The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 8, 1921, Page 1

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. Generally Fair THE BIS V BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, » JUNE 8, 1921 AT WIFE’S FUNERA AUTO CARAVANS | ARE TRAVELING |* <S3ay | UNDER GUISE OF BOOZE VENDORS ae on P lic Invited . To,Witness H.S. - Pageant Tonight The second annual pageant ‘of the Senior class of the high echool FOR SLAYER OF POLICE SEARCH | CK TRIBUNE Laue Last Edition — PRICE FIVE CENTS OUT EARLY ADMIRAL SIMS STIRS SENATOR THROUGH CITY will be presented at 7:30 o'clock this evening on the state capitol - “DOCTORS SCORED ~ GIRL IN FARGO | WITH ADDRESS Thousands Will Pass Over The Red Trail Before the Sum- mer is Ended ENJOY LOCAL GAMP SITE Bismarck People Fibd Pleasure! . in Welcoming and Visiting With Tourists . ” ‘Auto tourists. are beginning to pass) through the city in large numbers. abe Almost every night there are vis-| itors in local hotels: and at the free} camping site east of the city provided ‘by the Commercial club ang Town) Criers. ‘Many Bismarck residents are visit. ing the camping grounds in the even-} ing. to extend a welcome hand to the visitors,.and the visits are much ap- Preciated. Usually, too, the tourists have very interesting stories to tell. The camp site is believed td be one! of the best along the National Parks) Highway, although in some cities shelter houses, The grove, General Von Hindenburg, former commander of the German armies, is ; Shown with a relative at the funeral grounds? is‘a beautiful spot, and ‘offers, of his wife, who died recently at @ quiet, cool place at night for the! Hanover. tired tourist. Facilities for. cooking, | @ free telephone, information and’ other. conveniences are provided. , Several Parked There Last night visitors at the camp site! 4 i found several cars parked there. One| M ET HE RE party was. traveling from Duluth to: 4 Portland, Ore.. One man was travel-| ing to a North Dakota point on the /: Canadian border. Another party was| ys ¢ from Piaza, N. D., to California, and : there were two or three parties which; ~ . tee had. retired for the night. ! d a The night before the visitors at the! State Meeting Will Be Held In camp included a party of tourists: . from Massachusetts. .A lady in the! Bismarck on Saturday, party confided that she felt that the! June11 trip would be all right if she did not! e encounter any Indians or “bad men’; — traveling through North Dakota and The North Dakota Wheat Growers Montana, She had been agreeably sur-' association will hold a meeting in Bis- prised, she admitted, to learn’ that marck, N! D., on Saturday, June 11, it she was traveling through a véry mod-' js announced. faget? ern country, where she met courte; N.K. Wick, a farmer of Eddy coun- ous people on all sides. One party of ty is the state organizer and has start- four which stopped af the camp: was eq a big drive to.pool thirty million traveling from Idaho to Calgary, Can-) hyshels of a ada. They had left Calgary last’ itn” North: Dakota wheat by: July year, toured through the southern! 4 , ates, apent the winter in California,’ over coanty ehtoe chat one in ie qpring bss gene aba wore Toul: within, the, pe thirty days. These pay ae es yi meetings are held Yor the ‘purposé ‘of Roads: through (North Dakota are ‘2°" about the best porate by tourtats,’ enplatiing: ne 1 per cent compul- ‘according to their reports,’when the: 2°7Y Pooling of wheat. A. Slaughter, yugh: 2 farmer of Oklahoma, also natione! weather is fair. They encounter rug! | organizer, will speak here. soing in rainy weather, however. Mr. Wicks is in charge of.the drive ‘What Tourists Spend | for, membership in the Wheat Grower's Thousands of tourists will pass over; organization and actual wheat growers the National Parks Highway-this year.| are selected: from different places, It has been estimated that each tour: speakers as well as solicitors. Wheat ist which stopped for the night in Bis: growers only can join this association. marck spends an average of $7, either, The North Dakota Wheat Grower's for hotel accommodations, food, gaso-| association is organized under the line, ofl or other necessities or luxi-; Aaren Sapira plan, it is stated. ries of the trip. Thousands‘of dollars 3 ———— will be spent in the city during the AL JOLSON AND summer by tourists and local boost-| ers are extremely anxious that aii tourists be accorded the most courte-| ous ‘treatment possible so that they; | President of American Medical, WHEAT GROWERS will not fail to speak a good word al the city wherever they may go, One of the tourists camped at the 150 ARE COMING site last night did not quite under-' «stand an experience he had. He had/ driven his car, a make frequently used/ by whiskey runners into the city. The) tonneau: wes, loaded with | canvass; camping equipment. A man ankonwn; to ‘him: stepped © <up "and ‘searched | President of the World of Fun, with through the car without explanation.) his brilliant company of 150 people, A description of the man identified; under the direction of the Messrs. Lee him as a state officer. The tourist! and J. J, Shubert, wili be seen in laughed when visitors explained that; the elysian extravaganza -of oriental the officer undoubtediy, was searching, splendor, “Sinbad” at the Auditorium, for contraband booze. Friday, June 17: Appear at Auditorium “President of World of Fun” to! seein | Al Jolson, who has been hailed as! \°% Association Pays Respect to Liquor Licensed Physician RIGHT TO BE WELL BORN ( |City Rears Healthiest Children, ‘hools Them Better Than ral Communities 1 ig) Boston, June 8—The promiscous ; Prescriber of alcohol licensed as a | Physician, but whose ethical sense j would degrade a|bartender, the per- functory prescriber fora fee, the ven- der of habit-forming drugs, all are ‘educated criminals, a social menace, by posing as physicians, Dr. Hubert Work, of Pueblo, Celo., president, teld the American Medical association con- vention here today. “These physicians’ are tolerated by the public,” he continued, “because of the integrity, efficiency and self-abne- : gation of a majority of medical mev |8o great that these derelicts almost ‘escape notice. “I sometimes fear t | Ourselves as dictators. i ters, when in realy at ie | the demands of the public. Wevahout remember that numerically we are a one in 800 among ‘the peole ‘and thal our calling has. already been granted | many, privileges, some of which are | being betrayed. $7 | “Physicians are indifferent to quack- ;ery as a competitor in all its phases. ; Charlatans have no place in rational ‘medicine. They are adventures, sup- ' ported by people who court deception , for the ercitement of it, and who are lured by the mysteries of ignorance. | “Thoughtful men believe that crisis threatens established principles, | and that physicians must now earnest- i ly address themselves to the cause and | the prevention of disease and disabil-; ity ag the primary concept of medicine, | saleguarding its principles, lest the | Profession lose its esprit de corps, and its plac¢ in public esteem. If its mem- bers become piece workers, it may fail of public appreciation as an essential economic factor in the preservation ot | the national wealth, because of a de preciating national health. Our medi- cal outlook must then he hased on _pub- Mc welfare; and the function of the physictan should be not only to treat, but also to prevent disease in the families ‘under his care, and in the community ‘of which he is a-part. xereises Functions. “Years ago the general practitioner conceived his duty to be that of a healer only. He regarded disease as ineyitable, if not indeed providentia'. | Later he advised his clientele how to avold it. Both of these functions he | continues to exercise; but a new fleld Presents itself; medical men must jnow combat disease in the mass. With- j{n recent years our lay press has in- | dicated a welcome interest in matters Pertaining to public health. “Our people regard it in a new light, as a virile, organized force, quite in- dependent of the sick chamber of hos- pital environment. ‘They see in the Practice of medicine the possible ap- plication of civil morals by those skill- {ed in healing,—and more. They.-tow | urge that it must include the larger field of civic service for those who are well; for social morals should protect against disease, as well as cure it, and business thrift has come to recognize | medicine as ati essential in‘ public pol- 1 “The practice 6f medicine demon- |ates some men to the exclusion of ; many things that broaden and sweet- en life. To boast of no knowledge out- side a specialty, to smother interest in cultural arts or collateral sciences, to ignore the spiritual distinction be- tween men and animals, is to invite grounds. * \ More than 75 Seniors and other. students of the high school will appear in the pageant, “The For. est Princess.” Beautiful costumes have been obtained for the char- acters. The pageant includes dancing and music. The book is a beautiful fairy story. The high school orchestra will play, Z “The For Princess” is. the mest elaborate pageant that has ever been attempted by the high school. A cordial invitation to the public to witness the pageant is extended. , WINTER WHEAT" ESTIMATE IN BIG DECREASE New Department of Agriculture Figures Cut Yield 51,000,- Bushels une 8A drop. forecast of %j4 ture issued today. "i The ‘crop was forecast from June '1 conditions at 578,600,000 bushels while from May. 1 conditions it. was estt- mated at 629,000,000 bushels. 1 According to the estimate issued today the condition of June 1 and the acreage planted are as follows; Spring wheat, production, 251,000,- 00 bushels, condition 93.4. Acreage 18,023,000. (Winter wheat, production forecast, 578,000,000 bushels. Condition 77.9. All’ wheat production,,.. 830,000,000) Condition 82 perces; Nr 744,000, Osts, production, s! els. Condition 85.7. 00. 165 ARRESTED IN 5 MONTHS BY THE POLICE Report of Chief Shows Unusual Number of Calls on De- partment Acreage 44,829, ‘The police department made 165 ar- rests during the period from January 1.to June 1, according to the report filed with the city commission by Chief of Police Martineson, Thirty arrests were made in Janu- ary, #6 in February, 26 in March, 31 in April and 32 in May.| Of this num- ber 150 were men and 15 were women. Drank. disorderly conduct and speeding were the..most numerous charges, There were 47 arrests on charges of being drunk, 44 for disor derly conduct and -26 for speeding. Other charges included drunk and reckless driving, vagrancy, slander, gambling, desertion from army, sell- ing: liquor, assault and battery and robbery. The police answered 364 calls in the period, investigated 57 complaints re- ceived 20 calls from health and quar- antine officers, found 37 lost children, closed 12 doors of business houses found open at night, sent five girls under 14 away from public dances, Apprehend the Brutal Murderer GIRL IS IDENTIFIED Body of Girl Slain in Hotel Room 'Fargo, June 8.—There is no evi- | dence to conne:t H. J, Hagen, for- mer president of the Scandinav- lanAmerican Bank of Fargo, with the murder here early Tuesday of Marie Wick, William ©. Green, states attonney of Cass county, “gaid In a statement today. “Mr. 1 Hagen’s finger-prints are not the same as those on the walls of the room where the crime was com mitted and his body bears no marks‘of struggte,” the statement says. | _ Fargo, June silent today on the capture of tix who early yes- -|terday morning assaulted’and beat (¢ death Marie Wick, of G!vgla, Minn., ia va room in a local hotel. Scandinavian-American bank. of, Fargo, occupiei‘a room next that of the mur- dered girl, Monday night, “Juat having returned from a journey. He askel ine his finger prints and compare them | of the room where the killing occur- j his body to establish that it bore no marks of struggle. County authorities were looking for a man who was reported to have plays ed cards with Miss Wick on the train Monday night. The girl’s. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hans Wick, are in Fargo. The murder is one of the most sen- sational which ever happened Here and has given rise to much discussion and many rumors, f Came From Crookston, Miss Wick came to Fargo Monday evening from Crookston, arriving ou the Great Northern local. She reg- fetered at the Prescott hotel shortly after 10 o'clock; ;Qad- was assigned] room 30‘0n the second floor. A young Authorities Silent on Efforts To Parents Reach Fargo to Take} H. J. Hagen, former president of the authorities today, they said, {to exam- | with those on the blood-spattered wall red. He also asked them to examine! between Crookston, Minn., and, Fargo; : Secretaries Hoover and, Wallace ‘President Harding strolled up Penn- sylvania avenue, Washington, the other day for an hour’s conference with Chairman Clark of the Intérstate Commerce Commission, on freight rates. The president gets busy. early, The clock here shows 10:05 as he walks back to the White House, after: the meeting. And he had to wait 15 minutes for Clark! GOVERNMENT T0 U. S. Navy Officer Discusses Irish Question at Dinner In London McCORMICK IN PROTEST Secretary Denby Wires Admiral Asking if he Were Cor- rectly Quoted Washington, June 8—Senator Mc- Cormick, Republican, Illinois, com- plained formally to President Harding today and Secretary Denby about the address delivered in London yesterday by Rear Admiral Sims in which he die- cussed the Irish question. The senator asked Secretary Denby to take disciplinary measures against the admiral. He did not see the pres- ident, but asked ‘Secretary Christian to.call the address to the attention of the executive. s On leaving the White House Senator McCormick declared that the admiral's serene was “disgusting and unauthor-. Admiral Sims was quoted in pits dispatches received here as havi said that there were many persons in the United States wlio Aechnically were Americans “but non@ of them Americans at all.” “They are Americans when the; want money,” the admiral said, “but @ Sinn Feiners when on the platform.” ASKS IF QUOTED CORRECTLY. Washington, June 8.—Secretary Den- by instructed Rear Admiral Sims to- day to advise the navy department im- mediately by cable as to whether he Was correctly quoted in press accounts of an address he made to the English- speaking union in London. GAG RULE REMOVED, ASK IMPROVED GRAIN STORAGE y Call Elevator Represent. i atives : nly ‘Washington, June’. &—Secretaries man was with her and they went out] Hoover and Wallace. have asked rep- together and came back in about an} resentatives of various farm organiza-| hour. Miss Wick gave the night clerk’ tions, grain elevators and dealers, in- orders to call her-at 7 yesterday morn-! surance ‘companies and other associa- ing as she was to take the Northern -Pacific train for Pettioone, N. D. The young man then left and thc girl went to her;room alone. As far as the authorities have been able to ascertain this wag the last she was geen alive by anyone except the one who took her life. Last evening a young man giving his name as Arnold’ Rasmussen called at the. police station. He said that he wag a friend of the dead girl, and showed a letter from her which he re- ceived on Monday. In this letter Miss ‘Wick asks Rasmussen to meet her at the depot and show her around, as she | warehoyse certificates that could be had never been in Fargo before. The} tions interested to attend a confer- ence here June 13 to consider a plan for improving grain storage methods, the commerce department announced. It is proposed, the department ex- plained, to provide a method by which farmers could be given unlimited stor-| age facilities for grain and receive used-as'an order for the delivery of the grain. 1 If such a plan can be made practi- cal, the department asserted, it will increase greatly the farmers’ borrow- ing power and relieve him of the pres- sure of selling his grain except at his. own option. It was contended | the farmers would be enabled to haul h h letter says that she was going throug | grain at the time of greatest farm to visit friends in Pettibone, N. D. : Met Her as Requested. Rasmussen told the police that he met the girl, and, escorted her to the Prescott hotel which had been recom: mended to her, she told him, by some one on the train. He sald that after she had registered they went out and ‘had some ice cream together and that ‘the left her later at che hotel. Ras- mussen is employed on street work in Moorhead. Following the discovery of the mur- Sell at that time. economy without being compelled to In addition, the department declared the farmer's cre- dit would be extended beyond his lo- cal bank and place him in the same position as to credit as the grain dealer. NEW BUILDING Many of the tourists are people of; moderate means, showing that one must not necessarily have large means to enjoy a cross country trip. STATE SCHOOL OFFICERS BUSY Delivering Many Commence- ment Addresses in State Pate i Minnie J. Nielson, state superin- tendent of public instruction, returned to the city yesterday after delivering five commencement addresses, ~ in Sykeston, Starkweather, Egeland and the Johnson Consolidated schools in Towner. county, and conducting a school officers’ meeting ‘in. Norma township, Barnes county. She leaves today for Linton, and will present dip- lomas at exercises of the “county schoos following “Play Day” on June 9. Miss Bertha ‘Palmer, assistant state on the Elks swimming pool. superintendent; A.-C. Berg, rural school inspector; and Mrs, Emma Golden, community singing leader, will leave Friday to conduet a series of school officers’ meetings in Grant, Morton, Mercer, Oliver, Dunn_and Stark counties. England Friday night, and also will! speak at ‘Wabek. €. J. Taylor, of the state superin- tendent’s office, delivered the com- mencement address at Hankinson high school last Friday-night and on 'Sat-| urday addressed a meeting at Foreman. schoo! officers’ KILLED IN PLANE CRASH, Huntington Beach, Calif, June 5.— One person was killed and. eight in- Jured when an airplane engaged in stunt flyiig crashed to the. beach here ia the midst of a throng of spectators. Miss Palmer makes! the commencement address at New) or elaborate magnitude and spec- | tacularism, this Winter Garden tra- vesty. “Sinbad”, with its star, Al Jol- son, the world’s greatest and foremost navigator of fun, “welcomed at every port by cheering crowds, encounter- ing only storms of approval,” is un- ! doubtedly the Winter Garden's su- Ppreme achievement. ‘Not only have the receipts for this attraction sur- | Passed anything known for extrava- ganza but they have overtopped any other theatrical offering known to the American stage. In the two seasons thatMr. Jolson has been appearing in “Sinbad” he has appeared in but ten cities outside of New York and | his receipts have been unprecedented. In ‘New York alone he played in four theaters all last year. | i { A wee tot of a boy—about 4 or 5 years of age—toddled up to John L. Larson, in charge of the work i He held outa toy shovel. “I want to work on the swim- min’ pool,” he said proudly. Mr. Larson could hardly restrain a smile—yet who could smile at | the expression of such a sentiment on the part of a kiddie? Every afternon after school, there are a lot of school kiddies at the swim- ming pool site in Custer park, between | Main and Broadway, and many of them | bring little shovels/ Nothing .perhaps has inspired the kiddies of Bismarck so much as the great voluntary effort to provide then |with a place to splash and swim. | Those who saw the kiddies’ perform: \ing at the Rex theater last night for {the benefit of the pool could not help jbut feel that they were acting for a j cause in which they believed. Adults who will Avork on the swim: | professional deterioration and exclu- ight children for violation of sion from the highest concepts of che took ‘mp.clgnt ch the curfew law, and attended to nu- merous other duties, the report shows. der yesterday morning, Miss Alice body as that of a \Miss Wick who} worked .in: Fargo, about two years! 4-YEAR-OLD KIDDIE WANTS 10 | BEGIN WORK ON SWIMMING POOL. | profession. ie 4 ite Tendency, | “No thought is entertained of mini- | mizing the importance of individual or | isolated achievements. 1 wish, rather | to deprecate the tendency to attract attention.to them, to neglect of the lar- | ger things in medicine, sonecessary to ; retain public confidence in our pro- | fession, and to secure co-operation of | physicians instead of their dissocia- | tion, now threatened, largely through special societies, which is tending to obscure medicine as & national asset. “The city now rears the healthiest children, and schools them better, of- (Continued on Page’ 3) ming pool when needed are asked to register their names with John L. Lar- son or L. K. Thompson. Preliminary. work is being done now but in a few days therg will be a call for voluftary labor, and lots of it A check for $152.15 was turned oyer! to the Elks committee, the entire ad- mission fees of the benefit perform- ace given at the Rex theater last night. The Elks band played before the show. The “Little Wonder” or- chestra furnished music during the show. Nine kiddies from the Wili school: Marion Curran, Jean Cras- well, Evelyn Loubek, Neva Uettel, Ly!e Mayer, Betty Haliday, Jimmie Gard- ner, Joe Woodma' and Isobel Gor- don, appeared in singing, dancing ani talking specialties, \gnd motion pic- tures were shown. | The Elks committee expressed itself as very grateful to ihe kiddies, the! band members and to the management for the.interest taken in the benefit and for tso financial success. | The value of stolen property recov- ered during the period was placed a‘ $870.58, It was one of the busiest periods in the police department in many years. STUDENT PARADE 10 BE PROBED State Board Members to Visit University at Grand Forks An investigation into a recent “night- shirt parade” of men students at the University of North Dakota at Grand Forks will be made by the state board of administration, it was decided by the board, following a long discussion of the incidents reported to have at- tended the college prank, Three board R. H. Muir, were expected to leave for Grand:Forks soon. . It was stated by board members that reports of the affair had been obtained through newspaper stores and in Iet- ters of complaint, and while it was not known whether the affair was of such a nature as to demand action the board decided to investigate. GERMANS MAKE ALLIED PAYMENT . ‘New York. June 8—The German | governenent made another payment on the allied reparations account, re- Ported to be about $14,500,000, ago. A member of the police force also declared that he recognized the body. She had no police record, bowever, it was said. A search of the.goom and sur- rounding premises revealed that the murder had been committed by hit- ting the girl over the head with the brass nozzle of the fire hoye which hangs in the hall. This discovery was made’ when it was found that the noz- zle had blood and hair on it. It bore marks of attempts to clean it off and (Continued on Page 3) | ed -Presg.)—Pueblo, swept by floods i late last week, today began getting | back to a “peace basis” in earnest. | Relief work was rapidly being sys- | temized, local workers being assisted by eastern Red Cross officials. The lighting system was being steadily | improved and with the expected in- | stallation today of a water purifier an- | other problem will be solved. A refugee committee was ready to receive the homeless today. More | than 200 tents were set up yesterday | and in addition a complete field hos- pital was available for refugees who | might require medical attention. The camp will contain 300 tents when com- | pleted, each with a tapacity of six | single cots. | Col. Patrick J. Hamrock announced that refugees would begin moving | from the courthouse, high school and, and ‘arrived here at 2 a. m. 300 TENTS TO HELP HOUSE HOMELESS OF FLOOD-STRICKEN PUEBLO WHILE ARMY WORKERS BRING IN PROVISION, membezs, Geo. Totten, J. 1. Cahill and; Puebio, June 8.—(By the Associat-; Expect to Finish: St. Mary’s Addition by Fall Work on the new $60,000 addition to St. Mary’s parochial school has started. Contractors are expected to have the new two-story building complete by the opening of the next school year. The school will have a Broadway as} well as a Ninth street entrance when the addition is completed. Colwell- Long company, of St. Paul, is erect- ing the building, RRR RAR AAR, other public buildings to the refugee camp today. ‘Twenty-five army workers are here; from Denver, Colorado Springs, and)‘ Trinidad and the mess for the refugee) camp has been turned over to them,| They brought two carloads of provi- sions. from Denver and will be sup-! plied with all food needed for the refugees by the citizens committee. | Colonel ‘Hamrock estimates that} there are more than 2,000 homeless in| the city. FIRST TRAIN TO DENVER | Denver, Colo., June 8.—The first’ train to leave Pueblo since the floods of last week arrived in Denver early, today, bringing 375 refugees and tour-| ists who were marooned there. The} train, which came in over the Santa- Fe tracks, left Pueblo late yesterday Washington, ‘June —A general or- der removing the- alluged “gag rule” from the navy has ben approved by Secretary Denby, it is understood, and will be issued soon. Jt is now in the hands of the printer y In effect, it is said, the order pro- vides that hereafter officers may write for publication without submitting their articles to the censorship of the lavy department. Certain Lsiphlarare -arerimapaed. regard articles affecting intevantionsl: relations, it is understood. Officers, liowever, will bo held responsible for any. statements they may make. ATTACK POLICE LORRY. Dublin, June 8.—(By Associated Press.)—Dublin streets Were swept by bullets for 20 minutes this morning, fol- lowing an attack with revolvers and bombs on a police lorry. Five constables were wounded dur-. ing the attack and some civilians also were wounded, OBSERVANCE OF “FLAGDAY JUNE {4 1S URGED Proclamation is Issued by Ex- ecutive Calling For Obser- vance a A proclamation urging observance of Flag day, June 14, has been issued by Governor Frazier, as follows: “That our commonweath may fitting- tingly observe the one hundred and forty-four the birthday of the Stars and Stripes, I hereby designate, Tuesday. the fourteenth day of June, of the Present year as Flag day, and direct \ that this day be dedicated to exercises appropriate to the ideals for which out colors stand; that the flag be display- ed from public buildings and the homes and that flags be worn on that day. , “In these times of international stress the responsibilities of citizen- ship demand our keenest attention qnd fullest co-operation that’ the princi- ples for which our fathers and broth- ers fought and died may not be lost sight of, that selfish interests may not be confused with the common good, and that profiteering and profiteers who prey and fatten on the vitals of our nation, may be’ kept outside the pale of the confidence and respect of the patriotic, liberty and home loving citizens of North Dakota. “In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and the seal of the state this fourth day of June, A. D. 1921. LYNN J. FRAZIER, Governor. (Seal.) By the Governor: Thomas Hall, Secretary of State. SUPREME COURT WILL ADJOURN FOR 2 MONTHS Beosriiceer ay § The supreme court will be in vaca- tion during July and August, Chief Justice J. E. Robinson said today, fo!l- lowing opening of the June term of court. Appeals filed with the court from now on during the,summer will not be heard until the September term. There are 14 cases on the June cal- endar. “We will not begin our vacation un- til all case of the June term have beeu decided,” said Justice Robinson.

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