t -TV.THTRD YEARNO fifi " " : . -.'-i-.Vi'-u.ir-S s . SALEM, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 17 iQn LEATHER FORECAST Oregon: Tonight and Thursday fair except probably rain near coast, moderate southwest winds. Local No rainfall: river, (.6 feet, falling. GERMAN RE VOLUTION FAILS: " " ' . 1 l - " "" : L KAP Five Killed By Blizzard In Dakotas Two-day Storm Does Damage Running Into Hioasands and Ties Up Traffic; Tem perature Drops Low Today Bismarck. N. D., Mar. 17. Five known dead and thousands of dollars damage to property was the toll of the two day blizzard which swept this state the worst in more than thirty years. The storm today was reported to be gradually subsiding with tem peratures sinking. One girl gave her life to save her sister and brother while the heroic ef fort of another youth to bring help proved futile and he was his three brothers perished on the prairies dur ing the storm. When their sleigh was wrecked by the wind, Hazel Miner, aged 18, took off her coat and wrapped it and blan-1 kets around her small brother and sis ter near Center. For twenty-four hours they lay in the snowdrifts before they were found. Hazel was dead but she saved the lives of the little ones. Virtually no freight trains were run tilng in this state and passenger serv ice is alow. Two Great Northern trains are stuck in the snow near Minot. Reports from Devils Lake said that there are snow banks from twenty to thirty feet deep between there and Ml- .nut. Hotels at Devils Lake are said to be unable to handle the stranded tra velers there and many persons were re . ported sleeping In coaches in the rail road yards. CIRCULATION Averse lor Quarter Ending . December II. lilt t S$ Member Audit Bureau of CLrea'ttiea Associated Fresa Full Leuea WLre POUT Hoover Tells Bourbons Of New Hampshire He Cannot Be Candidate Concord, N. H., Mar. 17. A hi telegram from Herbert Hoover, saying could not approve of the ua nf hi. name in the presidential primaries in this state, was received today by Rob ert C. Murchi. democratic national committeeman. Reecipt of the telegram week after the primaries in which thre district delegates to the democra tic national convention pledged to Hoover were elected. The message, as made public today by Mr. Murchi follows: "I see by the Dresa anil letter. . friends that my name is mentioned for "'B aemocratic primaries in New Hampshire. I would be glad if you would inform the democratic authori ties that while I am highly sensible of the great honor implied in the desire of many friends to place my name in nomination as a candidate in the dem ocratic primaries I deem it due to them (apparently ommisslon here) that I am not a candidate and there fore cannot approve of the use of my name for that purpose." Bryan Reiterates Ratification Plea In Advice Given Democratic Senators Irish Tri-Color Takes Place of Good Old Green i fcew TorK, March 17. The tradl- tional "wearing of the green", in St. ' Patrick's Day parades on Fifth avenue ' gave way today to the wearing of the green, white and yellow the tri color ot the Irish republic" in honor ut : Kamonn De Valera, head of the un recognized government who reviewed the 25,000 marchers from St. Patrick's -cathedra). The parade was a rfree Ireland" demonstration, the like of which New York has never before wit nessed. It also took on a "free India": inspect, for more than 1,000 represen tatlves of that race marched with the sons of Erin, , Wh" ,he colors of the Emerald Isle naturally predominated, the Stars and Stripes led the parade, followed. by the sluing insn sixty-ninth," formerly the 165th United States infan.r,. Every Irish American organisation here was represented. Between the great Gothic towers of he stately cathedral floated the Amer ican flag and the tri-color of the re public. In addition to President" De alera, Governor Alfred E. Smith, former Governor Lynn, Mayor Hylan, Archbishop Hayes and host of Catholic dignitaries were invited to the review ing stand. Previous to the parade a Pontifical mass was celebrated in the eathedral. Shots At Wilson Washington, Mar. 17. Photogra phers were permitted to take their first i Pictures jot President Wilson todav since his return from his western trip last September. The president was photographed as he left the White House grounds on his fifth automo bile ride since he went to bed in Octo ber "a very sick man." Washington, March 17. W. J. Bry-I an arrived here today from Florida en' CntTIPrn Man Clnl route to N.w Yn,i, . ii.. UIUCI U mCTl UCl dress Friday night and immediately became a paticjuant in the eleventh hour negotiations if democratic sen ators working for a eomnrnml nn the peace treaty. Although Mr. Bryan said he did not intend to visit the senate nor Intervene In the treaty situation, democratic sen ators began to consult him before he had finished his breakfast. Mr. Bryan gave out another state ment urging ratification of the treaty. "For democratic senators to Jom with the 'irreconcilables' in defeatlnir the treaty," he said, "is unthinkable In advance of its being actually accom plished and it would be unspeakable afterward." Mr. Bryan said it would be "suicid-: al" for the democratic party to deny the right of a majority of the senate to declare the senate's policy. "We have the right to appeal to the people to reverse the action of the ma jority," he said, "but we have no rlehr to resist that majority to prevent the people speaking through the represen- tatives. "The democratic party cannot hoy to make much headway combatting the fundamental principle upon which it stands." , Decision to Give up Short Lived Dictatorship Made By Revolt Leaders Today Refusal of President Ebert to CoMrosise With Revolu- tinjsts id Deaosstnuesi by Extreme Radicals in . Virion Parts of Gersur Hasten Action: More Killed m racnonai uasnes The Hague. Mar. 17. f Rv Tho Assnr-inrArl ProaaTrio nn. ignation of the government of Chancellor Kapp in Berlin was handed in this afternoon, it is announced in a Berlin dispatch from me semi-oinciai worn Dureau, received here shortly before 4 p.m. ; (By the Associated Press) The Kapp administration at Berlin.' realizing the futility of attempting to hold the reins of power, has decided to give up its "UJ' "vc" utviaiorsnip. At one o ciock tnis atternoon Berlin time, wiancenor ivapp aeciaea to resign, according to official advices irom ine uerman capital. Youth Dies From Kicks Given By Jealous freinds Paris Chauffeurs Threaten Strike For Lower Rates Pueblo, Colo., Mar. 17. Tel, the 11 year-old son of Mrs, H. A. Kuykendall in a statement today shortly before his death, charged he had been kicked and injured by five boys. Physicians say the lad died as a result of these Injuries. Pueblo, Colo., Mar. 17. Five school boys arrested today in connection with the death of Ted, the 11-year-old son of Mrs. H. A. Kuykendall, confessed, according to the police, that they kicked the boy to death this morning because they were jealous of his high standing in the school the boys attend ed. , The Kuykendall led, suffering from severe injuries, was found behind a billboard. He died an hour afterward. The police are withholding the names of the boys under arrest. Paris. Mar. 17. Chauf feurs threaten Paris with a novel strike, their demand be'ng a diminution of fares. Since the law calling for in creased taxation went ino ef fect a few days ago a long '"e of taxies have been idle, the citizens having taken to piking. Chauffeurs claim 'heir income has been de creased fifty percent because f the recent Increase in their rates of loo percent and they demand that the rates be brought back to the former scale. Campaigners in Hospital Drive Fail to Respond Seventyifive per cent of the com mittees who ardently agreed prior to the campaign to aid in the movement for $100,000 to construct a Salem Gen-' eral Hospital have failed to take any part in the drive at all, with the result that today failure confronted the pro ject. This was the substance of the report made at campaign headquarters In the Commercial club, as to the pro gress of the drive. Out of 100 solici tors who declared they would aid In the campaign but about 20 have thus far taken any part. This caused Campaign Manager Mc Gilchrist today to declare that assist ance of any public spirited citizen In ' the city wishing to see such a hospital ' here would be gladly welcomed. He I i"co"" ""P" uusmeHB men oral Uroener. aakinv m in oumit hi spare a few minutes of their time and here for a verbal discussion, but so far end a hand in the campaign of solid- he ha not arrived. General Mera.r . "' ' - I bm no commission from us to nego- A few solicitors were at work Tues-, jtlate with the Insurgents. We, on tm day afternoon, but they had not re- contrary, told him we must adhere to ported up to a late hour today. Th the declarations we made Friday night figure today still showed t dene ot and we nominated representatives of 135,000 from the gyal. the coalition parties we must Insist on Evidencing the fact that support to 1 unconditional retirement of the insur the movement Is not solely confined gents." Previous to this announcement tor- ces of extreme radicalism asserted themselves In various German centers. There were increasing Spartacan dis orders and growing talk among the radicals of the possibility of utilizing the present disturbed conditions to es tablish soviet rule. The list of killed reported from nu merous German towns and cities in clashes between demonstrators and troops mounted Into the hundreds. There has been no direct confirma tion of last night's reports of 400 kill ed in a DomDarament oi Kiel by a war ship but there are apparently verac ious reports of 100 killed and 300 wounded at Dresden, probably more than 100 killed in Berlin suburbs and ine Ktinng or irom a nair dozen to a score of persons In others of the 24 or more German centers where clashes have been reported. ElK'rt Stands Firm. Copenhagen, Mar. 16. President Ebert, head of the German govern ment driven from Berlin last Satur day, stands firm in his determination not to have any relations with the new- regime at the capital, says a short tele gram received here from Stuttgart The telegram says that in the course of an Interview, President Ebert de clared: "I am in complete accord with the imperial government. We have not so far deviated from the declarations we made Friday nlght.as to reply to the Insurgents' ultimatum. There can be no question of an understanding with the perjured enemies of the Germtfh constitution. "I replied to a telegram from Gen to Salem, and further clearly deoiet ing the fact that outside districts wel come a greater hospital here, a letter, with a check for $50, was received at headquarters today from a widow at Gen-aii. She wrote that she hoped the campaign would succeed, and regret ted that she was unable to make a greater donation. A meeting of the hospital board was scheduled for three o'clock this after- noon. Matters pertaining to the cam paign were to be discussed. Allied Troops And Naval Craft Hold Constantinovle Now i i Constantinople, Mar. 17. Allied 1 troops have occupied this city and the great guns of the British dreadnaught Benbow, and other giant allied war ships, moored to quays or anchored in the Golden Horn, command both sides of the Bosphorus. Every ship Is cleared for action. The actual arrival of allied forces caused little alarm, nor were there any signs of panic except in Stam- boul. Shopkeepers closed their places when they heard the allies were com ing, but the troops inspired confidence and the stores were reopened. Modern Camp Ground y For Salem In Prospect . niiniature city, located on Albert's between the two creeks in the I'lnity of Winter and Oak streets, to known as the Salem Auto Camp tun5' wih gas cooking plates, elec lights, attendants, shower baths. wo!i 8 pooUand re bathing suits, sivin 'teiU h0USM- Playgrounds with iu etC"" and a huS electric sign at ".nance, tii nlanned tentatively bv committees from the Commercial j Ing to the plans discussed at the meet ing. An attendant will be In cnarge Joint iuh o ium me uunimerumi o. Salem Cherrians and Salem Auto Bi "J association, that met Tuesday 'h at the Commercial club. t ' RotaUon are already under way th , Alberts tract, and it is hfllevrd th "rk wiu bein establishing .np grounds within a couple of i weeks. It is planned to have it at ready when the tourist trade begins to surge this way. Three committees from the respec tive organizations wire named to pro mote the camp ground plans. Com mittees on finance, publicity and grounds were named. The grounds will be large enough to accommodate 350 automobiles, accord- Irish Question Debate Delays Pact; Blocked Washington, Mar. 17. Hastening to clear the way for final action on the peace treaty the" senate today choked off a St. Patricks debate on the Irish question by tagbllng 64 to 21 a proposal to declare by reserva tion that Great Britain should pro claim Ireland free. The motion to table was made by Senator Kellogg, republican, Minne sota, who denounced, the proposal as "politics." ' Thirty republicans and twenty four democrats voted for -th mnilnn. Spartacan Rise. !whll fnnrtaon iliamnxral. Paris, Mar. 17. News from Berlin renuhllnann nnnoned It niA nek... rtn.mn. . I - j. . . ,np7.i w &a,rnavnt .,., I,"?" le"ln.'5 or' The Irish declaration was proposed H auiiguiiiiiry (.'mines at eissen, JJort- gree murder, for the murder of War-mumf Leip9ic, Mannheim, Frankfort ren O. Grimm, one of four victims of and Brunswick, together with . Centralia I.W.W. To be"! Sentenced Monday, Report Montesano, Wash., Mar. 17. Sen tencing ot the seven alleged I. W. ft. Many Killed in Clutlta. London, Mar. 17. Machine gun fir ing was heard in Berlin between 11 and 12 o'clock last night, says a me sage to the Exchange Telegraph com pany today from the German capital. During the day a detachment of sol diers passed through the Brunnen strasse, headed by a band playing "Hell dir im siegerkranz." Workmen immediately charged the troops and a skirmish ensued in which a number of men were killed and others wounoeu, the message adds. At Spandau, sixty-nine persons. nearly ail workmen, were reported miiea, and the righting is continuing. The correspondent reports that big trucks are constantly passing through the streets, loaded down with armed soldiers who point their guns in the direction of the sidewalks. Wagenhelm, who was defeated and captured in Altona has Joined the troops loyal to the Ebert regime. Stuttgart, March 17.-It is doubt ful if the German national assembly will be able to meet here today as planned. Because of the railroad strike a great number of the mem bers will be unable to reach this city tor the opening of the session. PEOPLE WHO KNEW HOOVER Back Of Hoover's Interest In humanity a "Real Love Story" Is Found With Ail The Romantic Phases. - Gasoline Price Boosted Today; Raise General Increases in prices of gasoline "and other petroleum products at Standard Oil filling stations here became ef fectlve today, according to announce ment of district officials. The raises are: gasoline 2 cents, distillate nnd coal oil 1 cent, refined, oils' 1 cent a gallon. , ' . ; . . Other oil companies operating in 'Salem imvt not yet announced raises in prices, but officials said that they expected them within a day or so. With the raise of 2 cents the price of gasoline here Is at Its zenith. This rise is believed to be preliminary of another to follow within 90 days. So tar as officials here know the raise In prices is effective all over the Pa ciflo coast, ' Advance (icncral Portland, Or., Mar. 17. An ad vance in gasoline prices of two cents gallon went into effect in Oregon and other Pacific northwest states to day. The pries ot gasoline at filling stations and garages here was quoted I at sit cents today. An advance of 25 'forward course of procedure. Th n.nl. a lHMnf ....! . .... cwv b uaum vn xuut uii also went Into effect here today. the Centralia Armistice day tragedy, that a councl, of vorkmen had assum- ed power at Chemnitz, has given the Impression here that thero U mora in mediate sentencing of the prisoners Is, be feared from a revival of the Spar- wlll occur Monday afternoon If a mo tion filed today by the state asking im- granted. The minimum penalty for second de cree murder is 15 years imprisonment; the maximum, life imprisonment. The Jury. ssked leniency for Eugene Bar nett and John Lamb, two of the seven convicted men. The other five are O. C. Bland, Bert Bland, James Mciner ney, Ray Becker and Britt Smith. Other motions relative to the case tacan movement than from the activl ties of the Kapp government in Ber lin. According to the latest despatch es the military movement hss resulted in bloodshed In twenty-four German towns. The Spartacans are reported to have risen in Dresden, where a clash with troops Is declared to hare resulted in a casualty list of 100 dead and 300 wounded. Fisrht(n in R... also will be heard Monday, The time, lau, Hamburg and Kiel also is report- limit for a defense motion for a new trial expired yesterday but Inasmuch is courts ordinarily allow leeway for ed. Hamburg, such motions, Vanderveer still may be j counter last March evening 17. An en In the Barm- by Senator Shields, democrat, Ten nessee as an amendment to Senator Owens' reservation declaring that the British protectorate over Egypt was to be considered a war measure on ly. The vttfe to table carried down the reservation itself and all proposed amendments Including (hat by Sen ator Thomas, democrat, Colorado, for Korean Independence and another by Senator King, democrat, Utah', pro viding for freedom for the Philip pines. Porto Rico, 'the Virgin Islands and Hawaii. granted leave to file such a motion If he desires. at all times, and each evening a com mitte of two from the Cherrians will visit the grounds to explain to c tourists various phases of the city's ee velopm?nt, and In general act as in formation guides to the visitors. CA-VADIA.V I.AVD OPEX Ottawa, Mar. 17. Canadian soldier farmers will soon be able to settle in a large area or western reserve lana which has been thrown open thru cancellation by the crown, according to announcement by the soldier set tlement board. Action has been tak en to dispose of 75,000. acres of Hud son's Bay reserve lands situated in the provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta and 10,400 acres of Doukho bor reserve lands near Kamsock. Saskatchewan. beck quarter between Spartacans andj troops resulted In ten deaths. Double Killing In Chicago Revives Old Labor Fight By Will Carve Romance! Mrs. Southworth, E. P. Roe, Zane Grey and a thousand other fiction spinners, have trailed much Ink over valuable paper In efforts to place romance upon the rickety throne of second-handed realism. Wa, ysu and I, and most of us, wait upon their efforts in breathless suspense and then rush to the nearest book store or li brary and spend two or more dollars' worth of our cash and about thirty dollars' worth of oW time finding that we have been handed the same old pill in p slightly different (haded cap sule. , , And, all the while. Right next door to us, back of the sealed lips of that quiet couple, or that elderly bachelor or that respected (but often ridiculed) old maid, there may lurk a story that would serve as a pattern for some clever weaver such as a DaMau pausant, a Tolstoi or an O Henry. So, although devoid of the ultra-sen sational or over drawn fantasy we have glimpses at the meeting and the traditional happy outcome of romance in the lite ot Hoover and the helpmate, who has stood by him and worked with him during a quarter of a century. , The story will be better told by some ot the best writers of this country, Who have spent months in searching out authentic material for the food ad ministrator's biography. However, In this short space can be outlined the story of the bashful young lad who arrived at Stanford from Salem. Bert his Salem friends say, has al ways like any other normal healthy lad been attracted to girls. He liked to be in their company, There are instances of his being snubbed by tome of the nice little Salem girls when he was a youngster here. Because the lad was not able to wear the "up to date" clothes of the time, some of the more clever of the younger set' termed him a "sissy." But through all young Hoover's so called sissyness and slowness there can be traced the reswve and high regard tor womanhood that may be well at tributed to a Quaker training. When Hoover arrived at Stanford university, he , brought his "sissifled and non-sportive" airs along as excess baggage and during the years devoted to pursuit of his engineering course ana to earning Ms own way, these served him well. For young Hoover was known as the "chap who goes alone," although many of his comrades read mm better by calling him a "one gin man and prophesying- that when cupid gets Bert it will be uooa-oye bachelor days!' " And so it proved, for toward the end of his Stanford term he realized that oupia had gotten Bert" and once d elded, he took and followed a straight "l rl in the case" was a senior of nxcniiant social standing and of means. Bert's first step was to ask for the pleasure of being her escort to one of tne university city's social functions. nu perhaps, the lady's rebuff was Hoovers first stepping stone to suc cess! for, her reply Is said to have been "No Indeed! Do you think that I would 5-0 out with a shabby old thing like you 7 Why the Idea!" or such similar emphasis as only the gentler (7) set can employ in expressing a resolute negative. Just whether Bert attended that social function. Is not told by the narrator of this Incident, but It is told that the couple became comrades and good friends before Hoover graduate. Then the graduated engineer went out and within two years, he had ac quired the reputation of being one of ugnem paia young men In the pro fession, drawing a salary of $lg,0eo'u year. Then he is said to have asked his erstwhile friend to be his wife, and to have received another negative re ply with the admonition of "Get out and make real money and acquire a name for yourself." How Hoover went to Australia and while employed as a mining engineer with a large enter prise he acoiilwhtly discovered a gold mine is only the genuine prelude to the sequel "and they lived happy ever after." That the Australian gold mine was only a "lead vein" chapter to the better treasure is proven by the re malned of the volume. Of how Mrs. Hoover has continued to work with her husband In all of his successes; of her Journeys with him to all pom-, ot the globe, where'ever his nrofesnlnn called; of how she endured hardship Supporters Of Johnson Win Ground ISbesola County CoaYcsfca : Hedged to General WcJ is Stampeded bjr Felbwers of California Senator Minneapolis, Minn., Mar. 17. Sup porters of Hiram, , Johnson for presi dent took control of the Hennepin county republican convention here today, named a new county commit tee and elected state senator . Arch Coleman who has been opposed by the Wood state organization, as coun ty chairman, . Frame-up Charged Detroit, Mich, Mar. 17. The Min nesota republican primary was char acterized as "a, pretense" and the "first strong arm tactics of the lszO " campaign" by United mates Senator Hiram W, Johnson in a signed state ment issued here this forenoon. He charged that "tho republican state machine is in absolute conlrpl" of affairs in Minnesota. "This machine," the statement de clares, "has been conducting the Wood fight." Although the ' slate's " presidential preference primary law had been re pealed, -Senator Johnson said, the re publican organization in Mlnntsota. called what It termed a primary, with a preferential vote for president Fix ing of the time of voting between 7:30 p. m. and 8:30 p. m. with coun ty chairmen empowered to fix the hours 7 to p. m he alleged meant in the country districts no primary at all. "In mid-wlntor, with the pres ent condition of the roads," he added, "It was the disfranchisement of these farmers." Continuing the statement says: IMmury Culled "Fako" ( "When recently I was In Minneso ta, I demanded a half day In which voters might express themselves. Fol lowing this Hoover and Lowden forc es made a similar demand. Of course the machine, In absolute control anil representing Wood, contemplating a mere fake primary, which might b used to Influence other states, paid no attention to our demand, I then advised my friends in Mlnnoapotls and Bt. Paul to go to these night polla as nest tney could. My advices are that I have carried Minneapolis and Hennepin county and perhaps Bt. Paul. i "This one hour, machine controll ed primary was a travesty on the right of free expression." , Soviet Republic Idea Spreddin Over Father! and In China; and how when the world wr uwne on, irom ner home In Kngland she saw and realized the terrible help lessness of the women and children of me Hun-scourge countries is "Just the rest of the story," Basle, Bwltzerlahd, Mar. 17. A dispatch from Chemnitz, the Industri al center In Saxony with a population ot more than 200,000 says a republic of workingmen's councils has hen proclaimed there. A "committee ot action" has been formed, comnrlslnv ten communists, six Independent so cialists, four majority socialists and one democrat. London, Mar. 17. Independent so cialists and communists In Germany have commenced a violent agitation In favor of a soviet republic and an alliance with soviet Russia, accord ing to a Berlin dispatch to the Ex change Telegraph company. Copenhagen, Mar. 17. A telegram from Kssen says at the first sitting ( the revolutionary workers council held Monday afternoon, a committee of thirty three took over the conduct of affairs. "Kfforts are being made," adds th dispatch, "to secure common action of all three socialist parties for the lower Rhine district and Westphalia on the basis of a proletarian disUU ornhlp." The demonstrations whose activi ties have resulted In clashes with se curity guards in Hamburg are ap parently Spartacans, according to dispatches from that city. In yester day's hostilities the casualty list to talled seventeen in killed and wound Chicago, Mar. 17. Chicago's labor war, dormant since the murder of Maurice "Mossy" Enrlght February 3, broke out again today with the finding ot the body of Joe Hurley, London, March 17. Gustav Noske minister of defense In the Ebert gov- ernment, is confident of !.l. ability to;Ubor ,ea(Jel. d Enr, M 1IeBtenaI1i restore normal conditions In Ger-!,vl , ... , , , ,,, .,,. many within a comparatively brief time, according to an Exchange Tele-i . 7" .. . . ! graph dispatch quoting an Interview with him at Stuttgart. lying In the street in the South Side "bad lands." . , Hurley had been shot In the back, dying Instantly. A trail of blood led from the body Copenhagen, March 17. Hamburg to a nearby saloon, noted as a "gath- and its western suburb, Altona, are erlng place for labor leaders." now definitely in the hands ef the; Hurley was a pal of "Sonny" Dunn followers of the Ebert government of; brother-ln-Uw of Enrlght who re Germany, according to a dispatch to;cently forfeited his bonds In a mi and the Social Demokraten. General Von' larceny case and disappeared. 22 Husbands For One Wife; Pair Seek Her Arrest Dayton, Ohio, Mar. 17. Claiming that their "wife" has twenty-two hus bands and is divorced from none at them, Tlffic Bailie of Cincinnati and James Nick of Dayton Jointly have asked police to arrest Margaret Foster, 21, on a charge of bigamy. Huille claims he married the woman at Chevolt, Ohio, February It, 1S29, and Nick claims to have wed her A that cers was were dispatch from Oldenburg saya at Wllhelmshaven all the o Hi nt the garrison whose attitude "doubtful", namely about 400, arrested yesterday. Live Wires Will Meet On Friday The regular monthly meeting of the South Salem Development league will be held next Friday night at 7:3 o'clock in the South Salem school house, according to an announcement today. All members are urged to at tend and participate in tne general dis cussion for promoting development In that part ot the city. The South Salem Development league was Instrumental In having nu merous street lamps installed In that Monday. They are Joining in the hunt section of the city, and for causing nu- for their alleged common wife, .) merous other developments there.