Newspaper Page Text
*/« 7 Sn o THE PRODUCERS NEWS Owned by « group of fi erg and subsidised by body, it prints the_ papers of Big Business not giro yon. * all program» productioi ** ll *l« for t* _ „ Official Organ of Fanner« Holi day Association of Montana _ PLENTYWOOD, SHERIDAN COUNTY, MONTANA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1936 T .PUBLISHED WEEKLT ■mm** XVIIL NO. 4S ©ÄfflEÄfsOTJ I Anfoi Dolice in Egypt ha' c frowned on are repo*« 1 ^.hineguns while up anU-imper^ist .tu meeting» dent these Brit *^nned police! , * chivalrous. . . , v.nas " .^^"'.Ch fhis life, ' Tira** Wb'l« ..ni* are stirring, Hanyfirr-n« , a ife —F.p. A , M*vHvork Herald Tribune **< **, * * _ . . Arms Banos t ■ Thuringia J the ■•.•national fc the in-«*- over a concern irelfare has - ^ ^ and baby jjc.ituaS..*• to he a thriving ha si ft 0Ur ' Germans coming u hoa.'iM ?.. (tot J , l . !u ,'T r-f'rli again Pwcm Rji" 1 J,w ' u ^ ^ * * * . Found at Last! The Answer Why is there so much unem pJoynicnt in Boston, It is because ttere is so much unemployment jjgetfhere-rtnut s *, A tileno, Boston men. * * * * u gee. of Commerce Roper tens M that the nation is on its tee* ... , _ Now all that it »««da is a Mir of shoes. * * * The Gi" Des'?. gi. ind Primo (.»ruera tile i tror'C" ___ rS I ^«ÆmoTears. * • * . , T . lb. B«nry Coffin of Union theological Seminary says t faith i# returning. 86 m ; 9 With fashionable Sir Anthony s-."ssi»sirs ^ - ÄSrT'Ä «é the birthday of Andrew aut »f thing. - --rk.b * • * m, mayor of New York has Mzmed artichokes in order to bat racketeers It looks like putting in . . Students report tüa. that deah £5«?V^ ^ aspM making speeches. LINDBERGH AND HIS FAM HT. TO GET AWAY FROM KID KAP THREATS, ARE GOING TO ENi.f ' M) AND POSSIBLY TO HIS FATHER'S NATIVE LAND OF SWFDFN. THEREBY FOLLOWING OUT Hî ' T OF 1'-REPEATED HEARST Bin EM TO GO BACK WHERE tlKV CAME from. Ihn to f «t after the bootleggers, ♦ * ♦ As 1 result of the disclosure , tf that Ethiopian partition plan wwked out by England's Hoare ta à Laval of France, peace . .. twrea rather than war are going to give Haile Selassie * : tbe Jitters. • » • » Mussolini's answer to increased pressure from other powers was a plea to his people to ~ Äraight." Which way? scares shoot C.«Ä 14—^The' fed by the house are ; F O bill: Authorized full cash °*ut a proîidedTo C meSâ Ä" Ml; Provides for full payment through $50 bonds, re Îîîb a wv. af iSn. ne î t — 15 unpald 1 The only man in the country « who reported an income of more than $5X00,000 in 1933 lived in BUitoir. And they put A1 Capone in jail. .*......, * * ♦ ITS A GREAT SYSTEM. deferences shown - IN COMPARISON OF TWO BONUS BILLS Sfî; orÄÄ" House bill* Canreltarf oil nnnid House bill, excelled all unpaid Senate bill: Cancelled interest due on loans made after Sent 30 inqi P * 3 , ' Both bills provide that the vet eran could hold hi, certificate, or bmifl in the case of tbp senatP MU ^d get 3 per cent interest annu allv from June 15, 1937 ally irom June io, TIME BY FORELOCK FRANKFORT. Ky., Lui. 13 Co-'rt opinons on ponding leg falation would be authorized in a bill that appears headed for quick passage by the Kentucky general .»semHy. hit' «• O" HE COMPOSED "HOT TIME" NEW YORK, Jan. 13— Theo dore Metz, compo-cr of the half century old favorite "ThereTl Be - Hoit Time in the Old Town Tonight" died in a hospital to day. n.J. WPA M WIN WAGE RISE - Back Down in Face of a General Strike By FELIX GIORDANO NEWARK, N. J.—WPA work clistrcit have! er in the , n n , f) per cont mC rease m wages, from $55 to $60.50 a month, j beginning from January 2,1936.1 This increase was due priman-, lv to the organizational activity i ( of the Association for Adequate ■ Relief, Newark section ot tue a. U. L., which was the only organ iaztion to call the W0 T*^®^ S a giant mass m eeting -which.v - imousiy endorsed thei denial d i wage increases, lower workin 0 hours, and recognition of tae worker organization co. - '*7SSS**rSSS&& Tired of Promises' the workers, who had or ganfzed to set results, were not sat j s fj e( i w jth vague promises that * nd " he administration to ex , nothing. Dissatisfaction ^ among them> h was heightened by the knowledge that in Pennsylvania and in New York the two bordering states, wage increases had been obtained. The mood of the workers was taking shape and found express ion in the w idespead response that, the idea of STRIKE obtained on' the various projects. . js* »et. .man ! "ft " d, s tri ÂTÏS ! project workers, which was being prepared by the Association for j Adequate Relief, and for ^luc all the workers were g^i 1 ^ re u y ta acainst this background that the sudden dedsum .to hand, -trirrrfs.ssAB-jS ! a^Hke^mvoWin^^lose S' Ä ; have umvi bly R - e bÄÄBSJSS U take their ^«^Jhis tihey tried Dy iinng a nuiuuci ui militant workers without advice or a g -i ! ÄrtÄÄSÄ . be was ed indirectly bv Mr. Michael Con don, district labor manager, when he stated to a committee repre senting the Association ^vhich went to protest the firing of the men andean.! their «i-tatement. that one of the fired men had "thereatened" to carry on orgamz ational work on any other project | he might have been assigned to. The Association immediately **' ^„«ÄÄn^d irate penlng, Mother aspect of the struggle tb ^ the administration is carry 0 ? against the Association is b f ound in the arrests (four £ date ) of members of the Asso Nation Who are guilty of organiz 1 ™ PA workers. The arrested 1 g Thomas Morans, Jack Dale, Giordano and Victorson. A j on page four) sure, ^this^ WASHINGTON.'jan. 1^—The^ouse^f ■?' , /.nmnromise proposal more acceptable to Prebl to enact a compromise p d6 A n CTalter the bill h ,?f t Uan'ison! 0 democrat,"Missis l° wer ^ th^nfte^taMwe committee said his ^1'Olip ^ Sippi, of the senate imance^ bm ^ decUned to further meet 4.^? however, are reported to lean to comment. Party leaders Bonus Bill Passes House 355 to 59; Now Senate ! i * Body Expected to Enact Measure That Is More Acceptable to President Roosevelt; Group Will Begin Its Work Monday Upper nowev^ would ^ ward the Byrnes-Steawer rn " ^ ^ goverme nt. ___$2,200,000 The bill enacted by the house* todav was stripped of inflation oday i<;ions and contained SJrely an^authorization for ap propnation of funds to meet the -iIkT +t! the veterans. The res ponsibility of finding the money U taft tn Mr. Roosevelt. Bonus eaderl ^id congresrional officials said thaf^oavment of the adjusted ^^certificates would require th7rasing of only a additional $1, cco fi00 0 f 0 ' W as estimated that veterans Îj- wa lt least $500,000,CCO of ^'SfrtHicates would not cash SemTn tan-edialely and ftat a^ other $5CO,OCO000 could be taken ftSm the old war nsk fand accumulated here. Snlits Party Lines The vote today spUt shai|ly across party lines. It fhowed 275 tSSSSL -■* TSSra-S ; i | Government Loses $20,000,000 Action on Process Taxes: , . c . n m i. . l -„îeîana Rice I Amount involved in Suit Brought by Lotuwana A ice Concerns Ordered Refunded; Fate of Billion I ^ " .. . r . . • , Honkt | L reviOuJy Collected in L/OUDt L , - WASHINGTON, Jan. 13—The ' government i os t $2CO,CCCCCO in process i ng tax revenue today when the supreme court ruled unari mous i y that the money be return ed to the taxpayers. The fate of one biUion dollars previously col lected was leit in douât. In anothe r decision, also unan Ä ÄÄ S stitutionality, however, as another test suit by Gov. Eugene f .tl madge of Georgia is pending, on which an opinion may be experte«. on or after Jan 20. Tlie cases involved Were: p. A suit by eight Louisiana nee processors for an injunc t i on to prevent the government f rom collecting about $200,000 in processing taxes. The money had been placed in escrow pond ûig decision, and the court or dered it returned to the procès The mling set a preced ent for some 2,000 other cases • — »' ****"- : r. 1 ^. b /- L ".-" ool j t ^!J decisioi in which he 4 "?, deïild W taTunSion 'to prevent the government from imposing the heavy Bankhead i ™ ï ^ d ^ . ° °^ wkaJSjtj t^the^distrirt had the —s as mikb* It took the court a scant 10 ' i j at noon to announce these dec l 3 ' : 1 &2 - LM-ff&Ä | today's decisions, while devot - 1 ed up only one point definitely: ! The "d&on of the. processing out to farmers who co operated with its P^am . It Wa. just such a situ today's-tEe propect of havmg to pay back tax money already spent -that nst -4 to event of its un vide that in the event o its constatutionaj vp " onl i£ sue for Jf c ot y they could show they had not p LlhSÆ* " " JÄÄÄ'g £5 which time they may challenge the government's right to require proof as to who actually paid vhe taxes. . .. Complicating Uy farm «Ration still more i. the fact that the ad ministration has recognized its outlawed obligation to farmers, . thus definitely committing itself to paytng th em TO me 13. 0, WC«. laborites voting for Pesage while 31 republicans and 28 democrats vote d "no." Among the democrats opp osing passage j ame9 Buchanan, democrat, lej». aS( of the powerful house appro pna tions committee, who is de ^ anding that government spend j be tapered sharply. ^ ke Josep h W. Byms vot ed „ as did Majority Leader William B. Bankhead , democrat, Alabama . Minority Leaded Ber tram Snell, republican. New Aork, and othe r high ranking repubh cans roared the,, "noea." Despite t he fact that the three t p ve ter a„s organizat.one-the American Legmn, the.Veterans of Foreign Wars and the Disabled American Veterans—united behind which passed to day, op I <€«*«* on pa^ four) - S - . . .. ! The AAA at first estimated this obligation at $oUt,000,C0C, but re vised it after a check. t Ä Meanwhile congressional ^ead-, er s proceeded witn attempts to enact a substitute AAA. . .! Senator Tom Connaily. demo « .Texas, announced tnat he »nil « »***"; JPjgJ N^. X £ p ort ôf farm oducts on the theory that by of these .. 0illltl Qdities tne cioaiestic price ° wiU be raised. . i ( Tbe administration,* however, is committed to a policy oi control ling production through soil con-j servation rather than the raiding ! 0 f prices through export bounties, Senator Ellison D. Smith, dem j ocrat, South Carolina, said be would press for action on hia hill to create a separate federal bank w system for agriculture. j-— « , pNpfii I en i 1 AT NORTHERN At WUIUIIlIuT 1 CTATC CrilAAl M AI K NLHUUL JIAIli 0\J " l|j^ College Now Rate» »iSlw«imi ^ »**-*» at H t he ^fice^of ' ^ the^re^stw^of "Sä the^wmter quarter just beginning.! S3f3f5S S5£5?iSS%s tjon of the year wmen % : ■ 1 Havre College Now Rates ! 6 - _ . HAVRE Jan 14_A final check H A VK "', Jan ^ 1 TT: A J^ 8 .rî Sasrÿs zKSS ^ 240; 1932-33, 378; 1933-34, 381; 1934-35, 324, and in the pres the enrollment contin ued ^ rige and reached the pr es of 4 studen ts which; mikes it the third largest -»"1 »n Montana. -o+on/.«! In tbe 81x years of its existence the college has made other advan ceme nts. Starting with a small ^ t allotment tor salaries and ^ ^ * co iieg e ; one building donated' J ne * ' of HaVre> another sal fro ^ old F ort Assinniboine 1 and the third and newest, the wo-, dor mitory, built by a feder « U ' - RADIO STATION HAS , K™ p. m. , I The material used is the leased j Transradio Press service received. at Wolf Point by m J a ^ t of 8 ^œeiitativeslS^tool^te.mediatJîy^ gmn| ! Ag s00n as weather permits, George Bairy, manager announces. new sîatfon' new modem high fidelity filant ^ u ™ hout an / the m0 st modem i station in the northwest. - The Wolf Point radio station, \ KGCX, will in the future broad cast four news periods daily, cov ering international as well as ua tional and state news. I The news periods are from 7;oOl to 7:45 a. m., 9:15 to 9:30 a. m.j - 15 to 1:30 p. m. and 7:15 to 7:30: ^ - nnn Al 1 OTTED ALLU1 1LLI FOR WPA PROJECTS MONTANA 1 IN MUn I ■ tn ' "mmunication ' Tavlo? reSing to by Char'e- E. laymr rei tari mg t the rg 0 ^ piprwmta-* tana to , s ® nat °^f 0 a ^, 1 w „_ b imrton tives of Montana in WaÄfagton, the following wire was reoeiv.d from Senator James E. Murray. in co „f e rence daily .fj. a odminirtraticn here and ^ ^ cure d additional grant of | million two hundred thou- ! dollars for .the state of Ct.na to be naoed U P«' ditiona i people to work P James E. Murray mca«aae was re The foregoing mes. , ft • ce ived a *^s** to press. Further details will ap pear tn a later t,«e. BIRTHDAY BALL EVERT OF SEASON Birthday Ball for the President" a couty-wide affair, to be held in Plentywood Thurs day, Jan. 30, at the high school auditorium, promises to be the social event of the season. According to J. Franc Mur ray, general chairamn, in charge of arrangements, county com mittees are now functioning and The tickets will go on sale this throughout Sheridan county. Three orchestras have been en- ! gaged to furnish music for the-1 fall. The Medicine Lake school j orchestra, Wunderlich's string ur chestra, and one of the three j Plentywood orchestras, will contri bute to the success of the event. Tickets will sell for one dollar ^ - n the pas t. Proceeds, after ex s lia ve been deducted wich i L ce ntion of a -mall percentage.! distributed as the com- j mitîée ih charge tees fit. j Js ot infantile paralysie. Thirty per. cent of the receipts are sent to a national committee in charge to be used for prevention and eure of infantile paralysis, of whicn the President himself once sui fered. J Last year $1,€70,000 was raise! for the fund on Jan. 30. It is de flared that over 5,COO committees have already «ent pledges of local participation and it is expected that the affair Svill outshine the past ones considerably. I —-I i _______ n(\«>Aiîfi NEW TELEPHONE | RATES ANNOUNCED lUllljJ MiUUIIIlI/, _ Announcement was made today by the local office of the Moun- 1 tin States Telephone and Tele fSSaryMountai^ Stated Within the last year, reduced SÈ'b2SÆÂ^rsS instead of 8:30 p. m. The tele-: îsrsft ^ day Sunday> This applies t0 ES€r3H.^!DooLEY Announcement was made today j . .. . , lL - * tain States Telephone and Tele graph Company that effective j January I6, the Mountain States Company, will introduce special Sunday rates for Long Distance j telephone calls and also offer re-. duced rates on person-to-person calls after 7 p. m. every evening, Within the last year, reduced * t rates on station-to-station S-&HH5 Sunday. These reduced r ply ^ ^^Uon-to-station rate is the day 1 .. , 1 1 more cents | In the S*Ä*KÄ«Ä Ä maininc the same for all hours maimng t e of e ? s0 t n ,t o . pe J 0n calls the : . V , „ el partie operator is asked g P ^t«T lîîJÏ! "ni pie in giving a broad ®/ se ^ffir? lower cost. Persons who particu larly Uke to^call , out ' of ' to J^ d "J' atives and friends on Suncmys will be benefited by the new schedule 'which offers both reduc ed station-to-station and person to-person rates at all hours on Sundays. The reductions actually , apply from 7 p. m. e-rySaturday I IS f(INFERRING ^ u - , - ...p AW IWÇI1R AWfF Ul'l UlüUluilwLl _ l HELENA, Jan. 14—The state ^^ d ®n f fiK , ta™S>M 0 ^^^» 1 i con g ,n f, TT ftlt , „ witb At . I Äccm^Ä'Äm.Ä ^^ ^ d ^ get a complete picture wanted ^ ^^plete pKturo t joinin in an action relative ^ \ Cancellations." day. STATE BOARD neyfa & or j. Under a blanket contract with pearl Insurance ^ the state carries policies totaling $6,000,-,• 000 on state P r °F«rty and in ad-, dition has separate policies on new j buüdings at some Montana insti-j* ^ions that were put up with| federa i funds. I Jean . Kelley ' deputy invest ment and insurance commissioner £of ^ gtate> gave the board of examiners an explanation of how the new ^f -insurance law, pa c se d by the last legislature, is function mg. —--Sheriff Tn >jpw YORK WASHINGTON, Jan. 13—Pres ! id ent Koo evàt will leave • ington Saturday for New York 5f;°" to participate in a radio program in connection with the hirthdav balls to be given again, this year for funds in fighting ^ paralysis. Ft. Peck Workers Wire Wheeler and Murray for Increased Appropriation -• 17 HIGHWAY JOBS WILL BE LET IN FALLS ON JAN, 24 - Trrfal r»f ™ «-in'<VVI ■ More Than $1,540,003 Announced . ced tod ' y J contracts for high wa y work to cost a total of $l>-j ^ oco would be let at Great] Falls Jan. 24. The notice of the contract let ting i ist8 total improvments cn both the federal and state ' er" highway systems as follow», 77.167 miles of road construction, 5 treated timber bridges, 2 way overpasses at railroad cro-, sings, 1 highway underpass at a i railroad crossing. * , ora ! Work Panned on the roads in Montana includes, ot .218 1 miles of grading, surfacing an i , ■ ** 1 ing and bituminous Pavement; 0 '^, grading 811(1 concrete I ^pour treated timber bridges two hi ehwL ov?rpasses at railroad cr ^ sin £ s and p one raiload under PS Work provided on the state ssrriJj^iÄi3g-^ÄÄ6iSrtEÄr3i.Wi.^ S£,s«. ta £^ 2 «M f tbe Moon erfek road in Cos improvement P y young man *p our trea ted timber bridges, two at railroad ''"work provided on the state **f eeder >* road system includes: 1&90 miles of grading and plant x ^ x 0 iiin g - 14.025 miles of grad - n and surfacing; 1.149 miles of ceding and one treated timber bridge ! SfelSrS was riding turned over on the feu? Trail about three miles from b i e ntvwood Wednesday. His con ^ntywood^ v Engdahl was riding with Ervin USfShTjfjSS». 1 car, a new Furd, hit an icy rut, turned 0 ver. Engdahl s head hit the top of the car. Nelson es caped uninjured. injured man was taken to tJ ho spda, by passing m otonsts. Plentywood Wednesday. His con- . dl Encdiü was 6 'riding with Ervin ! attendance . ^jackson dinner A large crowd "wm in attend ance at the Jacks J on v. Ar held in Plentywood at which Ar thur Laney, Havre attorney, waa tbe principle speaker. The affair was h «W »n the I^A eran church basement and a rep resentat ive crowd of Shendan, county was in attendance. A radio was installed m the p „, p , s . makmg - *' & Mr 0 Laney's speech was well te ceived. He made favorable com nari=on of the conditions that now confront Près 'SSfi** V» • £îï ! velt^ administration and stated j that people are inclined to forget ^ be "troubles of yesterday, bu urged continued support of Ne w Deal- ___' • * . aUr seii, chairman *1 .* l I and • , ,." sends word to The Pro * time, se^ds wort ,• menA and will soon b. able tm ; and • Tumd to busine». : • no unces to those mtereotod , the Relief Gr^vance • Committee will take up sneh ^ « com plaints as he has *" * « vcry near future, and l*y*J # j having complaint should sead # : * it to him a t once. •_---:- jqpjje MARKUSON IS ! i imhCDCUFPIFF NEW UNDERSHEKirI* -- | Nel Ma rku on, Medicine Lake business ma n, was appointed un dersheriff of Shendan county by Han s Madsen and ussum ed his new duties Thursday. Mr. Markuson is neer reaUenU ot Shendan ream ty, having lived at i^ou y number of year»-and »»«»»!.,„.»« ly engaged in busmcM fam . cine Lake. He will : ily to Plentywood aa^ - I rangements wiU permit. " , _._ JANUARY RELIEF CHECK IS ^Senator Murrav Wired Back He Had Secured lncreasf*K* ^nator Murray Wired L>aCK ne naa ae„urea increase* of WPA Jobs in Montana From 14,000 to 10,0G3-r- L; but Workers not On Relief List not Qualified for Sß Jobir _ Relief Campaign Conducted by Destitute j j ; ( oiurresman Ayers. j ■ Senator Murray wired back that he had had the num increased from 14,000 to 19,000 so that ,, OI , f mio-ht hp nlaced in iobs Un all employable relief ca ^® s g . • n it ia fortunately this does not have any bearing On our situa ^ . • . fe because up to November 1 there were only , - $1165.00 FOR 200 FAMILIES Glasgow, Montana January 11, 1935 When the relief office in Glasgow received only $1165 at the beginning of the month, the League for the De fense of the American Standard of Living got busy. Wires were sent to Senators Wheeler and Murray and about ' y 0?« 2500 have been laid off at the Fort Peck dam since No>ember and they are just as hungry as though they had been on reüef sometime during the summer. There are over 200 families on relief now so the $1165 divides „ n t r> S5 a famUy. P *ÆJL t me eüîigs of the League were: Monday, January 6, McCone City and Nashua; Tuesday, 7 ' , <^*:Yii-- "»»â-âï'â: nary J " THRESHED OUT AT GLASGOW attended ; iä£^SSS him at once telmg him to get the rule changed quick. Letter to Hop kins from C. M. Perkins, a mem b£r o£ the league, was read. Am ong other things it said: -I bav. beard .1 a eeuatr, utopia where life guards . M f officials do herf r(w fflUt t0 a man w ^ 0 has yelled for help and say, ,. citizen?' 'Are you kins from C oi^ fthw Udn|s It said: "I have heard of a country called Utopia where life guards act as the relief officials do here. They row out to a man who has yelled for help and say, 'Are you a citizen?' 'Are you married?' 'How long have you * 'Why didnt Sr^&Sh® ^ we'll coac^back next week and « " eome floating.' ^ ne J|^we«k, if they remem . R tbe investigate and dis ^ ™ y th 1 drowned was cover »n« th ufe guard ^ ne^Tiatrict. f lived in you learn how to swin when you boy?' 'How many child Hauptman Given Extended Time Due to Fact it Wffl Be Necessary to sentence Prisoner; Governor Refuses to Di.'uige J-JJ S Reasons for Action . . 30-Day Repriev t ~ior, ifi—Rrn Hauptmann convicted läÄWÄ man. || came only 29 hours before tk "l''2!i r tnutinf a reprieve,'' the which 1 do not care to disclose at * , The reprieve, though onjv for ! Haupt SO days, actually.assures mann of at least eight more weeks of m and perhaps three months due to the fact it will be n«cbs sary to resentence him. Governor Hoffman acted soon , after the United States supreme ; court, in a one-sentence daemon h v Chief Justice Hughes, denied Hauptmann's appeal for a wnt of habeas corpus and a stay of ex ' ^ Th wil i b e only the one re J™ Te <<ualess t h e evidence PJ 1 * ' warrant M ar?ther tbe gov caid J{ Hauptma nn is to be firally save d it must he through presentation of sufficient new evidSice to 'warrant Justice Thom Jrenctard who jjt Flemmrton, granting a request, tndL « for clemency to the state pat don ' court. j The ernor anno unced his de J ^ Hopkins, and tl SSLu point- put ü-t U» ïîtâ«. - and that stuff Svas going into tl rÄÄ;,rsi Hopkins' offi< Vf immediately. A mei ^ ^ f hat he thought the Cou sunoort was due to pressu ^^^mzation The memb, by N g De al reported that a* 'ÂÏÏ. too relief b been put in the gas station New Deal. He thought this w d ue to pressure by the organ« tion, and especially its dema for investigators on the proje. g£ J^^immld^ fess - Ä ^ Jh^trip to Glasgow. The appli tion blanks to be sent in by it therefore meant a real help. 1 now they faced another delay cause the relief office makes (Continued on page three) cision in his office shortly a talking with Mrs. Anna Hai There was no formal statem bv the governor who spoke ..f-h e attorney general .and matter, and I have decided to ?<Since a reprieve of 30 days. <<We have agreed that this i ed. not be cha n e „ g intertion to grant ^ne reprieve. There will ^ further repr ieve. (1 j am giving this reprieve d i vers reasons which I do not c tQ di5clo?e at this time. It is act of executive clemency. can he no extension of prieve unles8 t he evidence sh warrant it. wa <No forma i request was « to me to take this action. «There i* plenty of hrecen for the action I am taking. «i will send ^ Î 0 « v ^ i the reprieve to Col. Mark O. l berlim* (onncirdo ker t r oi state prison) Vithm the hour." preparation „( A®iav however, cai {he eovemor to lea™ hi» oi 0« goverao u ^ ^ , before s gn » .. ed ear y