DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. HE IN CALLED RDER 8ENT TO GOVENOR3 FOR 49,843 TO MOBILIZE MAY 1 AND 10. IWA'S QUOTA WILL BE 1,910 iveda Lowest In tho List with 49 Men Will Be Required to Report at Camps Probably for Training with the Regular Army Units. Uern Newipttvr Union Kewi Beetle. Washington, D. C. Anothor draft 11, for 49,843 registrants, has boon it to governors of states by Provost irsbal General Crowiler. Mobill Ion of tho men Is order for May and 10, tho war department an- uncod, and thoy will bo sent to ven forts and recruiting barracks, )bably for training with regular ny units thoro. This call Increases to moro than .000 tho number of select men or ed to camp slnco lato In March, further announcements are expect to follow tho roturn of Secretary kor from tho battlo fronts. Troops r aro moving to Europo at a rapid o. Quotas of Each State. Although every stato and tho DIs :t of Columbia aro called upon to nlsh men undor Oen. Crowdor's lat , order, nearly halt of tho 49,843 n will como from sovon Btatea. II- )Is will supply by far tho largest nbor, Ha quota bolng 8,047. Thoso 'tos follow In tho order named: 'tnsylvanla, 3.77C; Now York, 3,642; hhlgan, 2,593; Missouri, 2,103; Wis 'sin, 2,133, and Ohio, 2,000. Novada 1 tho lowest quota, 49, Delaware is jt lowest with 87. Wyoming with da tho only other stato to furnish i than 100 men. ho quotaB of other states lncludo: zona, 318; California, 1,187; Colo 'o, COG; Idaho, 165; , Iowa, 1,910; isas, 1,210; Minnesota, 1,925; Mon- 354; Nobraska, 987; New Mox 274; North Dakota, G81; Orogon, r. South Dakota, 482; Toxas, 1,094; ',h, 1C8; Washington, 434. ho army posts to which tho mon bu jhciuuo i'ort aicjjowoii, uai.; t Logan, Colo,; Fort Sam Houston, , and Vancouvor Barracks, Wash. To Reinforce Allies. 'ho Iltltnlinr of Hnloft mnn nrrtnrn,! camp Blnco lato In March Is far In bss of tho monthly average that Jul havo boon mobilized undor tho final plan to call 800,000 mon this jj over a nlno months' period. Fu ji calls at tho Bamo rato would com to tho program boforo mldsummor. ,ndor President Wilson's dotorml on to haaton tho dlBpatch of Amcr jt troops to Franco to rolnforco tho i Ish and Fronch armlos bearing tho jit of tho groat Gorman drives In ('idors and Plcardy, tho wholo pro fn of tho army is Bpoedlng up. Only j )ok ago Gen. Crowdor ordorod mo 1 ation of 1C0.000 select men for ill 20 and tholr movomont to tho .inal army cantonments during tho day period following. ,, able to penetrate line. W Forces Are Cut Down by the Thousands. it B.0 ontlro alllod lino in Bologlum Franco 1b holding firm. Nowhere tho aormans boon ablo, notwlth ling tho great numbers of men Jj'id against it, oapoclally that por ili in Flandors whoro tho British molding forUi, to gain an Inch of jfrd. Field Marshal Halg's ordor jjino moro ground bo ccdod is rig- - uoiiig compuou wun, aB is nt- 1.1 I... (I.. 1... .1- -m n u ujr uiu iiiuuuuuuH oi ucrinan (now lying boforo tho nrltlsh po- in nmilhwnat nt Vrwa .!.fin.i II I o ambition of tho high Gorman "Ijtuuu to break through and on: jj flold Marshal Halg'a forces and tn open highway toward tho Eng , bhannol. khwcBt of St. Mlhlel tho Amori iJtroops hfivo been compolled to land a sorloa of porslstont as ' i second In Intensity only to dollvorotl by tho Gormana j 8t tho British In Flandora. And , onora at tho end rostod with Uio leans, who mot tho foo at ovory 1 1 of fighting ho offorod and doci- dofoatod mm. Grain for Holland. Hague. Tho announcement of morican war trado board's offer id Immediately two shiploads of (can grain to Holland and to fa ,o tho Bonding of a third ship from Argontlna occasioned con '.bio popular rollot horo through respect that tho distress owing , shortago of food supplioa would oviatod. I Race Horses Cremated, limoro, Md. Sovontoon raco ), valued at $50,000 in all, per In a flro which destroyed a large , at Bowlo raco track. An ox 'B lamp caused tho blazo, it was jlt Oil Producer Dead, fJn, Mo. John II. Galoy, aged Idely known oil producer, dlod j' homo horo. Galoy drilled tho ,)jf-oil well in tho Pennsylvania F x anil nwnrvl Iia fill- fnmo.f Fiont gushor, S ILS JEN REGAIN HILL FROM HUNS Americans in Counter-Attack Capture Observation Post Northwest of Toul. FIGHTING LASTS ALL DAY Yankeeo Repulse Two Attacks and Battle Is Still On Enemy Intend- cd to Penetrate to Third Line In Wednesday's Raid. With tho American Armies In France, April 15. After repulsing two German nttneks on tho American positions northwest of Toul, American troops on Friday counter-nttneked and recap tured an observation hill. Tho American troops battled with tho Germans nil day, Infantry and ar tillery participating. At n Into hour the fighting was con tinuing. In the raid carried out by tho Ger mans on Wednesday nguinst the Americans northwest of Toul the .enemy intended to jKmetrnto to the third lino positions,' according to In formation obtained from a prisoner. This is corroborated by material found on dead Germans. The enemy carried wire, dynamite, intrenching tools and other Implements for organ--lzlng tho positions. ' The Amcrlcnns know In advance of 'tho proposed attack through infor- imatlon obtained a day or two pre viously from prisoners captured by .tho French on nn ndjacent sector. The attack was made by n special .battalion of 800 shock troops, who .had rehearsed tho operation for two or three weeks Ivohlnd the lines. As soon as tho German barrago be gan tho American batteries, with .out waiting for tho rocket slgnnl, laid down n counter-barrage, with the result that less than 200 of tho cn 'omy succeeded In climbing out of Itliclr trenches and ndvanclng townrd tho American line. Tho German oflleers sent tho men ,rlght through tho barrage, but only two succeeded In renchlng tho front line. Both of thesowcro taken pris oner, ono of them dying a short time afterword from wounds. When tho German barrage started tho American outposts moved Into tho first Hue, whore, with other in fantrymen and machine gunners, they waited for tho advancing enemy. Tho Americans poured a deadly flro Into tho raiders, then climbed out of tho trenches and engaged with grenades and in hnnd-to-hand fight ing tho few Germans who wero ablo to cross No Man's Land. Tho American Infantrymen drove tho enemy buck to his own lines nnd, protected by machine-gun and auto matic fire, drugged tho German dead back to tho American trenches for Identification. U. S. REPLIES TO HOLLAND Ship Seizure Made Necessary by Ene my's Coercion, Says Lansing America's Policy Is Friendly. Washington, April 15. America's reply to tho recent statement of tho Netherlands government blttdrly pro testing against and denouncing tho action of tho United States in taking over Dutch ships in Its ports, was mndo public In Uio form of a memo randum by Secretary Lansing, a copy of which has been sent to tho Nether lands legation. Pointing out that tho Netherlands government itself) does not qucsUon tho legality of tho act, Mr. Lansing devotes himself to a demonstration) Hint it was on act of necessity ro-j suiting from Germany's menacing nt tltudo which prevented Holland from.' fulfilling her engagements, and that) Instead of on Injustice the stop results' In real benefit to tho Dutch ship own' ers and pooplp. SEDITION BILL IS PASSED Senate Enacts Measure Without Roll Call Had Already Passed the House. Washington. April 12.-Wlth numer-l ous modifications, tho sennto, without; n roll call, passed tho sedition bill do signed ostensibly to arm tho depart' ment of Justlco with moro drastic au thority in rounding up spies nnd dlB-i loyalists. The mensuro has nlrcadjj passed tho house. PASS DRAFT FOR IRELAND' House of Commons Approves Conscrlp-i tlon Clause of Man-Power Bill by Majority of 165. London, April 15. Tho house ofj commons on Friday passed tho Irish' conscription cluuso of tho man-power bill by u majority of 105. Hope to Unify Methodism. St. Louis, April 15. Members of the. Joint commission on unification of tho' Methodist Episcopal church South pre-' dieted that tho plan for union would bo rntillcd boforo the commission ad journs. Try to Wreck Troop Train, Wlnonn, Minn., April 15. A bold at tempt to wreck a troop train near tho Interstate drawbridge, which the pollco assert was an act In protest to tho war. was averted by a telegraph operator nt East Winona, Wis. LEND YOUR MONEY TO HELP WIN WAR Help Properly Equip Your Own Son and Other Soldier Boys Over There. DUTY OF ALL TO BUY BONDS Liberty, Loans to Uncle Sam Is Best Guarantee of Our Fighters Safe Return Home Do Not Hesitate. (By ROLAND G. USHER of the Vig ilantes.) Put It to yourself straight now. You know perfectly well that you would feel ashamed to keep your boy out of tho ranks If ho wanted to go. You know perfectly well thnt you would probably feel ashamed before your neighbors If they knew that the boy was sticking at home. But have you ever asked yourself whether you felt nshamed that you were keeping your dollars tight In your Jcan3 Instead of lending your dollnrs to the wnr as well as your boy? If you havo not got a boy you probably would feel that he ought to go If you had one. You have got some dollars, why don't you send them? Think again ; If you have sent a boy over there, don't you know for cer tain whether that boy will como back, God grant that ho mny. But he went, Just tho same, knowing fully just ns you did that ho might not como buck. You gavo tho dearest thing you hnd In the world to tho government freely, for tho cnuso of democracy. You wero giad to do it; you felt fine about it You still feel thnt if you had it to do over again you would not do anything else. But I will wager anything you llko that you have a lot of money that you can lend to the government with out hurting yourself at all, and which you nro hnnging on to until It screams Think of It TIiobo dollars will bo per fectly sure to como back If you lend them to tho government- Tho govern ment guarantees that. Why should you therefore bo so afraid to loose your clutch on them. Tho great risk you have already taken and did It be cause It was a worthy and a noblo thing to do. Tho thing which Is no risk at all and yet which Is Just as nec essary to tho war as tho other, you hesitate about. Dollars Will Come Back. Lot me suppose for a moment that you havo not yet sent your boy. I will wager you havo a sneaking feeling that he ought to go. Ho has too. In this case, I won't havo to make n wa ger about it you havo not sent your dollurs. If you hesitate to send the boy because you aro afraid ho may not come back, you have a perfectly ex plainable reason, but you havo not got a good reason why you should not send your dollnrs. Thoy will como back, you may bo sure of It. Not only will they como back, tho government will pay you Interest on them In the mean time. You will lend tho government your capital and will get a return on it. Far from losing anything, you will mnko something. Why hesitate? Look ut It from another point of view. If your boy has not gone, or if you havo no son, your neighbors who havo sons havo sent them. Thoso boys are going Into danger. Thoy nre go ing to need guns, food, artillery, ship, and alrplnnea, not only to enable them to do what they went over there to do bent tho Germans out of sight but to keep them safe. If thoy don't havo those things thoy certainly won't como back at nil. You know perfectly well, however tight-fisted you may be, or however mean you may think yoursolf and you nro not half as mean as, that you would not hurt your neigh bor's son just because a few dollars stood In tho way. You would feel so ushamed of yourself for tho rest of your life you would not bo ablo to shove In tho morning. Your neighbors' sons and your friends' sons thnt you have known nil your life need tho things your money can buy for them, and It Is going to go mighty hard with them If they don't get them. Make Your Money Help. Now put It to yourself straight. If tho thing was a llttlo nearer to you bo that you really snw your neigh bor's son actually without food bo cnusc you had declined to give It to htm, you would not hesitate for a mo ment what to do. Tho dlfllculty la here, that the thing Is on so largo a scale that you do not rcnllzo thnt your failure to lend your money to Uio gov ernment Is going to result very prob ably In depriving that particular boy' of things ho needs. You can say, If you like, there are so many millions' of them that It will bo some other fel low's son thut will go without- I hope you won't get much comfort out of thnt, because It Is tho snmo old thing. You would not hurt him either if you saw him ond know ho was In want; but because you don't seo Iitm, bocnuso he is somewhere In France, you for get about him ond don't stop to think that ho wants n thing you would not hesltoto to give him f you knew him. Why hesltnto, then, to lend your dol lnrs to tho government? Thoy nro tho only thing thnt can really do this busi ness. They ore tho only thing that can put tools Into tho boys' hands over thero to UIU tho Germans with. Don't hesltnto any longer now; get it straight, nnd go down and buy a bond ond feel better about It for ttxs rest of your life. BIRKNER IN CUSTODY Lincoln Major Arrested for Disloyal Utterances at Camp Cody. DIs- charged from Service. Major John M. Kirkncr of Lincoln, n Qcrmnn born olllcer of Uio Nebras ka Notional Guard ond a member of Uio 127th field artillery was urrested at Camp Cody, N. M., charged with violating the espionage net. Affidavits of four oflleers who accused Blrkner, nllego that his pro-German sympa thies were expressed nt frequent In tervals, that he displayed "elation when Uio Gormnn army made success ful drives nnd was depressed when tho allies won." He was discharged from tho service April 4 ond recom mended for Internment by the War department The dismissed ofllccr wns naturalized In Clay county, Nebraska, in 1888, und during the sonic year en tered tho service of tho Nebrnskn Nntlonal Gunrd. Ho Is well known throughout Nebraska and the mlddlo west nnd Is said to havo hod a lurgo circle of friends. Colfax county lends In Nebraska In the sale of war snvlngs certificates, according to n report received by State Director Ward M. Burgess, from the Kansas City Federal Re serve bank. Colfax's quota was $238,000. Cash sales up to April 1 wero $334,145 mnklng a per' capita Bale of $28.08. Thayer county stands second In the list with n per capita of $20.21, Furnas with $25.41, Adams $23.18, Platto $23.05, Johnson $22.04, Grnnt $22.27 nnd Polk $21.81, stnnd next In tho list in Uie order nnmed. State Food Administrator Wattles mudo tho assertion nt Omaha upon his return from Washington that Uie gov. eminent will tnke steps Immediately to requisition all wheat being held In Nebraska. Many nntlonnl gunrdsmen are com plaining because they ore not being sent ubrond to take part In the great Plcardy battlo and Nebrasknns at Camp Cody are omong the complnln nnts, Mrs. Morgnret Serby, a Llthunlnn womnn employe nt tho South Omaha packing plant was severely beaten by another womnn employe for alleged Insult to the American Aug and dis loyal utterances. Following a patriotic meeting nt Decatur a telegram was sent to Pres ident Wilson, Informing him thnt tho citizens of Decatur were with him in his great tnsk to the end. Fifteen thousand persons, forming n lino throe miles long, marched In a Liberty day parade at Lincoln. It wns the grentest demonstration over Witnessed in tho cnpltnl city. For Uie third time Wisner has gonoi over the top for the sale of Liberty bonds. April 9, the day sot for the big drive, carried Wisner over the top by $30,000. Itev. George Allcnbnch, ono of the five pastors undor flro nt Lincoln bo cnuso of their refusal to attend u pa triotic rally, tendered his resignation nt n meeting of his congregntlon. Kdgnr will havo a ling raising April C5, with tho 38,5th regimental band from Camp Funston. which Is touring tho state. County Clerk Scott has tho datn t show that Pawnee county has 27,826 acres of wheat In line growing condi tion. Bonds to tho amount of $1,000,000 were voted .by Omaha citizens for tho construction of a new Commercial High school building. Frank Eng of St Edward sold a carload of cattle at the South Omnha market at 10 cents a pound, the highest prlco paid this year. The sum of $15,000 has been In vested in third Liberty loon bonds by officials and employes of the stnt? houso at Lincoln. , A load of hogs donated to the lied Cross by farmers .In tho vicinity of Anselino sold on the South Onioha market for $1,937.17. Wheat Is looking w.ell In Richard pon county nnd seems to have passed the winter In fine condition. Antelope county lms asked the ptut auditor for permission to Invest coun ty funds In Liberty bonds. S. It. MeKohie of Lincoln, promi nent newspaper man, has filed for the republican nomination for governor. Homo guards of Bancroft prevented a meeting of tho Non-partisan league, scheduled to tnke place In the city. According to nvullnblo figures tho Nebraska farmers wnr council now has a membership of over 50,000. Servlco cords which were sent furm ors aro being received by tho state hcadquurters nt Omaha at the over age of 5,000 a day. An Indictment charging Georgo II. Smldt, a wealthy Adams county farm ur, with having said ho wos Instru mental In forming an organization among farmers to prevent crops from being raised, wns returned by n fed. erol grand Jury at Lincoln. C. Byrne, chalrmnn of the Stnto Liberty Loon committee, nt Omaha, has offered $100 In cosh prizes to Ne braska school children writing tho best CO-word essays explaining why Third Llborty Bonds should be pur chased. Tho prizes nre $50, $25, $15 and $10. Tho contest closes May 1. Men actually engnged In raising foodstuffs, whether fnnnor or hired hand, has no chance to get Into the army under Instructions sent to local draft boards in Nebraska by Cuptaln Walter L. Anderson of the governor'a otlico More than 200 boys' nnu girls' garden clubs will be organized in Nc brnskn this year for the purpose of helping win Uie war, according to O. W. Watson, leader of tho Junior sec tion of the ngrlculturnl extension service of. the Stato University. One thousand citizens ol Scotts bluff, ut a liberty loan meeting, passed n resolution petitioning Presi dent Wilson nnd congress to tnke im mediate action to prohibit tho mnnu facture and sulo of intoxicating liquor. Manderson Lehr of Albion, son of Mr. nnd Mrs. II. F. Lehr, who has been doing great service with the French nvlntlon squadron In France, hiy? been honored by promotion from corporal to sergeant. Tho first permit granted by the state council of defense under tho new sedition law of Nebraska for on ulien to preach 'and teach was Issued to John B. Reetns, head of the parochial school ut Plckrell. Nebroskons will suffer a serious shortago of coal next winter unless they begin to fill their bins nt once and continue accumulating their win ter, supply during the summer, Wash ington nuthorltlcs say. The Madison county council of de fense has posted placards oil over tho county nnnounclng thnt It Is opposed to the use of the German langungo In business transaction or social meetings. Estlmntes plnce the number of mnrchers in the Liberty day parado at Omaha at approximately 75,000, and fully thnt mnny moro peoplo were lined nlong the principal streets of tho city viewing the procession. C. II. Peter, n Lincoln street enr motorman, alleged to havo made dis loyal remnrks, was taken from his home by fellow employes nnd forced to give fifty snlutes to the American flag and Uien kiss it. A proposition is to be put before members of the Fromont Methodist church to sny whether a new $40,000 church shall be erected this year. The sum of $31,000 has already been pledged for tho now edifice. Lincoln has oversubscribed Its Lib erty loan quota nnd the committee has raised voluntarily, Lancaster county's allotment from $1,545,000 to $2,000,000, the Capital City agreeing to ralso $1,400,000. E. T. Hill, rural mail carrier of Odell, sold $3,848.23 worth of thrift stamps during the first month of this year, leading all other riiral carriers In tho stuto for that month. The sum of $10,000 was raised for tho Red Cross nt un .auction sale at Humboldt An American flag was sold several times nnd brought $3,500. Condition of winter whent In Ne braska on April 1 was 75 per cent of a normal crop, according to a re port Issued by the department of ng flculturo of Washington. Tho Stnto bonk of Senccn, capital $20,000, and the Farmers Stato bank of Ilalsey, capital $10,000, wero granted charters by the state banking board. Chose and Thurston counties re ported on April 11 thnt Liberty lonn bond sales hud exceeded the allotment for both counties. Application for honor flags has been made. Records In the ofllce of the stnto food administrator at Omaha show that only hnlf as much whent flour is being used in Nebraska as was used n year ago. A "Good Roads" fuir held at Al liance netted about $2,000, oil of which will bo used to better the con dltlon of main roads in Box Butte county. John Kilcur, pioneer settler of tho North Bend vicinity, wns found dend In his yard following n flro In hli home. It Is believed the shock cnused his death. A number of county food adminis trators In Nebraska hnve pledged cit izens of their counties to use no more wheat flour until the new wheat crop Is harvested. (Buffalo county peoplo nre elated over the honor of being the first coun ty In Nebraska to win nn honor flag In the third Liberty loan drlv. Nebraska has given $85,512,403 to the various war campaigns, has 443, 231 Red Cross iiioinbers nnd bus sent n total of 19,042 mow to tho service. A movement Is under wny In Rich nrdson county for the purpose of or ganizing n county Y. M. C. A'. A voluntnry agreement to pay, through the federal food administra tion of Nebraska, the sum of $000 to bo given tho Red Cross nnd the Red Star by the Fremont Milling company wns the penalty assessed for viola tions of the rules nnd regulations gov erning sales of wheat mill feeds. Upon n request of Director Gen eral McAdoo, the Nebraska railway commission has asked city authorities of Omahn not to compel tho Missouri Pacific to build a viaduct over Leav enworth street, In that, city, until after tho war. Resolutions demnndlng thnt the con. gregattons of flvo Germun Lutheran churches of Lincoln nnd vicinity se cure as on evidence of their loyalty the resignations of their pastors, who refused to attend n patriotic meet ing were passed by over 200 cltizem at a mass meeting in the city. Nebrasknns who havo done nnd nro doing tholr bit to help win Uie war ntyuld compnro their efforts with those of David Thonins of York. Mr. Tlionias has given flvo sons nnd n daughter Into tho service nnd another son is going as soon us he Is of nge. LEtEinHE EN3ED SPECIAL SESSION OF LAWMAKERS. ADJOURNS SINE DIE BILLS SIGNED .BY GOVERNORS Potash Leaseo Aro Validated and Allen Voter Question Will Go Before People In Fall. Tho special session of tho legislature adjourned sine dio Monday afternoon.. On account of tho failuro to include ratification of tho national prohibitory amendment in tho call for a special, session, and also on account of tho re fusal of tho senate to consider that. BUbJect, tho federal amondmeut must await tho action of tho next regular Bcssion of tho legislature, or somo sub sequent Besslon. The houso of repre sentatives ratified tho prohibitory amendment, regardless of the gover nor's refusal to placo that subject in his call, but tho senate repeatedly re fused to consider this subject. A resolution by Senator Sawyer of Lancastor wbb passed, commending: President Wilson and his attltudo on. tho war question. A delay in closing tho session waB caused by a disagreement between the. two houses on tho provisions of the potash or mineral loaso bill, H. R. 9 Tho houso struck out of this bill a pro vision validating minoral or potash , leases which tho stato board of edu catlonal lands and funds had issued tc 227 different persons, all but two of: which were issued without competition or without calling for bids, and all otl whlch the supremo court held wero void. Governor Signs Bills Governor Novlllo has signed the fol lowing bills, and thoy aro now lm forco: S; F. 1 Amending tho Omaha city charter so as to permit tho voting otT $400,000 of sewer bonds 'annually. S. F. 2 Defining sabotage and pro scribing penalties. H. Rs 1, 2 and 3 To permit voters of Nobraska who aro in tho military or naval service of the United States to voto by mall when absent from the stato, and to provide for the canvass of votes so cast. H. R. 4 Repeal of tho Mockctt law relating to teaching European lan guages in public schools. H. R. C Legalizing tho homo guard- H. R. 7 Appropriating $2,400 a year for a bacteriologist in tho state board: of health department. H. R. 8 Appropriating fees of the in surance department to pay salaries and1, expenses of state insurance examiners. H. R. 10 To protect the civil rlghtst of soldiers nnd sailor3 in tho govern ment service during tlo war. II R 12 Appropri-itl'ir; R" 'CO for mploye3 and in .dcnl- I e;-;i ci of he enate during v poitfon of ilic !a3t 'ogu ar session i:.id tho present spe cial session. Bills Not Yet Approved Tho following aro tho bills now im tho governor's por3osslon which he has: under consideration: S. F. 4 Proposed amendment to the constitution relating to rights of aliens to vote. H. R. 5 Defining sedition and pro viding ponaltles. H. R. 9 Authorizing stato board to lease mineral rights on state lands. H. R. 13 Appropriating $3,110.20 to pay mileage of membors of tho special!, session of tho legislature. II. R. 14. Appropriating $12,800 to pay per diem of members of tho legis lature in attendance upon the special session of tho legislature at tho rato of ?10 por day for ton days. Tho governor will inquire into tho right of tho legislature to pay the mem bers of tho legislature per diem and mllcago for attending a special ses sion before approving or disapproving: tho two appropriation bills In his hands. It is reported tho sedition bill' pleases tho governor, and that ho will', not veto tho alien voting bill. The pot ash bill is said to be in accord with, his Ideas. His message asked tho leglslature to validate mineral leases. Tho governor sent In a message, int response to a roquost, Informing tho houso that sovon mombers havo re signed sinco tko regular session. Theso aro Richmond of Douglas, Flansburg- of Lancaster, Dorsoy of Franklin, Ollis. of Valley, Roisner of Thomas and La Bounty. L Pay for Legislators The committee on finance ways andr. ' means of tho sdnato reported back ro ' the sonato tho threo houso npproprla- ' tlon bills to pay salaries of members ' of tho legislature, employes wagos and Incidental oxpenscs of tho senate, andi mlleago for members of both housess,. t aggregating nearly $19,000. Tho com--mltteo attached to the senato Inci dental oxponso bill $2,000 to pay un- ' paid claims of tho last regular session, of tho senate, thus Increasing tho total in this bill from $3,000 to $5,000. No other amendments wero reported. Recommends New Sedition Bill After voting down sovoral amond monts offered by membors from tho floor, the houso Tuosday nftornoon, ln committeo of tho wholo, recommend ed for passago H. R. No. 5, tho sedi tion bill, pracUcally ns it camo fronv tho judiciary committee. The amend monts voted down wero Intended to bar absolutely all alien enemy toach--ors and preachors and lecturers from acting in thoso capaclUes and prevent ing tho teaching of any foreign lan guage in parochial schools. t i-U- I 0 I