V Wet wt majorities were piled up f t early arly Jn the cities clUes Rural sl sections and l d villages increased their dry vote yote that registered in the t. t I beer referendum of 1926 but more i V wets ts than n ever er before turned out outto to the polls in many communities r Wisconsin in the first prohibition t test passage of the Jones five Lve and X ten law aligned itself with New v i. i Yok Nevada Montana and Maryland Mary Mary- v. v land Jand stat states s which have repealed or 1 never le have b had d e. e prohibition i. i l f vets the I J The wets ets feeling reeling victory v in referendum fight within their clasp believed that with the vote had had been taken an important step toward cutting the eighteenth amendment m out of or the constitution ot of the he United States State tate by state they will continue th thir h fight sight they said as did the prohibition f forces in bringing the before congress 1 Gathering of returns from outlying out- out t r 1 lying rural al sections of ot tho state where thero s tb drys held greatest t strength was slowed by storm Wre wreck wire systems Snow now covered cov- cov t r l i ered highways were blamed by the drys s 's fo for many of their numbers lumber from from- rom the polls polis in Ia farming dIst districts |