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The Daily Sentinel from Grand Junction, Colorado • 14

Location:
Grand Junction, Colorado
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 3, TTIE DAILY FENTINEL, 5RAND JUNCTION, COLORADO PAGE FOURTEEN CHANGES IN ELECTION LAW ARE PR0P0SEL Would Affect Registration Party Preference, Also 4 ot ing Eligibility. Soupeaters, 1,442 of them, were made glad Christmas day at On, Guards seventh annual party, as the above composite picture of some of the scenes shows. At the upper left may be seen the throngs entering the Avalon at 10 oclock to see the special picture. At the upper right is a scene in the room where the toys were stored and sorted. At the extreme right is A.

A. Look (On Guard himself) and standing: with her arm on the toy autto is Mrs. Bessie Stuller who has sorted and boxed the toys for the past four years. The others are volunteer helpers. Just below (rfght) are Tommy Ela, Bob Campbell and Fireman Charles Bunnell with a happy Soupeatcr to whom they have just delivered a box of toys.

The other scenes show parts of the happy crowds of childdren at the nowfamous Soupeater party, Dec. 25, 1926. COLORADO HAS NEW GOVERNOR Inaugurated Yesterday; Plans To Carry Out Wishes of Amnions and Johnson. Denver, Jan. 2.

UP) A new Colorado governor prepared today to smooth the path for tha man who will follow him Into the office In ten day. Lieut, Gov. Ray H. Talbot of Pueblo was aworn In as goxernor at 10:20 a. m.

today to fill In gap between former Governor IM C. Johnson, who resigned effe-. tive today, and Governor-elect Teller Ammons, who enters office Jan 12. Rerauae of hia nnl(ite poaltlon, Talbot waa confronted with the task of delivering a dual message to the atata legislature when It ronvenea at noon Wednesday. Governor Johnson left with me a bi tef message to be deliver 1 to the assembly." Talbot said.

In addition, I ehall have niv own ad-diesa, which will he written after I have talked with Ammona. He will undoubtedly have some re-eommendaJKoftw I ran embody In It Talbot anld he planned to do nothing In hla ten-dav term, except rarrv out hat Johnson wanted done before hla term expired and to help Teller all I can In the wav of getting: the office started on hla program before he takes ov er John'on departed for aslnng-tnn Thursday to become Coloiado a Junior I nlted States senator. The new governor wae elected lieutenant governor In J932 and 145 4, afler one term In the alate senate and one tn the house He was defeated by Ammona for the guberftatm lal nomination In the Ilemorratle primary last September. Midwest, West Struck By Cold (Continued fmm Pose 1) through hpavv drifts In an attempt to bring food to 300 Navajo Indiana beleaguered In New Mex-lto Th most serious flood since 1901 forced approximately 100 families to evacuate their homes In the Town creek aiea. of Murfreesboro, Tenn.

A four and a half Inch ram sent the slieam over Its banka. Funeral service for Mie Clara Cochran will be held from the First Baptist church this afternoon at 2 o'clock Rev. Franklin Fenner will offulale, and inlei-nient W'lll he In Municipal ceme-ferv. Tha Krolin Funeral home will ba In charge of service Funaral aervirej for Waller Griffin will ha held at .1 30 o'clock till aflei noon frotp tha Krolin chapel. Rev.

K. F. right will official, and Interment ill he In Municipal remoter). Memlieia of V. F.

will attend tha aeivhes In a hodv and 111 ronduct military hurlal rite at (he grave. Funcial services for Alison K. Foaler were held Saturday afternoon from the chapel of the Kiolin funeral home, with the Itev. R. hlnsell officiating ''Nearer Mv God to Thee" and Sweet Dye mid Ilya" were rung hy Mrs.

Treere. Pall bcaim ore Smith, Joe 1 'easier, diaries Webber, Joa tJobbo, J. A I'KIInc, and A. Plsrk. mini was in diehard Mesa cemetery.

Funeral aervltes for Mrs John Moor will be held from the Martin chapel Monday afternoon at 2 oclock, Uev. Fianktin Fi liber will officiate, and Inteimeiit ill ha made in the veterans' eemeieiv on Orchard Mea The ladles auxiliary of V. F. W. will have charge of service at the giava.

at th -J Marriage Licenses A license was issued r( eiui.v til tilrnw nod fur the of Paul K. Cmiev and Henris Uiin Set ei son, both of loll- i 1 Legislators Are In For Hot Time (Continued from Pag 1) to handle the additional work required. Several other proposed alterations tn liquor lawa will await conatdei atton. Including Repre-aentame James Jensen' bill for atat liquor atorea. Secretary of State George E.

Sann-dra, preaent liquor department chief, has suggested two major change Issuance of ''customer' permit" to all hu'era of liquor, and restriction of licensing and control of dealer either to the atate or to local authorities. Hpeakerslilp Three names Moses Smith of Ault, Janie W. Graham of and Wayne N. Asptn-all of Giand Junction figured most prominently In speculation on the speakership. The winner must gam a majority of th 50 Democratic vote In tha houae.

Smith, speaker tn the 30th assembly, recently made a vigorous public denial of report! he has eliminated himself as a candidate to retain the post. Close associate said they considered him "very much a candidate." Claims that Graham already haa obtained 24 of the neressarv 26 votes came from organized labor camps, An official of the United Mina Workers and the Colorado Federation of labor, said Graham wa virtually assured the solid support of labor groups. Aspinall. Returning to tha legla-lature after a two-5 ear absence, said was "certainly in the running for tha Those predicting tha 31st a-i seniblv will he hectic based their forecasts on problems created by the $43 pension amendment approved by voter at the November election. Most member were hopeful the atate supreme court will pass upon several phases of the smendment be'ore they are compelled to consider legislation to make It effective.

O. Otto Moore, attorney who helped draft the amendment, contended onlv about $2 ftfln.flOtl a year in new revenues will be needed to pay $45 pensions. Against that claim, state at toineys rtted a welfare department estimate that $14,500,000 a year In additional funds will be -necessary to pav tha pensions, continue relief of unemployables, snd csrrv on other welfare work. Thev expressed fear that, in addition. tha amendment might oausa the federal government to withdraw its 1937 contribution for old age assistance, expected to total $4,000,000 to $4,500,000 a vear.

Heads of state penal, eleemesyn-ary, correctional, and educational institutions will meet Monday to prepare a request for a ten-year levy for new buildings and Improvement a plan advanced by the state planning commission's public works committee. In sddition In th levr, whUh eommlttee members said would less than ona mill," tha group will consider asking for appropriations fnr emergenrv" con-strutton which they bellev cannot aw ait tax- returns. Water and land ronservatlon legislation will hold a prominent plaie on the assembly' agenda. Governor-elect Teller Ammons took the Initiative in preparing a hill to create a seven-man water ronseivation commisalcrfr-and announced he will seek an appropriation for "whatever money the commission will need The planning commissions approval already has been stamped on bill to set up aoll conservation districts and atate grazing a-soi (ations as steps towsrd reclaiming duat-rax-aged farming areas In eastern Colorado. No legislative problem are likely to reach the floor of the assemble next week Organization of Ihe houae and senate.

Including the election of a speaker, the doling out of patronage, canvassing of th November ballot for state offhers, and hearings on sn election contest will probably orrnpv tha week Democrats will hold nnwteldv majorities In both branrhes nf the assembly Against their 3d representatives, Republican will occupy onlv 14 scat In the house, and In the senate the Democrats have a 24 to 6 margin. One seat in each branch will he vacant through the session, I ee Knoua of Montrose, Democratic leader In the senate last session, whose term will expire In 1934, resigned following hia election to the supreme eourt. Rep, A. J. McFatlanl, Rocky Ford Democrat died shortly after hla re-There la no election to the house.

pmvislon tn Colorado filling either vacancy. law for It IIOTTI.K BOMB I INVESTIGATE TRAIN CRASH Stringfellow Met Accidental Death On Friday PLANES READY FOR SHIPMENT New York, Jan. 2. (P)ht least 20 crated second-hand American nlrpanes are at North ReHch air poll, Isvng Intend, tonight, air port officiate said, ready for lm- mediate shipment to Spain; and tPll several weeks previous to the moie am expected Matson kidnaping and was in- Thev were described at the air- muded for the abdiution of the 6-port of tho order of 60 planes mar-old son of Mr and Mr, bought bv Robert fuse of Jersey Franklin, who had pnr-CRv, X. which government based Had da wav Hall, the man-leaders hoped to prevent leaving slon of the late P.

Weyei liaeu-the Ended Slates Speedy idlnn fr, grandfather of George Weyer-ls planned after congress convenes haeuser who was kidnaped and All Ready For Construction Of Power Line On hlaiecont return from Washington, I). wlioia he spent a number of (lavs In connection with Ihe fedeial piuiect for the electron allon of farm home In the lower xallev, Oival Herron of Mack, piei-blent of the local eoni-panv, report that all details 'have been agieed to, and that actual rnnatruc thin woik should be underway within a sliorl time While an agieenient ha been reached on all detail connected with th piojecl, there Is still the mailing! hac and forth fiom Washington of the encircled contract. Mr Herron polnled out that It ha been no little job to inncliid the nianv details connected with the prelect a it I In tealilv a lil-piiilv agieenient. Intituling Ihe loan department of the REA fmm whlili the necessary funds will lie borrowed, the Fedeial Engineering eoinpanv of Kana 1 1 who submitted the low hid for the, con 1 1 Hi I i till of the power vstrm and the Public Seivlce companv of t'oloiado who will supply Ihe eleitilial power for the projert. Rids worn opened In this cltv oiilv a few week ago and tha hid of the Fedeial Engineering and I oii-i I action company of Kansas lt.

was srei led bv the dire, tors Denver, Jau. 2 (cP Movmm In support of two chan ge in CoH rado election laws were reports todar as legislators gathered ff opening of the saion Wedne-1, One proposal likely to ba pr duced would prohibit changes registration of party aftiliat after the major political pa have held their state assemblies The second, alan probably tn embodied in a hill, would perm registered voter to return lo ar cat ballots In preclncti o-which they had moved less tu ten aavi before an election. Under the present law, vee who move from one precinct another within ten day of election lose tha right to vote Sponsors said 4he Idea of taring change In partv afflliat "ri after atat assemblies reaul'-from manv voters jrolng Into rival party's primary to vote f-candidates, frequently withe ary expectation of supporting same candidate tn. the enaup general election." Several other poseOvl rhanrs in election statutes were discu ed. One is a requirement that or -voter registered In a precinct mz attend party caiiruaew in that pr rinrt: the other for a head ballot with which, by making i ainele mat k.

an elector could a straight vote for all candidal of one party The "headed ballot" haa he. mentioned as a means of prever lng overcrowding at polling pi aurli aa occurred during the ele. lion last November, when vote were compelled lo bo through i long list of candidate for natter al, elate, Indicial county offices. legislative, ar Flu Epidemic In Denver Closes Public Schools Denver, Jan. 2.

CP The lr; number nf Influenza rasea enuae puhlir snd parochial achm to remain closed next week, of! elate said today. A. L. Threlkeld, public schn. superintendent, said although "Ih epidemic is widespread, he ha been unable to determine ho-many pupils were 111 became schools hare been doled th week.

Denver university, Colorado r. man's college and several Oth schools will not ba closed. What Diseases Do Piles Cause? Dr. A. J.

Marls, chief of tta of th world famou Thornton Minor clinic aaya: "Pllaa ar th direct ran. a of thousands cases of functlnnal troubles stomsrh, liver, kidneys snd bear1. Chronic constipation, colitis, neuritis, loss of memory, loss of and general tired feeling art of-en relieved when rectal trouble' ar cured. Ciacial i If you have riles or otner rectal disorder do not fool yours because aerioui rout plications, te eluding cancer, develop from wl a may appear today as a minor fllctlnn Write today to Tho-n ton A Minor (lime. Suite 25 926 McGee kau-Js tity, Mo (or a free copy of a new l.lustiat ed book which explains 1ica a -a other rectal duea'es and whte' tefla about the successful methods used hv the wot Id oldt By Earl Covin jtoa brought buck tn his parents for a jearago lust summer.

It waa recalled that since the Mattson lud was stolen, It had heroine known that the Fraukltn household bad (wire frightened awav a night prowler last Nnvem- and that th Fianktin family I left shortly for Ixxsv Angeles, oa- teitelhly for a Tll)wpek aParch ot coaH Itc. 0rda disclosed that Anna Mogen, maid In the Franklin home, was committed to a state hospital after hi'antltv hearing December 10 I at which the records showed she testified ehe feared that the house being watched and that she I had seen men with pistols about the place. The newspaper said It acr-wmlng tallied that the soiled and woin next week to bar the shipment to tha Spanish government at alen cla, the purchaser. Mattamt, a telativeof Ihe alidml-il hoy a father, Dr. V.

Matt-t-on 3h offioera then turned to an old tuikev iamb" southwest ol Olympia which was demiibeil Jo being near a posibla hideout amp. N. ltadiliffe also told police lie saw a strangi. automobile con- tabling a man the wood hark of tils home last Tuesday and that it later paeit him and he ob-t-( rve(t either a hoy or a girl" lu It. Seattle offheit aaid they were looking for a man who on being leha-ed re ently from tha "I a Tv' LOIliaCt ncnaiher (Continued Page 1) gun scan hni through brush and along hillside trails oil a bluff', bat of the Mattson homo avow- odiy on their own initiative In a yean li for dues.

Polue iuvestigatois sought the trail of a swarthy bew hiskei ad Therniomrters In downtown Giand Junction at midnight registered a nieicury reading of 13 degree above xero, promising hy intoning; a minimum eiiial In or! letter. Detectives (outinued to 1 1lls was Inter approved In Wash-! below- the wilder lowest leading! bold for (j ucM lolling a foinnr Ington There hen arose die-' 0f six cl eg reos ehova 7ero Palurda i old i ho alk gedly ana ered In pule over whether copper weld morning, t'nntlnued fair and cold ome respects a description of the wire would he used or aluminum the weather buieau foieiast abductor she Tin was settled hv Mr. i for gumlav. llernm while In Washington, wdhj the rnilni semen! of the plans of lu a fruitle-a hunt for clues sente bed a poultiy lamh east of Ulypmia helonglng to John own near Olympia. Laboiatoiy wmkeia turned to au examination of ink specimens to match the fluid used in the lankom Alleged Note To Mattsons Given (Continued fiomPaga 1) rean of identification at aah- mgton, I).

for examination. The newspaper asserted it had discoveied that the note was wilt- note wa left by Chat le Mattson's kidnaper after a man had twne enteied the Franklin home having gntned access to the child's bed room an the first occasion, Nov. 2 4. after crawling up an 1S-foot ladder. Mr.

Franklin, sleeping Ith the child, wa awakened by a flashlight beam as the marauder reachedfor her son. Sh screamed, seised her hov, and ran fiom the room while the intruder clambered down the ladder, abandoning It in hi flight. That tedder, seized bv police, ls considered an important clue In the Mattson kidnaping. The newspaper aald policemen, with sawed-off shotgun, guarded the Ftanklin man Ion for aeveial night hut weie wlthdtawn Nov, 27. Two nights later, the prowler returned again Ftanklin bad engaged a 1 S-vear old hov to steep In the home taring the Mattnn home.

Kceneshurg, Golo Jan. 2 (J) Railroad officials Investigated trpc day an apparent ronfiilou of signals which laused the death of two trainmen and the serious Injury of another In the collision of Iwo sections of a fast Chlrngo, llnrllnetnn Qulncv freight tradn near here lat night. Coroner R. F. Armstrong of Wold counlv said believed L.

Rtarkev, 51, of Ilenver. engineer of the second section Inco-ninllve, and Tom Perrin, 55, Englewood, the fireman, werssmnlh-eied to dealh beuoaih an avalanche of coal which poured from Ihe lender Into the cab K. Hoffman. 3 4, th biake-nien. fiactnird both legs when he leaped before the locomotive swerved off the track Into a six-foot pit.

Armstrong said, Hoffman waa taken to a Iienver lioa pllal. Mercury Remains At Seasons Low Officials Get Promotion' Hen or, Jan. 2. (Th Gem go William of Ilenver ha been pio-, moled from height traffic manager to general traffic manager nf tile Ilenver A Rio 41 rande et-ein railroad, official annnumed tndav William left the Colniadn Sonlhet tailwav, wrher? he started eienographer 47 veais ago, to Join the II A- It. G.

in 19.M GOLOUADOS SHIP OF STATE FLYING DISTKESS SIGNAL Denver, Jan 2, ll Statehnuee 'employe thmixht people ei just lining be funnv when lhv I -I tried phoning, soon after Gov i 11 vv .1 lint took bis oath of n'fice today, lo Inqune If affairs wa a wnthc, corrected aa onn aa thev became, aaara nf It. 1 I I 1 i i Rt. IOtil. Jan. 2.

(IP) A coroner' verdli of an blent wa returned today in the death of Horace S. Stringfellow, 5 4, of Denver, who wa killed early yeetrr-dav tn a fall fiom a indow on the eighth floor of a hotel here. suffeied a defect of vision which made it difficult for him to judge distance, ea-peciallv at night, polbe said. In theorizing that he lost lit balance while attempting to opena window. Stringfellow, executive representative of the Missouri Parifii I-lnes for Colorado and Itah, had come to St.

Louis, Monday to confer with I Baldwin, operating head of the rath oad. He was hotn In Montgomery, Ate, and had been with the Missouri Pacific for 12 years He had formerly lived In St. Louis. Robinson Favors An Amendment (Continued fiom Page 1) al senility act, stiengthen neu'ral-ity lawa, and Impiove farm tenancy condlt ions The leciprixal trade lawa nmat he extended, hut no general tariff lev islon ia In sight. Rohlnon waa neat toned at length about a constitutional amendment.

He said an "amendment mav piove necessary' and that the problem would "lecei.e consideration early In the aea-! sion "Tn nte It Is a very unsatisfactory condition that neither atgtea nor federal government shout 1 have the power to prescribe maximum houia and minimum wages. It la my thought that the power should he established either In the elates or In the rongiex nnd that the dei tsinns nf the supreme mint ptechnle effective legislation without an amendment, Admittedly, such an amend ment would provoke Hindi debate and require a considerable tun. Jt do not prciliide mvclf from etip-poiting ine band herp Thursday nicht but repotted thev had found no trace of the ugif Iv es I I nmio raijv In th Fprlne, rsntlv In r' elm 1 1 a I power In use In in i i'1" lnR of farm hemes after fo 1 1 a Rill ke and h- IXdla Gomex, Imih of t'mbnnda le, and the lot ul (ompanv for the us of th rnp)wr Tlir rnnt mrtlon company will uiulr'r trims of fh contrt hno onlv 1 2f ri for tho roni Patton of tho ft tlm oi Is fimillv 1 it I iid to thm hi should tlo mMimn rnmplMM with Inin- thal Ml nyl JsT Monte Vista, Colo Jen (Th in (hand county offniate nn-nnuinrd toilnv no iniiut would lie held III the (hath of Dini-d 1 1 Main, 2 3 e. 1 1 -old ansa fit ten killed In link slide In the low mine neai Mini uutv ille New tears ve Lester Chapman, 25. of Romeo Colo, was ini'tied when and D'a'ihl Main ei (aught lie neat I oil f-1 tv of 1(0 rlvOH A I KN lltlt "ID 3 lt H.

Amici -on of Kin Hlnnco and Jeanne Sponger nf (iiinitl-im. John 0 Day. 31, alia Ja I1-! ban is In Jail at Pi I tab, I wailing the fumg of ehaicrs of I I nh'jery with fiieami Itev charged willi rnteilng the tivciimF second hand goods stole in supposedly to see a levnlver (li 1 played in Ihe window. He -ked for shells for the gun, and on being supplied loaded the revolvei then tinned it oil ihe pinprrtor of thf slnie (iveitou was for od to wait on rustomr-rs ho sun ird the store, and i aul to have been, Feld uhje ion fnr two hiiiu. i hen he left the thief took a re-! xolver, a rifle, ou.noit and five dollars in money The thief was attested a slinii tune lat" ill a Pro a rest a ii Unt i San Diego, Calif.

Jan. 2. (V) A beer bottle ''bomb" found at th home of former Piesident Plutarco Elia Call or Mexico was fifed thlr rectal troubles ithont nee looselv with Mack Masting pnw-jls surgery, dangerous anaeari1-der. but would not have exploded Dr hospitalization. Corrcpo -and probably would have done pn denie ia confidential and llt aerioua damage If It had.

police jtur la melted under plain wrap-and explosive experts said today. Pr. rectal Institution, swlieia moi Ihsn men and women ha' f-acutrd permanent relief frer hot told othei prisoners he waa armed with a rifle, and was mat heading for bigger things" lie Ing ue of an Iron grille the Wev-j was reported to have mentioned erlieuer. had Installed at the in Malison a name. I the alalia to keep anv one autbnritV'mYr'Nhaubject Detective faptain Cliff Osborne, downstair from gaining accea to pr pf maIlml)m houla and as he would fuither question a.

the -upatalrs sleeping rooms, the wanes" l-veai-old former convl, I de- -totv said. Rnhmaon it wa, hi for Investigation iat The I (vst-lntelllgenceT a i 1 -acmct Inn should he done night when lie attempted to aell a franklin had locked Mi-s Mogen (hp gn(1 hnnr ij Iit downstair room Ihe night ln, nipI ehens.hle," he The man' general appearance ihe prow ler returned About mid- ad(Ip(1 thpre no talllen lu rnanv re-pects with the night tha maid aaw a figure out- gulhortjr t0 protert women or des'iiptlnn c-f tha dark, hew hisk-1 aide. for halt an hour ehe rhldrpn or mP fronl working ered man who aiuaabed hi way watched him a ha a.ked back gny numbpr hour their em- into the Mattson home her, a and forth before th hou. Then I wgn( vr, am and carried off lft-vear-'h strode to a door and shovedj old Charles while three other hla fist through the glass-aa the htdren looked on, poweileea toikidnaprr did last Sunday In en- anv legislation white 1 n.av become convinced will make possible the reasonable rontiol hy be irf shout Judge (teoi ge Donkin Then aomentia thought to look) pi oh 1 1 1 on tod i inli neat the tall f'agpole atop tha cap- Dmivci s.ihstman n- Itol s' main enhance. From I i 1 1 to ei life tei ma for I an Aimiuau flag, fix Ing nl aping a nd all at king a Dei ver upide How the radi' mnal aig- 1 0' of ditie on atrip at sea tildv nf the I 1'ert i bed hn-ie cu of Mai- Indiana exp'ained tn Governor 12 of e'ate were In distress.

Talbot it ail epyQ Qf J'lJk-q BIF Mr r.w -Awplnall. tee of Rpprevrnut IV A'plnall, was reported re-itg mm al Man hospital lte veoFt( toe guilt ripe of th fte has nillrsllv Ilf frt, "im Mature acme fme and her manv fi tends 11 1B 111" 81 a hoping for a speedy recoveiy, woman I 'Ihe loiirt a icvidiiop npjLJtieed him Sioux Fall', Jan. 2. (T1) i Hloux Falls police continued tonight effort to pick up the ttaili IN PLANE CRACKUr, found the prowler on thestairwav of a desperate gangster trio (- grtilv'. The man walked Mamed for the powder magazine execution of a fourth member of Th falling glass awakened the1 Franklin household Th vcuilh-, fill guard turned on (be light nd 11 fN i-oc appi ov Word has been received In Montlt lUo.

Owlll to of inntni Da ml pofim the lulus in ti a he tuuuels. I MK FU KI.L Hben mmi to striojl yon PMII'HT KI-1IH Jon nf (OsT, Our i molrri. oiir mpthonlrs qulk nnd effb irnt. Try you'll plonked! it i hamiiM for Ift'wJ i mi hi via Moah nd nurangr) 4 1 ihp Inf mg -sby mow of tn thank manv'thp tHrfon road, hid1 to tv! and rrlafhr ho fi 0, huikpn wnnw Kind to us rt'irinji th it'nf'M nf'ai Mn t-rrln, snd' clf'ath of our fathrr sni brother on Un ir Th trucks Hiharrl i sin, ws a it 1 mjr of i.nnd June Kiod lin and for s. Mrs Ai hr Thompson, Dana roup a vf aas net hrld lip at that iko tru nf r- Munford, Ala Jan.

J. (4) Th a bodus of two iorvl( offuen Kianklin strpppd from his room 1 (11Hl th, lu.ined'iMfl back to get, Then lulled IIiniNClf, wreckage of an armv- PrH hfwr.fU- Ouis.de. umlr the leam or a stiet llg'vt the man halted: the guard thrust his rifte out 0f open win-low. the prowter fired one spot and wa'ked awav- as the hov d-opprd below the w-ndo ledge for a fetv. 1 Iolu-p said Gever bad killed b-s radioed a nearby CCC camp thxt! C-lna is being re'itiorcd to mother and then committed a-ri-t the wreckage waa aighted exi 'v pub a ban on exports of wheat.

hv Mnldime himolf 4n llm moinine. TtOlllKi It TUs 111,1 In Inv 1 i ti, 1 Mill not be responsible for anv lo (te Daitimnie jeuutlii.g Main pew tn.hvav aie to he di l(s uiadr bv any tnf mvself, A jgoucUuvted lu Geimacy Urulle It. Miller, i Stablod Ajcd Mother shaking the grille Dalton. Owen, Deloies ind Kdua Foster, Mis ('hatlpw Mpthn', 'Dp John ismbaur, J. B.

Fcsier. 550 (ld. 1.

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