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1 V THE PRODUCERS NEWS ^ Wis UFL Pledge* Ä Subs for Our flew PsP® r ' ^ F age4 OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE UNITED FARMERS LEAGUE PLENTYWOOD, SHERIDAN COUNTY, MONTANA, DECEMBER 8,1933 Published Weekly XVI. Number 37 VOL Dairy Farmers Strike For Higher Milk Price In St. Louis Co., Minn •1 farms set up OWN COMMITTEES 10 GIVE RELIEF Stop Discrimination in Distributing Relief Jobs r. r. TU _: I KKLDEKICk, S. D . Iheagn- ( cultural workers of this eection iave drawn up a plan for the dis- j tribution of 'relief work in this county. Ibis is the answer of the fanners and workers in this coun the announced intention of, Comity Commissioner John For «ting to discriminate against mili tant farmers and workers and dis tribute these jobs only to the favorites of the politicians. The piai, which call* for a coun ty committee made up of three from each toWship to supervise the distribution of relief jobs, was i ty to , , .. - accepted by a mass meeting of farmers and workers held here on Nov. 24 on the occasion of the re turn of the Chicago delegates. Committeemen w ; re e e e rom 1C o i u i a townships. Palmyra has already ti nted its committee. Ma mass meeting at bavo hall je. under the Civil orks p jrnnp Je „ Forst, ng was present tf 6 ^. . ï ' . - _ , , He is the commission« who got mbad cdor a few rnont^ ago by making a physical attack or. Paul; Seidier, Aberdeen labor leader, at »farmers united _ f yo r t ^meeting tharc. The result of that fuss was trat Forsting beat an undignified, wd hasty retreat. »peak at this bavo wail meeung, he waf, to all outward appeau ances, again tne kindhearted gen f \ Hl ky body neat " lr. S „ ,h"t W ù?hU ,n°al 0 n hc cirair to show us his spats, ne ^WotTsm 0 he wiT'workinJ fey patriotism, ne w as working day ilSXt % the hwal grievance at the 'Vlhen'painted a glowing pic ne men painted a glowing pic tore of the Civil works program whirh wert into effect (on paper, »t least) last Monday. Workers »wld be paid 50 certs an hour, with a six hour day and five days a week. Altough the chairman and a few others questioned him most of us were pretty well hyp notized by hU nice sounding plan, And Forsting strutted proudly be ore his audience. «it all this changed when Seid 1er. who had come up from Aber deen with the local delegates re toming from the Chicago Confer e r te, rose to speak. Forsting then slumped down on his chair and his bead hung bctSveen hit knees. He finally staggered to his feet and started for the door at the rear of the room, followed by a few boes. Pawing the air as he went be shouted that he did not want to lister to Seidier because he did not l * rp e with him. At the door he obanged his mind and sat down, Gaining there where he could make a quick get-away through the rest of the meeting. Never before have 1 eeen a maw cringe so under attack, or rather fear of attack, for Seidler's talk was J^ly a general exposure of the Roosevelt inflation program. CLEAR FARMER IN bdnaptog case Charged With Using Tar Brush on Local Shylock By Willis Hibner finkZj^ 0, 0re '—* have juat Count? Ä ht d * ys " 016 Ada wifcto* district Court as defense _ in the John» Goertzen case. Vas charged with kid tokifll 1 u- ° r ' e C ' F - Priele and wîf aiTn * or a ride to the sage rivirt v° Vered Hanson Butte and tom a coat of tar and feath meant life in the Conviction r battle ,r °yal- But we - Goertzen. The United league stood behind man, although he a member. 100 .I?- t ^ ere w ere more than P. SPrty that took C. r a ride. Pringle was rai,!l Con-*, C 'l ^" y,, 0 c k s in Twin toMhe'r«^^ were try ing to Pound of flesh." Pen. It Jarmer s "°ertzen not to a 0 ' Vote Unanimously to Stop Milk Shipments to Vir ginia Plants DEMAND 40c INCREAS Farmers Get Less Than 2 h P er Quart for Milk Sold to Workers for 9c Farmer Correspondent y pWI VIRGINIA, Minn. — Farm erg shipping milk to Bridge Riicepll an d the Virginia r l T»pp Creamery went on strike Dec. 1 lor an increase of 40 cents per hundred pounds on their milk. This demand means $1.50 for milk delivered at {he farm and $1.75 for milk delivered at the plant, ; The decision to strike was taken Nov. 29 at Angora Town HalP tv hen the creameries told a dele gatiom , of f armer s that they flatly to comply with the de mands of the farmers. At the mCe ting, farmers eaid that on pres ent prices> they could hardly keep their cows alive. They insisted that the only way to get re i ie wa s through mass action, keeping u Uk a from * th Virginia ^ The farmers feel cnr.fident that mffl[ su?fily ^ et opped ; the pasteunzers and thus foirce jce id t0 the (armer to rais€d The Northland Milk Pro ducerg Association with its i ocals in Forbes and Cook ha ^ already j n j t j ated ac ti 0 n. Now we must get every mille shipper who sends m j] k to Virginia to join ini strike. Every organization and v Farmers 'r ue - 'r 15 arouIld Virginia a s for instance Br i ttmount) Florenton, Nebraska, j etc should arrange meetings for ; getting support to the strike. : The V " te t0 / trikC WaS . U " ani - m o,us and wo«rd was sent imme ■ diat f', y • ï Ä? would Jom in im mediately. The \ d ;~ ,°. f th b e rffÆ * ' 1 ll *, Ti s€ ". cali . bre , have rea ^ profttg f ro m the farmers. They got j eg|S , fban 3 cents a quart for their milk now whereas the pasteurizers ge |j f^ 9 cents. The banker pocJmfg the 6 cents difference. It j g aga ir s t these capitalists that the farmers are fighting. They do not wan t the milk prices to the con sam er to be raised hut instead get the worker in the town to fight together Witht the farmer and to even ge t the unemployed to help pi cke t the roads. Majority of South Dakota Farms Tilled by Tenants Ax State Dept of Agriculture Admits Small Owners Becoming Scarce PIERRE, S. D.—The State De partment of Agriculture hag just issued a report which shows that the majority of South Dakota farmers are landless and labor upon land belonging to others. The figures compiled by the e-tate ex perts reveal that 70 percent of the land in farms is operated by land less tenants, department is forced to admit of ficially what the Producers News ha*- declared all along—that the land-owning American farmer is being forced out of ownership by insurance companies, banks and other mortgage holders, down, into tenantry and even peasantry Comparing the figures in 1920, at the beginning of the agricul tural crisis, wite the figures of May, 1938, in the third year of the general economic erteis, we can see the direction which the ruin of the American farm is taking. in 1920 May, 1933 45,347 36,219 30,536 40,400 75,883 76,623 Moreover, the state There were; No. of Owner* No. Tenants Total Farmers In 1920, there were 4,800 more owning farmers than 1 there were ! renting farmers, lu Jhe sprvng o 1933, there were 4,100 MOKE RENTING FARMERS than own iug farmers. The countryside was ; changing from a picture of land owning farmers to one of teirrtun who toiled upon land in which te had not one whit of ownership The above figures apply to the NUMBER of farm operated When we take the ACREAGE, the AROUSED 1 Ü MV M m V ■ ■ V - & ?*:$ Wm r X ► A, »sä* \ s - ■ - fc-v ■■ m v j %: § 1 M || 1 * | students all over the country have been aroused by the cuts in education a ? a result of the de preario'.'. Here is one in Cahfor n * a demanding that the schools protected frc * the panics effect . ■ X $5? j-year-old imir AT IN fi nr./ A 1 DullUlJ 111 _ _ nrpamrin nnn | M \ I A I f \ ■ A I S3 I ; i AAA Sends Checks to o ii \v/i ^ ma Wheat Producing i States - | 1 WASHINGTON, D. C—The Ag-i tricultural Adjustment Administra tion claims that checks for $23,- 1 f , 3^,569 have been mailed out to wheat farmers in 19 states as pay ment for agreeing to reduce acre iage. Fanner. in*the larger wheat ; product' g states are ytt to be paid . to ! The checks are fnr the first two! the payments being made to farmers ^ agree t0 r ' duct ,h eir acreage by 15 per cent. The first pay ment says the AAA is at the rate of 20 cents a bushel on the allotment each farmer receives. The second payment of eight cents the a bushel will be made next spring, the providing there is anything left t er plan is deducted. iTie three million already paid i s only a fraction of the $70,000, 000 which the government pro m T d *? pay du ™ K the fa " and early winter. c The A ^ A C ' ?in, a that . enca8;h farmers have signed up to reduce TT k bï 8 ' 0 T 0 •S"-,, rt In . tha ™in For v * e week CTd !f \ . the markets were unsettled with prices lower. The demand was dull. The Department attributes the tendency toward falling prices to "weak ness in foreign markets" and the selling in December futures, The 1933-34 world wheat crop outside Russia and China is indi cated at about 220,000 busheh less than last year's production, but prices thu s far in world markets have shown no sustained improve ment from last year's levels, t>lû i_ Ti j T _ on Der cent of ; +v,û iQn/T ic onerated bv owners- • 7n . -onerated (0 per ce t pe j by , eI t' . . , . . . The land operated by tenants is j held not only by insurance com-1 paniez, land companies and banks which havc foreclosed mortgages, hut ^ by.®» S^e^rt»^its Rural Credit D^«.rtnwnt, h.ic has alfo no . delinquent ar 7J s _ , , , governments hoW much of the and for dehnquen • The fact that hundreds of thou sands of acres are off the tax sts ha s brought about what the ex perte call a breakdown of the taxing system '^dsfromtexes, levied against the .and of small and middle farmers .°^ adequate to meet tee cost of gov eminent, and the sta e o ic^ s, against their withes, 3 ^ forced to levy a gross me . Almost three quarters o lion dollars are delinquent rux *^ interest on South Dakota s p* nent school fund loan, according to Ben Strool Commissioner of Steoote ard Public Lands. Only !2 counties in the state ave da^ able to keep payments up _relief Washington. D. C.—The U. S. Department of Agriculture advises fanners who have cut their acre acre to breed fame in the unused land as a mea-'s of making a hv ing from these acres. figures are even more gloomy. Of the 28,887,130 acres of land de voted to agriculture and ranching in the state, only 11,270,166 acres are operated by farmers who own y TOLD TO BREED GAME Pan-Americani CongressOpens In Montevideo Secretary Hull Represents j American Bankers at 1 i r*_ r _ « 1 Conference , I 1 HATRED OF YANKEE IMPERIALISM MARKED _ j Mexico May Force Discus sion of Latin American ; I i Debts to Wall Street ■. i MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, —The Pan American confer ence, called for the avowed DurDose 0 f uniting in Deace , harmrmv tha nations of ^ . ^South America ort " a ^ t>0U , A , . ' bejl 135 opened here almost mCBT \ shot of the guns of the two war between Bolivia and Paraguay, The sessions are held in the beautiful multi-marble palace of the Uruguayan legislature, flanked by palm trees. The manners of the delegates are the elaborate and extrava S an t formalities of diplc matic functions. But underneath the finery buzzes political intrigue. Agents of American capitalists vie wth agents of British capitalists for tke spoils which these I-atin Amencan Politicians are all to ra £ er to sell tc the highest bidder.; Mary of the delegates represent g° v< ? r nments kept in power only by the ^ uns and sabr ^ of Amer ' can Marines. Hate ü S Bankers Out on the It^Montevideo and inland in the rubber tobacco !' and s"gar dSiSm ttS is a smouldering haSId Tôr thc l'r L" the American bankers esDeciSlv Th fi S American workers and neasants struggling to throw off tbs voké 0 f American imnerialism have much to sav at *his oolite mo Î?SSiÆSaS. j ust before Serreterw of qtate Co»rdcll Hull arrived here police d i sc(>vered a buge ^ flag flying f rom the oort words: 'oSt with Hull, oolice raided the workimrelnco cee «on of the city nnd arrested 20 Communist workers a na«t of a SïïTïïiSÎTdÂi: gainst Hull and the American r eral strike whteh was to have be Op it Were the Later yy Latin American masses against American imperialism » so m tense that many things, unpleasant to the ears of Secretary Hull, will gun Sunday in protest against Hull's appeairance. This is the background of the conference which is supposed to build "peace and harmony. President Roosevelt has already announced that the American dele gation refuses to discuss tariffs, currency or Latin-American debt«. It is around these issues, as Roose velt knows, that the Latin Amer icans have some of their greatest grievance*: against the United States government. •• Loans to Paraguay However the resentment of tee no doubt be brought forth. The consul of Paraguay, for in stance, charges the United States with financing with big loans the Bolivan government in its war on J ara ^ y * He ia wel1 ^ ac ^ s ' as eve ^ Senate Investi gatan £ Committee showed. But he f a il s to mention that the British government is financing Paraguay, Mexico announces that it will force a disr , ussion on de bte to the American bankers, despite Hull's instructions. Cuba may insist on Kvokta , the p, tl amendment, the notorious swindle treaty by which the United States justifies the ! se of troops in Cuba to suppress the C ba ef _ If the Latin-Amencan masses are able to make their voices heard above the intrigues of the diplomates, Hull will see for him ; the undying, bulling hatred of they masses for the govern ment of the United States and the j Walî Street bankers who exp oi and oppress them. - FVIPTFD F A Mil IF^ TO __ v _ . DC vmi Llvt. UN BÜX LAK5 1 OLSON'S MINNESOTA . _ rtvt'Tî fat T S Mir.n— THIEFRIVER FALLS Mm n. pS for ^ ]ocal unemp loyed fam-1 denendent on the county for The box cars will he mounted on sleds and towed to their location bv the county trac i tar y j r^ e unemp i oved bave suggested j nam i ng their boxcar village Olson «r bonor .» t he Farmer > „ nv , ranr v nromised so _ muen ana aia so utue. I Protest Sentence of Death to Young Scottsboro Boy This is an appeal to every reader the Producers News to do his part in the mighty campaign to save the Scottsboro boys- from burning in the électric chair. The Negro boys have nowhere to turn except to the masses of workers and farmers. The ruling class is gairet them and is sending them to death, because they aro work trs and because they are Negroes. lf they die> it is a blow struck agairst the working people. If they die, it is a victory for the robbers and exploiters who lynch jit- up to YOU as one of the toil e.s of this country to save the Scottsboro boys, Call meetings immediately to pass resolutio"s condemning the lynch verdict of the Southern court. If funds are not forthcom ing immediately, there it a danger that the attorneys will have to leave before the trials are over. Send money to the Internationa] Dcfepp«, 80 East 11 Street, New York City< Send y0Ur letteiS of protest to G ° vernor B - M - Mil 1er, Montgomery, Ala., and Judge yf w. Callahan, Decatur, Ala. The Scottsboro boys know that only you can save them... See them throughI j i GENERAL ASKS LARGER BUDGET! \ - .. .. c More Money tor rrepara j ; 4 OT1TVTr ,^ XT ^ 0 . WASHINGTON. D. C-Ag.m : , Cry :0r ? 0I * army resounded Dotlls M^ur «-' ' ^ ' e j a . 3 - , r\_ 1 0rte<i *° J??*}*'! ? . "if" th \ Un î ted States Amy is I th ® ^ paredneas - MacArthur the man commanded the troops who drove Bonus Army, 1 known m ^ ashmgten -»s a Big man. tions Demanded by Army Leader According to his report, the army has been "weakened" because of insufficient funds and also be cause its officer^ have been taken to train the unemployed in the Civilian- Conservation Corps. In stead, MacArthur advocates using the regular officers in the Na tional Guard and Reserve Officers Training Corps, the high school and college division of the army, and assigning reserve officers to the CGC camps. budget ÏÏ d d?m«d m r e by fr ZclÏ thur to equip the army. Thie means heavier taxation hardens on the worker, aud farmers. General MacArthur's report is another sign that the United States is racing to | prepare few another imperialist j world war. i There is still another reason for J General MacArLhunr's insistence on j a big army. In the concluding paragraph of his report he says: "In the obvious state of unrest [now prevailing throughout the [world, evidences of which are I plainly visible even in our own country, an efficient and able military estuhliehment, con startly responsive to the will of its Government, constitutes a rock of stability and one of a nation> 1 priceless possessions." It is for use in strikes, both of farmers and workers, that MacArthur holds his army in readiness. Because he sees times growing worse and the workers and farmers fighting bit erly against their exploiters, Mac Arthur is calling for a bigger army which ■'.an put down this "unrest." — _____ Ä Ainrnnr MCW DC] |CC Af,FNT IVClTT IyLLICF HULIV 1 p.pjrn UmAMC MAV| fltnO WRUNu W1AJN _ _ ^ r . . By a Fanner Correspondent WILTON, Minn.—The new Re Ufif Agent arriyed hefe and fetar vation is in order The work ftnd that were on re Uef ^ m forced to get along Qn one to three dollar8 per month No c i 0 thing is being given out< When a farmer, Henry Krumery, was talking in front of the relief office about the damn a )W« conditions that existed here, he was singled out by the new Re lief Agent, L. Fisk, who threat ened to beat him up. But Ftek failed to pick out tee right party to beat up. When they went down P ï had asked Mr Krumery to come, he had to back down. He may have rememberedi that the farmer was an ex-blacksmith. 1 The United Farmers League Beltrami county has protested the Farmer-Labor Governor Minnesota about the methods used by said relief agent. His answer, when and if it comes, will printed in a later issue of the Pro ducers News. Jury Orders Death for Scottsboro Boy In Decatur Trials GUARD SCOTTSBORO LAWYER m :£xfv; - .- x: » 8 m y m 1 Ü ¥ SS f : : ■f Bö i ï m j ! ' \ i \ rv. •I * * '/* Samuel S. Leibowitz (center) has not been harmed at the trial of the Scottsboro boys in Decatur, Ala. s and two of the «reasons may w, ; j ., » ÿ/xÿ . i ■ri . I r . m m ;• C ?.« ÉiSÉIRi •••ÏX yy. . .. i m a TT - a , j v :i-i be seen at his £ide in this picture. He is constantly under guard while going from court to his rooms. Publicity of lynching threats against counsel and prisoners which included the publication of a pamphlet attorney advocating mob action, is believed another cause by an the safety of the attorneys and the boys.—Federated Picture, J. - . County UFL Conference ar I 1 LOCALS PREPARE EVICTION FIGHT Bemidji Scheduled Dec. 6 By a Farmer Correspond™, j BEMIDJI, Minn.—Two meetings ; , . , ,, . , . , . , i havc j"*" held 1 at " h,Ch dC ' CP f !S r€ P orte d on the Chicago Confer-1 ence, one at Eckles township and one at Northern. People seem to think that the program is all right, especially the cancellation of se cured debts. These township locals are now planning ways and means of quick transportation of their members aIld others, so as to be ready to stop a n sheriff sale* and evictions, î depend-- i »| J I U|0XdII Qfcj 1 P VV P- LLlSlTlV 7 J „ ___ g _ A m 9 Q | J" 3 111^51 l^lwS 3X MU m ' ——— * | p f International Har- 1 i * res ' °* _ UltcroatKnttl .tl • vester Co^ Headed HOO- j ; ver*S Farm Board j 1 " ■ 1 -■ [ CHICAGO — Alexander Legge j 0 ^ ' 1 presideilt of the International Har ve,iter c «"P"y and former chair man of Hoover's Federal Farm "j* h ' re " 6 g 7 ' Death was due to heart disease, The manufacturer returned from the office Saturday morning, where he had been, working on an NRA code to enable him to make bigger profite out of the workers in his plants, and complained of f ee ling ill. The servants sent for a doctor, but Mr. Legge failed to respond to treatment. Alexander Legge wag a farm | boy who is said to "have made | good." Ini 1891 he left the farm to take a job as a bill collector for the McCormick Company in Oma ha. He succeeded 60 well in tak ing the farmers' hard earned money from them that he was j taken to Chicago in 1899 as head of the bill collection department. In 1902, when the International Harvester Company was formed by merging McCormick ana Dee»r ing, he was made assistant man of ager of domestic sales. to For selling farm machinery to of farmers at three times its worth, he was eaid to have no equal, and success came easily. He was be steadily promoted u ri til in 1922, he was made president, succeeding * Harold P. McCormick, and began ! i i , i o • \r armers Protest Low Price ; Wörter«! Demand lobs workers Remaria jods or Relief FRENCH FARMERS MARCH ON PARIS PARIS, Prance. Fifty thousand hun ^ er marchers, many are farmers have been reported as converging on Parle to protest the cut X r f liet voted by the new govern n,ent cabinet. The march er"s moved in small bands to de f ea t the attempts of police to pre vent their entering the city. In speeches along the route, the farmers said: "All that we sell, we sell at a loss. All we buy, we pay dearly for. It is unbearable." The workers are demanding jobs or relief. - to draw down a of ^0U,° 0 ° a year - Mr . Le gge was not s0 gelfish> however, as to confine himself en tirely to building up his immense fortune. He was a faithful ser vant to Wall Street and hi 3 own dear friends, the money lords. w h ^an scSiir « K d ' , ®[ a / ^ ? T Se ^ then chat™«, oi the War Industries Board. In this petition, he had charge of all munition shipments both to Amer ic an troops and allied forces abroad. At Versailles, where Woodrow Wilson was the agent of the inter nationa i bankers in forcing the notorious Versailles treaty on the maases of the warld( Le gge was an advisor to Wilson. But the greatest Ignominy of Mr. Legge was his service as first chairman of the Federal Farm Board, to which he was appointed by Herbert Hoover. For 20 months he administered this great swindle 0 f the American farmers, In the irterest of Hoover and his Wall street hackers. He is survived by two nephews, Jame. ard Alex E. Legge ; Schuyler, Nebr. A third nephew, Roy Legge, is manager of the In ternational Motor Truck Sales branch in San Francisco. The passing of Alexander Legg*» will be mourned in Wall Street and in the homes of the wealthy, He will not be missed by workers and farmers he has helped to ex ploit. Unfortunately teere are too many to take hie> place, LEGAL LYNCHING Judge's Charge to Jury Was Open Invitation to Convict REFUSED DELAY FOR TESTIMONY OF GIRL Trial of Clarence Norris 2nd of Youths, Is Begun at Once DECATUR, Ala,—After 10 hours and 33 minutes in the jury room, the all-white jury trying Heywood Patterson, first of the Scottsboro Boys, brought in a verdict of guilty and recommended that the innocent Negro boy be put to death in the electric chair. The verdict was not a sur prise to Judge W. W. Caila I han, Southern landowner who Î is presiding at the Scottsboro j trials. His charge to the jury jwas a clear order to convict, i He instructed the jury in the j different ways it might CON ! VICT the prisoner, but com ! pletely neglected to inform j the jury how it might FREE the Negro, until he was re j m j n ^ e ^ From the very first, the South | ern judge did not hesitate to show 1 which way his sympathies Went, j He snapped at Liebowitz and at obj^JST'Sd °ttae ; after time refused to permit them. ! to question witnesses in such a way as out aging to the case of the proeecu tion. Perhaps the moet open show of the court's intentions to legally lynch Patterson was refusal to hold the trial up until thç evidence of Rub y Ra tes, ill in New York, might be taken. It is well known from the first trial that the evi - dence of Ruby Batefr> Svho d6T , ieg that the Negro boys laid hand upon either herself or Victoria Price, entirelv destroys the case * of the prosecution. Jury Rolls Tampered 1 Although attorneys for the In ^ , . * Seen tempered, tee Jud^e dï nied this as grounds to quash the indictments. : Jn earlier messages, we have shown how the Judge' is rushing through these cases, allowing, he S&ys only three days to each of the boys. He has no regard for the the lives of seven of the j Negro boy 8 hang upon these trials. îîfXj 1 ". Deca Lï' f e ? dy I «Ä on the case of Patterson, "Sp'ed" had called for a new jurv and for the trial of Clarence Norris to begin, Norrie was int court when the Jury brought in its vendict. Pat terson was brought in handcuffed, surrounded by six deputies. The a^he^nteS^ andhe^licked^lS j. pg nervouf i y ' A mome ; t tet er, however. the clerk read the ominous words: "We find the defendant guilty as charged and fix the penalty as death." The Negro boy did not flmch - Fe stood erect and his face ^tnaved no emotion J^rnatlonal Labor Defense ask . e . d fo / ra ™ th *° » *" "* ' h ' T , • K . .. - j.. de^nd^d' l ^ d i c t based on the color of the de fendant, "When a white woman is ip volved." said the jurist, climaxing th ^ lypch,incitement which he has consistently vrs«tieed tooottbe * t ^ ere *l 8 a i 8tr Jl e s. D tf U ^^l not' viel^voluntarilv to tee P Ne j ero."^ u y He ordered the jurv to refuse to consider any medical testimony as to the impossibility of Victoria Price's story, Giving the jury the choice of 1 ^. ree verdicte—death in the elec tnc chair, life imprisonment, or tô mention the possibility of quittai. Finally, »recalling the necessity of fulfilling the technicalities of tee law, he scratched his head and j Ba j£ : j Callahan's Charg« Practically Asks Death an ar "I overlooked one thing. I have friveri von the form of the verdict 1 for the infliction of the de«*th pen alty t>r imnris mment. Of course, (Continued on Page two)