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> BISMARCK THE BISMARCK WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Not much change in temperature. Ss ESTABLISHED 1878 AUTOMOBILE SHOW STYLE SHOW TRADE WEEK BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1927 FIVE LIVES LOST IN FIRE NEA VERONA MAN ISFOUND DEAD , INBANK VAULT Cashier Believed Thrown in Vault By Robbers Who Took Money and Killed Him STATE OFFERS REWARD, Citizens Tear-Down Vault; Walls When Door Is Found | Locked and Bank Looted H Governor A. G. Sorlie, in be- | half of the’ state of North Da- | kota, today offered a reward of | $500 for the arrest and convic- tion of the person or persons who murdered the cashier of the Verona bank sometime during last night, locked his body in the vault and escaped with the institution’s funds. Fargo, N. D., March 1,—(#)—The body of H. C. Bjone, cashier of the Farmers and Merchants State Bank of Verona, about 75 miles southwest of here, found early today in the ransacked vault of the institution where it is believed to have. been thrown by bandits who are alleged to have slain him. All funds of the bank are missing, according to re-| ports received here, Decorates New Coolidge Home The Robert Patterson residence on Dupont Circle, Washington, is being “prettied up” prior to its occupanc by President and Mrs. Coolidge as a temporary White House. Miss Ge: vive Hendricks of Madison, W pictured above, is in charge redecorating. PUBLIC MAY | ; Measure. Permitting Private | The body of the cashier was found ' after citizens of the town and La| Moure county officials had dug through more than a foot of brick! wall into the vault. Suspicions, lead- ing to the forced entrance to the vault, were aroused by the finding of the front door of the institution nail- ed shut and the rear door open when} the bank failed to open this morn-j{ ing. When the combination of the! vault failed to respond, officialg or- dered the wall dug down. SEE COUPLE PLIGHT TROTH Ceremony Planned For City Auditorium During Trade Week—Gifts Promised CONGRESS IN BILL-PASSING | _ MOOD. MONDAY | House Acts Favorably on 90; Minor Measures While Sen- | ate Acts on 83 Washington, March 1.—()—With an improved parliamentary situation in the senate, and the house still in a bill-passing mood, the 69th con- gress today was but 3% days from adjournment. Both houses tackled their consent calendars last night and, before quitting late, passed 175 minor and contested bills, 90 in the house and 85 _in the senate. The house previously had disposed of three more important, measures, passing a’ bill appropriating $19,878,- 700 to launch the administration's five-year public buildings program, and two naval measures, one author- izing an appropriatiun for modern- izing the battleships Oklal a and Nevada and completing the airplane carriers Saratoga and Lexington and fleet submarine V-4, and the other authorizing expenditures for im- provements at five naval stations. All three bills have yet to pass the senate. While the house continued today under a migcellancous schedule; the senate, having invoked the debate- imiting cloture ita oy the adminis- tration’s proktbiti nied customs re> organiaztion bill, proceeded with this measure as the unfinished business. By succeeding in placizg the one- hour debate restriction on that bill after three cloture attempts on other us had failed in as many days, senate drys yesterday displaced the unfinished business the filibi tered Boulder Canyon dam propor and assured passage of the dry meas-' hg viens has been sstonely urged n Secreta drew! of prekl bition and ms would be set up in the treasury under the proposal. O’Connor Jury May Be Completed Today bezzlement, made it highly ob. m able that the jury would” be. se- cured before the end of the ses- just before recess ! bridal “Here comes the bride” will sound through the spaces of the city auditorium Thursday night, Maren 10, and some lucky couple will get varied gifts as the result of, a dec sion of committees in c.ange of Bi: marck’s Automobile Show-Style Show and Trade Week to hold a wedding. Young couples who have been hesitant about marrying because of the high cost will have no cause to worry if they are chosen to go (through the ‘ceremony Thursday night, for license, the ring, the and the minister will all be furnished without charge. Dishes, furniture and other appro- priate wedding gifts are to, be given the newlyweds. Any couple wishing to be wedded is urged to send in their names to ithe Association of Commegce any time up to Tuesday noon, March 8. At. that time a drawing will be held and the couple chosen will be notified immediately of their good luck. Burt Finney is-in charge of the affair. Members of the various committees connected with the show met yester- day afternoon and went over all de- is of the affair to see that every- thing is working smoothly and to make additional plans for the event. Auto Dealers’ Banquet Plans for a banquet of automobile dealers, to be held Thursday evening, March 10, were made, at the commit- tee meeting yesterday afternoon. M. B. Gilman was chosen toastmaster. Invitations have been sent ont to all dealers throughout the Slope country, with teturn cards, so that the banquet sponsors may know how any will attend. If banquets of past years are any indication, in the neigh- Dorhood of 400 will be present at the affair. 3 Practically all the vaudeville acts to be given at th) auditorium will be presented at the banquet in one form or another, well as several outside numbers. A full orchestra has been engaged for the event. the principal speaker at the ban- quet will be E. J. Ashton, merchan- dising representative of the Automo- itive Equipment Association of Chi- cago. Ste Ashton will talk on ways to inctease sales of accessories and ser- vice; the need for maintenance; how to keep the shop busy; the advant- ages of flat. how to get new customers and. how other dealers have increased volume and profit. He nationally known authority on these subjects: Sponsors of the banquet are Quan- rud, ‘Brink and Reibold and automo- bile dealers of Bismarck. . Some Legislators Would Hold School on All Holidays Members of the North Dakota gen- eral assembly have no patience with the tendency of the schoolboy to “play hookey.” Some of them even express a desire to take away those legal holiday ‘privileges which the youth of the state already enjoys. During a. recent debate on the holidays, 8 the importa: minds of the children. them was George Aljets, a member of the house from Wells county, and the father of eight children. The bill in question Erikson equal credit VETERANS’ SERVICE COMMISSIONER _ BILL PASSED BY HOUSE-PROPOSAL sation Insurance in North Dakota Passed — House Would Permit Voters to Se- lect Ballot at Polls Stopping only long enough for brief tilts on bills allowing private surance companies to write com- {pensation insurance, establishing a veterans’ service commissioner to handle the claims of disabled world | war veterans, u bill to pension a state j employe and another changing the jtime “when a voter must declare | {party allegiance, the house Monday | {disposed of 17 bills. Four were illed and 13 were passed. In addition, one bill which was defeated last Saturday was re- ‘yived and placed on the calendar for} today and the house concurted inj senate amendments to a bill requ ig that coroners be physicians. As passed by the house the Jaw a d | to counties with populations of 5,000 amendment ; p to countics of 10,000 or more. H An effort to kill the bill providing{ for a veterans’ service commissioner, and carrying $11,000 for the —s) j of the ice, fuiled and the measure! recdmmended for passage by the committee of the whole after a brief discussion. / 0. Brown, Adams county, said) he had been advised that Ameri | Legion posts in his district did not! favor the bill on the ground that such an officer is unnecessary and they.do not favor spending the state's money for the support of such agent. * 3,000 With M. H. Lynch, county, said the legislative committee of the Legion was reluctant to introduce the bill because of the gencrous treatment given the veterans by ‘State in the matter of the. sdidiers bonus but that there are 3,000 dis: abled veterans. in the state whos claims have not been completed. Th: Legion has taken care of the claims. of its members, he said, but’ many who have claims live in the rural base his fight to keep the girl from |he -suid, disti the has post: no_ contact with The proposed s and Legion public service officer would look up these under the ‘men and help them claims, he said. Lynch pointed out! that 1,080 North Dakotans now ure getting compensati and that the Ml of the en government t these individuals totals $2,000,000 a year. : The bill will save money for the state, he said, by bringing under federal care men who might other wise eventually become charges of ‘the state. J. H. McCay, Sioux county, said he had been advised by members of sev- eral Legion posts that they do not favor the bill and charged that the 1 (Continued on page siz.) SIOUX FALLS | MAN GETS ON FRONT PAGES perfect their Flanagan’: beck and McMaster Are Called ‘Publicity Stunt’ Washington, March 1.—(#)—At- tacks on United States Senators Peter Norbeck and W. H. McMaster of South Dakota by Walter Flanagan of Sioux Falls, in a petition filed with the South Dakota louse of rep- resentatives yesterday, are described by Senator McMaster as another at- tempt to land on the front pages. Flanagan’s petition requested con- test before the senate of the right of Sentors Norbeck and McMaster resent South Dakota in con- It charged “misappropriation, misapplication and embezzlement of rural credit trust and state treasury funds and funds of banks under state supervision over a period of 7% embracing violations of the ws of the United States, of which Peter Norbeck and William H. Mc- Master (former governor) had knowledge by reason of th own acts of commission and part are’ not se even news,” Senator ite iter said last night. “He has an insane desire for notoriety and periodically peti- tions the South Dakota legislature for the impeachment of public of- ficials on these same charges and other matters. Each petition to the legislature gets him op the front page of the newspapers.' Then he is satisfied for two years. His peculiar characteristics are so well known to the people of South Dakota, I do not deem it necessary to comment on his charges.” yn. “Mr. Flanagan's cha! ja man, Attacks on Nor-|" Today’s Doings in Nation’s Capital Congress meets at noon. ween considers . miscellaneous s. ‘ Prohibition reorganization bill is before senate. He judiciary committee sub- nie report on Cooper investiga- ion. Testimony ntinues “befpre Special, Master Hughes’ in lake, division case. x TO PENSION WILLIAM LAIST KILLED , OSE eta ne te senantoger ee tole 2 | Police Find Man :._ | Insurance Companies to | With Charmed Life | Write Workmen’s Compen- *—————_—--—— —* Washington, March 1—(P)— Police here believe they have found a man with a charmed life. Five attempts to commit sui- cide having failed, Charles W. Lee, 27, of New York, snatched a revolver from a police guard at hospital fer mental cases and, after grappling with the guard, shot himself, in the face. Doctors say his sixth attempt will prove abortive, Lee previously had tried to end his life by setting fire to his room at a hotel, taking poison, sleshing his wrists, jumping head downward from a radiator and diving through a transom, Po- lice say the man often has declar- ed he wanted to die and asked that he he allowed to meet death peacefully. full, ‘UNWRITTEN LAW WILL BE GIRL’'S PLEA Alice Holst of Near Sanish Goes on Trial Tomorrow For Killing Wm, Nafus Stanley, N. D., March 1 ®) -- Prepared’ to defend herself on a charge of first degree murder, on the ground that her act of shooting whom she alleges criminally aulted her while was in a pless physical condition, i tified under the “unwrittn law,” Alice old farm girl of has arrived in Stanley I go on trial in dis- ct court here, Admitting the slaying of Willi: Nafus of Van Hook in a poll hall Sanish a few months ago, it is Plan of the defendant's counsel the to going to the penitentiary on the tention that the act was justif reumstances which defendant asserts existed. If the girl is convicted of the charge of first degree murder, she will subject to a sentence of life imprison tiary, according to State's Attorney C. N. Cottingham of Mountrail county, who will prosecute the youthful de- fendant. Has Been With Her Parents Miss “Holst, accompanied b mother, arrived in Stanley y and conferred with . Wyckof! local attorney who has ‘been retained to represent the girl in the trial of the case. Miss Holst has been stay- ing with her parents and brothers and sisters on a farm near Sanish since the shooting occurred at Sa- nish, when the girl walked into a pool hall where Nafus was loitering, called him to the front of the build- ing and shot him once, mortally wounding him, As the shot rang out, Miss Holst swooned and continued in a faint for several hours. After she had been re- vived, she told of her reason for the sneatiags and said that she was not sorry that she had killed Nafus, ‘cording to authorities who ques- ned her at the time. Judge Moellring to Preside When court convenes at 10 a. tomorrow, with George Moellring of Williston presiding, it expected that Miss Holst will be c ed for arraignment and will enter her plea, which her counsel has said will be “not guilty.” The jury is to report at 2 p. m. tomorrow, and the scle tion of 12 persons to hear the tes mony in the case will begun immed: ately, according to present plans. Some difficulty in obtaining unbiased jury from the panel of 60 jurors, including five women, which has been called, is anticipated, due to the sentiment which has been aroused throughout Mountrail county as a result of the slaying. | SESS GaP seen Weather Report | Weather conditions at North Da- kota points for the 24 hours ending at 8 a. m, today. Temperature at 7 a. m. Highest yesterday . Lowest last night . her m, nge in temperature. For North Dako! tonight and Wednesda; change in Cay WEATHER CONDITIONS The high pressure area is centered over Manitoba this morning and it extend: southwestward over the ins States, Cold weather prevails over the middle and southern Plains ites and over the eastern Rocky Mountain slope. A slight depression centered over the middle Mississippi paler accompanied by. precipita- tion in that section, while a deeper low pressure area over the north Pa- cific coast is causing precipitatiow over the extrem Northw t. The temperature is ae the far West. ORRI! . ROBERTS, Official in charge. GIANT MELONS Washington—Watermelons grown in the Turkestan, along the Tigris river, have, under special conditions, the remarkable weight of 275. accerding to Department riculture bulletin. Melons weighine more than 125 pounds are e United States, Not much the! ent in the state peniten-| +} rel _| current [anDeatn wiaate | MANY MINERS { ‘ » had told pol mutilated bo k Loomis { Questioned jof finding h tin their home, Dr, F. Detrait said he could ‘of the murder, He went for a wa nd discovered when he turned that his wife bed to death. Pictures of the cou are shown above. Sessions Planned With only : before they adjourn sine branches of the North Dak lature today faced Leaders of both houses ar that the avoid night, thereby h has night’ session wh jose of previous leg The work of mos be completed by t aning committees house and senate finish their work sessions are planned by th tomorrow and Thurs that’ only a f g the coma is afte of expected home. A check today house, where the usually occurs left to disposi showed house and umended in the ot tees. Two conference were appointed promise disagreements betwee certain bills. 10 Bills Disposed of posing of 10 bills. even were ed and one was recommendation. The latter b Vv. house Freeman, than in 1925. jvehicle registration act to reorganize the stat partment by placing it in charge a commission composed of the gov ers. The tax redemption bill carry $250,000 for use by the Bank North Dakota in paying taxes on land acquired by'the on, mortgage foreclosure recommended. A minority presented, HAIR TELLS IT Tokio.—You can tell girl is engaged by hair, according to Duncan. of the Y. W. ‘When the gir! “do” their hair in the old Japan style. training and greasing it ful curves, . er no theory; ad been club: LEGISLATURE HOPES 70 QUIT EARLY FRIDAY House Has Only 43 Measures Left to Dispose of —Night hopeful, ssembly will set a record| by finishing its work before Friday lative terms. ittees will n and both the to Night house for in the hopi will be left to consider Friday before the law makers pack their grips and start for that the last-mintue jam! has only 43 measures 3 does not include bills originating in one her which will go to conference commit- committees iterday to com- the} jtwo houses on technical details of | The senate state affairs committee completed its work last night, dis- ree- ommended for passage, two were kill returned without measure was the con- resolution offered in the 4 Grand} bil ‘Forks, asking Governor Sorlie to file \his report on the operation of the! Partly cloudy) state mill and elevator and to explain why its losses were greater in 1926! Among the measures recommended | for passage were the uniform motor and the bill; highway de-| of ere |nor and two appointive commission: | ing of delinquent ank | also was report recommending its defeat also will be! a Japanese looking at her to stand out from their heads in grace-| Bill (ARE ENTOMBED "BY EXPLOSION 1135 Men Were in. Workings a Time cf Blast—52 Are Believed Killed Wales’ National Holiday— Ccuntry in Gloom | | 1 | i (A) ¥ lieved to ha’ a result of an ex- plosion entombed x morning — whic f here q thi afternoon w: while hope been abandoned of rese i 30 other who were trapped in a section a mil «a half from the main shaft. At the time of the explosion the were 135 men in the mines, squads fought grimly throug t lone morning hours to reach — the comrades and more than 80 men we brought to the surface alive: Gas Halts Rescue Work The ‘task of the r difficult because of poisonous gase and many who descended mine were overcome and hospita he hee noon that rescue work abandoned to permit taken t had venti to ‘on ¢ en and children entymbed men ut the pit head and the & they rushe ach man rescues nsious hours th under the tr displayed by these watchers The di . which is one worst the Welch have known in r cent yea k place on tional holi St. David's di ‘the whole country was gloom. By rward to iaent ughout the heroism BELIEVED KILLED WHEN STAGING BREAKS Hope was virtually abandoned |. today for the rescue of 14 men who, flooded | fell to the shaft of the staging ever on. the . but three were saved by li on portions of the scaffolding part « the way down. LOBBIES HAVE LITTLE EFFECT bottom of the Bilsthrope Colliery whe pllapsed. men were a din Executive Considers Bill From Standpoint of Bene- fit of People of N. D. - Having taken two sharp flin the alleged insurance lobby wh present session of the assembly, Go ernor A. G. Sorlie today made it pla that he does not propose to be “lo! hied” into signing or bills whi re presented to hin Speaking with a group of senato: and representatives whom he m casually in the corridor of the capit elf of the opinion that the cardini mistake made by the assembly is i readiness to listen top come to Bismarck 51 in which they are interested. Sorlie’s comment was made in executive's eye as he remarked blood of a lot of bills will be shed my office before the session is ov and when it happens I don’t wa just because people who were perso: ally interested asked me to do t and be myself. ly Might Have Done Bette 1 lective legislative toes he will ha to tell visitors that he th legislature might have done better than it has. The executive has indicated nks th: to persuade him to approve or ve! i He has told calle: the trouble to point out that the go’ venor’s approval vf a bil! now on i way to the executive office {mean additional ree ness. “The trouble with that sort thing is that no one except the le; islators come here to represent t' Mmmon people,” the governor s: ‘And the people have no paid lobb That's why I propose to stand on m o right. from the those standpoint of’ benefit ing outside the state.” DEATH CAN'T PART Be NEA Service New Haven.—Death will not pai Old Bill and Fatima. when only 2: ighed 2000. A her. ide)" Now they will and she an African hippopotamus. 80 BROUGHT OUT ALIVE Disaster Takes Place on! Ned work-! had w uers Was most) Hin into the me so bad at! be MARCH 7-12 TRIBUNE | moan | PRICE FIVE CENTS '4 CHILDREN | AND INVALID . ARE VICTIMS ' Children’s Mother Escapes, | But Is in Serious Condi- j tion From Burns | New Defender | | | t STOVE IS OVERHEATED Father, Milking Cows, Dis- covers Blaze When Attract- ed By Dogs’ Barking inn, March 1.—-@)— ere burned to death eriously injured whe e-room frame und oceu ford, employe of the Oliver Mining company, in the Woodlwn addition, three mile south of Hibbing, at 5:30 this morning. Trapped in the house, on an_ upper floor, four children ranging from 5 to 11 years of ag were burned to - death and ©. H. Basford, an invalid, military father of Samuel ord, was burn- » in Chin ned to death as he lay in his bed. e ac ° f Mrs. Basford managed to Shanghai. I through the flames and stumbled sded Sun Chug of a rear door. She suffered severe routed whe burns on her arms, shoulders and xehow a i chest, and in addition froze her feet. Hibbing, Five people pied by Si * es | hos- said rushed here was j where j to be critic to the Road condition "The Dead is ot the of \ SENATE PASSES 98 BILLS WITH LITTLE DEBATE | 1. HI Sale of Pack- - Measure Licensing Snuff, With 1 Cent a heated jn the barn th he O, H. Basford, 77. Charles Basford, 11. in Basford, 9. ford, 7. Evabelle Basf« The Injured Mrs. Sam Basford, back and chest burned. Samuel Basford, 33, arms, hands Th ire stove started while ilking from thi an ov father Noticing ‘ Basford ck to find the home in flames. five victims cou#d not be re Nottingham, England, March 1.—(#) ‘ottingham, Engla' arch ayliee tee ON GOV. SORLIE hes appeared in Bismarck during the | vetoing any building, the executive delivered him- rsons who! z legislation Sra bat there wes ees ORME! passed with the amendment. limi “The any one to think that I did anything propose to do what I believe the legislature should do—stand on my lentally, he steps on the col- no regrets, he indicated. He is frank muc he has not been free from attempts 3 that one} a member of the assembly, took e woul pts in his busi-! reinstated in the bill by the senute n feet and do what I believe to be t. It is time we commenced to consider laws from the stahdpoint of; peen contracted for, instead of hav- benefit to our own people, rather than BILL AND FATIMA Old Bill died but he weighed 2500 Miss Constance’ pounds. Fatima kept her age to her- . A. in Kyoto.| self and become engaged they! after Fatima died, Old Bil e short time! cial*order of business for today when I followed; a wrangle resulted over a move to stand side b; i Peabody Museum at Yale. in Indian-armored rhinoceros, cd and their bodies were later n out by firemen who were rushed to the scene from Hibbing. | Asleep on Upper Floor The four children and the aged . who was ill, were asleep in the {one-room on the second floor ofythe house, which had un interior’ of jcardboard material and an exterior € ed by paper. » quickly did the flames spread ‘to the entire house that Mrs, Bas- jford barely had time to escape |through a and rescue of t |their grandfather sible. When Basford the house from the bi led to enter the on flames repulsed him, open another age Tax, Passed t The senate suspended its ru! troduce and pass a appropriating $19,400 to provide for salary increases for members of the legislature. A concurrent resolution with the same provi- sion had heen previously ruled unconstitutional, anli the bill was the hope that ion will be declared constitutional. Each — member would be given $2 a day in addi- tion to his present $3 a day, the Increase to cover services on com- mittees. Some doubt was expressed as to the constitutionaljty of the senate’s action, . n ie of , he att door, but nd he tried to door which had This he Passing 28 ; no debate, i wife broke her took a big stride to ring its|to emerge badly b heavy calendar of house bills that] Basford then tried must be disposed of in the next four, 4 f day Although ures with little or a te. M but the flames ged so fiercely that this not measures were passed, but scant time possible. The bodies of the childrea RrGE GIVEN Ouse. ta TallReLeRinp: were found huddled in the ruins of re providing for the li-| the home < al nd taxation of snuff in Help From Hibbing sed by a 37 to 12 The only telephone ne to the nts by Senator W.| home was burned away id could iF : to not be summoned, until a neighbor jdrove into Hibbing, 2 to summon the fire d the house} The firemen a tax on moving the senators | M 1. the stove fired he left the se became overheated and ignited hings or the walls. sj number of importa attemy ( n, amend the bill to tion rate had fail fat The bill as pas | would pl a_ three-cent teuch package, but several contended that this was too high and | would encourage attempts to escape. by the tax by ordering from other, he stat and the tax was cut to one) nearby furn cent in committee. { Whitman offere n amendment! -establishing the tax ra cents. After that ha ught to have it made which was also rejected. 1S CLEARED OF : mes involving It had been twice! diciary committee,| Habitual C d amended. | abitual | tration di vision of the state highw depart- jment was ugumented b: 5,800 |through passage of two bills, if they are approved by the governor. One was an emergency appropriation of | | $25,000 for a deficit in the fund and the other was a transfer of $300,000 from the highway fund to the motor vehicle registration department A house bill creating a new law to permit decrees of separation was passed. A measure that would 2l- llow counties to parele prisoners, | ? {providing they are employed in coun- | Toad received favorable | to action. An appropriation of $194, for jthe state school for the deaf at {Devils Luke was passed. It had been ts amended by the house to make the ld total $1,000 less, but the $1,000 was v= rs et oY al ts | | 2 © statute was ing 3 to jn! Moral turpitude uiireiected by the j nt; but was finally reviv e motor vehicle ee y, : i House Judiciary Committee Recommends Dismissal of Impeachment Counts n- r ve ast Federal Judge a Frank Cooper, of the northern he New York district, h y by the house at Jed that allega- unfitness r the bench, ainst Cooper by Repre- Laguardia, Republican, New could not be construed as con- grounds for impeachment. ded, however, that the com- action was not to be con- pg as approving all of the judge's acts. Judge Cooper was charged by La- | guardia with having conspired with prohibition enforcement officials to entrap liquor law violators and with having later sat in judgment over the men entrapped. Laguardia also accused Cooper of usurping power in connection with several bankruptcy cases, York, stituti on motion of Senator J. E, Stevens, j Ramsey county. i Provides for Arbitration | * Another measure passed would provide for arbitration between the state high ommission and con- tractors in es of dispute over . The object of the bill is to compel completion of work that has of ving it held up possible lawsuits, An appropriation bill of $13,200 for the work of the department of the commissioner of immigration for, the next two years was passed. | , A bill requiring that estate taxes | rtibe paid out of an estate before it jis distributed, instead of being paid by the various heirs after distribu- tion as at present, was made a spe- some time through to oy Today’s Program : : in Legislature House and senate meet at 1. _ House to consider bill chang- ing time west of Missouri river and measure amending state hail insurance law. s Senate to insider Freeman resolution asking Governor. Sor- lie to reportsan operations of state. milli: hi! ree reinstate emergency which was finally successful. A bill that would appropriate $20,- (Continued on page three) clause, t