The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913, June 09, 1911, Image 7

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    MAZBIDS FARE-
WELLTOMEXICO
MSays He Will Die In His
Native Land.
(Goal 8P,,n Dclri
r u..;nn Goverrment Mull Con
tinue to Us Fore.
V.ra Cruz. Mexico, June I. Gene-
L, Diaz mill his final farewell to Mex-
,.o yeatenwy. wun me wire anil
thrr members of the Dim family he
,arded th steamer I piranga, nound
,r Spain.
Ceneral Dial' ship waa only a little
ay out when the searchlight of the
irtrrM Kuartln( tn P"r " turned
ll' . . U ..UHMua In ha.,, I mon.i
A lU fill" 1 " ... pniwii )
,nall imrty in the etern. Dial waa
timiii'K. somewhat apart and cloae to
h rail. He waa plainly discernible,
iking hit farewell look at hia native
ira.
Hit lat words, apuken to those he
J left on ahore, wera : "I aha.ll die
n Mexico." Thia waa utUred in a
me of prophesy and with a look of
ipired vnviction.
Wearing the aatne uni forma they
til on when they served aa the gen
ral't iruard, the aoliliera drew up in
writ of the home of J. H. Body,
here the ex-president haa been
jarlrreil aince hia arrival in Vera
rut. under command of (ieneral Vic-
riana Huerta. an old and peraonal
riend of General Iiai.
To hit country General Diaz de-
vereil a warning. Speaking to the
ttlc group which accompanied him
n hit trip from the capital, the old
in who governed Mexico for more
iin 30 year by military strength.
jid the present icovernment muat yet
-tort to hit method if peace ia to be
.-Mtahlinhed.
When General !iax atepixsl forward
wr waa a bun of intercut, but no
tmonatrntion. The moment waa too
ilrmn fur auch an exhibition, and
ven the littla group of peona behind
wauldier repressed their feeling
jring the eech-making and embrac-It-
The general, showing almost no
tn of hit recent illness, waa dreaaed
i in ordinary aack auit of black. He
irrieil in hit hand a I'anama hat.
Throughout all of General Huerta'a
ilk, Diaz stood like a aoldier on par
I. with eyea front and never a
ilch of the muaclea. Bravely he
gan hia reply, but before many min
jti he waa having great ditticulty in
.altering hia emotiona.
STORM SCATTERS DEATH.
our Killed at Clavaland and Lorain;
Two at Pittsburg.
Cleveland, June 1. Four dead and
I injured waa the toll of the terrific
ind and rain atorm which awept over
kveland and vicinity today. Three
ea were loat at Ixirain. AH 'of the
ad were in rowboau which were
iir.-d by a audden wind atorm
hich aprang up out of a calm.
The body of a woman, one of thoae
rowned. waa identified aa that of
!ra. Kthel Farly. She, with David
1 Thomaa Ixmgstreet, her brothera.
Te out on the lake in row boat.
'o more amntv mwlxuli wire
irked up by a tug.
Twenty bather at Kdgewatcr Park.
ho tM,k abetter in the boathouae,
'pre buried when the roof fell. One
n hm I both leg bnken when a wa
in wna blown on him and another
' ttnick by a piece of cornice,
l"nolfan It-story building. Ilia
'jll wu fractured.
Butter "Brandt" Farcea.
Kansaa CityIt ia usclca for the
nurnir to t.l the grocer to. send a
-rtain brand of hotter anil no other.
Tactically all the butter Bold by the
-tailera j. purchased in tuba in car
d Iota, taken to the place of htisi
t of the big diatributera and there
oldiil i,,to packages and brandel.
"tic of the butter distributed by any
n company with a nartieular brand
4 tnanufnrtiiroil I. u ll.nl m nan V
ni wu the testimony of produce
-hit, m a auit to dissolve the Kanaaa
"' t 'ruit and Produce F.xchange.
Liner Beached. All Safe.
Victoria, Ft. C. The Canadian Pa-
'"C ateainer Amur .lr,,..lr . nil
Wrangle Narrow lut Wln...liiv af-
"""xm. She floated olT in a short
, ime and waa run aahora on a aandy
''h at Northllat. There waa no
'"ger to tiaaaenirera txr erew. The
Jteimer 1'rinceaa May, on her way
rom Skiigway from the aouth, reached
"I Irene aoon aftriifar,li TKo .
'"it of the damage to the Amur ia not
11 now n.
PittHllllfn 1.... !!.. ,L. !.!
I,. ;"', aunt i, rlin ine winu
I -.R niiiea an nour ami wim
that f,. In torrent Unlay, a
wept over thla acction or the
leaving death and destruction
n lla laiuL. . . . . i
u int yrn wM. wn
ii j u ",r 01 npr nome oy me
nd f,. ,e,d frnm friKht
A M-tin, preaident of the
h "bur Tube company, ia dyino; In
"lta with a fractured tkull, cauaed
"J filing aign.
.uotham Not Contldarad.
I New Vn.l i ... .... .
H II i report mat aira. r.,
unt , an enntemplated founding
.!?'t3r ,n Ne" Vork City haa
wld.Pread circulation. Mra.
.'rriman a niTto. I ....
yurtnatio that .h. ul...t .n
,Qe.uch.underUking.
ONE DEAD. FIVE HURT.
Firtt Day's Auto Racing Full of Bad
Accidanta.
Motor Speedway, Ind.. May 31.
Onelife waa aacriflce.1 and aeveral
Tt lnJurwJ y'Hterday in the
llrat OOO mile race on the apeedway.
The race waa won by Kay Harroun.
driving Marmon car, in 6 houra, 41
rnlnutea and 8 teconda. Cloaely preaa
ing llarroun for victory were Kalph
Mulford, with a Ixixier, who finiahed
tecond. and David Uruce Brown, in a
Fiat, a good third.
Seventy-aeven thouaand persona
ahouted encouragement to the 40 pi
lota who ttarted the race at 10 o'clock
in the mornimr. anil with
enthuaiaam cheered the leader In the
laat lapa ami watched the field pound
round the eouraa in iliwiai.,n u
- " v VIIV
leaaer honora.
In the moat aerioua mpnl.Unt r.f
day 8. I'. Dickaon. of Chia.rn
. - ' IS" iiic-
clianician for Arthur Greiner, driving
n nmpiex, loai nit lire In an upaet on
the back ttretch. The rmrm k.,i t..
on but a few rnlnutea and the Amplex
waa in ita .10th miU ah v.
one of the front wheela flew oft. The
car twitted on the track, hurling the
men irom their aeata. Dickaon waa
thrown againat a fence 20 feet away
and Waa terrible mmrll II. ....
iliatantlv killed. Greinxr mmm ..riu...
ly injured and it waa feared he had
concuaaion of the brain, hut it
later learned that hit only injury waa
a iraciure oi an arm.
Men injured in the miahapi were:
Dave I-ewla. mechanician, riirht t
broken near hip.
Harry K. Knight, driver of Wet
etitt. brAat bruiaed ami noaaihle in.
ternal injurie.
John T. Glover, Knight't mechan
ician, Ixxly bruiaed.
Itob Kvana. merhunieittn fur Japli
Tower, Jackaon car, . body bruiaed
when he leaped from car in panic.
Illhn WimmI mwf.huni.ian fj.r .l.i.
Jaegeraburg, Case car, run over and
badly bruiaed.
NEW FAST TRAIN IS
WRECKED ON CURVE
Siaikane, May 31. Derailed at a
tharp curve at Maiden, teven milea
eaat of Kalaton, 2ft miiea eaat of I.ind,
VtiMh., the "Columbian," eaattxiund
panaenger train on the Chicago, Mil
waukee & I'uget Sound railroad, wat
wrecked at 5 o'clock thit morning.
Seven coachea were derailed, the en
gineer and fireman inatantly killed,
and at I eaat one paaaenger it known to
be terioualy injured.
The Columbian went into a iharp
curve juat before entering a cut near
Kalaton at a high rate of tpeed. The
engine, amoker and day coach left the
railt and piled up on the track. They
were demolished.
LAWS MAKE JUDGE ANGRY.
Say Provincial Legal Habit Makea
Ut Blunder Along.
New York In a dociaion given here
by Judge Hand, of the Federal court.
nvolving highly technical tcientific
mattert, the court atepped axide from
the queationa at iaaue to berate the
"provincial legal habit of mind," of
American juriaprudence.
"I cannot atop," aaid Judge Hand,
"without calling attention to the ex
traordinary condition of the law which
makea it poaaible for a man without
even the rudiment of chemistry to
paaa on queationa like theae.
"In Gcrtany, the court summon
technical judgei who can intelligently
paaa on the iaauea. How long we
ahall continue to blunder along noliody
know, but all persona not convention
alized by provincial legal habits of
mind ought to unite to effect tome
advance. "
Peace Treaty Ditparagcd.
Iondon - Kowland Hunt, Unionist
member of parliament, who has mmte
it hi apeciul business to bait Sir Ed
ward Grey, the Hritiidi foreign tecre
tary. on the subject of I'resident
Taft'a arbitration proposal, returned
to the charge in the house of com
mon, and auggest that the great ex
pectation which had been raised by
the presiilont't original offer had been
whittled wny, a it ratification by
the senate wa required, and that the
proposnl could not longer be regarded
a the basis for a treaty of arbitration.
Sixteen People Drowned.
Iterlin - Cloudbursts, accompanied
by heavy hail, caused great damage in
South Germany Wednesday. Six
houses in a village in the grand duchy
of linden were swept away by the
flood and 12 persons were drowned.
Four persona wero drowned near Hei
delberg, where a mill was washed
away. Eight Inches of rain fell at
various places in tho south, destroying
the fruit trees and crops and killing
birds by the wholesale.
Mob Rule Canary ltea.
I.a Talmas, Canary Islands Made
furious by the delay accompanying the
hv the Spanish parliament
of a bill providing for the division of
the Canary archipelago, a moo wo
possession of the streets here and at
tempted to burn the government build
ings. Troopa were called to restore
order, but public excitement contin
ues.
Jap are Not Wanted.
Melbourne, Australia William
Morria Hughea, acting premier of the
commonwealth, In a remarkable ar
ti.i. .kik h haa nintrihuted to the
UCIV mm." - " .
Sydney Telegraph, declared that Aus
tralia will never agree excep
'. Mi.t tn Bilmit Jananeae im-
migrants, even should tuch refusal
mean separation irom we
BRIEF REPORT OF
WORK OF NATION'S LAWMAKERS
Washington, June 2. Senator Lor
imer, of Illinois, faces another inves
tigation at the hand of hia colleagues.
m inquiry win be conducted by a
committee composed of four Kepubli
cana and ifour Democrat. The
method selected ia regarded as the
latest thing in jury triala.
it took seven houra' debate to agree
upon the system, and it waa finally
adopted by a vote of 48 to 20, being
substituted for the plan urged by La
Kollette of turning the cane over to
five senators who were not members
when the case waa voted upon before,
and therefore were supposed to be un
biased. Before the vote waa taken. Bristow.
who favored the La Kollette plan, ac
cused Dillingham, chairman of the elec
tions committee, of having capitulated
in the interest of a Democratic pro
posal of turning the investigation over
to sub-committee. This waa based
upon the fact that the author of the
resolution adopted waa Martin, the
Democratic leader. It wa said that
the old guard of Republicans had
formed an alliance with the Demo
crats, and that they had placed the
mantle of Aldrich "on the shoulder
of Martin."
That the committee on privileges
and elections had shirked ita duty in
the former investigation wa charged
unreservedly by the lupporter of the
La Follette resolution. Iea, of Ten
nessee, said he would no more turn
the case over to the electiona com
mittee for another trial than he would
submit to a second operation for ap
pendicitis by a surgeon who had failed
on the first operation to locate the
trouble.
Washington, June 2. Offering to
lay bare all the facta concerning the
United States Steel corporation and to
"stand or fall on the record;" deny
ing that he ia planning to form a trust
to control steel products and prices of
the entire world, and admitting that
the Steel corporation has absolute
domination of the subsidiary com
panies, Elbert H. Gary, chairman of
the board of directors, appeared today
as the second witness in the inquiry
being conducted by a house committee
into the steel trust.
Mr. Gary surprised the committee
with the statement that the Tennessee
Coal & Iron company, before ita ab
sorption, while nominally independent
"of all other companies," was "very
dependent so far as getting a liveli
hood was concerned," a remark which
he quickly asked to have expunged
from the records, and which he said he
had no "business to make."
This remark, however, served to
forecast the possibility that Mr.
Gary tomorrow might make state
ments not in accord with the testi
mony given by John W. Galea to the
highly prosperous condition of the
Tennessee Coal & Iron company at the
time of the "forced sale" to the ateel
corporation. Mr. Gary told the com
mittee that the Tennessee Coal & Iron
company still owes the steel corpora
tion f 10,167,700 for money advanced.
Washington, June I. Public hear
ing on the Canadian reciprocity bill
were practically completed by the sen
ate finance committee today, and next
Wednesday was fixed for a vote on the
measure by the committee.
No amendments other than that
offered by Root on the paper clause
will have any chance of consideration,
it was said by a member of the com
mittee. The Koot amendment, it was
added, will have to be materially mod
ified before it can be accepted.
It was decided to request officers of
the Associated Publishers' association
to appear to answer some questions
regarding the mutters under consider
ation. Joseph H. Allen, of the firm of Al
len & Graham, of New York, emJoy
ed to conduct the fight being made
againat reciprocity ' by the national
grange, acknowledged that M. Wood,
president of the American Woolen
company; Arthur C. Hustings, presi
dent of the American Paper & Pulp
association: Chester W. Lyman, as
aiatant to the president of the Inter
national Paper company, and Leonard
Bronson, general manager of tho Na
tional Lumber Manufacturers' asso
ciation, had volunteered contributions
to the fight.
W. L. Graham, of thia firm, while
he admitted he waa not connected with
a law firm at all, notwithstanding the
statement of W. M. Hull, mnster of
the Michigan grange, that it wa em
ployed as the farmers' legul advisers,
was asked if any interests other than
the national grange contributed.
"We have been promised nothing,"
he replied, "but we do expect that
any manufacturer who is Interested in
this matter and who appreciates what
we are doing, will pay ua for our
work; if they do, we will be glad to
take it."
Democrat' Unite for Duty.
Washington, D. C The proposed
Democratic revision of the wool tariff,
the Underwood bill, waa unanimously
approved by a Democratic caucus at
midnight, 12 hours after it had been
made public by the way and mean
committee. Ita endorsement followed
some rapid maneuvering by Demo
cratic house leaders who devised a
scheme which effectually disposed of
the free wool advocates. The final
vote wa made unanimous.
Policy on Wool Attacked.
Washington, D. C. William Jen
nings Bryan took exception to the
program of hia party in the house and
criticised sharply the majority of the
Democrat, who have agreed to up-
port the reviled tar I IT icheduio on
wool and woolen good.
THE DAILY
SPEAKS OF PEACE AND WAR.
Tart Pay Tribute to Dead Heroa at
Arlington Cemetery.
Washington Under the ahaded
arches of the Washington National
Cemetery Tuesday, President Taft
spoke not so much a the friend of
peace, but as the enemy of war.
Thousands of veterans tramped the hot
asphalt of the atreet, crossed the Po
tomac and trudged dusty road to Ar
lington to hear the president speak.
Thousands of other came in auto
mobiles and by atreet cars, and Presi
dent Taft, with Secretary of War
Stimson, came up to the vine covered
amphitheater and saw fully 10,000
persona crowded about the speakers'
stand. It probably waa the most
largely attended Memorial day cere
mony Washington haa seen.
"Far be it from me," said the
president, "to minimize in any way
the debt we owe to the men buried
here who carried on the successful
struggle that resulted in the abolition
of the cancer of slavery, which seem
ed ineradicable aave by auch an awful
slaughter of the brightest and bravest
and best of the Nation' youth and
manhood.
"I shall not discuss whether it
might have been possible to accom
plish the same reform by milder meth
ods. Whether that be true or not, the
aupreme sacrifice of these men who lie
about ua, in the causa of advancing
humanity cannot be lessened or ob
scured by such a suggestion.
"But the thought at which I would
but hint thi morning, is that, even
the hallowed presence of these dead,
whose ideal of patriotism and love of
their countrymen it needed a war to
make everlastingly evident, we should
abate no effort and strain every nerve
and avail ourselves of every honorable
device to avoid war in the future.
"I am not blind to the aid in creat
ing sturdy manhood that the military
discipline we see in the standing armiea
of Europe and in the regular army of
this country, nor do I deny the inci
dental benefits that may grow out of
the exigencies and sequelae of war.
But when the book are balanced, the
awful horror of either international
or internal strife far outweigh the
benefit that may be attained in it."
Washington, May 30. The house
was in session 10 minutes today. A
handful of members who had not been
drafted for memorial day addresses
were present. After routine business
adjournment waa taken until Friday.
A resolution waa introduced by Rep
resentative Harrison of New York,
directing the secretary of state to in
form the house whether Russia has
ordered any overtures looking to ita
modification of the discrimination
against the American passport in the
hands of the American Jew.
"My fear is," laid Mr. Harrison,
"that the reported policy at St. Pe
tersburg is put forth only to quiet the
just indignation of the American peo
ple at Russia a treatment of our Jew
ish citizens."
That congress will not conduct an
investigation into the arrest and ex
tradition to California, in connection
with the Los Angeles dynamiting ease.
of J. J. McNamara, the Indianapolis
labor leader, waa indicated today when
the house committee on rules decided
to take no action on the Berger reso
lution providing for such an inquiry.
Washington. May 31. Bryan's de
fiance today of the party leaders in the
house, his warning to the Democratic
members that the voter are yet to1
pass on the wool schedules they are to i
ratify and his appeal to them not to'
add hypocrisy to the sin of voting for
a revenue on wool, have caused in-'
tense feeling in the party. J
Notwithstanding, Underwood, as '
chairman of the houae committee on
ways and means, tonight was insistent i
in the prediction that the revenue bill I
will be approved by a big majority. I
"In my judgment," Underwood said
in answer to Bryan, "his statement'
is unjust and unfair to the members of
the ways and means committee and to
the Democratic representative! in con
gress who will support the bill.
"The ways and meant committee
ha cut in half the whole wool i
schedule. They have reduced the du-1
ties on manufactured goods as low as ,
they were under the Wilson bill that
Mr. Bryan voted for when raw wool i
was placed on the free list. In that
reduction they have fallen short of the
$40,000,000 now raised by wool by
$13,000,000, and it is necessary in or
der to secure this revenue to place a
revenue tax on raw wool imported into
the United States."
Taft Stick to Beverly.
Washington, D. C President Taft
will atick to Beverley as a hot weather
playground, unless congress selects a
site and appropriates the money for
an official Summer White house else
where. In a letter to Governor Eber
hart, of Minnesota, declining with
thank the offer of a aite for a Presi
dential summer home at Wayseata,
the president explained that congress
alone had the authority to designate
an official summer White House.
Taft May Visit Coast.
Washington, D. C As having a
probable bearing on hia nomination in
1912, President Taft' plan for the
coming fall are attracting unusual at
tention. The president told Senator
Smoot, of Utah, that he expected to
accept an invitaton to visit Salt Lake
City in September. Thi trip may
alao take the nreaident aa far aa the
Pacific Coast.
TOD
N the old building of the New York
university on Washington square,
the birthplace of the telegraph of
Morse, there waa taken in 1839
1 tbe Arst photograph of the human
face. The photograph waa that of
Miss Dorothy Catherine Draper, and
the man who took It waa her brother.
Dr. John William Draper, professor
of chemistry In the university. He
bad gone a atep beyond Daguerre and
by this photograph he established htm
telf as one of the great Inventors of
the nineteenth century.
Not long ago occurred the hundredth
anniversary of Doctor Draper's birth
and It was celebrated in the auditori
um of the university at Aqueduct ave
nue and One Hundred and Eighty-first
street.
It waa on tbe roof of the old build
ing on Washington place that there
was set up, In 1840, the first photo
graph gallery In tbe world. To thla gal
lery there came to be amazed and de
lighted all the notable of the day, in
cluding Theodore Frelinghuyien, the
candidate for vtce-preiident on tbe
Henry Clay ticket.
Professor Draper took the pictures.
Hia camera waa a cigar box and his
lense tbe glass from a pair of spec
tacles. Doctor Draper' assistant In
this gallery, tbe man who posed the
sitter and attended to the artistic de
tails, waa Prof. S. F. B. Morse, who
only five year before and In the same
building had operated the first tele
graph line.
The picture taken In thla gallery
were developed by Professor Draper,
for It waa hia experiments In regard
to the chemical action of light that
had enabled him to Improve the proc
ess of Daguerre almost aa aoon aa the
latter'a discovery was made known.
It wa tn 1S39 that Daguerre gave hia
process to the world, but it waa not
then adaptable to landscapes or por
traits. In the same year Professor
Draper announced that he had found
the way to photograph the human face
and to overcome those obstaclea which
made the Frenchman's process Imper
fect and Impractical.
In these kodak days the directions
which Doctor Draper gave at thla time
for taking a photograph are Interest
ing. At first, be said, he had tried
dusting the face of a sister with white
powder, but he later found that this
was unnecessary. On a bright day
and with a sensitive plate, he an
nounced, portraits could be obtained
In the course of five or seven minutes.
"The hands of the sitter," he said
In these directions to the camera
fiends of that day, "should never reat
upon the chest, for the motion of res
piration disturbs them so much as to
make them of a thick and clumsy ap
pearance, destroying also the repre
sentation of the veins on the back,
which. If they are held motionless, are
copied with surprising beauty.
"A person dressed In a black coat
and open waistcoat of the same color
must put on a temporary front of a
drab or flesh color or by the time that
his face and the fine shadow of hi
woolen clothing are evolved hi shirt
will be solarised and will be blue and
black with a white halo around It.
"Owing to the circumstance that
yellow and yellowish brown require
a long time to Impress the substance
of the daguerrotype, persons whose
face are freckled all over give rlae to
the moit ludlcrout result, a white
portrait mottled with Just a many
black dot a the altter ha yellow
one."
On March 22, 1840, Doctor Draper
took from the roof of the building the
first photograph ever taken of the
moon. HI plat wa exposed 20 min
ute and the image wa about an inch
In diameter. The photograph waa pre
sented to what wa then the Lyceum
of Natural History. It created a great
teniatlon at the time, not only here
but abroad. Daguerre't nam wa
imm
H0 1?
v..;rf , , I
" St'' f
- . A
given to the photographic process for
many year after thia.
The man whom New Yorlt univer
sity I about to honor aa the first
photographer and a great chemist waa
born an Englishman. - He came to thia
country at the age of twenty-two.
graduated from the University of
Pennsylvania in 1S36 and waa appoint
ed professor of natural philosophy,
chemistry and physiology at Hamp-den-Sydney
college In Virginia. It waa
from there that be was called in 1839
to be professor of chemistry at New
York university, and be signalized hia
change of residence by announcing
almost immediately thereafter hia
photographic process. He was con
nected with the university until hi,
death In 1882.
Doctor Draper ha frequently been
described a a pioneer In the science
of prismatic analysis. His dlacow
erles In this field covered a wide
range. He even anticipated the Incan
descent light of Edlaon when e sug
gested as a standard for photometry
for white light a piece of platinum foil
of given area and thickness heated to
Incandescent by an electric current
of specified strength.
Capillary attraction was the subject
of hi first researchea and from them
arose his discovery hs to how the
blood Is' purified, a mystery which had
baffled the scientist up to that time.
It was In 1S47 that he explained tho
circulation and purification of the
blood In a work that attracted wide
attention.
Doctor Draper Is still remembered
at New York university a one of the
rcoat prodigloua worker ever known.
Beside his extensive research work
he found time to publish more than
a hunded books, monographs and ad
dresses. He wrote a history of tho
Civil war tn three volume and hi
"History of the Intellectual Develop
ment of Europe" waa translated Into
every civilized tongue.
A Lazy Man's Job.
Tip. since hi early wanderings on
the plains, has alway laid that the
softest lazy man' job on earth waa
raising sheep. Sheep are bush feed
ers. They will thrive on eating any
thing from dead sage-brush to railroad
snow fences. They will tunnel their
muizle through snow to get a stick
underneath for food. Of course they
eat tbe snow when they get thirsty.
Now Tip learn from an official gov
ernment report that an Island off tho
coast of Nova Bcotla has been a great
success. Not an attendant with food,
not a copper cent of cost to the own
ers, and through two bitterly cold,
hard wlntera those sheep have fat
tened and flourished to splendid form
and fleece. New York Press.
Oh!
"And what 1 her reason for asking
for a divorce?
"Because her husband waa In tho
habit of throwing her dreaae all over
the house."
"That' a funny reason."
"Yes, but as a general thing h
wa Inside tho dresses when ho threw
them."
Ood help thoee that help thorn
elvea.
country.