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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1904)
r . . -A 1 .... '" ' . w. ... , ' ' ' GOOD E VENT?TO. i , . : 1 Tonight End Tuesday, fair- cooler Tuesday; westerly wind. ' VOL. IH. NO. 17. VIIEELS.OF LAD03 ARE TIED TOR SINGLE DAY ErCIIsnt Prcto Cesses r Uslcsists to Forget Ttclr Tel 0UTIN(i AT HAWTKCRNE Park If Crowded Early ud Iilbb f : 4 Ubor Pot ii Great Day tf Ce : bratJoB Haay Speeches ' . Kin lAhor ralM todar- Anwag tfc eoartlcra who hava autbarad arouod ,. tata tarona ara all tha knlairta of labor 4 who ora dvot!n tho dar to do boouo to thalr ofaoaoB hmUt. In ovarr oltjr, baailat, and towm UirougiuMit Aaartea - - ta day wu fluinljr observed. - 2 There were domonatratlona of morg T ua pasoaotiT ia the awtropolla while lit the oountry town a band ot vniafira - proclaimed an hum Me tribute, la Cfcl T. easo S.ot aona of toil Joined la a moa Ur parade la honor of tho day, while in New York 40,00 wurobed throuaii ' tho street. Chtoao'a demonetratlon 4waa not mo araa a the vme a yea ao, , when Tl.Oeo laborera were ta lino. la Kanama City there were li,M Is - tho parade and la all the other oltlea whoro orsanlaod labor ex there were ; various oalebratloaa. In Portland 7,000 people gathered a Hawthorn park oa . - the aaat aldo to obeerv tho day. s It waa 9 o clock when tho erowd beau J: to arrive. The email bey waa flrat-aad ma there la greet number. Ue flrat : mado a long detour to avoid tho rogy. p lar ontranooa and altp te andor a fence. - but aoon it beoaaia generally Itarwa . among tho iuvaailea that the tbAiAT m free. Thoa ho oam hi oamotC . ,. Shortly after hla arrival workmen, attired In Sunday garb, iMgan to ooma. - then women .and fanniM and toward jtho opMing- of th oaromowiea ane de " voted oouDlea, lata on purpooa. It waa o'clock before th rat speaker rewe to kddreaa the crowd, but by that time ' thee wera fairy , people on the grounda. In the afternoon the erowd Increased perceptibly until It waa eatl' V malod that fully T.OOt peopU partial ' . pated la tho eolobrattoa. . - . '" Before -the apeakor bogam . to talk 1 Brown e band occupied tn platform. Tho ; band rendered oeverel aalaottona before ' the program waa begun and Waa heartily OBoored. It graciously replied to jsan of the Booraa. . , Oeorge U. Howell praeMed. Ho read - A letter from tho Multnomah oounty W. 1 T. . U., which' aent greetings to tho labor trades that want represented. Tho letter axpVeosed through tho flower Him v aloa tho sympathy of th W. C. T. U. la labor'a attempt to effect th' prohibition of child labor, and added the belief that .. "the laborer waa worthy of hla hire. , It further remarked that a solution of . many of labor'a voxatloua problems oould be found la tho prohibition of tho aal of liquor. After reading th letter Mr. Howell sMd a brief address, la whlob h ta slated upon th oo-op4raUoa of all , branches of tabor la their struggle for what they deem tht.r rights. He then Introduced Banjamla P. Welch, former- . ly a member of th Carpenters union of this elty, and new aa attorney at Oro Clty. - Th apeakor referred 40 th alfeuatloa Ih Colorado, which he said existed be oauee th miner bad votod for th pow- ' ora that bar turned against them. To .' th military which has flrured; so promi nently In th strike trouble of th atat he applied th term of "federal police, M Ho exhorted the union men to abstain from any Internal strife and work uaanl mously for th great eaua of labor, for gotful of petty oentontlona " Oeorge P. Coturltl, a prominent labor : loadar of Seattlo, was th next speaker. H spoke la a humorous vein and also referred to tho situation hi th neigh boring state. He urged that th proper (Continued on Page Two.) WOUNDS FOUR TRYING TO COLLECT 5 CENTS (SperUl Menu Is lb JoaraaLl ) ' New Tors, Sept. I. In trying to .coll set a gambling debt of 0 d osnta, Antonio Care yesterday afternoon shot four persona, on :of whom la dying, was chased - sevon blocks by a mob ami gave the police reserves untold trouble 4 P capturing him after ho bad v 4 fled to the roof of 'a house. Bat- d urday night Caro played . sards t with hi next door neighbor. An tonlo Delago, feebl and year . old. Caro said hla opponent 4 owed him I eents when the gam 4 ended. Caro entered llago's : apartment yee Urday afternoon and demanded th I cents. Del- d ago denied th debt. Caro struck Dslago, who ran - down etairs 4 5 eL)lng for help, Caro drew a rarelvar and aa Delago turned on fthe sidewalk, shot him la tho breast. Caro flred again. Th oeoend ballet entered the Hp of i year-old Rool Oltoalo, who was making mud plea la tho 4 d street A erowd ooileoted and 4 pursued Cars, who ran toward ' d Third avenue, Srtng repeatedly . e .and wounding two man, - 4 i ' J Praatdont Oregon Stat Fadoratioa .Labor. carat e:lds SECil MEETING Kepreseotatfyet if PKkert and Batch- en Seet In Copfercace Hay Ar- rive at Amicable Aecnent . Ooereal Spatial IwHat ' . Chloago. Sept . A see ret oonferenoa of representatives of the packers and tho striking butchers' eommlttee Is la giag. rasa looaing to. a settlement of the trtke. Manager Stalner of th XhUoa Stockyards dt Transit, ooapany spent more than aa hour this morning la 00a- .suHhtloa wtth the strike leaders at lb transit-bouse.' i . 1 It to authoritatively stated that Prosl. dent Donnelly hold m oonferetvoa Satur day night with T. t. Coonorg of Ar- ssoag Qo., and that ho will meet ether representatives of th packers today. It la eta ted that plans have been made for Immediate return to work of th strik er. .' w - It .. I understood the packers have agreed to put tho old men to work as fast as possible at tho old term. Th only condition (g that the -anions gall th atrlko off. As a result of the Ef forts of th polio to stop tho alghk picketing la th yards 10 atea wars locked up during the night. ., Donnelly today withdraw tho order oalllag. on the most cutlers, teamsters and market wagon driver1 to refuse to handle any meat until th strike waa de clared off. He said the -order was not official and that the oonfereao board had no power to ordeft the seen out Donnelly somas that ho will call for ft. referendum vote as to sailing off the strike. The; reports of a pending settle ment are looked upon as a ruee to pro- vent another break la the ranks. . VOUOS tVi 1KB SV Seat Vp Till Jptfos IJesrsal Siictal serrtet.l Mew Tork, Sept. . A polios wuard la still kept up today mt th plants of SchwerehUd Sttlsberger and the UnHed Dressed Beef oompany, though the strike of th butchers has been called off. A guard wUI be kept up 'until to morrow, when the strikers apply .for cneir old fobs. , ' INSANE WOMAN KILLS BOSTON POLICEMAN ,1 .' I' ." Pe v.V il .' 1 ' f Boston, Mass., Sept.. Afrs. Mlnnl hfcKensle, 14 years of age, and of pow erful frame,- became violently Insane yesterday afternoon at her home In thla city and. securing a revolver, .attempted to kUl her husband. She- then barri caded herself la tho front room of -her house sod fatally -wounded a polteewiaa who attempted to arrest her. She fired more than M shots during the siege, many of them going wild Into a orewd of more than 1. 00 people that had eou- gre gated to watch th ecsesra try to ar rest her. Finally agout t o'clock In the avonlng a quantity -of germicide gas was forced Into the room through holes In tho door and th frelaned woman was aoon under control. i . - vt . . - --" - - . , SECOND KURCERER -r: DIES BY ELECTKICTY - ' (Joarmal Sneelal Serrwe.1 . '' " Auburn. N. T., Sept' i. Ouleeppl Ver se Ul waa pat to death la tho el eo trie chair at th state's prison her at o'olooh this morning. There was a unusual Incident , Tsrealll wnt through the preliminaries auletry Mng mad no statement , Veraalll and An tonio Giorgio, who was electrocuted here last week, murdered John Von Oorger and hla half-slater Miss Parn ham. la Allegheny county last May. VersaJlle was only II Vears old. '' BSWpwsiei SsT OtnnOaaA. , , Da van port Waahi. Sept Pranelg M. Smith, who was married to Mtee Sleg- man of Mondovl last January, was ao- oldentally... drowned In the Columbia river Thursday while trying to anchor a snow. Joha-dlegmaa. a coom Denied oy hla sister, brougnv the body here for Interment ' Mrs, Smith .will sMfc her hem her with her brother, . r- ..... . at . 1 PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY EVENING, TOOK PICKERS Hop Growers Kay Cut Price to 35 Centsf: yi-Xr Box. i .; 80,0 BALES ARE SURE Absence af laald and lice Make Qoal - Ity Good aad Increased Acreage . Makes Up for Fallin Off i Jesratl Staff . Aurora, Or.. Sept l-Tner are now practldhlly twice as many s4ohre as win do awMd for the crop thi year, and tho grower ere not alow la taJklne anvantag or to situation. Most of the plcksre were lured to tho hop fields by the general Impression given -out by the growers to the news papers that they "would pay M onta a box. hot tho supply of pickers has now become so great that many of tho grow er" are reducing the prloe to as low an t cento and sons of them are Wfttng of only giving 16 eents a box. ' - -It Is a usual thing- for pickers to oome to th hop fields with barely) enough money to pay their fare here, and as a result they will either be compelled to pick tho bops at whatever figure thai growers offer or else- walk homo. ' According to some of the large grow ers, they have almost one picker to every vine, and this condition Is sure to bring gbout materially lower prices. Thar waa a large band of Indiana here from the Warn Springs reservation yes terday who offered to pick at lower price if given a ion. Many families ar camped la the woods here, md- many or them ar barely staking rr"iigb to - - , i 1 ' Present Indications shew a hop yield in tata stoto s -between tMH and ,- 000 -be lee. .'. The weatheV g . perfect aa far as picking operations are oonoemed. but there baa been a general lack of -rain all through tho bop. country, - a j Last year the crop waa about tS.OOO bales. . This year reports from all sec tions show that the aualfty will be tho finest ever produoed, hut there wUI be a reduction la the yield by the acre. The Increased acreage will practically make vp for th loss,' however. In tho Aurora district the yield this nu be fully up to that of la at year and la some yards there has been a material Increase. Th opposite m true at Buttevllle an Champoeg and many missing hllla are found. This la caused by too- mock rain early m 1 the season and tha absence of It during the maturing period. - -' Oregon hops all through am In , bet tor shape than they have bees, for prac tically 10 years. There Is an almost ntlre absence of lie or mould, and this has been a great factor In making the crop large. Picking this year to practically two weeks later than during the former season, the absence of moisture mMr the hops mature very slowly. Th ab sence of mould and vermin has ceased many of the growers to wait longer to have their yards picked, for during for mer years the coming of th rains oauaed many of them to bo picked while th hop was yet green. This will be avoided to a great extent during th present season and hotter results will ba obtained. Km amdlvasaal Yalta, Jo Jackson, who has a to-aorn yard six miles from Oervale. picked 00.000 pounds last year, but oven with It acres more this year be does not expect awe 10,00 pounds. Mr. Jackson 'at tributed tha smaller stop to the lack? of rain. . N Th following ar among tho repre sentative yards tot the Aurora diet riot and show th oooditlona both this sea son and last: - William Pry.' 1 aorost hop net look- in g very good; weather too dry; will not - weigh a much; aspects but too pounds to th acre. John Carpenter l Oeorge Miliar yard). (Continued oa Page Twe. i Have You T ' 1 .1 ' . ;joinca :thc ; Woggle-Bug FIRE EATS .MODS Forest. Blaze Near Hoi brook Assumes mense Proportions. '.4 CUT WOOD IN ITS PATH Eight Thousand Cords BelontHnf to Portland Finn Reduced to Ashes . fanner's Harvest and Hwischold ' Goods (b tattgetv ... -W 1' ',J - Heavy loss eonfront oordwood deal ers and tlmbermaa from thi fir- that yesterday's Journal reported from Hoi brook. . Since that report was received two more fires have-started in th sum neighborhood. and . today . MOO oords of wood ar being esotroyod. Th wood la the property of the C. R. Davis Puer oompany, of Portland, Mr. Davis departed for. the seen early this morn ing, and has a force of men there, but they ar utterly powerless to save wood or timber. The wood te worth J.0 to ft per cor ta th woods. -"The whole mountain te- afire." la the report that comes today from Holsrook. The fire Of Saturday night started In Deer creek ravine. In green timber be longing to Minnesota loggers, and swept up the bills on both sides of th ravin. Aa aoon as Mr. Davis read of It In yes terday's Journal he went to Hoi brook and spent tho day looking through the timber la tho neighborhood of hla wood camp, to see if ho oould find any sign of firs or any trace of inosndiarlea, He saw nothing to arouse his fears, but heard reports af a sua la the band of some hunter. He returned to Portland, and no sooner had no reached home than he was called over the telephone, by hla foreman at Hotbrook. who said that fir had broken etui la the woe oasnp, and everything then waa Ureaeeoed with destruction. fiteriy this morning b left agam for Holbrook. It was useless to take help to the scene, as his foreman said that all the- men In Portland couldn't ston th fire." Whoa morning oame a.OOO oords of his wood has been destroyed. and etnoe that hour th fir has raged la the oordwood all day. Tha wind la blowing from tho northeast today, and the fire Is running from Rooky Point southwest to Olencoe, a distance of tour miles. - . . There are settlers and small farm on tho creek and up along the eld of the mountain, and all of tha property win probably be destroyed. The - flea la threatening Kirk Hoover sawmill, and this plant, together with the oordwood and other property. - will probably ba lost. Th fire Is now af the edge of the Patterson farm, and will destory its buildings and crops In storage, as welt as the mac h loser and household good. If the, farmer does not succeed la re moving them to a place of safety. The W. Wilson farm Is also la Imminent danger. A loggias Ouaw will also bt burned. SASSONEFF. DID NOT ESCAPE FROM PRISON (fears! s-eeW Barries. I St Petersburg. Sept i. A rumor that. has been In elrculatloa hero aa well as at other European cap tale, to the effect that Sassooeff, th assassin otM.de Plettve, had escaped from prison through th aaaistanoe of friends who Imperson ated officers and secured his release on a forged order. Is emphatically dented. It la asserted upon good authority that there la absolutely no truth whatever In the story, and that th prisoner ta asouroly guarded. ' SAT A OltftS BAT. , ... . , (learael Spatial terries.) Oyster Bay. Sept t. The president Is spending labor day In much tho same manner a any ordinary day oa the calendar. No rial tors are due. The pi of the village ar. ge as rally a retina. . n ' . ' , S ' 1 f The' Woggle-buv ohm to town ' yesterday and It la remarkabl what a aeaeatlon h mads among ' th boys snd grila sf Oregon and ; tho surrounding country. Cvery ' body baa been exerted for eeveral weeks over the mystery of the - Woggle-bus. What la Itf Was What they all asked. They found out yesterday ta ' - The Sunday Journal, but tho great mystery' of what the Wog- ado-bag really said still remains as ' muck sf a mystery over. Thla la what tha- young readers of The . Journal ar trying to And out ' Some Of them undoubtedly suc ceeded la puasttng out the mys tery before they retired last k sight. There Is money la It for all of thin and some fame aa welt 1 .'. ' Th greaf Woggle-bus eteb Is ' now In process of formation all ., over this region. It la determined to Snd out exactly what . that . togaclbus bug aald. You must join It to a In the swim. o The Sunday Journal, read, that and you will as ready for buev. SEPTEMBER I, 1804. J j 1 ,lt , BARONESS BACBOPSN VON. KCHT. WHO WAS- MISS ALIO M. H. , PP1ZBJR. BARON AMERICAN BRIDE ttearmt SseeHl serrlee.1. Newport, R. L. Sept. Newport "so- atoty was much Interested today In the only International wedding of th sea son that of Baron Bacbofan voa Bcht of Austria and Mies Alio M. H. Pflaer, which was solemn; sed at lnBpgata. tha villa of the bride's parents. The af fair wee a vary exclusive one, the guest being limited to tho relatives and a few Intimate friends of the contracting par SHOT STAMPEDES .CAVALRY HORSES . : Jearsat Special Swvtae.) London, Sept ckn astonishing dis aster put an end for -the present to -the work of th osvalry nansod la th Brit ish regular army aianeuvere in the oouth of England la -yesterday's- cvolutlone, which lnoluded a sham battle, on- of the osvalry horses felt, breaking ' Ita lag. Veterinary Surgeon Southampton waa notified, and between 1 and o'clock this morning went to th ho roe picket to kill th Injured animal. Southampton found the horse' without difficulty, and shot It through the head. The sound sf the shot atampoded the KILLS HIMSELF NEAR : OLD INDIAN CHURCH ftpeolal Ptepaem h The Timmt Kamlah, Idaho Sept t. Lee Smith, a former bartender-In Orangeyllle, and who la thought to have been Insane, as be had threatened to take hla Ufa, oora mltted suicide by cutting hla throat with a pocket knife near the old Indian okuroh here Saturday..' , Hla relatives in California hay keen aoUflod. V (Jew! tseelsl service.) New York, Sept I. Th first af the season's new plays" to be seen In New York this week Is "Th College Widow, which Id to have . Its Initial production at the Oerden theatre. The play Is from the pen of Oeorge Ado end-la a satire. without music oa modsra college ilia mm. .e-i.ii .1 '1 ,W 4' ri You; -XT"-, Joined the ties. , Miss Anna Maud Harrison was th malS of honor, end th be Lawrence Latouretto Drlgga. Todays ceremony la the culmination of an attachment that I said by many to have been a case of love at first eight Previous to her meeting wltl) th barpa soma tlm ago Miss Pflsar 'ntaa rooked upon as an Impossible, catch among many of her admirers, who bad long looked la vain. for Savor la her eyes. horssa. which bad booom hi approach. .A thousand horses broke thetr-tethers- and gall oped f ranUeeiry through the. camp, upsetting tents and slightly Injuring several troopers. Two hundred dashed to seaward and plunged Into the-water. Several of then drowned, but most of- them oaughL Others daehed themselves again end agals- aceinst a heavy sonry well that obstructed their fright, and others plunged, through barbed-wire fences. A hundred horses are still miss ing, and ttost of those-caught are so badly Injured that they will bar to be hot, '.-.,... - - VERMONT TO ELECT 1 GOVERNOR TOMORROW - : ' ,fforael piilil'awriee.) -yr : Burlington Vt. Sept (t. The ayes of the nation are on Vermont Th rs ult of tomorrow's oloetton m this stats will be slgnlncant It hv th straw that wilt tell which way the political wind 1 blowing, -If the Republican majority hwhould bo light the Democrat of the country will consider It an . omen of good,- while, on the other hand,' should the majority' ba heavy, the country will take it a an Indication that Boooovolt will aweep th Una. 1 1 It is contended that. a Republican ma jority of more than tO.000 la Vermont will bo a sign- that-Parker will meet defeat. Should the Republicans' have e inu ev,v vptee v spare toenor w the. result of the.eomins: national etecdon will. rem ala la doubt until No vember. The Republican candidate- for cover- nor b C J. BeU of Walden.' Mr: Bell la a farmer and Is being aupported by the State Orange. -. The Democratic can didate Is Ell- M. Porter of WUmtanton. MINISTER ARRESTED ! FOR SELLING BIBLES tfesrinJ ajedrt tat ileal -Dos Molosa, la.. Sept t. Rev. M. J. OToore, one of th foremost clergymen of New Sharon, has been arrested by order of the surer for violating the city ordinance by eellin Bibles without a Itcenee. At he has no place of buolneas. the mayor strictly Interpreting th law, oonatrue the minister as a peddler. The trouble originated ever the Evan gel lets, whom the mayor, stopped from selling Bibles. Rev. Mr. 0Toole took the mayor to taak and was told what he might expect If he Indulged hi a similar misdemeanor. He went ahead and sold Bibles and stirred the tows wtth a civil war, and tho people are all taking aides. . . ISseriel DhaaM Tl Baker City, or.. Sept , t Sheriff Brown yesterday arreeted twJ snore a Iooh men for keeping open en Suaday. There waa more drunkenness her yes terday than any day here la yean. Tee JaU Is full Of pflscaars EVERY Up-to-Date XXy 91 Girl JsJofafaj: The Jour, "i WOGGLE-BUQ CLUU PRICE FIVE CENTS. Japanese WUI Cosat tSi Campaign Lost if Kcro patkb Escapes. RUSSIAN LOSSES LARGE KiroU ud Rodzi Pros Hari si Czv X Amy Inpedlof to Retreat u! ' : Seeking A. all tvs,, ' roflsd it -'U' Itsei London. Sept. lPoced by tha sua nor strategy af th Japansee to away the powerful stronghold. Tang, and to abandon hurried' y ftt h' set plans ta order to aaoape tho enelra otto web which Pteht Marshal Oram was weaving about his army. General Kuropatkta Is In full retreat upon Muk den. ' Straining every nerve to oneom pass his destruction before he can reach) a olaoo of safety the Japanese ar pressing bard upon him. Aooordln to th latest, but unofficial reports reoetvsd. aeoordtng to a dispatch from St Peters burg. Xuropatkla continues tho retro grade movement and only the rear guard of his Seeing army 1 engaced. : Line Tang t in, the hands af tha Japanese, That la a knows fee. Gen oral Stacfcelberg with a portion of his S.Mt me Is reported to have crania the Taltae river and rejoined the malm Russia nrasyv This 1 tha atatement made In a telegram given out la St Pe tersburg purporting to bo from General Knropathln. Stscsalbern. eontrarr to orders, remained so Ions south of the flooded Tatts that he was practically out oft by th Japanese, A dispatch to th Central New from Rome declares' that Staoaetberg and his whole eorpe word annihilated. This rtattmtnt. how ever, la discredited hers. Europetklu made a desperato stand at the Vental mtnes. ton miles to the north and east of Llao Tang in the foothills of a mountain vanf. Ksrokl saw th no eesslty of gaining this point la order to complete -the enveloping movement which baa been the central Mea of the whole Japanese campaign, but mot wtth determined rests tense and was twice repulsed September ft. Xuropatkla d raaimant after regiment at this point and hurled back the Japanese lines. Tho shrapnel Sre of Kurokl's batteries horribly destructive. 1 frosa Yentsi. seecribtng- th Sg-gJ aaya that two Russian companies were annihilated before they oould be drawn, out of reach of the Are of one battery which had located them. A single shell struck down to men. Knrekl tried to break through tha Russian Itnes to) reach the railroad - and succeeded In pressing forward to within It' miles os tho Mukden Una, but th Russian reaV mento retreating from tho south formed to meet bha and struck at tormtnedly that Kureht not only repulsed but wan driven back. toMasT all bo bad gained and being forced to take up his original position. - During thin action It Is reported General Kuxopatkla had two bore a ebot under him. Kurokl's savage attempt at this potat It ta believed decided th Ruostaa com mander to abandon th elaborate de fenses at Llso Tang; where more than M. 000, 000 had been spent In throwing? up fortlfloa 1 1 one, accumulating stores snd preparing far a determined stand. Oa the night of September t the Rus sians marched oat of Llao Tang, bavins; Are to thousands of dollars worth. of stores and to tha town Itself. t Tho St Petersburs: oorreeonBdwat of Router's service wires that In aplto of the denial by th war omce, the re port Is persistently current that Kuro- patkia was obliged to abandon to can non at Llao Tang. Some were earns sod during the fighting. Th breech blocks of others were destroyed by order en (Continued on Page Two.) CAPTAIN VEYSEY'S H FLOOD CF SOtf At noon today, Muriel Veysey, X : th little daughter of Captain L. d Veysey. died at the home of her STmndnarents In Llllavl I la-Sal- combe, England. She had been 4 suffering during the past two weeks wltk typhoid fever. Just a month ago Captain vey m sey left England to return to his Portland home. He bad gene to England to bury the body of hi wife la the Uttle village eh urea- yard, where her baby son and d ether relatives are sleeping. Mrs. d Veyaey died In this city wet d summer. . Her last request- was that sh be taken bach to Bns ft land to be buried. Muriel aooom- s periled her father across the ocean. Captala Veysey was Pre paring for her to return wi..a a short time. Tnw morn'- r -vd a omh -"rranri t dau- iter v tronotd t r.w I buer M r -. 1 of hie dan. Will bo buried t Had th Utile the Uth of tt- e kave seen s.4 it STRAIN TO CRUSH Hlfil , ...... , -