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Show THE MORXHfC, SaTTLAKE CORREBFONDENTB (FROM ARE NAMED. TiW TEACHERS t. . fnTVduca lion mot P to uJ 7. The comml Khod wot of March night 1 O. W. Myle JafPWentelection of the " jailcwlnl wHh the eel- 60: Dully. ; tore Alice MW Cheee. 165. d"ei IW?1 - MO- Rhode we. Robbing end Jeaal In the . Franklin ,,wn,,l' 37750 10 ,s0 jacoeiinended. TfcV gcraown wee iwwwnded ae eeeletent to the fcr .ppolmnirtU the office of the principal Khod et e ealary at $25 S,7ch 2S JEThiS to buy toole tor the dfputoc&t of th ? $170, end 9150 le w decided EjJhSl tof for fPt-n- t to .17 that 5JJ e committee compoeed of Cummin, a memberendof the Erf; Secretary U P. Judd Eaton he appointed riflra end 125 SSXTmwU-I1t- . tor the High echool cadet Snaany. at a coat not to exceed $450. of selecting teacher for Tinatter wee deferred. . year (he et J TALES, TELL CONFLICTING 9 refused. When the train arrived at Bancroft plaintiff was forcibly ejected from the train, and hia baggage waa also put off. He wae compelled to remain In Bancroft nearly twenty-fou- r hours, and consequently missed his business engagement at Pocatello, all to his damage In the sum stated above. HEAVY LOSS ON SALT LAKE ROUTE. Balt DASHED TO DEATH. By the a scaffold around the tower of the new 8t. Mery's Dayton .0 March 21. collapse of church today. Charles Senders and tiuprge EUlsog, atone work-if- . were precipitated a distance of 100 fan to the ground Pandand fearfully mangled. Elers waa instantly killed. lison lived about fifteen min- Fail 0009000000000000 The great pile driver, the only one In that section, wae caught by the flood and carried down stream and landed between two big washouts and is now where It cannot be reached. Two trains of oranges are apparently on the desert to rot and other valuable Altofreight le tied up Indefinitely. gether it le agreed that the washout la the worst In the history of western railroading. Country. pro-wlat- ' - com-aiude- be-to- corn-tolle- Conference Trains Daily . r VIA M CRUDE WOMEN ARE Spread of Cigarette Habit in This 7:4, a. n 2:15a. LeaTinr Leavtaf Uri2i22 rden ?.BVdcn -- 10:30 1:86 2:50 7:00 !,! ,iTgd.l 6Jlt Lake City 10:25a m. 10:33 A m. 1:45 p! m. LnX Si! .Ue 2? U, J" Oty Lake rtty ft Lake City S.t ;Bit dLJ T"iSe C rUn n. p. p. p. 6:05 p m. 11:10 p ra p m. .. .11:36 City.. the rwmd trip. dlrerl ,ro Fine depot to BY of Will Its Drs. Elliott & Norris . Specialists MEN'S DISEASES Bleed Poise, Plica, Rupture, "Let not the tempted young woman be deceived by the rosy setting forth by votaries of the habit already under Its enthrallment, for there la a dark side to the picture which must not be Ignored." PROUD OP HADLEY. Wha Thinks Ha la a Grant Man. New York,' March 28. With the Standard Oil hearing, ao far aa New York la concerned, closed. Attorney General Hadley of Missouri started for home laat night with hia aaaiatant. Rush C. Lake, and Frank Hagerman, the Standard Oil lawyer from St. Louts. Alfred D. Eddy, the western counsel of th Standard Oil, left for T'. Chicago. I have made my case, said Mr. 1 considHadley juat .before leaving. er that I proved every allegation contained in the information I filed. When the case la argued I will ask the supreme court of Missouri to render a decision which will punish Standard Oil for its violation of the laws of Missouri In the past and to impose conditions which will guarantee that corporation's compliance with the laws' requirements in the future. Mr. Hagerman before taking hlf train aald: My friend Hadley has given us Missourians cause to be proud. 1 feel that am honored When I Introduced him to a stranger aa the Missouri attorney general, and I believe that there la a great future in store for him. It would be mighty good politics for a President to nime him attorney general of the United States." Mr. Hagerman waa not minded to discuss the probable effects of the which have attended the In' quiry. He spld that the corporation would have evidence to put op the records in Its own behalf, and that the wltneaa who already testified several times will probably be recalled. There la no reason for attempting to muddle the situation, he said. "We hall make little effort to dispute the facts established by Mr. Hadley. Our aim will be to ahow that, while the conditions shown by him exist, there has been no violation of the law. Our battle' will be strictly along legal e ltaea." ' , COMPROMISE AGREEMENT. Arizona and Naw Mexico to Vote Separate Statehood. Narva Dability, Drug Habits, CONSULTATION FREE, PERSONALLY OFFICE 2991 WASH, AYE. OR BY LETTER OFEN DAY AND EVENINGS. When Writing, Address Drs. ELLIOTT & NORRIS, Ogden -- Trains Daily East Via Union Pacific Railroad This includes tha fommw OVERLAND IQ MITK9 and ths LOB ANGELES LIMITED. ' BurlcUy twentieth eaatnry, aoNd ttttl-- buled, electric lightad, (team boa tad 8top-era- ; trains, operating Pulkaaa-Pala- c laeomparaM Obaervatton-Ubrar- y sad Dining Cara et the vary latest manufactory Only 41 haunt Ogdsa ta Chicago a0 For further information a A. B. MOSELEY, T. P. A., Ogden! Utah relatives or where ah Mvd previ- to lorn Angalr. Th girl Insisted on giving ua her not for tho money and ous to coming to Balt Lake. Miss Lak remained at llw Nrlaon home a couple K waa finally acceptod to get rid of Angeles. her." of days and then went to Tho body waa prepared for burial While In Los Angeles Mias Uke Eber W, by Undertaker lived at th Salvadoa Army'k bom yesterday waa found that tho girl had Hall. It NelMr. wrote women. Bha later for shirt waists on and two skins. son and asked him to hand a totter three beltevwd that this la all bar wear? is It a him to would forward which h apparel aa efforts mado yeilerday . man In Ik Tellurtde company's off- lng ascertain where she was roominS ices in tha McOornlck block. Mr. Nel- to son vecnived tha letter but it was not proved futile. addressed to anyone and ao be rd lined it to her. It was learned from OOOOOOOOOOOOMO O General Superintendent A. ! Wood-Lous- e O O of th Tellurtde company at O WOMAN KILLED BY THIEWEB. o o Provo laat night that several totters O of this nature had been received at o Chicago, March 2$. A dis- o o their office where ah had workad. Mr. o patch to tho nscerd-lforalaald that ha was under o from Mcndota, Ills., says; Woodhoua o waa she mentally o Mrs. Ellen Fuller waa found o the Impression that unbalanced. o dead yesterday at Barlrlll, 2 "Borne daya," he aald, "he attended o 11 miles east of hero. Rohbera or to her werk ia fine order but the next o had entered her house In whichd o day perhaps she would not apeak n o oho lived atone, bound nnd gag-ge- o' I her and ransacked the o word and would act very peculiar. o Bomcllilng seemed to worry her and o place. Tha thieves left a note o she could hot get 'her mind on her lO outside the house staling that o work. We did not feel that wa could o their 'victim was bound aad o asking that aha h liberaMd, o employ her under the circumstances but relief did not come In Um a and dismissed her. Mis Ink Mid to anvc her life. a that she waa in desperate strait and tho company gave her $1$ extra 3 than her wages to help her on her way Ja . d ooooooooooooooo were aurialaed. He thought that the weight of an order of the commission, made upon of an act of congress, would tha authoritycourts from granting injuncprevent on , odooooooooooooo'o I Varicose Taken on a positive guarantee to cure tea-lio- men? Missourian p To the study and treatment ef Chronic diseases of men. women and children, having deeotsd special effort during our entire professional nfs and ara now rewarded by the dlaoovary of methods that give complete mastery of Nervosa and Binod Pises sea. Catarrh, DaatoasK Rheumatism, Stomach, Kidney aad User troubles. 0 Chlcago,March 28. Aroused by the recent discussion of cigarette smoking by women and the frank endorsement of the practice by some, .Lucy Page Gsaton, head of the League, yesterday sent out the following open totter: "Cigarette smoking by American women la; unfortunately, no longer an Beornt developments open question. have brought prominently to the fiont existing conditions. "It has been denied repeatedly by those Jealous of the good name of American women that cigarette smoking prevails to any considerable extent among respectable clasaea. "While the right exists to men and women alike to Indulge in the cigarette bblt, are we aa a nation ready to face the fearful coaaequences of the widespread use of cigarettes by wo- Washington, March 28. That senate and house will reach a agreement on the sUtehood bill, which will permit 'Arisons and New Mexico each to decide tor themselves the question et their admission as one state, seems a correct conclusion from present indications. The conferees met today for the second time, and while the session was devoted to what are termed the minor amend-mentstherer are Indications that a buds of agreement on the chief question la suggesting itself naturally and will result In the restoration of Arl' ions and New Mexico to the Mil with the Foraker amendment, and Inquiry NEGRO KILLED WHITE MAN. among the senators who opposed the honse bill indicate that they original 8. Clark will Sat Francisco, March J this compromise. accept j Magee, a negro, last night deliberately shot, and probably killed a white man, John Walsh by name, for having, as the negro alleges, despoiled hla home. FLOODS IN IOWA. McGee then, turning hla gnn on hla wife, fired a second shot which went Waterloo. Ia, March 2$. The wide. water In the Cedar river .rose over eleven feet last night nnd BRIDGE WASHED OUT. early today broke the west levee and flooded the' business district of Waterloo. Hundreds Lincoln. Neb, March 26. Three of familiet were rendeaed pans of the nouth channel of the homeless and all railroads are PlMte river bridge of the Sioux City ft Western railroad have been washed tied up. Cedar Falla reports a similar cut by a flood. Traffic is completely dimeter and 20 families there paralysed on tbat line. There ia still were rendered homelesa.Brldgea danger from In gorges at other places, and dam were also wiped out. ' My child was burned terribly about At T e'clock the waters came the face neck and chew. I applied Dr. to a standstill nd danger for Thomas' Bclecrric Oil. The pain ceasthe present is believed to bo ed and the child rank Into a rrotful sleep." Mrs. Nancy. M. Hanson. Hamburg, N. Y. Both sides agree that the right should one bold a that it la in hill or exists independently of it; other it is not in the hill, but should he and yet the former, for soma half-poun- oooooooooooooooo WESTERN IMS. 29, Purpose. cr.t-off- Seven MORXINO.MARCH mysterious and unaccountable rrason, objects to aa amendment which would place the matter beyond doubt. 'When we consider that tha people i asking for prompt, derisive and effective act ion; that tke present bill diidlnctly contemplate review; that it constUutnmahty is seriously threatened by failure to provide for such review if the other features are to stand; that rreredrnts of state let Istotion are in favor of a review; that all the Mil pivseaied in either houaa provide or recognize a review; that this hill itself aa presented in borh Bill houses and as originally prepared by th Intent at Commerce commission contained a provision for a renew and that the president in hia massage . aka of tha orders being subject to review when we cunrider all these facta, the action of those who are willing to lmpsril the vafTfciry and efWashington, March :R When the fectiveness of this law by not explicitly senate met today 51r. Lodge offered an providing for a review for ao valid reaamendment to the railroad bill, making son whatever, I to me It apply to pipe lines fur the transportation of oil. MANHATTAN STRIKES. Mr. Daniel presented an amendment to the same bill making rail road a liGoldfield. Ncv., able for damage to employes. March 27. Two The resolution railing upon the in- strikes have settled the future of terstate commerce cummlmdon tor in- Manhattan aa a remarkable gold ramp. formation relative to free transpor- The first waa made last wm-- on the tation, including tickets issued to property of the Manhattan Consolidatnewspapers In pay for advertising was ed Mining company and ran $1 a pound of $2,000 to the Um. Th second atrtka passed without opposition. Tha railroad rate bill waa then tak- and one of equal Importance to tha en up and Mr. Knox presented kla ramp ia the wonderful finding juat views. Thla was Mr. Knox'a first sus- made on the Annl Isurli claim of tha tained effort la tke senate and he was Manhattan Mining company of Nevada, where ore panning 25 cents to every accorded attention by a d chamber. panning mado from leas than a of ora was found in a streak Mr. Knox act forth, by generous citations from auprems court decisions, eighteen inchea wide. This mean a the powers and duties the Interstate valuation of over $1,609 to tha ton. Over $80,000,000 la now invested In Commerce commission now possess and perform nailer ths act to regulate the camps of southern Nevada. Th commerce, and he declared that hia re- Venture corporation, with Its $100,000,-00view showed that tha commission has capitalisation, ia rapraaantaid. Men abundant power to seek and diarovrr like Schwab, Newhnuse, MrCornlck, deviations from the great purpose of Itiee, Farrell, Poasy, Keith and Kearns the act to secure equality tor all, but ara becoming more heavily tut errsled It wholly lacks power to enforce Its every day. decrees and orders, and that its deWEATHER A MONTH AHEAD. crees and ordeiw do not have the force of law until nude so by judicial deNew York, March 28. Willis L. cree. After lecltlng a portion of the Pres- Moore, chief of th weather bureau at ident's message calling attention to Washington, announced laat night at the advisability of expanding the the dinner of the Maritime association I powers of the commission, th sena- that ha weather bureau might soon Istor said that a short and simple law sue forecasts of a whole month. Mr. would reach the root of the trouble. Moore had been Joked hard by Job R. He declared his bill introduced several Hedges, when he arose end gut perweeks ago oompn heads and deals with mission to add to hla speech, already the misrhlefs for which congress la delivered. He then aald: "The weather bureau believes (hat seeking a remedy more effectually than for the first time In the history of men any measure yet brought to the at teorological science It he within It of congress. scientific heals of long range Mr. Knox aald tlie theory on which grasp the it is drawn ia that general words in a weather forecasting that Is, forecasts of th character of the monih to come. statute, which are sufficiently compre'The detail are not yet complete, hensive to cover the evil aimed at, and the system will not be adopted for make hotter and more effective legis- acveral months to come. lation than specific prohibition of the mar be possible, and I believe it "It evil In the forms in which it has ap- will he. to tell you New Yorkers and Recent declsfona of the su- members of the Maritime exchange, peared. preme court, he said, confirm the wis- before this time next year, what the dom of that method of legislation. character of the coming month will In elaborating on the .fifth section be." of Ids bill, which provides for a reMr. Moore said after the dinner (hat view by the courts of orders of the he bad not intended to make this ancommlHsloa, Mr. Knox said that the nouncement at thla time, but had planomission of such a feature from the ned to give it first to the public house MU constitutes the main differ- through the orient i lie publications. ence bei ween the two measures. As a preface to is If nee number of extracts MISS LAKE UNBALANCED. from court decisions upholding his position, Mr. Knox said: Balt Lake, March 21. Information "It is obvioue that a law conferring received yesterday about the relatives tremendims poer, which it ia propos- of Miss Gertrude Lake or Bhand, who ed by all the bills under consideration committed suicide Monday afternoon to confer upon the commission, to sub- in the McOornlck block, waa meager. stitute one rate or practice for an- Telegrams wn received from Pitta-bur- g other, must be drawn upon one of two and Ixa Angeles atating that ah theories: Upon the theory that the waa not known there. It was learned order of the commission shall be final through Adjutant H. P. Nelson of the and not reviewable by the courts, oi Salvation Army that the girl had com upon the theorjr that It shall be to him In January and asked for lodgby th.? courts. I have no hesing at th Salvation Army hotel. Bha a in bill drawn waa informed that women were not itation saying that upon the theory that tha order of the taken at the hotel. commission shall be final and unasaall Mr. Nelson offered to take lier to hi able in the courts would be unconsti- home for n night or two when- - sh tutional. could remain until she secured work. Tha decisions quoted, aald Mr. Knox, She accepted hla offer, Mrs. Nelson prove ihot th railroads are entitled talked to her the first night ah spent to their day In court, and 4hat an act there hut the girl iremed timid about which prevents a Judicial review or giving her name. Mrs. Nelson waa determination of the question of the unable to find cut anything about her rcasonablenroa of aa order of the com mission would deprive Uie carriers of this constitutional right and would, Mr. therefore, be unconstitutional. Knox said that in his hill ho had un derlakcn to preserve the constitutionality of purpose of th measure and to throw around the pro virion for review such constitutional restriction and terms a would prevent unnecessary or frivolous appeals to defeat the end of the remedial legislation. Hla court review section, he said, provide that the question to bo submitted to the courts is solely whether the order of the commiwlon violates th complainant's rights. Mr. Knox advocated a provision aiispenaton of the com' "gainst the mission's order by interlocutory decrees without requiring a caeh deposit or a bond to secure to the parties en titled to repayment, the difference between th. commlsakm'e rate and the railroad rate if the commission's rate Railroad Rate Balt Like, March 28. The News says: Surely tbs Salt Lake Bouse bee been hit hard by the recent floods in the region of the Meadow Valley wash. It la now certain that It will be many weeks betore it will be able to send trains through to Los Angeles. It may be sixty days or more. In means a practical rebuilding of a vast amount of the. roadbed over the eighty miles of the damaged district The unprecedented snowfall in the mountains of Nevada, with the warm weather and nine sent a raging torrent down through the wash with the result that where there was once a grade there is now n gorge filled with n rushing, tumultuous stream, approaching a river In volume. The defile is narrow at this point and the weeping away has been complete. Meanwhile hundreds ef men are working day and night. But they are fao-Intremendous odds and progress la g UTAII. THURSDAY SPEECH 0900000000000000 alow. tea-agai- news utes. March IS Several ne- by the elate to Jeaa Thomae, the mulatto of ebe tohMni tried tor the murder renter-Harry Wilson. gave testimony which waa decidedly favorable to waa th defendant. Their evidence (liaapotntlng to the officer of the riurlFa force who have hid charge f the cue and who any that in many r fcatiacw the teitlmony given y eater-gaMADE SERIOUS CHARGE. differed radically from the atorle told of the ahootlng by the same meg Salt Lake, March 28 J. L. Bates thortly after It oecurred. . The wKneaeu called yeaterd ay ware was today arraigned betore Judge C. Will B. Diehl, to answer to n charge of jaaeph ffweneon. Joaeph Bunu, Bind-tar. Haiti Sullivan Meera aid 'Jim threatening to kill kls wife, Lottie Bates. He pleaded not guilty to the The last named wltneaa la of the colored men'e club where rharge, and the case will have a hearthe Shooting occurred. Almoet with-cu- t ing tomorrow at 10 o'clock. The bond except ion the negroee teatilled wae fixed at $2,000.' The woman alleges that her life L In that Wilaon waa the aggreaeor In the OgM: at leaat that he applied foul constant, danger at ths hands of her apttheta te Thomaa If he did not give husband. Neighbors have frequently of a contemplated aaeault. bad to Interfere in her behalf, and sevIndication The teatlmony waa that the trouble eral times, R la said, they have locked grew out of a game of "coon can," in her In n room to save her from the Inof the colored race furiated man. Her toes today presentwhich member take gnat delight, It would appear. ed n bruised and battered appearance, Thomu anroaed Wilton of looking In from the effects of a beating received th deck of card ao aa to cheat him. yesterday from Bates. A! Goodwin pleaded not guilty to a Wilaon, It la claimed, called Thomaa a fm! same, They left the card table, rharge of burglary alleged to have ad the next thing known they were been committed on the night of March atuffliag in an adjoining room. Tbom--u 24. The case will have a hearing on had n gnn la hia hand and 11 red two April 2, and in the meantime the dehots, with Wilaon gripping hla arm fendant will be confined In Jail, in dewhile ha was doing aa Tbh details of fault of $500 bonds. The taking of testimony closed at Da affray, aa related by the witneeeea, noon In the case of the three Japanese differed greatly. The ehooting occurred Oct, 28 last, charged with carring another Jap on lit Wilaon did not die until Dec. 6, the evening of March 20. With Horace S. Ensign aa interpreter, the case pro'WILLIAM X. JONES DEAD. ceeded with much more alacrity than yesterday when a Japanese was emBalt Lake, March 21 WillUm X. ployed for that purpose. Argument Jones, a raaldent of Utah since 1856, are being made this afternoon by Matt died st hfs home In the Seventeenth Thomaa for the prosecution and Boren ward last night, from an attack of X. Christensen In behalf of the defendplfurlay, with which he had Buffered ants. several weeks. The deceased was born la Denbyshire, North Wsles, May 8, OPEN FOR BUSINESS. 18U, and while ittll n young man became Idetifled withthe latter-da- y la Doing on its Saints. When he was 19 yearn old he What tha Santa Fa Big Cutoff. irrfed Sarah Parry,' She died September 25, 1886. The Jtwo emigrated to America in 1856, and crossed the Balt Lake, March 28. C. F. Ward jlaina In a handcart company, ren, general agent for the Bants Fe, by CapL Bunker. They reached Utah late la the fall of the year received word this morning that the mentioned, and excepting a short stay Santa Fe baa opened up for operation at Provo, during the time of the move 70 miles of the Eastern railroad of couth, Mr. Jones resided continuous-J- r New Mexico, from Texico to Legua, In Salt Lake. He la survived by M a small elation Juat south of 11s wife, Emma Btansfleld. and nix of N, The Eastern Is really eleven children that were born to him, Albuquerque. cut-of- f now being built by the big eesMea numerous grandchildren and the road which, when completed, for the eevarsl entire 225 milra projected, will give Mr. Jones waa for more than thirty Tears, and up to the time of hla last the Santa Fe two main lines from the into AlEImm, a member of the Tabernacle Missouri river practically cut-of- f will This be the buquerque. He wae known as one of the Djotr. of the Santa Fe; not that est of the older, singers, having a rich, Lupin cut-of- f heavy bus voice. He accompanied the it 'crosses big bodies of water, but because it will eliminate the heavy oir on its triumphal tflps first to l1" "Grid's fair at Chicago and later grades In the Raton and Gloricta t California and Denver. mountains, ant also will do away with the route through the canyons among the headwaters of the Rlo Grando AIKS FOR 95,000, river, a stretch iff track that has 8H Lake, March 28. Because of g caused more grief in connection with ejected fro ma train of defendant washouts than any other on the system. When this cut-of- f la completed wpny at Bancroft, Ida., and d to remain there nearly twenty-tou- r the Santa Fe will rale the roost when boars, and causing him to miss a It comes to rapid transit between Chiengagement he had In Poca-toll- cago and Los Angeles, for no other wmeja H. S. Koxmlnsky baa filed suit line will he able to make the same w the district court against the Ore- - time. It la anticipated as soon aa the Short Line railroad company to new line will be cut down between tower damages In the sum of $5,000. the two points named tolly five The complaint alleges Ithat hours. Wrohaaed a scrip hook from plklntlff defend-- l In addition the Senate Fe la building and on October 21. 1902, attempt-exchang- e a road from Ballinger, Tex, to Texico. the scrip coupons tor a This will give haul from Gal "cet from Soda 8pringa to Pocatello. veoton on to aBanshort Diego, California, Th sgent at the former point. It la and1 will be in direct competition with 6d. was busily engaged In other th Panama oanaL The system has sefailed to give plaintiff a cured large terminals JT?snd at Galveston ,h latter boarded and 2?L.wllup00 big elevators and wharves are d entered the sleeper. In now being constructed. It la the in' nagged a berth. tentlon of the traffic departmentt to esme "Eductor k!5 around aft plointiff offered him eou- - make Galveston a great grain shipping from hla scrip book, which were center to the detriment of Chicago. A glance at the map of the ay item with a the proposed Included, showa that the Santa Fa win be in a position to move grain from the big belt to tidewater with perhaps even better facilities for rapid transit than any other aggregation of tinea. Tjkr JZ.' Mbpocnaed OGPEX, BTATE EXCHANGEE) AND It Will Reach an Enerawus Sum and Will Stop Traffic Many Weeks. 100- - "Tof state .! matnictor In the manual of H,h etal MJShhrtoW and EXAMINER: tions appending the order, unless abundant proof were submitted to Justify such a course. Warm praise waa bestowed by Mr. upon the. men who prepared the pending bill, but he aald he waa convinced that aa it now stlnds, "It utterly tolls to accomplish their beneficent purposes, and Indeed, wholHe reiterated tbat ly defeat thm. he regarded the bill aa unconstitutional. Mr. Kara asserted emphatically that under the pending Mil in no way can aa order of th comm lesion he brought into court by proceedings against the ir.r ly . Now In.: Progress commission. "Whatever the intentions of .the framers of this hill may have been, said Mr. Knox, "they have succeeded in prod icing a measure which permits an admlnlsttwtlve body to make order respecting property rights, gives no right to the owner of the property to test their lawfulness In the courts In direct proceeding, denies the right to challenge their lawfulness, in proceedings in enforce them, and penalizes th owner of the property In the sum day if it seek a supposed of $5,(ie6 remedy outside of the provisions of the bill by challenging clihsr its or the lawfulness of tha acta performed under its provision. the differences which Discussing thus tor have prevented any agreement between (he two faction, ena demanding and the other opposing a specific provision for a court review, r Mr. Knox said: "But tor the srrlousncsa of the situa-wution, the matter would c 1 |