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Show Tudy ifl ths vvsatmer. and Wadneadsy fairt aomawhat warmar. llarrtins flirtin' Local Sattiomant Prices. MUr . Ill torpor 91 3 ..... (.aliiodva) huue-lu- M and fur curry line of buiiu'ss may bo found in Tribune Wants. IH5 SALT LAKE CITY. TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH VOL. 300, NO. ICS. P IM T? ! , i rr ' SOVIET "Ambassador a Martens, deportation warrant as bea laniod by tb United 8tates, government authorities. Ji JJ zLi r? J Kino Christian has raised a Says Radicals ot Denmark, storm In his kingdom by dissolving the cabinet; a revolt la threatened. Arc Instructing Nations Youth .March 29. Socialists and anarchists are given teachers certificates, and they are teaching in Repreevery state in the union, sentative Campbell, Republican, Kansas, declared today in the house. "College professors of, high and low degree are Socialists, anarchists, enemies of congress, enemies of the constitution, enemies of this government, and they teach it daily In the colleges," he said. "A.saphead Socialist from Harvard appeared recently, before a, committee of congress and admitted he was a Socialist and admitted he taught socialism as a teacher in Harvard. They now admit it, and in a short time will be boasting of it." Mr. Campbell aaid trustees should see to it that "the Socialists are not employed to poison the youth of the country. FIVE CENTS 22 PAGES 1020. rr if y? YrTri id di GO, rr "jiy- atat";twaiiTywej ' , -- WASHINGTON, Senator Wires General That Unless Practices Are Corrected Name Disgraced. of the Constitutionality t Measure Prohibition and Parts of Enforcement Act Under Fire. Indorses Pro posal for Federal Con trol of All Preconvention Expenditures. U. S. Supreme Court Hears Arguments Contending Brewers Have Right to Make Beer. (Chicago Tribune Special Service.) March 29. Senator WASHINGTON. Borah of Idaho left today for Detroit to carry hie fight against General Leonard Wood directly to the voters of Michigan, where the first big test of strength between the rival aspirants. for the presidential nomination will take place next Monday. Before leaving Senator Borah gate out a telegram be bad sent to Uen-ir.- il Wood at Chicago In answer to the general's charges that the attacks on bis ampalgn expenditures were being made for the purpose of Influencing the Mi chiton rote. The telegram read as fol- v Inna; 'Thess dispatches state, you claim ths .itui'k upon you was to sway the voters of Michigan, You are In part ctirrecL It was Intended to sway the voters, not but In the United only in Michigan, j'tatcs. I know of no other tribunal to wnlrh to appeal to correct these practices, hut It ban only be effective provided the facts I stated are eorreeg. 1 tis within your power to give to the peopla of Mlchl-- .. tnu and, other states a list of your the amount jou are expending, the amount which jou did expend In South Dakota, and the amount which you proposed to spend in Ohio and Illinois. IYASIIINGTON, March 29. A possibithat the supreme court might pass final judgment on prohibition questions before It by the middle of next month Ties seen by some observers today in the announcement that the court recess to be taken after arguments in these cases, probably tomorrow, would extend to April 19 Instead of April 12. The opinion was expressed that a decision might be rendered immediately when tho court reconvenes, Further argument on questions touching on validity of the constitutional amendment and the enforcement act was presented today. They were In connection with the original suit brought by New Jersey as well as appeals from that etate and from Wisconsin. Rhode Island, Kentucky and Massachusetts cases have already been argued and will be considered at the same time. Ellhu Root, representing Christian Felgensparv a brewer of Newark, NT!.; Attorney General Thomas F. MoCran of New Jersey, In opposition to the constitutional amendment, and Assistant Attorney Geoeial William I Frierson for tho government addressed the court. a Will Be McAdoo ' Heady to Correct. if you will make a statement of these facts ovA your signature, I will correct any erroneous statement which I have heretofore made. The material which Is toinlng from South Dakota, Illinois and Ohio convinces me tliat-- 1 was modest iu General Wood, if you I.) y statements. are not familiar with what 1s going on in your bebalt tor (he presidency, I take ioave to assert that unless you familiarise ourself and co rect It you w ill bring upon your name, upon your party ami upon your country. "It Is up to you aa a soldier and a man to come out boldly and meet these facts, and either show the public that they are unfounded or else lopudiate the men who have manifested their determination to lontrol the national contention through the uue of money. Senator . Borah will make his first He expects to caspeech In Detroit. In the middle-wesIf mpaign extensively business not force him to does pressing return to tbo senate. dla-gru- lity Warrant Issued Self-style- d for Mar-ten- , Soviet Ambassador. . By Universal Service. WASHINGTON, .March 29 With an entire absence of sensational features, amd Ludwig C. A. K. Martens, bassador to the United 8tates from the soviet government of Russia, was turned over tills afternoon to the custody of the department of labor on warrant of deportation, sworn Cut by .the department of Justice. .. Former Senator Thomas W. Hardwick of Georgia, counsel for Mr. Martens during the protracted hearings before the Moses subcommittee of the senate foreign relations committee, gave his personal bond for the appearance of Martens at a preliminary hearing on the warrant at 11 o'clock Wednesday morning. "For over two months, Mr. Martens has testified at a series of hearings before the Moses subcommittee Investigating alleged Russian soviet propaganda In this country. During this period, officials of the department of Justice have repeatedly stated that they would arrest Martenssen-at soon ss he had been released by the ate subcommittee. self-style- Goes to Washington. After appearing before the Lusk investigating committee iu New York, Martens came to Washington, staying at the house of Lincoln Coleord, a writer, several days before making his presence known. Durof ing this time agents of the departmentthe justice acourbd the entire city tor A govsoviet ambsttsador without result. ernment clerk was arrested by department agents, who mistook him for Martens, but on establishing his Identity the clerk was later released. Finally, Mr. Martens notified a Washington editor that he was in Washington and In a few days was served wifh a'aubpoenea for his appearance berore the senate committee. Indorsed by McAdoo. Assistant Attorney General Francis P. William Gibbs McAdoo, who is cam Garvan. In charge of the campaign against to escape the "Red activities in this country, when inpaigntng vigorously in public 5emorratlc nominal lo,t and working hard formed that Mr. Martens had been taken In private to k In It, wrote 'Senator MorInto custody, said; tis Sheppard of Texas. Democrat, Indorsing Senator's Borah's bill to limit pri- Garvan Statement. mary campaign expenditures and requirThe department of Justice already has , ing publicity of contributions. with the departGeneral Woods Washington, campaign filed its complete briefMr. Martens. We of labor against ment declared managers today that with delecase against Mr. Martens, gates chosen from only nineteen states have a Inperfect reasons he should detail the why giving their candidate has more than .. - of. the AQte necessary him lie deported to Russia. "The entire responsibility for his custody in the Chicago convention. and rests with "There are now, said Senator Ccorge is now off our shoulders We Assistant Secretary of labor Post. . II. Moses, "one hundred and seventy Mr. Martens tinder to Intend keep one delegate committed to the .Wood do not cusIn he Is as as the surveillance long fifty-foof these and Intwe cause, structed to vote for him as long as his tody nf the department of labor." At the preliminary hearing on deporta-tln- n name Is before the convention. The rest charges tq be held ou Wednesday, of The 171 are personally pledged to GenMartens will have to reply to the charges eral Wood. that Of the other candidates. Governor brought by the department of Justice Inimical Imwden claims eight instructed and Sena- he Is associated wttWof propaganda United the States, tor Johnson tea from South Dakota, all to the government he of whom probably will be found in the and that as an "undesirable alien, should be deported. It Is probable that Wood camp at convention time. Marthe hearing preliminary following tens will be taken to the immigration staDispute Lowden Claims. ( tion In Baltimore for a final hearing. "Tho Lowden managers claim 137 vote candidate, but many of these are Officials Confident. , for th-- lr known to be for Wood. They are clalin- Officials of the department of Justice tolug elevenIII In Connecticut, six In Loulsl-nnMaine and thirty in Missouri night expruiaed complete confidence that four of Immigration will be eup-phalthough it is well known that Wood has the bureau sufficient facts to guarantee with most of those delegates committed to It Is known that Martens deportation. him. of. government agents lias large force It was announced today that the inter- abeen months for work compiling data women at of of the the est country In the i Timer campaign have been placed in the regarding the activities of the soviet amhis sojourn in this coun- bands of Mrs. Halsey W. Wilson of New bassador during Soik and Minnesota., Mrs. Wilson was Is conceded, however, that officials for several year recording secretary of ihe National American Woman Suffrage of the department of labor, who now have cans, may association and Is now recording secre- entire charge of the Martens tary of the National League of Women take a different view of the matter, as Voters. She Is a graduate of tho Uni- In several hundred iff cases of arrested to Rusversity of Minnesota and has lived In Reds' scheduled for of portation Labor has comIowa, Mim'ota and New York, her pres- sia, the departmentdecision made by the ent home. pletely reversed the At Wood headquarters a poll of cot'ege agents of the bureau of investigation that and unmen wqpe over dangerous the arrested the country shows Wood professors Hr president received 310 votes. Lowden desirable aliens. 1H7. Johnson 7. Butler 31, Senator HardNEW TORK, March 29. Assistant Dising 14 and Senator Poindexter 3. trict Attorney Rorke. whose prosecution of Harry Winitsky, executive secretary of the New Yoik Communist party, resulted todav in the latter being sentenced to CAMPAIGN prison for criminal anarchy, announced " he had warned the police departNATIONS LEAGUE ton'ght ment squad that the Communist lmb America was seeking alliance of party KV YORK. March 29- - The league of with the Communist party for rations must become a political issue and forceful overthrow of the government Mr. Rorke de lared this alliance haij lontlnuo as surh "unld the American themselves decide It. for no ottn r ae-- i not been completed. He added, however, Islon "will tier be accepted hv some of that nation'll headquarters had been the men who have beeq making the moved here .front On Icq go. but that gf- 'Continued on Page 2, Column L) (Continued on Page 2, Column 6) t. one-thi- rd ur a, ed tft JOHNSON RENEWS AGAINST Roots Contention. Mr. Root characterised the prohibition amendment as new legislation, made under "color of an amendment, affecting personal rights. If Us validity was upheld, he said, the effect would be that the court recognised In addition to the legislative powers of congress and the states a, third legislative power, enactment of legislation by consent of three-fourtof the states, which, he said, would be "a perversion not only of the word but of tlie whole tone of the con- stitution. "It Is of little consequence, Mr. Root said, "if there he or be not prohibition in this country. It is of vast consequence, however, that our honors now decide rightly and for the good of our couhtrv in the future if there are to be any limits to the power of amendment and where the lino of limitation is to be drawn. I Insist that your honors are not at on. the liberty to put a construction overturn the power to amend that will fundamental character of this government unless the language of the article is too plain to admit a question. Mr. Root argued that the original bill of rights on which tlie federal constitution was founded would he swept away if the amendment was sustained, and laws as constitutional amendments enacted would be made superior to other laws. This would mean, lie' added, that "we are not a government of limited powers, because there is a legislative body that is not subject to those limitations -- Replies to Justice. Replying , to an inquiry by Associate Justice Dayf Mr. Root eald only two ways existed to Insert a prohibition amendto transfer ment in the constitution power to regulate liquor traffic to conwas done aa regarding Interstate gress, commerce, or to call a convention to propose amendments on the same authority as was dune for the original constitution. "I contend they have not put that power into the hands of the amending authorities. he said. General McCrsn contended Attorney that the amendment was legislative In nature, andravolutionary in character and of the was noV adopted by membership of congress nor ratified by refto of the stsee, owing erendum provisions In various state constitutions. On the government's behalf Mr. Filer son reiterated arguments .made In the Rhode Island case that the question of the amendment's validity Is not Justiciacould ble. The eighteenth amendment have been Inserted tn the orig'nal const! he he reason, for that su'd, tution and could not see the force of argoments amendment. Inserted by that it cannot be I(s effect, he said, was merely to give eongresa authority to enforce two-thir- Illinois, Reservations and fer Issues at Stake. Further Negotiations or hay-tuc- In- Michigan, Property Losses Mount to Dizzy Figures; ed Will Number Hundreds of People. Ballot Box Verdict Suggested; Early An-I- s Expected; In-j- ir CHICAGO, March 29. The death 1st of the Palm Sunday tornadoes that sweiit sections of eight slates tonight stood at 11. Communication with many Isolated communities In the middle weal had only been partly restored today and Indications were that tho toll of death and destruction would be augmented. Th known dead In six central western states numbered ninety-fivwhile ty-eight were killed In Georgia and Alabama. The property loss In th Chicago area was estimated at JS.OuO.CO. while In the other etate affected the: material loss was large. Elgin. III., suffered' the heaviest property losa, th damage thure being Ji.uOj,-00e, Progrewives to Proclaim a .Republic; Angered at Kings Conduct. LONDON, March 30. A tion ef trade unionists and Socialists Ylslted King Christian Monday evening and notified him that uulcu ha revoked the dismissal of Premier Zahle general strike woftld ha called throughout Denmark next Wednesday, says an change Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen. COPENHAGEN, March 29. M. Liebe, an Advocate in the high new cabinet court, has formed to take the. place. of that of'M. Zahle. conM. Liebe is servative politician. He is not a member of parliament. well-know- n seven- Illinois was the hardest hit of the central states, with thirty dead, more tl.au one Jhousautl Injured i. Fatalities Elsewhere. Indiana reported thirty-si- x fatalities and Ohio taenty. Twelve wet killed m Michigan and one each tn AVIsconsin and Missouri. Districts most severely affected iu the Chicago area were Irving park, within the city limits, wtth six dead; Melrose park, nine' dead; Elgin, eight dead; Mac. wood, four dead, and Plainfield, dead. resulted iu Heavy property damage these towns and also in AYUmett and ' Evanston, North Shore suburbs. f At Joliet, lil.. three persons were probwere fourteea ably fatally Injured; hurt and the property damage was estimated at a half milllou. the ser.-ous- ly Troops on Patrol. Troops patrolled Elgin, Melrose p., t and Wtlmelle today and police detaui from Chicago were on guard at Dunnii g. Wire communication with many of the communities blasted by the tornado su.I was paralysed today. Every public relief agency was organised today to a d victims. In severs places American Legion poa'i sent volunteers to watch for looters and assist In relief work. A survey of the devastated district was begun today by Henry J. Uox, weather forecaster. The tornado wa the result of a comUi e bination of two storms, lie said. througn developed In Alaska, traveled 4 British Columbia and joined a storm trotu COPENHAGEN, March 29. The pro " the southwest whit h developed in southgressive parties of Denmark will reply ern Arixona and Nevada. This combinaCox said, resulted ill a to the king's dissolution of the cabinet tion, Profeseor which formed eddies and rotary motion the caused today by proclaiming a republic, r a tornado. Koebenhavn say It Is rumored. The cabinet of C. T. Zahle, premier FIFTY-FIV- E TOLL and miniate., of justice, resigned today, The ministry was formed on June 21. ! The king demanded the resignation' of the cabinet because of differences which STATES had arisen concerning the plebeecite In the Fienshurg region and called the LibGa March 29. Revise ATLANTA. eral leader, M. Neergaard. to form a seccabinet. It Is presumed that M. Neer- reports tonight from storm-swetion of to assume Georgia and Alabama cut down gaard has AI.a ministry ready At Lagrange. Zahie has not been asked the death list to fifty-fivoffice, as killed. .were person Ga., twenty-sito continue hi the Interim. the event as Eleven wera killed at Alexander City.The Polltiken describe ten at Went Point. Ga.; five at Aga "unique coup d'etat in Itanlsh constitutional history. The unexpectedness rlcoia, - Ala, and one each at Maewi of thedownfall of the Zahle ministry Is and Milner. Ga., and Cedar Springs. AU. of injured was laige. emphasised by the fact that the rigsdag - The number was the Easter holiday and Property lows at with yesterdayItsbegan that at West at memb.-on (5u0,0nn, moet of are the already Point said to be "hundreds of tho way to their homes. rands. Ai far east as Washington, U.i but the gate is all that remains of the the Dorm caused damage estimated at home. There is a hole in the ground where the house stood, a couple of shirts The property damage at Mccon was esand a pair of socks wave lonesomely PASSED BY SENATE timated at several hundred thousand do from a clothes line, but the hole in the lars and at Washington, Ga 2ua,oO. The ground, the gate and the clothes hue oemuigee river at Macon wa out of its with its three gai meats, with the valiant By Universal Service. , brown pup are all that remain, N. T March 29. The Fow. banks. ALBANY. a a a ler bill repealing the New York state Back of the pretentious Praegef home, daylight saving law was passed tonight TOLL which was reduced to powder, stands a by the state senate, by a vote of 26 to 2.". dilapidated 'shack, of which not even a This is the first step takert by the shingle wa dlaturbed. It Is about twelve stale legislature to Btralghten out the PERSONS feet from where the Fraeger home stood, confusion and hopeless muddle which has SCORE but' la Intact, while all that remains of confronted the cities of the state since the 1'raogcr home Is a solitary water the timepiece were turned ahead one Ohio, March 29. TwenV COLUMBUS. pire, from tha top of wnich floats a hour on March, 2$. are known to have been kill.' , draggled American Hag. hoisted by some passage of the Belts companion bill persons fifty injured, and property ioIn the assembly tomorrow night by a more thanclose wag. to the l..twieutH) mail ! running toa was on slim similar by Nar pigeon bouse, perching majority predicted caused In wt stern Ohio during Sunday s S elxtken-foo- t pole, was undisturbed. It night. Should the governor eigu the bill, tornado. Is a flimsy thing, constructed of latb. tha state will return to normal federal Parse county. In which Greenville and Twenty feet away a substantial time before the end of the week. Nashvile are loiaied. suffered Intne greatbrick home was demolished. The Dottier bill as passed, however, est the too loss. .E'.pht were killed All the skiing ordiand sheathing was does not rubify Ihe davlight-aavln- g more t.nm a score injured. ari from one houi-e-, but .the roof nances now effective In cities, but leaves towns stripped d upper Miami valley Is was untouched, perched high upon 'th the door open to any cities enacting its Loss In the to be at least l.eob.fOd. bare and eklnnv studding. A piano wan own local ordinance. Three persons are known to have been The loan of the farmers of the state shipped out of this house, blown enin Vanwert and three others at tirely through another and left bottom-sid- e was largely responsible for th adoption killed Mmiton. Tne sgrlcuttural disup In an alley, two blocks distant. of the measure. s of Renolette and Bruner vlllag-Tie 0 tricts eonterd the extra hour of davlight huig, pear Di sue. were wrecked. M Til house of Alexander Jamieson, who Interferes seriouslv with the operation of are in dead the two towns. was Instantly killed, disappeared comfarms and milk dairies. pletely. Not a stock or stono. or handToledo District. In ful of material of any description Salt Lakers in Now York. TOLErO. Ohio. ? March 2 I Tnltnaa. Tiie u Kwanton Chief o' Police Kieher of Wilmette and Special RaaLg Corrr NEW YOI'K. March 29. Algonquin. O n.tcht td ftvri ih two member of lu force had Ju- -t com- The Annex, E. J. Annina aid F, 11, Column 5.) wife. (Conluued on (Continued on Page 2, Column 5.) COPENHAGEN, March 30. Large crowds fill public squares, demanding establishment of Danina republic, and all streets leading to the royal palace are held by police. Kin Christian tonlgtt received a Socialist deputation with which he conversed half an hour. Demands were gubmitted and tha king promised a definite reply at 9:30 oclock this morning. OF J IN FURY STORMS SOUTHERN I Humor and Tragedy Are, Blended in Stories Told of' Sweep of Storm King death-dealin- il REJI diana, Ohio and Georgia Worst Sufferers in Sweep of Tornado. Re- Reach an York Agreement Conference. 1 h Appeal Made to President to Accept Lodge Scale hs three-fourt- CHEAT By ARTHUR SCARS HENNING. (Chicago Tribune Special Service.) WASHINGTON. March 29. President Wilson Is expected shortly to reveal his views of the failure of the yenate to ratify the German peace treaty, for which h were and the Republican irreconcilable responsible, and also his attitude toward further measures to reestablish peace. The president Is expected to do this tn response to an appeal presented to him of distinguished today by a number Americans to resubmit the treaty to the Committees senate, accept 'the league of nations covenant aa modified by the Lodge reservations and refer the questions remaining in New lu dispute to further negotiations or to the people In the presidential election. The appeal was presented at the White House by Samuel Coluord of New York, Wood-bridNEW YORK, March 29. Ths seal com- author of the proposal; Profeasor of Boston and Hamilton Holt, edt- -, mittee of the bituminous operators ami . The delegation .mino workers in a Joint conference ht'rt tor of The Independent. but Mr. Tusee not did the president, this afternoon agreed to make tbs mons-tar- y multy promised that their memorial would provisions contained in tlia award be submitted to Ale. v'iton at once. Th of the bituminous coal commission aa af- proposal will be laid before Republican firmed by the president, become effective and Democratic senators. ou April 1 and that tne nnes continue in operation pending the working out of Many. Sign Appeal. a new agreement. The award Mr. Coleord said that the names of the provided for a wage increase of 27 per cent. several hundred signors of ttie appeal to Tho motion to accept the commissions tlie pres'dent to acespt the Lodge reseraward was made by representatives of vation would be made public in Installtho mine workers and was adopted ments. It has been signed by William unanimously. Bryan and Herbert C. Hoover. All local unions of the United Mine Jenningstiie signer whose names were Workers in the central competitive fields Among made public today are Cardinal Gibbous, will be notified immediately of the ac- President Lowell of Harvard university, ceptance of the wage award, John I Cleveland H. lodge, George W. Wicker-shalain Is. international president Jacob H. ejchlff, George Haven of the mine wofkers, announced, official state- Putnam, Dr. W. W. Keen, Augustus ments of the proceedings and action of Thomas, the Rev. 8. Parkes Cadman, the conference signed hy the interna- Frederick R. Cnudert and the Rt. Rev. tional officers also will be sent out. Chauucey B. Brewster, bishop of ConThis action will avoid any necessity necticut. for cessation of operations in the Mr. Coleord thus described the plan bituminous industry. he said, "and will fully presented In the memorial: protect the public by continuing the sup"That by understanding between tlie ply of coal after April I, pending the president and a sufficient number of the and minority senators, we at negotiations of a new contract. majority once accept the Invitation and Join the Will Confer Today. nations upon the basis of what of league are known as the Lodge reservations, as After adopting the award, the conferby a majority of the senate prior ence appointed a subcommittee to carry adopted to March 19, with such favorable modion the negotiations of a new wage con- fications as have since been accepted by tract for the bituminous workers based or ae may be immediately on the coal commission's report. This the majority, and leave remaining quesobtained, commission, which consists of the Inter- tions in dispute to the be settled later by national offlcere of the mine workers referendum, if a referendunj must be and two operators and two miners from by continued negotiations. each of the four states of the central taken, or In other words, they may take "Or, competitive field, will hold Its first con- their K they will, but not The subcommittee while referendum ference tomorrow. waits in suspense and world the probably will complete its work and agony for the pledge of aid we are willing reach an agreement by the first of next to give, week, Mr. Lewis said toijjght. Green of the mine workers Letter to President. Secretary said It would cost bis organisation more The letter to the president said in than Hho for telegrams to notify local union of the acceptance of tb wage part: award. "With ae simple formalities as may be The wage Increase under todays agreeconsistent with propriety and the high ment amounts to approximately 27 per1 resjeot we owe you, we desire to present (Continued on Page 2, Column 6.) (Continued on Page 2, Column S.) (Chicago Tribune Special Service.) HtCAGO, III., March 29. Grim jokes g were played by the tornado In Its Journey across the thickly populated territory west of yesterday. It denuded Chicago people of their clothing, but left their homes; In other Instances sparing their garments, but destroying tbeir habitations. 4 In one Instance It lifted th third house in a row and demolished it utterly. 'Then tho second house was lifted and planked' down on the foundations of the one that had been destroyed. Still Say Amendment Revolutionary. another gust picked up the third house The eighteenth amendment to th smashed it down upon ths spot just and known as the prohibition amendby the second house, but the ment, D legislative la nature and revolu- vacated was done with such violence and In character, according to At- work tionary General the third house mostly rebasis that Thomas F. McCran of torney In the cellar. New Jersey; fn opening his argument poses before the United States supreme court On of the queer freaks at Wilmette in New Jerseys su't to have the amendment declared void and the Volstead act was the trick played upon a patient cow. was winked up hy the tornado and Hhe were unconstitutional. Eight points slammed so far into a bay stack that raised and discussed in the argument. tail protruded suit gave searchAttorney General McCran s brief de- only aher hint of what had become of her. c's red that the eig'iteentn amendment was ers so astonished and outraged hy was Fhe (hat the not constitutionally proposed; to judli tut review; that the joke that she did not bellow, but proposal Is suhject to-thlrso was d In numnot tightly Jammed iu the hay that by congress did k The bers of both affirmatively vote for ahe eould not make a Bound. had to be torn down to rescue her. th proposal of the resolution, and that of the states have not ratinut in the! Dunning district a amall brown dog guarding what is left of fied in the constitutional sense. The brief also declared that the na- - his master e premises. Iolioe and other intruders are warned awav by snapping teeth and bark.ng voice at the gate. ( Continued om Page 2, Column 7.) three-fourt- PEAtEPICT e. x eeii-mat- ed r DAYLIGHT REPEALER -- OHIO DEATH NOW PLACED AT OF - two-sto- I ry 1 , |