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VOL. XLIL 2ST0. 12,923.
POBTLAND, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1902.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
s
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f
Eastman Kodaks
20 per cent, off
published prices.
BIumauer-Frank Drug Co
Wholesale and Importing Druggists.
OLD KENTUCKfT
HOME CLUB
O. P. S. WHISKEY
Favorite American Whiskey
BLUMAUER & HOCH, sole distributers
Wholesale liquor and Cigar Dealers, 108-110 Foartb St.
HOTEL PERKINS
Jrifth and Washington Streets
EUROPEAN PLAN
First-Class Check Reictnnrant
Connected With Hotel.
3. F. DAVD2S. Prea.
St. Charles Hotel
CO. (INCORPORATED).
FRONT AND MORRISON STREETS
PORTLAND, OREGON
American and European Plan.
SPECIAL LINE OF
JVl-ENSGOQDYEAlR, JW-fiDTS.
"f I
Box Calf and Kid stocks below Eastern prices
a special drive. Send for sample pairs.
WHOLESALE ONLY;
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zfCwmMe
WILLAMETTE
IRON & STEEL WORKS
MANUFACTURERS AXD DESIGNERS OP
HIGH-GRADE
MACHINERY
PORTLAND,
M-i-i : : i-i-i-h-i-h-i-h-i :!!: 1 1 vvw i : : : i-:M"M-h..h,.i i i iiIm-i-h-X
-. t
i
I
I
I
I
4
.1 T
Our tfRlUK
IS A NOVELTY.
It is delicious and just the thing for luncheons or
evening parties. These flavors Vanilla, Choc
olate and Strawberry are the favorites. Take
home a brick in your pocket and try it. $
HAZELWOOD CREAM CO. 1
382 WASHINGTON STREET. Both Phones 154. f
I - I - I - M - H - H - M - M"!"!"! - : -
WIRE
tmmiSj&A
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1KD ALL K1RDS OF USEFUL AHD 0BR1HEMTAL KOBE
Portland Wire & Iron Works
MANUFACTURERS. 147 FRONT STREET
SUMMER SUITS
100 Unclaimed Tailor-Made Suits, Worth $25,
FARNSWORTH-HERALD TAILORING CO.
248 WASHINGTON-NEAR THIRD.
THERE IS BUT ONE PIANOLA
The instrument made by
YHE AEOLIAN COMPANY
NEW YORK
The various named piano-players AREaNOT Pianolas,
THE AEOLIAN COMPANY,
21. B. AVplIs, Sole Xorthvrest ASU 853-355 Wt.UnKton at., cor. Parle
WHEN PURCHASING
GARDEN HOSE
Be sure you secure one of
our brands
GOODYEAR RUBBER CO.
It. H. PEASE, President.
T3 AAD 75 FIRST ST PORTLAND, OR.
The Brownie No. 1, list $1.00 80c
The Brownie No. 2, list $2.00 $1.60
The Panorama, list $10.00 : .$8.00
and the
New Plate Camera, list $25. 00.. $20.00
PORTLAND, OREGON
Rooms Single 75c to fl SO per day
Roams Double $1.00 to 12.00 per day
Rooms Family Sl.SO to 13.00 par &ur
C T. BELCHER. Sec. and Treaa.
American Plan ........... ....?1.2S, $1.50, $1.73
European Plan 00c, 75c, fl.00
87-89 First St-
4tyC& Portland, Or.
OREGON
Ice Cream 1
!'! I M-H-H-I I-I2IIII IIII II Ifr
AND IRON FENCING
Of all kinds.
. Poultry Netting
GIT OF DEATH
Appearance of St Pierre
After the Eruption.
GHASTLY STREET SCENES
Thirty Thousand Corpses Are
Strewn About.
CHARRED AND UNRECOGNIZABLE
Only Heapi of Ashen and Blocks of
Stone Show Where the Build
ings of the City Once
Stood.
Careful Inspection showed that the
Aery streanfwhlch so completely de
destroyed St. Pierre must have been
composed of poisonous gases, which In
stantly suffocated eVery one Who in
haled them, and of other gases burn
ins furiously, for nearly all the vic
tims had their hands cohering their
mouths, pr were In some attitude show
ing that they had sought relief from
suffocation- AH the bodies were car
bonized or roasted.
Piles of dead In the vicinity of the
site of the cathedral tell a story of
the attempt to find sanctuary and ref
uge In the great structure of worship.
Men and women, panic-stricken at the
cataclysm, turned In the moment of
their despair to the cathedral, and were
apparently o ercome before they could
reach its doors.
!
-0-
FORT DE FRANCE, Martinique, May
12. It now 'seems to be generally admitted
that about 30,000 persons lost their lives
as a result of the outbreak of the Mount
Pelee volcano at St. Pierre Thursday
last. Careful investigation by competent
government officials shows that the earlier
reports of the Associated Press were ac
curate. Briefly put, last Thursday morn-
ling Che city of "St. Pierre disappeared
within ID minutes. In a whirling fire
vomit from Mount. Peloe 30,000 persons
were instantly and horribly killed and
the volcano, whose ancient crater for
more than 30 years had been occupied
by a quiet lake In which picnic parties
bathed, suddenly discharged a torrent
of flery mud, which rolled toward the
sea engulfing everything before it. The
last cabled communication was broken'
and the doomed city was Isolated from the
world.
The American Consul at Guadeloupe,
Louis H. Ayme, has reached the desolate
spot where St. Pierre stood and confirms
the awful story in all its essential de
tails. From an Interview with Colonel
Ayme, who Is a trained American news
paper man, a correspondent of the Asso
ciated Press, learned the following facts:
Thursday morning the inhabitants of
the city awoke to find heavy clouds
shrouding the Mount Pelee crater. All
day Wednesday horrible denotations had
been heard. These were echoed from St.
Thomas on the north to Barbadoes on the
south. The cannonading ceased Wednes-
day night and fine ashes fell like rain on I
OU xcwe. J.UU luiuuiuiuui nc aii"iu-
ed, but Governor Mguttet, who had ar
rived at' St. Pierre the evening before,
did everything possible to allay the panic.
The British steamer Roralma reached
St. Pierre Thursday with 10 passengers,
among whom were Mrs. Stokes and her
three children and Mrs. H. J. Ince. They
were watching the rain of the ashes,
'when a frightful roar and terrific electric
discharge, a tornado of fire, mud and
steam swept down from the crater over
the town and bay, sweeping all before it
and destroying the fleet of vessels at
anchor off the shore. There the account
of the catastrophe, so far as obtainable,
ceases.
Thirty Thousand. Corpses.
Thirty thousand corpses are strewn
about, burled In the ruins of St. Pierre,
or else floating, gnawed by sharks. In
the surrounding seas. Twenty-eight
charred, half dead, human beings" were
brought here. Sixteen of them are al
ready dead and only four of the number
are expected to recover.
The Associated Press steamer chartered
1n Guadeloupe neared Martinique at 6:30
In the morning. The island, with Its low
hills, was hidden behind a huge veil of
violet colored haze. Enormous quantities
of the wreckage of large and small ships
and houses strewed the surface of the eea.
Huge trees and too often bodies with
flocks of sea gulls soaring above, and
hideous sharks fighting about them, were
floating here and there.. From behind the
volcanic veil came blasts of hot wind,
mingled with others Ice cold.
At Le Preoheur, five miles north of St,
Pierre, canoes with "men, and women,
frantic to get away, begged for a passage
on the steamer.
. The whole north end of the Island was
covered with a silver coating of ashes
resembling dirty snow. Furious blasts
of fire, ashes and mud swept over the
steamer, but finally St Pierre was reach
ed. The City of St. Pierre stretched nearly
two miles along the water front and half
a mile back to a cliff at the base of the
volcano. The houses of the richer French
families were built of stone. The stlll-smoklng-
volcano towered above the ash
covered hills. The ruins were burning in
many places, and frightful odors of burned
flesh filled the air.
Streets Were Obliterated.
With great difficulty a landing was ef
fected. Not one house was left Intact.
J Viscid .heaps of mud of brighter ashes or
piles cf volcanic stones were seen on
every side. The streets could hardly be
traced. Here and there amid the ruin
were heap9 of corpses. Almost all the
faces were downward.
In one corner 22 bodies of men, women
and children were mingled In one awful
mass, arms and legs protruding as the
helpless being fell in the last struggles of
death's agony. Through the middle of the
old Place Bentlt ran a tiny stream, the
remains of the river. Great trees with
roots upward and scorched by fire were
strewn In every direction. Huge' blocks
and still hot stones were scattered about.
From under one large stone the arm of a
white woman protruded. Most notable
was the utter silence and the awful, over
powering stench from the thousands of
dead.
A. B. Austen, manager of the Colonial
Bank of Barbadoes landed at St,Pierre
with a party from, the British Royal Mall
steamer Solent. He found the bank clock
stopped at some minutes before 8 o'clock.
A horse and buggy and a policeman were
J In a dead group at the door.
Lund la Changing:.
Nearly 4000 of the refugees from the
vicinity of the village of Le Precheur, a
suburban village north of St. Pierre, were
rescued by the French cruiser Suchet
and the cable repair ship Pouyer-Quertler
and were brought here. As a result of his
inspection, the commander of the Suchet
reports that crevices and valleys are con
stantly forming In the northern portion
of the island, where the land la In. a state
of perpetual change. Fortunately that
part of the country was evacuated in good
time by the Inhabitants, who fled to Fort
de France.
The dearth of provisions is beginning to
be felt throughout the Island.. Numerous
families are completely ruined and even
shelterless, while the mearts at the dis
posal of the authorities are much too in
adequate to cope with the distress.
Communication is practically cut off
from all the surrounding islands, except
by stray vessels, which are seized upon
by the inhabitants to flee from Martin
ique. Rcf agree Are Djinp.
The refugees had as a rule assembled at
Le Carbet and Case Pllote, not far from
St. Pierre, and It Is reported over 100 of
them have died since the fearful stream
of lava poured down Mount Pelee.
Several steamers. Including the. vessel
Rubls, started from here yesterday for St.
Pierre. They had on board a government
delegate, a number, of gendarmes, a at
tachment of regular infantry and several
priests. The vessel also carried a quantity
of firewood, petroleum and quicklime for
use in the cremation of the bodies of the
victims of the terrible volcanic outbreak
of Thursday last. Large quantities of disinfectants-end
stocks of clothing for the
refugees also were shipped to St. Pirrre.
At the 'request of S. A. McAllister,
United States Consul at Barbadoes, Cap
tain Davis and tbi Solent were placed at
his disposal" -by Vthe t Barbadoes Govern?
ment The Solent arrived at about the
same time as the Associated Press steam
er and brought to St. Pierre the Colo
nial Secretary, two civil doctors, two
military officers, and Dr. V7. E. Aughln
baugh, of Washington, as well as a Cor
poral and four hospital orderlies, three
trained nurses, and a full field hospital
outfit. The Barbadoes Government also
sent 700 barrels of provisions, one ton of
ice and a full supply of medicine. These
were useful, but the dead needed only
quick burial.
Death on the Ilornima.
The stories of the survivors added to
the awful details of the particularly har
rowing account of the loss of the British
steamer Roralma.
C. C. Evans, of Montreal, and John G.
Morris, of New York, who are now at
the military hospital of Fort de France,
say the vessel arrived at 6 o'clock. As
eight bells was Btruck, a frightful ex
plosion was heard up the mountain. The
cloud of fire, toppling and roaring, swept
with, lightning speed down the moun
tain and over the town and bay The
Roralma was nearly gunk and caught
Are at once.
"I never can forget the horrid, flery;
choking whirlwind which enveloped us,"
said Mr. Evans. "Mr. Morris and I
rushed below. We are not very badly
burned, not so bad as most of them.
When the Are came we were going to our
posts (we are engineers) to weigh an
chor and get out When we came up we
found the ship afire aft and fought it for
ward until 3 o'clock, when the Suchet
came to our rescue. We 'were then build
ing a raft"
Ben Benson, the carpenter of the Ro
ralma, said:
"I was on deck amidships when I heard
the explosion. The Captain ordered me
to take up the anchor. I got to the wind
lass, but when the Ore came I went Into
the forecastle and got my duds. When
I came out I talked with Captain Mug
gah, Mr. Scott, the flrst officer, and
others. They had been on the bridge.
The captain was horribly burned. He
had Inhaled flames and wanted to jump
into the sea. I tried to make him take a
life-preserver. The captain, who was
undressed. Jumped overboard and hung
onto a line for awhile, then he disap
peared." Gus Llnder, the quartermaster of -the
steamer, who Is horribly burned, and
can hardly talk, confirmed this.
Francisco Angelo. who speaks poor
English, vividly described the onrush of
the fire. He says the captain was a
very brave man, too brave to be burned
to death. Angelo further asserted that
the storm of fire lasted not more than
five minutes.
Joseph Breckels, a seaman, 15 years old.
Is so frightfully burned that he can
not live, having inhaled flames. Other
men of the Roralma who were rescued
are Salvador Acollo and Joseph Suslno.
Described the Fire Cyclone.
From the Italian ship Teresa Lovlco
several men were saved, but they "are In
a frightful state, except Jean Louts Pru
dent of St Pierre. Although on deck
and unprotected, ,he was little burned.
Prudent says there was flrst an awful
noise of explosion and then, right away,
a cyclone of smoke and fire, but such was
the poisonous, ch'oking nature of the
smoke, tha It burned worse than the
fire. When It struck the people they
fell dead. The cyclone of gas tore the
masts out of ships, blew others up and
sunk some m of them. Soon afterward
r
(Concluded on. Second Page.)
TELL OF '05 FAIR
Portland Men Address Meet
ing at Baker City.
GREAT ENTHUSIASM PREVAILS
Mayor- Authorized to flfame a Com
mittee to Solicit Subscriptions to
Stock Miners Will Prepare
BlET. Exhibit.
BAKER CITY, Or., May 12. A meeting
In the Interest of the Lewis and Clark
Exposition was held in the opera-house
in this city this evening. Mayor R. D.
THEY HAVE AN
PHILIPPINES
OR
SCUTTLE?
Carter presided. A committee represent
ing the exposition, consisting of Mayor H.
S. Rone, F. E. Beach, president of the
Board of Trade; A. J. Capron, of the
Chamber of Commerce, and J. M. Long,
City Attorney, all of Portland, were pres
ent Each, member of the committee ad
dressed the meeting. Messrs. Long and
Capron spoke at length, explaining the
object and purpose of the exposition.
Mayor Carter assured the gentlemen from
Portland that Baker City and Baker
County, and all of Eastern Oregon would
most heartily second the movement to
make the Lewis and Clark Exposition a
success. Frtd Mellls, who had charge of
the mineral exhibit of Oregon at the Pan
American Exposition at Buffalo, last year,
said that of 8,000.000 people who visited
tho exposition, the greater portion saw
the Oregon exhibit, and many thousands
said It was their Intention to attend the
Lewis and Clark Exposition. Addresses
favoring the exposition were made by
W. S. Levins secretary of the Chamber
of Commerce; O. L. Miller and W. J.
Lachner. Mayor Carter was authorized to
appoint a committee, to be composed of
leading citizens of the city and county, to
secure subscriptions to the capital stock
of the exposition. Several gentlemen of
means have already expressed their will
ingness to subscribe liberally to the cap
ital stock. In addition to the stock sub
scriptions, it is the purpose of the mining
men to prepare and place on exhibition
the largest and most elaborate mineral
exhibit ever shown at any fair or expo
sition. The mineral exhibit from, this part
of the state will consist in the main of
gold and copper ores.
THE DEATH ROLL.
Sliter of C. P. Huntington.
NEW YORK. May 12. Mrs. Mansfield
Lovell Hlllhouse, eldest sister qf the late
Collls P. Huntington, Is dead at the home
of Mrs. Huntington in this city. She
came to New York about three months J
ago from New Brunswick, N. J her
home, to spend a few months at the Hun
tington house. A month after she arrived
here she was taken 111 and declined grad
ually. X. Meyers.
.BERLIN, May 13. L Meyers, a direc
tor of the Hamburg-American Steam
Packet Company, died at Wiesbaden to
day. Coal Shortage at Reading:.
READING. Pa., May 12. The coal short
age Is already apparent here. Coal deal-
a0oaQ iiottt.
ers were besieged all of Sunday by cus
tomer?, and they say that they have more
oiders than they can fill In a month, even
v-un me mines rupmng. xjesiuea mc
Reading main line coal train crews, the
strike will affect many of the shifting
crews all along the line.
STEEL CASTING COMBINE.
Will Control One-Fourth of the Pro
duction of the Country.
CHESTER, Pa.. May 12. Additional par
ticular? concerning tne new combination
of steel-casting plants, which Is to be
formed with the American Steel Casting
Company, whose principal plant and of
fices are In this city, as a nucleus, have
developed fday. The new corporation
will be known as the American Steel
Foundries, and has as Its principal under
writers, J. G. Gary, Charles M. Schwab,
of the United States Steel Corporation; J.
W. Gates and General Charles G. Miller,
of Franklin. Pa. The new company will
control about one-fourth of the production
of steel castings In the country. The
companies to be included are the American
Steel Casting Company, the Sbackle-Har-iison
& Howard and American Steel
F.oundry. St. Louis; Sargent & Co.. Chl-
--f
t
EYE ON OREGON.
cago; Benjamin Thayer & Co., Newark,
N. J.; Franklin Steel "Casting Company,
Franklin, Pa., "and Reliance Foundry
Pittsburg.
C0NTENTS vOF TODAY'S PAPER.
Martinique Disaster.
Appearance of St. Pierre after the eruption
Page 1.
Thirty thousand corpses are strewn' throughout
tho city. Page 1.
The face of the northern part of the Island, Is
constantly changing. Page 1.
Steps taken by the departments at Washington
to relieve the sufferers. Pace 3.
Congress.
The House and Senate passed a bill appropri
ating S20O.00O for West Indian sufferers.
Page 2.
The President in a message recommended an
appropriation of $300,000. Page 2.
Foraker led the Philippine debate In the Sen
ate. Page 2.
Foreign,
Particulars of the Paris airship accident.
Page 3.
Spain Is preparing for the coronation of King
Alphonso. Page 3.
The conference committee of the Danish Par
liament Is considering the cession treaty
Page 3.
Domestic.
Twenty persons were kljled and 200 injured at
a Are and explosion near Pittsburg. Page 1.
The tie-up In the anthracite region Is com
plete. Page C.
Oans knocked out Erne at Fort Erie. Page 5.
Pacific Coast.
Enthusiastic meeting at Baker City to discuss
IOCS' Fair. Page 1.
Prominent Moscow married man and young
woman take poison and die together.
Page 4.
Furnlsh's visit to Polk County awakens great
enthusiasm and Increases his strength.
Page 4.
"Whitman County, "Washington, farmers call
meeting to learn what legislative candidates
will fight railroad lobby. Page 4.
Marine and Commercial.
Many declines In stocks, due principally to
money situation. Page 13.
Bulls cause advance In wheat in the East.
Page 13.
Decline in potatoes aad advance In mohair
and hops. Page 13.
Large fleet of Portland grain ships reach
Queenstown and Falmouth. Page 12.
t)ld Portland-Oriental liner Monmouthshire
rescues St. Pierre victims. Page 8.
Local row between rival sailor boarding-house
men has been settled. Page 12.
Many Portland steamboat men have departed
for the Tukon. Page 12.
Portland and Vicinity.
Democrats lose confidence in their prospects of
success. Page 10.
Bellboy Savage tells his story In Judge Fra-
zkr'B court Page 8.
Police And no clew to Murderer James 'Will
iams. Page 14.
aCIww -rj'-via C T'iTr N jKfci JT' f ff
Terrible Explosion Near
Pittsburg.
SCORE OF LIVES WERE LOST
Two Hundred Persons Injured
and Many Will Die.
THE VICTIMS WERE 0N-L00KERS
Torrent of Flames Burst Upon &
Greet Crowd of People Wutch-
ingr a Darning Train
of Cars.
A series of naphtha explosion In a
railroad yard In a Pittsburg suburb
cost a score of lives and Injured about
200 persons, 75 per cent of whom, ac
cording to physicians, will die. Specta
tators at a tire pressed too close, and
when three cars of the stuff exploded
there was no escape for them. Men,
women and children were wrapped in
flames and fatally burned. Before the
exploIon many were rendered uncon
scious by the extreme heat and gas
eous fumes, and were being carried
away when, the torrent of Are burst
upon them.
A stream of the escaping naphtha
caused an exDlosion at a point a mile
and a halt awa. wrecking three houses
and injuring many persons.
PITTSBURG, Pa., May 12. The Sheridan
yard of the Pan Handle Railroad was the
scene this evening of the, most disastrous
explosion and fire known in this section
for many years. A score of lives Tvere
lost and about 2C0 persons were so badly
burned that, according to the Judgment of
physicians in attendance, 75 per cent of
them will die from the effects of their In
juries. The Dead.
Ibo, dead are: 4
AITOERT M'KEAN, brakeman, Sheri
dan. , ,
JOHN SWAIN, brakeman. Sheridan.
Unknown boy, died on way to Allegheny
General Hospital.
H. F. SM1THLEY, Uhrichsvllle, O.
. FINNBRTY, Sistervllle. Va.
CHARLES HERTIG, Chestnut Mines.
W. W, TAYLOR, Millers Station.
G. E. HUNTER, 2S years old, leaves
widow and live children. Sheridan. .
W. E. WRIGHT, 26 years old, Sheridan.
DALLAS BORT. 28 years old, Sheridan
(all died at Mercy Hospital.)
Unknown white man, about 40 years old.
. DOUDS, died at Mercy Hospital.
DAVID SMITH, aged nine years. Sheri
dan, died at Allegheny General Hospital.
JAMES KKENAN, aged 20, Carnegie.
PASCOE MADER.
Italian section hand.
Unknown boy, aged 10.
.W. E. RESI, Dorencetown, Luzerno
County.
TONY LEE. laborer, aged 30.
LAWRENCE KEENAN, yardmaster's
clerk, Carnegie.
The Injured.
Partial list of the seriously Injured:
Albert Haertlg, aged 12; Carl Eatings,
Tipton, Tenn.; Henry Denselne, Alle
gheny; Sadie Seymour, 23; Flck Conldi,
grocer, Cecil, Pa.; Clyde Grlnnage, 24;
Roy Guthrldge, 9; Cljde Fair, 22; Charles
Keenan, 14; W. H. Enoch, Pittsburg, frac
tured skill, will die; Frank Doers, Will
iam Henderson, 22; Elliott Borough; Hugh
Hendenson, 25; J-. E. Hanna, BrldgevIHe;
J. J. Wallace, Trevascan; James Calla
han, Elliott Borough; Albert Verry, 15,
Sheridan, burned about body. Inhaled
fumes, will die; Mrs. Julia Ansell, 3S,
Sherldaa; Frank Culture. 20, Carnegie;
Matthew Moreland, 25, badly burned, lll
probably die.
The many others who were Injured live
in all parts of Allegheny County, and
their names cannot be secured tonight.
Cause of the Explosion.
The accident happened In the railroad
yards at Sheridan, where the Panhandle
Railroad makes a turn near Cork Run.
Banked In by two high hills, hundreds
6f people were caught. In the shitting
necessary to make up a train, live tank
cars, two of them filled with refined pe
troleum and two with naphtha, were
switched wlth too much force, and one
of the care of' naphtha was broken. In
stantly the Inflammable bl-product poured
out in a stream. The trainmen, teeing
that one of the cars was damaged, start
ed to pull them out of the way. As the
damaged car passed a switch light tho
dripping naphtha caught on the light
flame, and almost Instantly an explosion
followed.
The explosion sent showers of burning
naphtha over the freight station near
at hand, and also enveloped a number of
carloads of coke and lumber that were
close by, and In a moment all were blaz
ing. Fifteen minutes after the first ex
plosion the two cars of refined petroleum
that had been damaged by the bursting
of the tank of naphtha and were leaking
blew up with a terrific report. No ono
was Injured by this, however. The noise,
smoke and flames drew a great crowd to
the scene. Troops of children ran from
their play to see the fire.
The yards at Sheridan lie in a narrow
valley. On the south side of the yard Is
a rounded hill, bare of trees. On the
other side of the yards' a hill fully 200
feet high riees sheer above the round
house. In less than 15 minutes both these
hills were black with men, women and
children, who were eagerly watching the
flames in the cut below.
Suddenly a third explosion was heard,
muffled, this time as though from a dis
tance and eventually coming from tno
mouth of the valley on the Ohio River.
Between the time when the first tank of
naphtha was damaged in switching and
sprung- u leak and the moment when it
exploded enough of the liquid had es
caped to work its way into the fewer
that empties into the Ohio River near
the mouth of Cork Run. Burning oil. too.
H ,
iConcluded on Second Page.)
I
I
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