The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 23, 1908, Page 1, Image 1

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    THE. DAILY JOURNAL. IS SOLD ON ' THE 'STREETS OF PORTLAND AT TWO CENTS A 'COPY
MORE HELP WANTED?
BOARDERS WAHTED?
Advertise in The Journal
N
The Weather- Occasional rain to--night
and Tuesday; , cooler tonight.
VOL. VII. . NO.' 220.
Portland, Oregon; Monday evening, ; November; 23, isos. sixteen -pages- -
TO
Sb :::p::,Sy 31250
.-.. . . , .. ,.. ....,,, ... ,i... 1 '" " " " ' ,...i.-n...i. -. ,, " - ' """.T""Tr"''. ' " J '"'.' " " " " "
lAwm
s
V
ADMITS THAT HAS FAU
HE SWORE 1 HONOR OF
FALSELY S0L0HS
Involves v Botlr : Burns and
'' Ruef and Damages Case of
Defense Exciting Scene
When Man From Portland
Was Questioned.
.(United Press Leased Wire.)
San Francisco. Nov. 23. Abraham
Ruef, charged with offering a bribe
to a ' former , supervisor to secure ; a
vote for '.the passage of - an overhead
trolley franchise for the United Rail
roads, wag charged today on the wltnoss
stand by Alexander 8. Lathan, hla for
mer chauffeur, who had recently been
brought here from Portland, with In
fluencing him to commit perjury be
fore the grand Jury at the time of the
graft In vest! (ration.
Lathan, who has been searched for by
the prosecution for more than a year,
declared that he knew nothing of the
affairs of ' Roef. ' He was then con
fronted with his own affidavit. In
which he admitted taking Ruef to the
office of the United Railroads.
. - .Make Admission.
'j. Becoming badly rattled. Lathan ad-
.''I
e then said he did so at the request
of Special Agent William J. Bums. He
later declared that Burns also had told
film to -tell ' untruth a ' under oath to
the - grand Jurors. The testimony of
Lathan was admitted into evidence after
one of the bitterest rows between atr
torneys that has as yet marked the
trial. .-.-.-v.. -. - I i
Lathan was represented ror uage J.
taking the stand, on the. ground -that
lie had been extradited for another pur
pose. Judge Lawlor overruled the ob-
waa then pleaded by Harper and saiu
Harpr at thi point became excitoW
ana rinsiiy ws umouiaireu m
court to remain quiet and-to keep his
Affidavit eread.
read averred that he had accompanied
a shirtbox was obtained by Ruef. in
Jy placed, to the offices of tha United
Railroads, mis wo in jr f y-
(The affidavit was daiea January x. im,
and purported to have been made In trie
presence of Burns and Miss Kate Conj
don, at that time stenographer f or the
rBefo?e the affidavit was presented
r Afterward he became a stammer
11: ..JtZZimtn witness. He "ruessed"
tWi feigned the document but did so "be-
dyouVnder oatlC tiu 'untruth, to
.-J?Z-La 4.. waa naked. With ap-
f arent nervousness the witness testified
"Whydmd you swear .to these un
truthsr ;
"I was told; to."
"ly Bu1'!! and Ruef," came tbeunex
rected answer. The time ,fee-fd to
was when Ruef was under immunity.
Throughout Lathan's examination
Herv Ach attorney for Ruef. constant
oblected' to the lfne of questioning by
nistant District . Attorney A
accused Judge Harper &t whispering In
structions to a young man seated near
Ruef, who in turn, he said, signaled to
thHZrper"and Ruef sprang to their feet.
Warner denouncing Dwyer and accus
ViK Mm of misconduct, Ruef excitedly
wMsperlnr to Ach. Judge Harper de
nied th charge and the court made no
Tnoncludlng his examination of the
witness. Hiram Johnson summed up his
U.7.ti0th"er.non.' iS'sgjtement-mad.
(Continued on Page Three.)
HINDUS TO I'JIPE
OUT EUROPEANS
avaaS-aaaaaaBBasaVSSSaaBSawav
Beturning Missionary Says
Grand and Final Efface-
ment is Planned; -
(Cnlred Prras Leased Wfre.J
San Francisco. Nov. M That the
Hundus and Mohammedans in India
- have laid aside ., their prejudices and
united in a gigantic conspiracy, to wipe
cut British rule In that country in one
Woody stroke Is the sensational story
told by Miss A. Helen -Wileox. s med
ical missionary who returned from the
orient on the steamer Mongolia yetr-
4lM'lss Wilcox says the manufacture
of bombs by the revolutiohlsts is iwell
known, the women being active in
making these infernal machines as the
men. wholesale arrests have been made
by the English authorities but the pur
pose of the natives Is not broken.
Miss Wilcox says that for s while
very English resident in India feared
assassination, dynamite outrages being
of almost dally occurrence, but the na
tives src now thinking of wider ranges
of activity and have decided that It
. will be easier to wipe out the British
rae in lmlla at one swoop Instead of
1 wasting time on petty outrages.
JJajor J. P. Kennedy, Chair
man of Bepublican County
Central ; Committee, Con
vinced That Statement No.
1 Men Will Keep Pledges.
: "And what Is more, I have faith
enough In the honor, the Integrity and
the citizenship of the' members of the
legislature to believe that- Governor
Chamberlain will be "elected Wnlted
States senator on the first ballot"
'This Is from Major J. P. Kennedy,
chairman of the Multnomah county Re
publican' central committee, one of the
hardest workers in the state .for the
election of laft in the recent election
and "a Republican whose standing and
record is unquestioned. - Major Ken
nedy is optimistic He believes that
there will not be found any man in the
legislature who -will reDudiate . the
pledge given by him to the .people and
he sets out his belief emphatically, as
mown Dy nis concluding Biaiemeart in
a discussion held this morning.
Major Kennedy was the chairman f
the Multnomah county campaign last
June and- directaef the fight in this
county against the election of Governor
. "Continued on 'Page Three.)
VOICES FKOM
THE MULTITUDE
e,
"Whereas, -When the people of. , e
Oregon elected the 'members tot
their legislative assembly onHlie 4
first day of last June, e,6S
voters cast their ballots In favor 4
of the bill tnstructlng members
of the legislative assembly to al- ' e
ways, as -such of fleers, ' vote for
.
, and elect for United, States sen- e
ator the candidates who receive
the- highest number of the peo-
pie's votes, and only 21,162 voted e
against that bill, and as at the f
same election George E. Cham-
berlaln received the highest num-
ber of the people's votes, there
cannot possibly be any doubt or .
misunderstanding of the will of
the people of Oregon; and
"Whereas, The election of a, 4
d .United States senator by the leg- : 4
s Islature next . January la now
wholly a question of morals, and e
not of party politics, because SI e
members of ths legislative as- ' 4
' semblr stand pledged by their
statement No. 1 agreement with e
s the people of Oregon, and of e
their several legislative districts e
to vote for the ; candidate for
United Stated senator who re- e
celved the highest number of the e
people's votes at the election last e
June, as well as by the people's .
instruction -law; therefore, be It
"Resolved, By the Central La- e
bor council of Portland and vl-
olnity, that we view with pro-.
found regret the attempt now ;
being; made by certain politlo- e
ians, led by Harvey W. . Scott, ,
the Daily Oregonlan, and Senator -
C. W. Fulton to Induce and per- e
suade the Statement No.'l mem- 4
bers of the legislature, to violate
their pledges to -the , people of 4
Oregon and to the voters of their ' e
several districts, and we deplore w
the fact, that any man or poll-
tician In Oregon should be .so A
e t wholly lost to all sense of honor
and moralltyjthat, he would for a , e
moment countenance or approve .
thetttempt to cause' the elected:
representatives of the people- to
betray their trust .by the com-
mission of perjury In any man-
ner. and especially a form which 4
can not be punished by lmprls-
onment 'In ; the penitentiary, or w
other legal sentence; and further
be -If.- ; :.-'-' - ."
, ."Resolved, That ; we most ear-''
neatly urge all members of or-
s ran lied f labor, ; and other good
e cltlsens, :to refuse s their slgna-
d tores to any so-called petitions
to members of the legislative as-
aembly to directly or indirectly ' eV
violate their pledges or - disobey
ths people's Instructions given "
at the general election- r
"We, the undersigned.. Joint
legislative committee of the Ore
; gon Btate Federation of Labor, w
. and the jrjregon State Grange, ; e
heartily Indorse and concur In
the senthnents and recommenda- 1
tions of : the above . resolution.
"H. M. LORNTBEN, Astoria,
- "W. H. FITZGERALD,
1 i. ; PorVand. .
For Oregon State Federation of
Labor. : ' ' . .: : ; ,s
"A. J. MASON. Hood River.
' "F. M. GILL, Estacada.
. "EUGENE PALMER, Albany."
s -4usVsJhaVw4v s
Marconi Does r
Not Get Prize
1
,:::
v (DnlUd Prcis Leaa Wrre.l
. Stockholm, Nov. 23. Gugllelmo' Mar
coni, was Ignored by the committee in
the distribution of the Nobel prizes. It
was '' unofficially announced about two
weeks ago that the inventor of the wire
less : telegraph would be awarded a
prise In physics but ths honor was be
stowed upon Professor-' Max Planck, of
the University of Berlin., The awards
were as follows:
For .ehepilstry, , Professor Ernest
Rutherford, director of the physical la
boratbrlee of- the i University of Man
Chester, Manchester, England; literary,
Algernon; Charlea .- Swinburne; physios.
Professor ' Max Planck, professor of
mathematics and physics (n the Uni
versity of Berllnr medlcln, divided be
tween Paul Erhllch, of Berlin.- and Pro
fessor Elle Metchnikof. of the Pasteur
Institute. Paris. f
mm bill
Three Hundred and Fifty
Nine Dollars the Total
Spent in Oregon.
i (Special Dlipateh to The Journal. )
Salem, Or., Nov. 23. The Independ
ence and Democratic parties filed their
sworn detailed expense accounts with
the v secretary of state today. It Is
shown by the statement of the Inde
pendence party that the national com
mittee was drawn upon as money was
needed by the 'state committee. Alto
gether, but. 3359 was BDent by the In
dependence organization in this state.
The Democratic account Is a copy of
me statement - rued several days ago
with County Clerk Fields of Multnomah
county, and shows 31.29S.S5 to have
Deen auDscriDed Dy diriereni inaiviauais,
all In small sums. Disbursements were
31,165.97, leaving a balance in the treas
ury of 3129.38.
The) Republican statement filed Sat
urday, falls to account for the source
of the $4,000 turned over to Chairman
C, N. McArthur by Treasurer Ralph E.
Williams. - The Huntley corrupt prac-
tlces act requires each treasurer to mak
a report showing the source of all
funds.
Several electoral nominees also filed
today sworn statements of funds ex
pended during the campagn. 1.
TiiiiLlil
PEfllTEHTIARY
Work Discovered in Mis
souri Prison on Eve of
C Wholesale Break.
i , . (United Pma Leased Wire.)
Jefferson City, Mo.. Nov. 23. Fol
lowing' the discovery of an attempted
Jail break Which would have released
hundreds' of- convicts In the ' Missouri
penitentiary, a rigid investigation of
the 'prison management was begun to
day.' A , serious scandal may be un
earthed.' v
The Jail delivery, which came close
to being successful, is believed to have
been engineered by life-sentence con
victs. The plot haid been carefully
worked out and was discovered in the
nick of time. A long tunnel was found,
leading underneath the prison yard to
the wall. . When the work was discov
ered the hoi had been bored nearly
through...' . .
NATIONAL ELECTION
Z OFFICIAL RETURNS
. (SvedU Dispatch to The Journal. ,
Boise, Idaho, .Nov. 32. Official re
turns of the vote in Idaho: Taft, 52,(88;
Bryan. 86,080; Deba ,24S; . Chafin,
1.704; Hisgen, .207.
Hi
(Snectal Dtanatrk T JoaraaLl
the vote In WlsconRln; Brvan, 166,707;
i5.t?3;-CliaXln, .ILJTi; Debs.
IHDEPEiEIITS
SAYS THEORIH
WASSEEflli:
ALBANY
Chief of Police of That City
Sends Word That Murder
Suspect in the Rasmussen
Case Was Recognized hy
Man Who Knew Him.
(Special Dtspateb to Tba Joornsl.)
Astoria, Nov. 23. A special to Ths
Budget reports that the steamer Sus
Elmore, on which the suspect Theorln
was supposed to have taken passage,
is barbound at Tillamook, the sea run
ning very high off the harbor.
F. Theorln, for whom Sheriff Stevena
Is looking on the suspicion that he is
the murderer of Watchman M. C, Ras
mussen of the steam schooner Washing,
ton, was seen lh Albanyhts morning",
accordlnar to a telephone message re
ceived at the sheriffs office shortly
before noon. The message came from
the chief of police of Albany, who
sava that Theorln was seen there about
breakfast time by a men who knew him
through having worked on board the
same vessel with him.
If this story is correct, it disposes
or tno ineory tnat xneorin, aner mur
dering Rasmussen. . Wednesday after
noon, marie h If escape in some sea-going
vessel. Theorln until recently was eap
tain of the gasoline schooner Condor
and is well known bv seafaring men
along the coast
The only clue tne snenrr has in the
Rasmussen case is the . fact that ths
man who was seen talking to Rasmus
sen that afternoon, and who it Is sup
posed shot and killed him, answers the
description or Theorln.
Zs Merely a Theory.
Whether or not Theorln is the right
man is conjectural, for the description
given by L. earner of the harbor boat
Palmer of the man he saw aboard the
Washington does not tally in some par-
. J ...1,1. a T r
uiiuwi d wihu iiibi a iimii i u, nun-
ever, earner does not know Theorln.
The strongest reason for suspecting the
ex-captain of the Cordor of being the
murderer is that he disappeared rrom
the city Friday.
But this link In the chain of circum
stance Is not as strong as it was first
thought to be. as It has been learned
that more than a week before the mur
der of Rasmussen, Theorln had an
nounced his intention of going to San
Francisco in search of employment
Morover, Theorln was seen about the
cltv as late as 3 o'clock Friday after
noon, nearly 26 hours after the account
(Continued on Page Three.)
UP TO OREGON
DELEGATION
laasMa-saariasaaaaf
Government Ownership of
Oregon City Locks Now
Rests With Congress.
The last spike has been driven, so far
as any action by the engineering au
thorltles can be taken in advance of
congress making the necessary appro
priation for the government ownership
of the locks and canal at Oregon City.
Major McAdoo Is completing his report
on the basis cost of labor and materials
to supplement the report of the board
of engineers formerly made, and It will
be forwarded this week to ths chief
engineers at Washington.
"This means," said Colonel Hofer,
who as chairman of the Willamette Val
ley Open River association, has been
flushing the preliminaries all along the
ine, "that when congress meets all the
official data and engineering Informa
tion will be officially at the disposal of
congress on which to base an appropria
tion. It will be up to our delegation to
secure the proper clause in the rivers
and harbors bill that la going. to be put
through at tuis session to make avail
able the money already appropriated by
the iu,. and whatever else Is neces
sary 10 secure the locks and canal and
make them forever free to the people.
"Free locks and canal on ' the Wil
lamette means a reduction of from $7.60
to 325 on every car load or freight that
comes In or out of the valley, because
the 60 cents a ton tolls collected at the
falls of the Willamette by a private
corporation Is added and absorbed as a
differential ov au rauroaas nanonng
fralrht in that territory.- I .am assured
by the steamboat companies doing busi
ness on tne river mai mey win imme
diately reduce their taritfs-50 cents a
ton when the locks are made free.
"There will not only be a large num
ber of new boats put. on the upper river,
but the money .spent ror Keeping sn
open channel In the WfUametta will be
doing the people some good. A large
amount of traffic that is now Impossi
ble! on account of the prohibitive tolls
will be created, such as piling, sawiogs,
railroad ties, cordwoo4 and - building
materials like brick.
Many owners of land will be able to
Clear- the same and put the cordwood
Into Portland on barges, reducing the
cost of fuel at Portland -possibly from
one to two dollars a cord, as the ruel
will more than pay the cost of -clearing
the landj The people of the Willam
ette valley rejoice.-at every , step taken
ifl" the direction of their commercial
freedom, but in nothln'g more than the,
possibility - ci tree iocks. ,
HENEY DEVOTES HIMSELF
ANEW TO WAR ON GRAFT
if
t ' s t
l" , ?
V 2 '-"i -ir 'if .
' - , ?
$ "X ,
Jb.'-a-iuxiis i .nil ,ji i,i,. ', y y .! ;.rl1. - --e-rfj
, . . JBnM rsas-l4Ms-WlM. ." ' "
San Francisco. Nov. 23. Francis J,
Heney, the- graft prosecntor, who Is
recovering -from the shot-fired by Mor
ris Haaja, the would-tte. assassin, today
Issued the following statement: '. "
T humbly thank Almighty God for
ray miraculous escaped from-death. It
was the corruption of man that leveled
the murderous weapon, but a divine
Providence" directed the bullet. Hence
forth my life shall be consecrated to
the just enforcement of the law and to
tne principle tnat no man snail te above
tne law.
In this great human battle atrainst
vice and corruption, let no one believe
tnat trie true source is to be found in
the Individual dynamiters. 1urv bribers.
kidnapers and assassins, and that their
extermination means ultimate victory.
Such beings sre but the bubbles ema
nating from the pool of filth that has
been years In the making. The seed
has been sown and we must reap the
Harvest, but in gathering -tne tares let
us be satisfied with, nothing but the
roots.
'Let us all now hlghlv resolve that
we snau not oniy not tolerate crime in
any form, but that wo shall likewise
cast out and discredit the toierators,
the apologlsers and the abettors of
crime; that Justice shall . not be made
mockery in oar courts, either bv vio
lent methods or through debased per
formances of men. professional or
otherwise, sworn to uphold the law;
that the plausible shall not be accepted
for the, true, whether uttered bv the
higher-ups or lower-downs, by honest
minded weak men or by designing trim
mers, "It has been a terrible sacrifice, but
it my blood has not been shed in vain,
if the aasassln's bullet has suddenly
disclosed to the public eye the hldeous
ness of the glgantlo Conspiracy to de
feat the' law, then I shall feel that I
have not lived in vain, that my poor
BODY OF GIRL
FOUND 00 TRACK
Tramps Believed to Have
Committed Brutal Crime
Near Lbs Angeles.
(United .Press Leased Wire.)
Los Angeles Cal, Nov. 23. the mu
tilated body of a young girl was found
on the' Southern Pacific railroad tracks
near Albambra yesterday. No clue to
her Identity has been found. The offi
cers believe she was murdered. - Tho
body was found ; by W. Lmon, who,
flgbtened at the eight of her corpse
lvlng between the rails, rushed to a
nearby house for assistance. While he
was gone, a train paased and severed
the head and right arm from her body.
Minute investigation revealed a small
hole near the right ear, which the of
ficers believe is a. bullet wound; Basing
their theory upon this they declare the
belief that the girl was murdered by
tramps, who threw her body across the
tracks..
e) $ w 04d444)4dd)d4J'dd4)td
i COULD BUILD FACTORY i
J "If the men of Portland would buy hats .manufactured in this city.
they would save from 25 per cent to 50 per. cent of their hat money," J
sayt ; I. Kaufman, proprietor'of he Eastern hat factory. ."It is to X
the people's credit to state that' our hat industry, which is the only r;T
T one in the city, has, increased wonderfully, and if the majority of 2
X ' citizens would insist on getting Oregon-made hats it would be nec-
essary for us to build an immense factory, which would be Only one J
of many similar plants.. tThe same is true of all other kinds of home X
e: industry. If home patronage, was for home-made articles the. pay-
rolls (df scores of the industries of Portland and Oregon would soon I
t'"be doubled. , " a -,.?-. -'-. ? .,..-.-.; - . . . ; -. ; X
rc" id
S W I ' " S
,t i ' e
Francis' Jf. Heney 'at th Top. Chief
of Police Blggy at the Bottom;
lie Is Said to Be Balking Progress
of the Graft Prosecution and Will
Probably Be. Removed From Office
efforts have met . with . Immeasurable
benefit to my beloved city and state.
"Toward the poor, wretched instru
ment of this crime I have no feeling but
pltv.
"To my friends and the nubile who
have so ions and so faithfully stood by
me and cheered me on during days of
(Continued on Page Three.)
PERSIA DENIED
HOPE OF LIBERTY
Withdrawal of Constitution
Maddens Liberals Re
actionaries Gloat.
(United Press Leased W.t
Teheran, Nov. 23. Street fighting be
tween the liberals and reactionaries is
going on today In' all parts of the city
as the result of the posting in the
mosques - of the shah's proclamation
withdrawing the promise of a constitu
tion for Persia. '
The-clashes ere not serious, but it is
feared the unruly element In the popula
tion will get -beyond control before
nightfall.-': Many arrests have already
been made.'
The liberals, on account, of the failure
of the constitution, are In belligerent
mood and their- temper has been made
dangerous on account of the acts of
the reactionaries, who are taking every
opportunity to Insult them publicly.
4Jd)4)4)w4)dwt4)4)$d4)4)$wwwdt4)) t4
HD.T
IIS
Kellogg Endeayors tq Find
Out Names of Standard Oil
Stockholders in 1874, but
Fails to Obtain Required
Information.
. - (United Press Leased Wire. I -
New York, Nov. 23. John D. Rocke
feller was on the stand again today In
the government's suit for. the disaolu-,
tlon of the Standard OH company of
New- Jersey, -and-waa even more stub- -bornly
resistant. ' under ' the cross-examination
of Frank B. Kellogg, than he
was last week. He dodged behind fail
ing1 memory and resorted to various
means of avoiding direct replies to ths
questions put persistently by ths "trust
buster." y -
Kellogg endeavored to find out the
names of the Standard stockholders In
1374. but -Rockefeller would gjve little
Information- Kellogg went over the list
of capitalists whose - oil business was
swallowed by the trust. In an endeavor
to establish their Identification. wltU
the Standard Oil company.,,, , '
It was shown that the president of
the New .York Central, the president of
the Erie and three directors of the;
Lake Shore were connected ; with the
Standard jprior to 1871. . . -. ,
At the beginning of th hearing Rock,
e feller answered a , few questions with,
animation but he soon took an' ob
structive attitude and used every means
to ' defeat Kellogg's . purpose. ,;j ,r
, ' Bared rem riaats. ef Twenty.. '.
Kellogg "questioned, Rockefeller closely
concerning the financial standing of his
competitors and forced from him the
admission that the Standard ' absorbed
between 20 and 26, plants from 1872 to
187S.-:--' . -v.-'-"'" A ; . !,..:-., i.',.-;' .-, -
- , TAfter you ' took the plants, did you
continue to operate them?" asked Kel
logg. -
Y'My memory falls," was the reply.
Coached and aided by Kellogg, Rocke
feller succeeded in recalling four plants
which, he said, were continued In opera
tion, saying their geographical situation
and Improved physical condition, waa
the reason for saving them. - .
Kellogg then resumed his questions
regarding the manner of buying plants
with stock certificates of the Stand
ard. ' The witness admitted that he
purchased the Imperial Refining , com
pany, . the Devoe Manufacturing com
pany and the Jett Carey company with
stock, taking deeds for the plants.
Rockefeller admitted that the principal
stockholders in these companies re
ceived Standard stock.
VJRIT FILED
Taking the $29,000,000 Oil
Case Up to Federal ;
Supreme Court.
(United Press tMsad W'rs
Washington, Nov. 23. Attorney-General
Bonaparte today filed In the Unit
ed States supreme: court a petition-for
a writ of certiorari to review the Judg
ment of the United States court of ap
peals In the $29,000,000 Standard OH
case, under which the case was re
manded for retrial. ' ....... .,.
HIS MONEY GONE
III I fEIIIDSE
J. G. Johannes Accepts Less
Than: He Sued MiUincr
Partner for, However.
Half rates were" accepted by J. O.
Johannes In the circuit court this morn
ing In settlement of his suit against
Florence Evens jl milliner. He slleged
that she owed him $152 and possibly
more as the result of a ioint enterprise
In the sale of merry widows. .
Johannes says that in August snl
September,- last year, he advanced I'i'io
to the milliner, who wrs to a.id $:.'
Of her own and sell a stock of the (inv
est kind of headwear In Tacoma, rU-.u U
and Spokane. She was to rray l ,m
$600 and divide the profits with Mm.
In defense the milliner declare.! tl,ni
the financial dlsturbnnce la-r f., -i
thwarted .her plans. hl.e said lii it it
tightened the purse strings of v. Mi'i, v
purchasers to whom she cirr- l. ,-. !. i
UESTIO
CERTOM
sne succeeded in selling i.nlv a
of-the hats. ; Bet'lcs, h i
Johannes did ntflll tti mri.i, . -,t
he was to put In IL.Ooo, an. I c.i v f
nished half that sum.
- When, the -rasa .was raiiul f
before Judge lironsuirli !. ,, .
court this MioriiitK u s-,.-.
tiled hy wl.li-h ,...; i rn-- ..
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prevloue! y i . ': i "
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