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WEATHER FORECAST Mostly cloud; jt and d- nesday; not tm innge. ® ESTABLISHED 1873 % — FLORIDA MAN IS WHIPPED BY . | ware UNMASKED MEN fae: .: 1s Blindfolded and Taken to a i Lonely Spot Fifteen Miles From Tampa ' BODY SHOWS LASHINGS { Police Believe That Domestic Trouble Was Cause of the Whipping Tampa, Fla., March 9.—@#)—Dud- ley Read, photographer who was tak- en from his home here ‘and severely # beaten by a band of un-masked men last night, returned home this morn- ing. He displayed nw | on tea Be rag aye merous wounds The victim told police that his abductors took him to a lonely spot about 15 miles from Tampa and whipped him wish a wide leather strap, He ‘was blindfoldeda Read’s-hips and back were swollen and bleeding. Detectives said he had been struck probably 50 times. Be Two Autos Uned 6ad, who is 31 years old, said his abductors came to his home about 9 v'clock last night in two automobiles. Mrs. Margaret Read, his mother, an- swered the door bell. She was con- fronted by three men, one of whom wore a badge, and said he was a de- ff with a warrant for Read’s FRAZIER AND BYRNE DISCUSS BALLOT FORM Question Is Whether Nye or Hanna Will Have Party Designation The form’ of ballot to be used in the election of a senator for the short term was diseussed here toda at a conference between Roy Frazic le county, chairman ‘of the Non. partisan Republica state central’ committee, and Secretary of State Robert Byrne - Thi sked to sec the warrant and ‘was told to tell it to the sheriff. The men whisked him into the first of the ing automobiles. Arriving at their destination, the abductors forced their victim from the car and, after lashing him, left him by the roadside with the remark question to be determin that if he didn’t abandon a divorce j Frazier said, is whether Gerald P. action which he had recently started, | Nye, Nonpartisan incumbent appuin they would take him out again and ed by Governor Sorlie to serve until nearty kill him. jthe special election in June, or After walking eight miles he Hanna, ngminee of the “Real” or caught @ ride into town and reached| Coolidge Republicans, should appear his residence abou’ four o'clock this|under the Reput party designa- morning ¢ tion or whether should run’ i y designation. Read's Family Arrested ye lists himself as a Republican! After hearing Read's story, Chief’ and, according to Frazier, would be; of Police Carter ordered the arrest us ‘much entitled to the party d of Read's wife, her mother, father’ sii jon as would Hanna. and brother, and detained them at!" He hag, proposed to Hanna police headquarters 4 ending an in-! friends, Fi r said, that both ++ vestigation. ‘They declared they knew| qidates ar Bald party enlanee| nothing about the: attack. tion: He probably will see, Hanna! et Dudley Read, 26, is a feature or his friends in a few days, he sai iis’. teacmanihiveny Acedia and will jdewand such an agreement tuted divorce proceedings, naming lay Call Convention John Kelly, a friend of his, as co ! t¢no agreement is reached, he s rgspondent. Kelly and Read contin. ne will call a state Republican con-{ a vention 0 endorse a candidate to! u S\run under the Republican emblem nid Kelly’ hed Ucen' If auch a call is issued, he said, it etree ee : oat provide oe Hisaliie and county ‘ conventions and finally a state con notte cesinae Rea make n0' vention to make the endorsement 's wife or her Mss peonte, pending sh inquiry today, but Delegages would be chosen on the { { id,| ued to be friends, Kelly living Read’s home and ee iy him in work. flogged Reports s ecently | . 4 basis df the vote for governor the Sree ine a ieuitic troublee | Hast. election, ‘he said, thus, giving 3 Nonpartisans in the western part of, Read was reported to haye told the chief tha the state a majority and insuring the selection of Nye as the official party cheice. The only reason he doesn’t cull the convention without attempting to reach an agreement on a non-pi ballot, Frazier said, is that s convention would cost Nye's friends he had been “forced into the marriage.” over $5,000 in the shape of railroad] fare and other personal expenses. Proposals made by Hanna’s friends that he call mass county convention Frazier said, “have been rejected. “If mass conventions were ‘called the heaviest represntation would be from the towns and Hanna might get! the endorsement,” Frazier said. “But under the system T propose to fol- low, if I cannot reach an agreement, it almost certainly would yo to Nye. We are willing to make the race without having either candidate ap- pear under the Republican emblem but if any one candidate appears there it is going to be Nye.” At the Nonpartis convention here in February, Frazier was ap- pointed by’ the state central commit- tee to handle the nominating peti- tions of Nye and the Nonpartisan candidates for congress in the second and third districts. Seattle Voters to Say If Woman Shall Be Mayor STILL SIFTING UP PRACTICALLY POLYGAMIST ONLY WORK COUNTS VARIOUS JUSTICE , By ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright, 1926). _The Wall Street invalid was still sitting up yesterday. Brokers loans were smaller, spring lamb stocks were thrown over for lack of margin and that eased the situation. Railroads discovered that every thing, from the administration on down, favors more mergers. Great economies in operation will result, and even if the public does not get its share of the savings, the coun- try will gain. Waste injures all. Bishop Manning, head of the Prot- estant Bp jcopal church in New York, denouncing divorce in high society, says it means “practical polygamy.” In one year there were only 57 di vorces in Canada against 112,036 in the United State: ‘ Some questions How does the bishop expect high society to amuse itself if it gan’t get, an occasional divorce? fe Would the average of high social morality be any better if men and women, disliking ct other, were compelled to remain* married? Is not man naturally a polygamous animal, reverting to polyg my when economic pressure is removed, as in high socigty Seattle, March 9. here today went to the polls to de- cide whether they want a woman for mayor. Mi Bertha K. Landes, president of the city council an city’s first woman mayoralty candi- date, is opposing Edwin J. Brown, mayor for the past {wo years. it the same time the voters may | écide they don’t want » mayor and! approve of a proposal to abolish that office by the substitution of a city, manager system, If this propos carri neither Mrs. Landes nor ale Brown would Reuben Hofman, aged twenty-eight, | BF serve as mayor, ‘ough elected, as the new plan would ters. cape shot himielf to death, leaving word) necome effective June 7, when) The injunction told the policemen aoiticned ales the fuct| Brown's present term expires. }what they could and could not do in a failure. that he “never worked much for fear slave of himself.’ of a slave, he failure. that work is while. Miss DeWolfe to Be i - Married Tomorrow New York, March 9.-(P)---Romance- has come at 61 into the life of one of New York's most notable women, Miss Elsie DeWolfe, and sogiety ru much surprised. She is to be mi ried in Paris tomorrow to Sir Charles Mendl, head of the press section of the British embassy. Formerly an actress and producer, she has in récent ass been suce ful.as_an interior decorator. She is an intimate friend of Miss Anne Mor- P. Morgan. ~ gay the engag ment was announced to a small roup of friends at a teu given in ris by Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt. to realiz Ing, worth Different kinds of justice are need- ed for different kinds of peonle, to rule “inferior races” successfully, as Bethe beantitul da 1M “The beau nei 7 tax Begum, ran away trom Sitaherayan yf Indore snd adopted tector, very rich, Al wie. Thugs. hired by the Mahi murdered poor and mgtil pie fae of the itch girl, destroying her beauty. ig ay oe _ Britain) promised Feniarel even, ree un ortant men were inged, four: di red |. The Mahara- jah,’ real jis the only other. pro: . justice. The moon moves around the earth J. Wehe, was signed b inst ! prepare plans and specification un ject, a -P)~-Voters every 27.32 days, WTEN KNOWN DEAD IN | BEAUTY TREATMENTS AID DERANGED MINDS Patients at the Missouri state hospital for theinsane, St. Joseph, Mo., are getting a ne Dr. J. H.. Parker, superintendent, holds that marcel waves and facial m ‘women’s minds, and now there’s a busy beauty p: rlor in the institu Property Owners Petition For One 7 y sub-committees of both the Block of Mains aysembly and the council were at | work, and they were dealing with Property owners on Theyer street.) . routine matters. There was, how- between Mandan and Washington . ever, no cessation in the gonversa- hues, presented a petition to the tions among the delegates regarding commission last night, asking the in- tion surrounding permanent | stallation of water mains along th i block. The petition, presented b KE, F. Trepp, E. C. Heekenleible, F SA EChHE DA NRSTGNa Mr. . none until the return of Aristide | Peeks’ hoy CUM AR ui ihe | Accepts Mandate From {ifind. who left Sunday. nigh. for Nock, according to Mr. Wehe, are ati President Doumergue Paris to discuss the crisis brought; present supplied by ch is of insufficient capac previde water for the balance the block. Those alread there are also greatly incon municipal swimming poo City Auditor M.-H. AU eted to have the cit estimate of the cost of this TWO HELD FOR AN ALLEGED POISON PLOT! d, Mysterious Deaths of Wom- | an’s Husband and Man’s Wife to Be Probed Flora, Ilinois, March fm ivestigation into the deaths of M Laura Malinsky and Ajbille Bible bed having occurred 26, and the information forming basis of the murder charges was taine last December 11, and analysis of v organs. Little is known by authorities con- — man delegation here is concerned. cerning the death of Bible, who died |. ‘e ‘Foe This was made clear today by a sbout a year and a half agu. His! Wealthy Sportsman Dies in| German spokesman, following. low, the present Mrs. was married to the enginecr death of Mal to arrange for exhumi Bible, he said POLICE USE HATCHETS IN SALOON RAID Smash Bar, Mirror, Glasses, Etc., and Pour Beer Into the Gutter Chicago, March 9 northside saloon last wrecked it after the manner famous by Carrie Nation. mi In spite of the fact that the estab- lishment had obtained an injunction ‘against police interference, the raid- ition | ers smashed the bar, smashing the mirror, glasses and other equipment beer into the gut- and then. emptied the saloon, but after carefully study- Daniel Murphy, who led the raid, decided it would not prevent him from stopping the illegal ing the writ Captai sale of beer. L. H. Caruf a small private living: enienced during the summer months, he. said,!s when water is being drawn to fiil the nd the report will be considered t the next meeting of the eommis- sion. unde d through exhuming of the bod Malinsky,! ub he coroner plans yg the body of (A). Police, armed with hatchets, raided a near ight and BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1926 ASSEMBLYIN | TANGLE ~TAKES. RRCESS TODAY May Not Meet Again Until Aristide Briand Returns From Paris GERMANY UNRELENTING Life of League of Nations at the Turning Point, Says President w kind of “cure.” | Geneva, tague of | M With the like help restore Nations assembly in a ‘ing out of Germany's re- membership and the de- sages and the tion. fe enn | mands of four other countries Po- | Brazil, and China for ty in the league coun was in recess te- ‘BRIAND WILL journment was taken yes-! teidny no time was set for the next session. It is possible there will be . French Statesman Veteran about by the downfall of his cabin There is muel (#)— Aristide, r tatesmy! a Abatement to minist: H t tt on him pressure March 9. veteran French opted a mandate from Pre nt Doumergue to form his ninth ed the one whiclf fell B in Claims he claims by the representat vari untries whic peri nt seats in the council. Jermans hold steadfastly to their! ground that no seats shail be award: | the only French leade: tempt to lead the country financial bog in which _ floundering. As he left the | afternoon aft and grandpar newspape ed_until Germany has been installed. | The only permanent members now t Britain, France, Japan and Spain's out of the it has been esentatives have ng the presi- she is not aenored ; dent of his acceptance, he said, “In| simultaneously with Germany they view of the present situation of my] will leave the leagui Brazilian | country I have told the president| delegation argues that they cannot) ‘that I did not feel 1 had the right] allow the entire continent of South ito refuse to attempt the task he did] America to remain without perman: 'me the great henor to offer me, I} ent representatio: will do my best to form a cabinet} No less insistent is Poland, and and hope to give President Doumer-| she is backed strongly by France and | gue a definite answer this evening.”| hoping also for the support of Aus: Possible Selections ten Chamb , the British foreign nucleus of the the Japan- ing to the best infe is sponsor- | tainable this afternoon, will be ing the claim of China. {Premier and Minister of Unanimous Vote Needed Affulrs-Aristide d. a non-permanent —mem- War Minister-~Paul Painlev red to be unalterably op- Minister of Marine—Georges posed to, any enlargement of gues, council at the present time ‘There is a strong probability that} for the —admissi Raoul Peret, former president of the! chamber of deputies, will undertake | the difficult task at the finance mi the applicant sembly, required. Elyse palace thi subject, off: will have to return to Th TODAY IN WASHEN control radio. ‘ 1 In- com Dwight W. before house on national defense For admitta two-thirds to: de: noon that he was leaving for for German ob- ! area in exchange ce to Poland’s admission te © of Nations ital | | on barren ground roundabout hint along that lin conveyed through the Geneva new: Hospital Under Suspicious | Papers. out | lin- | jous circumstances surrounding the death of Martin Van Buren Wilcox-j son, 56-year-old wealthy sportsman and a descendnt of President Van Buren, were under investigation to- cnlarying the league council is pur Is 150 Miles ly a league question, and all candi dates for permanent or non-permal 1 seats have equal merit | don, Coun Ma There is c pautarable resei tinent | 4 at the German headquarters over the! Cray; Stiltede of the entente press in ple-| oye th eR turing Germany as a storm center) away, of the council membership contro; Tw, versy and describing her as issuin blanket veto even before becomi a member of the league. ‘ause of Deadlock { Germany’s retort is that she is on the verge of entering the league and (Continued on page three) [ Weather Report mperature at 7 a. m. ighest yesterday Lowest lust night ay. Mr. Wilcoxson died in Harlem hos- n submar pital last Friday from a skull frac- ture after he had been taken to the alcoholic ward two days previously by a taxi chauffeur. He was unable to explain what-had happened to him Mrs. Wilcoxson says the chauffeur who took her husband to the hospi- tal gave a fictitious name and ad- dress. The chauffeur’s story wa that Wilcoxson had been left in his | car by another passenger who paid hig fare und disappeared. Mr. Wilcoxson inherited more than $1,000,000. pty-five bodies of submarine and the of Rome, last September, counted for, Some of th been w © prisoned moved until the not be r di Hock. e attempt will mont Auxiliary Officer Defines Just Who Is Eligible to Belong D., March 9,--)--Stat- ny American Legion Aux- units apparently are having interpreting the © e to determigte whether or nts for admission can become members, Miss Abbey M. Hur- ley, state secretary-treasurer, today asked that units having doubtful cases to decide submit them to state head- jan effort to - the steel shell , Winter storms ment of work, the might on salvage ships we: the craft to the Dividends Sent ade For Bismarck and vici ly cloudy tonight and Wednesday; not much change in temperature. For Nerth Dakota: Mostly cloudy tonight and Wednesday; southeast portion tonight. WEATHE CONDITIONS The pressure is high over the Mix issippi Valey and northern Pta States and a low pressure area is eéntered over Utah. Generally fai ‘weather prevails from the Mississippi Valley westward to the Rocky Moun- tain region, but precipitation occur- red at most placed west of the Rock: ies. Moderate temperatures prevai ftom the Mississippi Valley lo the) F Pacific coust. , ie Weekly Weather and Crop Report | Nearly normal temperature and! sunshine with deficient precipitation general in all sections. Prepar-| Dividends of 10 p sent out by the sta’ Under the eligibility clause, Miss Hurley said, the wives, daughters and sisters of men serving in the U. S. military forees between April 6, 1917, and November 11, 1918, who is a mem ber of the American Legion or who died in line of duty or since his hon- orablé discharge, and also to women who, of their own right, are eligible to membership in the American Leg- ion. Stepmothers, step-daughters and 1 and November 16, 1% The list of banks wh. ail; Merchants First State Bank of Olmstead. \s chants State bank, Finga| OL din the east portion. so Kool ORBIS W. ROBERTS, lors,” Oficial in charge. | Preeinm: Heaton, lam stown, Kenmare, Lari- more, Linton, Nortonville, Northwood.}-. Oakes and Rugby. . it riage to Capt. John Kinle: {tims of the collision betw steam > gust commission to depositors in 17 state; = MAYBETOWED TONAVY YARD, reh 4 hed rade Air-filled pontoons will be used in i erainpled il jest to Depositors in 17 Closed Banks: banks which closed between Octobery ich: stead; i'THE BISMARCK TRIBUN BORN IN U.S., C Although she was born and breight up in Kansas ents were born, Mrs. Peggy Hull Kinle er, is barred trom r of the british 1 ind the reve! 'E. T. MEREDITH OF DES MOINES, FORMER SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE, OFFERS NEW PLAN 0 ON House considers White bill to of legislation further | | Circumstances “The question of the Rhineland o ey eet cupation is a matter, between the al-! Navy Will Attempt This Feat} Sew York, March 9,—-UP)— Suspi-| eee art Sern a estion ot, Next Month—Distance 1 (PY unk. over-| bodies are in| holt do will in} next early npelled i postpone- | rable to lift) | sand relying being! fund} depositors a husband in of the charged b N’T ENTER eae where he Yy, magazine and in the couatry. Her m vy makes her a Bi British quota is exhausted. China unless the ruling is «l un Jot the ne PRICE FIVE CEN OAL MINE EXPLOSION WAAR eR AAR RnR nnn ne FATE OF 20 OTHERS STILL ISUNKNOWN | jSeveral of Those Rescued Alive Taken to a Hospital For Treatment | RESCUE CREWS AT WORK | Explosion Is Belived Local, But Exact Cause Has Not Been Learned |, Becles, W. Va. March 9.--P)-The j known dead in the mine explosion | here last night was increased to nine j tod as rescue workers — broke through barrier of debris and found eight bo Ss near the shaft bottom ‘rab Orchard Imprevement company's number 5 mine, Workers redoubled their | press their way into the fforts to damaged | Workings hoping to find alive some Jof the 20 other miners entombed by j the blast. i Another body was found — later, bringing to 10 the number of known dead. The body of the victim previously recovered wax found in the Number 6 mine of the same company ter of a mile away into w swept through a connecting pas: Thirty-nine other miners working in the Number 6 pit escaped Robert M. Lambie, chief of the West Virginia department of mine stated thae tne rescue workers hope to find that some of the entombed men were able to protect themselves by ting brat Around — th mine mouth gathered about two se workers waiting their turn b low. Outside a roped off area gathered groups of visitors Y TO MINE [8 ers at stake, rescue workers headed by state and federal officials fought carly today to penetrate a barrier of pris near the bottom of the shaft F FARM RELIEF Proposal Calls For Elimina- rops Rath-| quarter of « mite ticn of Surplus C: er ‘hat Marketing Them—, Farmers Should Be Provid-; a mine of the Crab Orchard Im- provement company here, where an explosion took a toll of at least one life beside walling in the 28 whose fate is yet to be determing he before loi wh 7 o'clock last night, not only él entry to mine number h the men were entombed, nt a wave of death-dealing gas through a connecting passage into mine number 6, whose shaft was a away. Lowell Go- ins, negro loader, was killed by the fumes, and several others suffered ill effects and were taken to Beckley hospital for treatment, but of the 40 in the number 6 workings, all except ed an American Standardt Goins were brought out alive. of Living mysterious circumstance contin- ursday. This was interpre Dr. Alfonso da Costa, former pre- The Gooding long and short ued today with the former husband| mean that the make-up of the cabinet mier of Portugal who is president of | haul bill and the army | supply of one and the former wife of the! was already decided, upon with the the assembly. yesterday warned the re a other, who now are married, held int exception of the post of finance min-' delegates that the life of the League cu Washingtone Mareh 9 (RP) A jail on murder charges. j ist nd that this would be filled | reached a turning ies si ag The two held without bail for a! iate this evenine or early tomorrow.) point and besought them neither to Ree TURE OF namin petlets. NROpORIng, !erand jury are Erne#t L, Malinsky,! i make nor let others make depressing hearing climimation of surplus crops rather locomoti : engineer, and his lor inharmonious suggestion 1 -Hudson than marketing them, was presented wife, Mrs. Elsic Bible Malinsky. Rea ae i ae ABET tive ch a are charged by State's Attorney ;ERMAN: TTITUDE B ae Piece Be eUas WE !liams with murder of his OF THE ENT RESS (ea aoe Lyerly Meredith of Des by a biological chemis Geneva, March 9.) sug- | Moines, lowa, former secretary of have died from poisoning. gestion that France might offer dim-| { agricultu Mrs. Malinsky died last Septembe inution of the forces in the Khine-) Sip amie oe the land and reduction of the occur tateda thee art in the presentation of the middlewestern delegates | tthe recent farm relief | meeting in Des Moines. legislation to assure the for his surplus. problem is not to handle .” Mr. Meredith said, “but an agricultural — policy which will eliminate the surplus and give us a balanced — production-—a production meeting all the demands f dom market plus all the for agricultural pro- which will give we have demanded an American standard ut eli “Lam willing that farmers should produce any quantity, no matter how great, over domestic needs, granted it will be absorbed in the world mar- kets at fair p “Production condit is is, to be sold xported under these effect, not a surplus a loss, and this loss to the farmers.” Must Link Two Laws “There are two great vs must be linked togethi balanced production and avoid over- production,” Mr. Meredith said, “the law of supply and demand, the law of gested a federal agricultural on to fix minimum prices on and asks: “Why Should you not farmer a minimum price?” You fix compensation for the s of rybody cook, ffeur, burver, else—your laborer. law of supply and demand indicates, upon the Jaw of incen: tive, a balanée can be kept and con tinuous surpluses avoided.” “Insurance Tax” Proposed To take care of any unexpected sur- {pluses resulting from economic de- pression, Mr. Meredith suggested tha! the farmers pay an “insurance tax” an “agricultural “No matter what crop is affected” he explained, “this fund could drawn on to bear its losses. The prin ciple is just as reasonable as other form of insurance.” He predicted that under such plan the individual farmer step-sisters are eligible the same as| ation for spring work on the farms Fort Ran- blood relations, Miss Hurley said. | is being made. Winter rye is gener-| som State bank, Fort Ransom; First ‘Sixteen units of the auxiliary al-| ally good with few reports of winter! State bank, ‘Ruso; Driscoll. State read; r 1925 mem. | killing. Livestock are in excellent, bank, Driscoll; Farmers State bank, bership, Mi said. They are] condition. Highways are in good) Voltaire; First American State bank, Bisbee, rrington, Clif-| condition in the west and centfal! Golden Valley; Farmers and Mer- ford, » Fessenden, Forman.| portions of the State, but they are|chants bank, Cogswell; First State not dank, Litchville; State Bank of Gren-| state ; ora, Grenora; Security State bank,| speak national forecast for each year. of Grand Forks.--Members sity ‘convention, t crops for the ensuing year, guarantee the|~ i raising and lowering the prices jof crops from year to year as the f of one per cent on the of the principal crops, this to guaranty be any] Th a would learn to- regulate his acreage to the the rd of administration will oday at the regular yniver- For more than five hours two of these men were listed as missing, but carly today rescue workers, pushing through the entries, found one where: he had hidden behind a trap door to {protect himself from the poisonous ‘as and the other in another portion jof the mine. where he too had walled himself in again: Men Scatt 3 the fumes. 28 whon | officials showed to be in fy believed tered through its various entries with probably some day men near the foot of the shaft, where they had been waiting to be hoisted out at the end of their work, it was suid at the company’s office. | Nothing definite was known us to the nature of the explosion, .but it was believed to have been only a local on Rescue crews were orga! dd im- mediately aft the explosion and | worked under direction of state mine inspect Jecles was the scene of one of the sasters in 1914, when 184 men lost their lives in an plosion. At least one of the sur- vors of that explosion, Slim Rus- |. was among the men entombed in Number 5 mine by last night's umber 5, in which the 28 ntombed, has an electrically ration, emplo: equipped j total for men and hus mal dail of 700 tons, feet deep and the rescue workers car- y today had proceeded to within 20 feet of the bottom of the shaft when further progress was blocked by deb- Pairing of Teams Remaining in the | Debate Contest Made Grand Forks, N. D., March ) Pairing of the various teams re- maining in the state high school de- bate contest has been announced by the university extension division ay Stecle; Bowbells vs. Vel- * 3 City vs. New Rockfor Lari Cando; Egeland ys. Rey’ nolds and Bowman vs. Mott. The winner of the Wyndmere-Lidgerwood debate was given a by: Announce- ment was made that Williston has withdrawn from the debate contest for the ye Divorce Suits Have Story Book Endings- New York, March. 9.—P)—To kiss and make up is becoming a popular~ ending to separation and divorce suits which have been holding pub- lie attention lately. e latest involved in recongilia- tion plans are Sebastian S. Kresge, ten cent store owner, and Mrs, Doris Mercer Kresge, Whose matrimonial difficulties, as they inyolve the ques- tion of stocks and , are now bes fore the supreme court of New York. The trial was suddenly adjourned yesterday. The couple conferred with the justice and/then went in searck of the pastor\of their church. «> “| t