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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (May 27, 1925)
Rose Consolidation of The Evening Newt The Roicburg Review PARTLY CLOUDY TONIGHT An Independent Newe paper, Published for the Beit Intereett of the People. Today ' CircuUUon Over 420O A i 4 Still C r o w I g VOL. XXVI' NO. 162 OF ROS.. FIFTY MINERS ROSEBtlRG. OREGON, WEDNESDAY. MAY 27. 1925. VOL. XIII NO. 63 OF THE EVENING NEWS ENTOMBED BY AN EXPLOSION Little Chance That Any of Carolina Coal Workers . Can Be Saved. IKK M.Y TO UAIUiK (Aaorlated . "u. UKDPORL , May 27. O. W. Mu. .y. charged with manslaughter In conaec- tinn with the death of his wife. following an alleged heating April first, was ar- raigned this morning and en ; tered a plea of not guilty. The dare of thin preliminary hearing was set for June 4. Kail was fixed at I a, una. 4 which was Immediately fur- ills lied. GOVERNOR SENDS AID Smoke and Fumes Issuing From Shaft Retarding Rescue Work Six Bodies Out. (AaocUUd mm Uued WtrO SANFORD, N. C. May 27 None of the fifty or more men entomb ed by a gas explosion at the mine of the Carolina Coal Company had beer, rescued at 3 o'clock. Howard llutler, surface foreman, with a group of aides, penetrated the shaft for a Bhort distance. He re ported that he saw six bodies. He could not, he said, tell whether the six men were dead or alive as he was driven back by a second ex plosion which sent out gas fumes that made further attempts to en ter the shaft impossible. fAMnrlstwi Ftm LcMd Wire.) RALEIGH, N. C. May 27. Fifty men are entombed in the mine of the Carolina Coal Company mine, eight miles from Sanford, N. C, as the result of an explosion there today, an officer of the company told the Associated Press this afternoon. The fate of the men. He added, was undetermined and grave fears were felt for their safety. Most of the men are said to be white. The explosion occured when the full crew of the mine was on duty. Dense clouds of yellow sraoke and dangerous fumes emanating from the mouth of the mine prevented attempts at rescue work. Governor McLean requested a corps of engineers to proceed to the scene. He also appealed to the bureau of mines at Washing ton for federal aid in what was described to him as a "serious tmergency." Following the explosion two men went in the- mine equipped with gas masks but were unable' to pen etrate It. A message from Creensboro late this afternoon stated that six bod ies had been recovered from the mine. Three explosions occurred In the mine. The first was that which trapped the workers. The second is said to have occurred following an attempt by rescue workers to enter the shaft where the men were entombed and a third occurr ed down in the mine later. Con tnued fumes prevent workers from penetrating further than the first lift. At 2:30 o'clock this afternoon Coventor Mcl-ean stated that he had notified the adjutant-general to hold several units of the nation al guard In readiness to -proceed to the scene. RAI.KIflH. N. C., May 27 At 3:05 p. m. the Raleigh train dispatcher for the Norfolk Southern Railway received a message from Gulf, N. C that five bodies had been recov ered from the mine of the Carol ina Coal Company. The dispatch er said it was reported the mine was on fire. He said the number of men entombed was seventy one. PLANK AS I'AR.XCIU'TK SAVKS WOltK.MAX'H I.IKE. e (AaoeUttd Prm Lnsrd Wlr. SAN FRANCISCO, May 27. Using a 15-foot plank for a parachute.- Ralph Harth, a carpenter employed on a new building here, accidentally e descended from the filth story to the sidewalk today. unharmed, save for a slight shock. Harth was pushing upward on the plank, when he fell from the scaffolding. He held.-fast to the timber and e the area It exposed to the wind broke his fall. TAX ON TOBACCO 11 0 BUSES T TO BE VOTED ON Petitions Found Ample to Invoke Referendum on Both Measures. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH FACING CRUCIAL TEST Literal Acceptance Virgin Birth by Ministers Is Cause of Schism. DOCTRINE AT STAKE Adherence to Entire Creed Demanded by One Body, Another in Favor of Latitude. ELECTION IS IN 192G State Deprived of Revenue From Those Sources in Meantime Tithing Bill in Doubt. SAWDUST CLAIMS ANOTHER WORKER HRND. Ore., May 27. O. I. Stlnglo was smothered to death yesterday In the sawdust fuel house of the RrooksScanlon Lum ber company sawmill. He was the second man to lose his life within three years at the same place. A third man was revived last winter after having been under the saw dust for 50 minutes. The Job which S'lnsle held Is considered one of the most dangerous In the mill, ac cording to officials. No one knew the man was under the sawdust and he was not mis sed for some time. When found physicians said he had been dead for an hour. He was 36 years old and a widower. He Is survived by two small children who are with their grandmother. He came to Ilend from Westfall, Ore. It hsd not been decided this morning whether or not an Inquest will be held. SPOKANE Wash.. May 27. His brother, a fellow emplove. stood hv powerless to help while W. 1. McDonald. IS. smothered to death beneath 20 feet of sawdust In a bin at the Diamond Match Compa ny's plant here today. C. A. Lockwood left last nlrht f- perila"! in drive back ;0.ln coln car which has been sold to Myrtle Point resident. SALEM, Ore., May 27. With al most 3U.000 signatures attached, (Complete petitions Invoking the I referendum on the bus bill of the 1 1925 legislature, were filed yester day with Secretary of State Kozer. jit was mated that I9.S23 of the names had been certified. As only 1 9009 are required on the petitions. the attempted withdrawal of up wards of 1.000 names would make no difference even If the withdraw als were allowed by opinion of the attorney-general. The complete petitions were filed by the Oregon Motor Stage Association and the Freight Trans portation Association. Completed ' petitions for the referendum of the ! tobacco tax were filed Monday. No Information had been received by Secretary Kozer last night whether the petitions for the referendum 'of the tithing bill would be com- pleted and filed, but since the peri led allowed for filing them expires at & o'clock today there was some I doubt whether that referendum ' would be successful. As for the bus ' bill and the tobacco tax bill, which were among the measures to be i come effective tomorrow, they are ' now held up until after the gen ieral election In 1926. ! On the bus bill petitions more I names were signed from Multno Imah county than any other county i of the state. The number from there was 6604. Coos county was second with 1675 and Marion third with 1347. I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Flock were visitors in this city Tuesday. They ; are from Newberg, and stopped ; evrr in this city enroute to llan i don by motor. Mr. Flock is with ; the state Highway department. j AMERICAN LEGION i ENDOWMENT FUND I DRIVE OVER TOP Douglas County Is over the ! top In the American Legion e Endowment fund, and con- trlbutlons are still coming in, I according to Dexter Rice. ; county chairman. Practically j every district has reported their Individual communities over their quota, and some have sent In for additional ' blanks. W. C. Harding, city I rhairmaif, reported a most hearty response to the appeal In Roseburg. Fifteen of the employees at the fl. P. round- e house, led by Foreman Harps- e ter, gave IS each to the fund. e American Legion members ' contrtl 'd over 1600. an ,e average of more than 12 00 : for every member in I'mp- qua Post. (AaocUtnl Prai Uunl Win.) COLUMBUS, O.. May 27 A def inite break in' the Presbyterian Church In the United States of America is imminent, modernists lu the denomination's general as sembly in session here declared to day. The split will come. Dr. Henry Sloano- Coffiu. New York, repres enting the decidedly literal Pres bytery, said if the various Presby teries uphold action of the as sembly yesterday In Toting that a literal acceptance of the virgin birth Is a necessary qualification of anyone who enters the United States ministry. While the modernists made clear their position in this regard today, ultra-fundamentalists, through Dr. Clarence Edward McCartney, for mer moderator- and one of their leaders, asserted that the "law and authority of the church will be upheld" If the New York Pres bytery continues to license minis ters who do not accept in full all the creedal and doctrinal beliefs of the church. A protest against the decision of the Judicial committee yesterday in upholding the New York Pres bytery which went against the law in allowing ministers to preach who could not affirm their faith in the virgin birth was formally pre sented to the assembly today by the Rev. Charles 13. Swartz of Chi cago. This, church leaders pointed out. Is in reality a dissenting opinion of the assembly itself, marking a direct line of cleavage. The protest was being circulat ed among the commissioners for signature and so far some fjfty had appended their names. It concerned entirely the licens ing of Henry P. Van Duzen. New York, who did not either affirm or deny acceptance of the theory of thu virgin birth. Eight points are listed and the principal contention Is that under the church law the Presbytery It self Is the only Judge of the quali fication of a minister. The holding of the commission, which became the Judgment of the assembly by Its adoption, violates the confession of faith Itself, the protest asserted. The commission consisted of commissioners from various sec tions of the country. Represented were Presbyteries and synods in New Jersey, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, St. Louis, Ohio and Iowa. . The following chapter of the confession was quoted In substan tiation: "The reqnirlng of an Implicit faith and an absolute and blind obedience Is to destroy liberty and conscience and reason also." "Ry requiring such absolute con formity." the protest said, "it res tores those Roman Catholic theor ies of ecclesiastical authority which It was the very purpose of Presbyterian protestantism to overthrow." While the modernists said that the appointment of a commission of 15 yesterday to study the whole Issue probably will avert the break for another year. Dr. Coffin's statement, declared that If the Presbvterles "approve the doctrine It would mean a break In the church." The great majority In the church does not want a break. "We wanted to state our posi tion and if It ever comes up In civil court, that would be the basis of our case. I hope it never cornea to that." The assembly was formally dis solved by the moderator. Dr. Charles A. Erdman of Princeton, N. J., who afterwards Issued the call for the next assembly In Balti more, the fourth Thursday of May, 1926. LEXINGTON. Ky.. May 27. Charges that modernism had crop ped out among Presbyterian mis sionaries In foreign fields were made at the general assembly of the Presbyterian church of the United States today. The assembly Instructed Re ex ecutive committee of foreign mis sions to Investigate all charges of unorthodoxy In the foreign fields and to report to the proper church curt for action. Unwritten Law Is Pleaded by.Girl16; Slayer of Woman Accused by Mother E OF TAMPERING T dutmksts ST SIM'I.AIIt, IHlllKNV AMI FALL SHOWING BELIEVE NORTH (.tarlatnl Prm LUkl WirO WASHINGTON. May 27. Albert II. Fall, Edward L. Doheny and .Harry F. Sin- clalr. whose indictments as result of the oil scandal re- ledum amy, wrip euiuu-ieu today by a District of Coluni- biu grand Jury. Aa in the previous case, 4 v the Indictments charging w condracy tu connection with the Teupot Dome and Elk Hills leuaes. Edwurd L. Do- "heny, who previously kud been Indicted also, was not reindicted. The original Indictments, returned here last aummer. SO SAYS GO-BETWEEN 'hrown out of court on w April a lusi on Hie gruunu me Indictment officer of the de- e partment of Justice had been Rr l. a . n -L ,lv present in xne graua jury etusal to Accept Bribe to . ,d that his presenee waa Illegal because prosecu- Hon of the case waa In the hands of the government's special oil counsel. Witness Feared by Defense in Shepherd Case Was Offered $5,000. POLE REACEED BY AMUNDSEN Theory Is Planes too Badly Damaged in Landing for . Further Use. Weaken Prosecution Was Followed by Death Threat, Alleged. Lucile Wunsch and her mother, and (Inset) her father. RIVERDALE. 111., May 27. "Not guilty," solemnly Intonei the foreman of thy coroner's Jury. "I've been a fool," said the rather, William Wunsch, Klver dale village trustee, whose friend ship for Miss Agnes Simnick, 28. caused his daughter to tnk-e a gun and lie in wait with her mother for the 'other woman." "This is the biggest lesson In the world to me. I've surfered. There won't be any excuse in my future conduct for a repetition of this trouble." "I'm sorry she's dead," said Mrs. William Wunsch. "Hut she did swear that she would have my husband. I only hope thh unites the family for good." "Oh. I'm glad!" said Lucille Wunsch. lu. hli;h school student. I the daughter. "I'm Just beginning : to realize now what an awful i thing it was. I want to get back : to school and my art work right j away." j "flood!" applauded the packed i courtroom, nil but six person lu ;the rear. These were the bro (thers, sisters and mother of the dead woman. I 'And again the "unwritten law" had been upheld as the law of the land. "I did the shooting." Lucille '.had told the Jury. "I know about I my father going around with this j woman for two or threw years. I I felt I couldn't stand it any , more. To think that when my I mother was ubout to have a baby, j that my father was out with I someone else. It was terrible." I ni inn inr nninr u .".mu nuL n Li i LmuniiLmttUL gram. Instead of this taking place In the drove as In past years. It Is the plan of the committee to con duct the services In tire shade I (AancUUd Pms Uuri Win CHICAGO. May 27. While Rob ert White, fugitive witness on whose testimony the state largely rests Its hope of convicting Wil liam 1). Shepherd for the murder of William N. McCllntock. was be- ing sought In New York today, the state's attorney's office proceeded i with Its Inquiry Into alleged Jury nxing attempts. State's Attorney Crowe traced White to New York last night and expected his arrest ' there today. Meanwhile the formal arrest of James J. Kelly here last night turned the prosecutor's office Into a buzzing hive of activity around which Mr. Crowe threw a blanket of secrecy. Kelly was named In a letter pur ported to have been written by White In Philadelphia last week In which ho charged he had been forced to flee from Chicago. Kelly admitted that ho had been with White and Arthur E. Byrne, Investigator for Shepherd, the night before White left the city. "Kelly has Uild'a lot", aald As sistant State's Attorney ajoseph Savage, after the sudden rush of activity had started, "but Mr. Crowe has told me to say nothing". Mr. Crowe's only announcement wns that Kelly had made admis sions that "Implicated" White. Amplification of this statement was refused. The prosecutor ex plained his reticence by saying the Shepherd defense hail accusjed him of trying to "poison the public mind against them." The Chicago Tribune says today FOR PROGRAM L iEIORIA of the huire manlo tree by tho.1""1 ''")' n,UB siaienieni 10 banks of the rtver adjoining the .his Interrogators: cemetery, his great tree with I 1 1 saw W hlte the night before ita wide spreading branches, or- in disappeared. He told me thnt rers shelter and shade to several j'" "'.lft0 he would make an affl hundred people, forming a didighl- I davit changing all the testimony ful setting for the Impressive pro- ti had given before the grand Jury gram which is to be presented. I A. .lawyer was called to draw up The nriiiciiial address will bo I the affidavit and he did draw it 101 TRIBES FILE SUITS FOR S ANXIETY NOT GREAT Explorers Well Equipped to Battle Elements Aid to Be Sent by America . . If Need Arises. ' I Nearly Dollars Demanded of Government. CLAIMED LAND BASIS Klamath, Modocs, Snakes Allege Treaty Errors, -Misappropriation of Holdings. Services Will Be Held in Morning Instead of After noon as Formerly. CAN AD AY TO SPEAK up. but it la my unilorstanuiiiK Will In never nlnned It." Whitc'i tt'Htlmony to thp grand Jury was in support ttf ('. C. Ful man's BHaertlmia that ho had flold , typhoid Kfrmn to Hlu-pherd with I t)m knowledfce that hfy were to 'be UH.'rt In killing McCllntock. Yewtf rdav'a quest loninic of ven iremen In tho Hhepherd raan and I of Jurors and wlvea of Jurnra on KI,AMAM FALLS. Ore.. Mny the cnnf,n arRmMj by W. fl. Stewart 27. Kiri-t deKree murder c-hnrReB nnd w O'Brien. Shepherd's have been filed BRalnnt Frank ! counsel, brought evidences of try Way, prominent Klamath heep ; ln- m ..fix thp jury or (nat 4Urv. made by H. A. Canaday. and a number of musical features ar belnR arranged to be given in connection. FATAL FIST FIGHT OVER LAMB LEADS TO MURDER CHARGE1 Parade Will Leave Armory as Soon After 9 O'Clock as Possible; Patriotic Orders to March.' Memorial Day will bo observed In this city on Saturday May 30, th'f program for the day being much the same as In the pat ex cept that the services will be held in the morning instead of in thi afternoon as has been dow for merly. Heretofore It has been the practice to hold the parade In the afternoon, leaving the Ar mory at 1:30 o'cloik, but this year the committee has decided that It would be much better to put tbe program In the morning, and consequently the proci sslon will leave the Armory as soon after 9 o'clock as possible. The parade will tie headed by the colors after whlrh will rome the Houglas County Concert Hand, the National Ouard. II. A. H., O. A. H.. W. It. C. Spanish-American War veterans. American Legion auxiliary, American Le gion and Hoy Hrouts. The com mittee particularly urgca all of the members of ach of these or ganizations to parllclpste la this parade and in the subsequent ceremonies. The parade will halt on the Oak Street brldr. while memor ial services are held fur the sai lors who died upon seas. an1 flowers will be cast upon the ri- mau. following the report of a coroner's Jury late yesterday. The coroner's Jury found M. Timothy Murphy died as a result , of a rraetured skull inflicted ny Way dur';g a tint fight clash In i the Devil's Garden country. Tho 'fight orcurr'd during division of a band of sheep, when the men i were unalile to agree on the own ership of a black lamb. Murphy was burled here thli I morning. The church was packed with acquaint nances, men from the sheep and cattle ranges who had known him many yeurs. (AaocUted Pras IrtmA Vtln.1 NEW YOnK.May 27. Today la the sixth since the' Amundsen Kllsworth Polar flying expedition hopped off for the north, and tho whereabouts and welfare of the. six adventurers remain as much of a mystery as ever. When their two planes disap peared from the view of thoae at jving s uay pitzoergen, ail com muntcatlon with thetn ceased, as Captain Amundsen went without wireless equipment so aa to carry aa much motor fuel as possible. As to what has befallen the party since, there are aevAriil nnsslhlll. Fourteen Million '; tie, but the truth can be for the present only a matter of conjec ture. Having reached the Pole or It vicinity, the explorers may be spending some time In Verifying their position and making the nec essary records to prove their feat I to the scientific world. Again thoy may have discovered a new land In the Arctic and ba engaged at preaent In exploring It. Another theory and this Is put forward by some who know . the mettle of the discoverer of the South Pole is that he knew It would be Impossible to fly buck I from the Pole because of the dam age likely to be suffered by the planes on landing; that the out ward trip waa made withoht mis hap and that the member of tho expedition, equipped with their hunting rifles, sleeping bugs, fold ing boat and other aidea, now are on their way back on foot across the Ice which cover the northern Bcas. The last possibility and one which admirer of the adventurou six hesitate to envisage, la that disaster has befallen the expedi tion that one or both of ..the planes have crashed and that tuar or perhaps none of the explorer now survive. There is much discussion about relief expeditions but Amundsen's friends in Norway declare "this talk Is premature. The explorer, they say, went prepared for.ll centlngenclvs; he Is fully capable of taking care of himself and Ills party, and be may be relied upon to turn up, sooner or later, at some outpost of civilization. State, menta made at the White House yesterday Indicated that Prealdtmt Coolidge would sanction any plan formulated by the secretary of the 'men selected to try the case had 1 been "fixed." There were only three Jurors land one venireman tentatively ipassed by both ifldes when court opened this morning to denote .tjn-y 0- interior later Iprogres In the selection of the : ihin tract for 87.000 at Jury, one Juror having been urop iped because he has formed an j opinion since being selected. I The state's attorney expressed a belief that White, would be In cus tody In New York by night. (AorUtd PreM leased Wln.) WASHINGTON. Mnv 27. Two suits for nearly $14,000,000 Involv ing more than a million and a half acres of land alleged to have been erroneously taken over by tha gov ernment were filed In the court of claims yesterday by the Klamath and Modoc tribes and Yohooskln bands of Snako Indians In Oregon and California. In one suit the Indiana ask $R, 047.629, alleged to be due them for 1,500,000 acre which they cliifln was erroneously excluded from their possession through err ors and Inaccuracies tn the treaty of 1KIS4 under which they ceded to the government certain lands in the two state and reserved a specified tract for a reservation. The second suit grew out of the granting tn Oregon by the govern ment of certain alternate sections of public lands for the construction of a military wagon road, whleh when built passed through the In dians' reservation for a distance of approximately 100 miles. It isinavy for an American relief expe- cnargeu in tne suit mat lYl.ww ditlnn. acres of their land was erroneously Secretary Wilbur, questioned re patented to the Oregon Central aatdlng the use for that purpose Wi'gon Itond Company, which of the dirigible Ixs Angeles and. built the road, and that the aecre- : Shenandoah, said the chance jwere remote. Latest newa from Oslo. Norway, 'la that the weather at King's Bay I was more favorable last night than ifor some hours before. ! COURT AT WORK GIRL KILLED IN FALL OVER BLIND exc winged acres of unal lotted lands within the reservation. The petition alleges that the 87, 000 aeres were covered with tim ber and were worth $6,000,000. Al though congreas appropriated $jOH,7.ri0 to pay the Indians for tho land, tho Indians accepted that sum under protest and the suit asks $r.!(l.2r,u. whleh with tho ON MONEY ACTION "1."& already received, they a) The circuit court continued to- t-iLI Ur rVElVlCi11 !(lt.OTf!B Hewitt against the American Timber and Iand com EVERETT, WMh.. May 27-Ella . ul. 20J()0 on an .,.-.) id note. The note. It Is claimed was given In return for services WASHINGTON. Mny 27. Hopo for the safe return of the Amund sen I'olar expedition was held out today by Ionald 11. MacMIllan, Arctic explorer, who believes that any one of several reasons might leed to be the reasonable vtilun have delayed the return, of the til of the property. Pike, 16. Junior student in the hlvh school at Arlington and dnughter rs. The mere problem of locating the I'nle Itself by astronomical Ob Iservatlons, MacMlllan said, might uays to of Mr. and Mm. M. If. Pike of Ar.nij expenses of lhe plaintiff, but lington, was fatany injured eariy tn company officials claim that 1 the peroons who signal the note j were not duly elected officials of I the company and had no authority I to Sinn the note or transact the I business of the concern. this morning when she slipped and fell over a high embankment at the end of a paved highway out side Arlington. The young girl, with a friend. Gladys Ilovin, had been on a atl'o ride with two young men. The party Is said In have stopped at the end of the pavement where the Ilovin girl left the car. Immediately she ptunged over the embankment. Searching fop her the I'lke girl turned the spotlight over the- bank and aw her iro feet below uninjured, but In doing so she slipped and fell ov er herself, fracturing her skull on a rock. Several hours latur the party reported the accident to the authorities at Arlington who held LOGGER IS HURT BY FLYING CHAIN .lrro,n;,,!fl,h'qulr'' . . ! "It Is inconceivable." he assert- vun nsimi-iiuvi K. "N employee oi (Continued on page I I TheVeather Highest temp, yesterday 79 Lowest temp, last night 48 vr In the nremory of these brave the boys until the sccldent had defenders of the country. been Investigated The names of At the Soldier, Home the W. the young men were not given out. R. C. will hold Hs ritualistic ser- I Miss I'lke wss rfeaVwhen her vices at the grave of the unknown soldier, which will be followed by the regular Memorial Ioy pro-1 tne i.ystui ijiwsin. lumber company of ;iendale, as badly Injured yes terday evening when he as struck by a heavy chain, which snapped under a heavy pull. The . chain was used aa a "choker," The trial nf this rase'neces.llat. I ,rm '"r np cab'" or chain ed the postponing of the cases of I wn rh ' 'sstened around a log. both Loyal Kmery and Jess Itnlcl-1 an'1 ln,n whl,h ' I1"""1 h cable, win. the former ln.ll.ted on a 1 lHlng the log. As the donkey charge of pnsslng a worthless Engine applied Its power the chain check, and the latter convicted of 'me loose, and under tho heavy heln drunk and disorderly at a ' tension the huge links were hurled ! dance. Attorney Hermann an- through the air wlih a tremendous j nounced this afternoon that a nio-'rce. Sksgenberg was struck In Hon or a new trial would 4e pre- the back, his shoulder blade was sented In the I'.aldwln esse, hut broken and his skull fractured. He 1 the argument on this motion was , was brought to Itoseburg in an un- , positioned until after the case now :cotiscous condition, and was treat-j befote the court. ed bv !r. Stewart. V was removed t o - 'to Mercy hospital, snd was reported J tn spring when lossoms start to I somewhat Improved this morning. I bloom o Men. a peculiar air assume. R. S. Ilartnell was among the i Warm sweet words from their Hps body wss found at alit 1:J0 o'- turned -9 this city last night after nut of town visitors here Tuesday. I do flow. clock this morning. Mis Ilovin spending several days at Little and tent the dsv attending to Their coolness departed with, thai waa not Injured. Jtlver on a camping trip. ' Ibuslness matters. He I from Glide j snow. Partly C I e u d f Tonight and Thursday.