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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1917)
iSol l sl' B1 I DISASTER Flames; Break Out Anew in. the 1 ; Stricken Canadian City; Defi-j Injured Not Yet Obtainable. -Property Loss Will Reach Into ' Millions,' Debris, Hinders Re- ; covery of Victims Frpgi Ruins; ; ;..'.. all B.;. - O j. I aii ousiness.in uuy ouspenaea HALIFAX.. N. S.r Dec. T. (U. P.) (By telephone to St' John, N. B.) The ap r palling deathroll here as the result of tie explosion of the 'French munitions ship Mont, " Blanc, .vrlien- she was rammed - 8y the VBelglan' relief "ship Imo ' ThorBdayvVcan'' only be eeti 'mated - " " " ' Police off icials place the flg V ttre at"20Q0 Members of the citizens1 committee this after " noon declare the total of dead r ...might be reduced to 1500. An' '- equal number of seriously in : Jured are, being1 cared for. Freezing cold and a heavy snowstorm added to the 'suf ferings of wounded and shel terless in this" blasted city toay. , r ires wiucti were ueueveu exunguinneu have broken out again. North Halifax ; today is a. vast funeral uvre. . i Many bodies are Incinerated In the! burning ruins of this city of desolation and woe. Snow is mantling with a : cloak of white great blackened areas :. where the flames have swept, hiding un known horrors beneath. A bitter wind i is sweeping, through shattered windows oi ruinea nouses. : u . Reports of additional dead found In i rulna came In this afternoon. More than aowo nenina tne itanan iorces stantung lOjwomen employed In one print shop ! on the Piave rlvr, the" Teutonic -in-are believed to have been buried in the vaaers &r aaln trying to force a de- wreckage. Fearful loss of life in the Protestant Orphanage, la feared. Only thre children from that Institution have' been accounted for. .- Thirty-five oodles have been found in one section of .a ruined hospital. ' Dartmouth's list is believed to be be tween 80 and 100. ' Police are attempting to round up lost children who are wanderinr through the appalling wilderness of . tor their mothers. , .. . i i r; Even "worse . conditions - than- exist in Halifax have turned North Dartmouth. ! across ibe bay, into a place of death and suffering. Thousands are homeless and churches, ' theatres . and schools are , being used . - as temporary hospitals - and- morgues. Some progress is .being made in re lief -work, but estimates of the dea are as yet based Bolely upon fragment - ary reports. . - The property damage will mount far (Concluded oa Page Elgbtecn, Column On) , State Commission r: To Visit Projects ''', , . i. The state irrigation securities com mission Monday Will start on a tour of all the projects In Central Oregon. Aa a representative of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, William H. Crawford. - secretary of the chamber's development - bureau. will accompany the commission ' and avail himself of the opportunity to - Study various phases of the projects. i. The commission will start south of Bend and will visit the Ochoco, Tumalo and the other 4 projects on a schedule that will allow close Investigation. The tour -wilr be made by autemobile and will take about a week, - . , V - v - Johnston Porter ; : Safe in Halifax X - telegram was received thla morn ing byi 'the Porter Bros. . company in Portland! from .Johnston P. Porter, member of the firm' who had charge of . the great - Halltax dock project. 'Mr. ' '' Porter, Wiring - from the . scene of the - disaster,- says- ft is impossible to esti mate the number of dead. Receipt of the - message quieted the fears of relatives and business associ ates here, "who had felt he might have . been amonff the dead or injured. . HALIFAX NARROWS, WHERE TERRTOLE EXPLOSION TOOK PLACE .' G ENERAL VIEW OF HALIFAX HARBOR, showing the construction work on the new docks and a fSortion of that part of the city of Halifax which was destroyed by the explosion of T. N. 1Y and subsequent fire. The vessels shown in the harbor, are lying approximately where the collision -took place between the French steamer, Mont Blanc arid tke Norwegian vessel Imo, flying the Belgian Relief flag.'which caused the cataclysm. This photograph was taken by Porter Brothers of Portland, who are constructing the Halifax docks. . s ; - : 1 . . lry,.: '"fjv '.V'" 'm? ' v: s '','-V :-;"oV; 'Ml , , -r1 -V'" 'V r " v--'-?. ;t ' .W. r Sib ' i 1 -p- - - V"" " - . t v , J 'St. V " ' ' " '.:-:ii.;.-.vr..s;,.;.v. T 'f 1 imTi 'lit 1 V'.-r- rt 'n -Mil ii imT y 111 ' "Mi' "mi 1 mnii mi n nrr -rr-Tr Mini Kin-'"'"! -r-- n-i,- - r --ir t"Hiii -inn inmn n m n,.IIMIII. , . InfriaBhio rirnhnf I ,11 III 1 VI W I I I IslVI III 4 - L.-, Monte Sisemo ' Captured With 4000' It'alfan Prisoners, Says Berlin Statement. Berlin,. via London. Dec. 7. (U. P.) Capture of Monte Sisemo and taking of 4000 additional Italian prisoners, making the total captured in -the Settecommunl region ,15,000, was - of Oclally announced. London. Dec. 7. (I. N. S.) On the same section of the Italian xront. where the Austre-German armies tried vainly for weeks to break through and roll The task - of breaking through has .again been siven to - Field Marshal Conrad von Hoetzendorf of the Austro Hungarian army, who commands ' the group between the Belena and Piave valleys. "In the new battle which was renewed on Wednesday the German war office claims the capture of 11,000 men and more than 60 guns, but they suffered very heavy losses. T l ' Advices from Rome, today admitted that v- the Italians had given up some ground in the mountains of the Aslago Dlateau. but their main- lines are hold ing Intact and the dents given them by the invaders are not serious. The Teutons are strtvin to break the Italian line in the Venetian Alps and to overrun the "wall" which overlooks and commands the Italian rear on the Piave. If they are successful, a general Italian withdrawal may be necessary with the evacuation of Venice. British Fly to Italian line Washington, Dec. 7. rL N.- S. More than 100 British aviators have ar rived safely on the Italian front to aid in stemming- the advance of the Austro-German armies, according to official advices reaching here today. Word of the arrival of the British aviators after a record-breaking flight from the western front, across the.Alps to northern Italy may now be printed for the first time. "Single machines - have - made longer flights than that undertaken by . the British squadron, but never has so long a trip oeen taken by so large a fleet of aircraft," says the report. British Officer Is Victim of Robbers An Atlantic Port. Dec." 7.-(I. N. S.) Captain wuJiam I. Boshell . of the British army, on his way from Colom bia. " where tie has been i recuperating from wounds received last' year in East Africa, was robbed Thursday of .a dis patch, box containing papers of an lm portant v character after i the - '.South American vessel on which he sailed ar rived here. Along: with the papers went 17000 In money. ; Accontpanylng? Captain Boshell were Captain WUllam, S. Douglas, also on his way from Colombia, and the former's mother Mrs. Maria Boshell.'. Captain Boshell intended to leave immediately to . Join , the .British forces In Europe. but he will not wait while a -search for m tae aispateh . box-. la being .made. , - im wm : NIGHT IN HALIFAX Halifax. N. S.. Dec t. (TJ. P.) The scene as dawn broke over the city today was indescribable. Here ana were about the ' smoking ruins of. what had been their homes men and women, scant- uy clad, clawed at the wreckage frantl cally with bleeding hands in an effort to find lost relatives. Weeping children, and women and wounded men groaning.' made last night a horror for all in .the city. More bodies were round today in the debris.; Snow Is rapidly cloaking, some of thaxnore ghastly mounds of shattered wood and stone, where the corpses, can be seen under the rubbish, . ' Women shrieked as they drew aside a blanket and. recognised 'a loved one. Men sobbed ovet the 'bodies of-children while others, "white raced - and haggard, stunned by the catastrophe, recognized trinkets -or bits of clothing on mangled and burned bodies, hoping to establish their identity. ' The .most pitiful of all was the row of little figures that represented the little children who yesterday were struck . down In their school, on the streets, even while playing on their doorstep. !-' Little Girl Fessd With SoU There was one tiny, golden-haired girl of about 4 .years. - She showed no surface wounds and she lay among the others, a dilapidated doll by her side. It was kept for help in Identification. Farly this morning this little body was claimed by a sobbing girl mother. She was wrapped In anold overcoat. In the common are other . still forms covered with blankets. Many are burned beyond recognition and others mantled. Some probably never will be identified. Today, a .slowly rising nail of smoke hung over .the devas tated suburb of Richmond and while soldiers and tiailors patrol the wrecked streets, the work of digging out the mangled ' and burned victims Is going Hundreds of wounded are la bospl tals in and near the city, many hov ering near death. Others, covered with white bandages, limping or being car ried in automobiles, are going to near by towns and .villages." ; Of the thousands of homeless, many still are tob dased to know what to do. The suddenness of the death that over whelmed the city has left them ; dumb In their grief and suffering. - Every avail able vehicle has been- pressed into, serv ice and literally wagonloads of . bodies are being carried away. . -The city was in practical darkness all night, r School sessions probably will not be resumed ' lor a month. Some wounded people 'were found to day lying where they had been hurled by "the explosion.' - Volunteer .stretcher- bearers gathered them up. - Some of those 'found dead today had evidently died of wounds. , By their pos tures It was apparent they made desper ate attempts to crawl Into the open be fore losing" consciousness. The dead were being tagged as fast as- they are' being; Identified.- Several men, . blinded, were - found groping; their way. calling ror neip. - America Sailors - Help I Canadian -soldiers and -American sail ors worked siae oy side searching; for wounded, fathering-. the dead and. pre- serving order ;In " Halifax. Immediately after the explosion, while dense clouds of white smoke were rolling over the scene of devastation, the Canadian troops were assenfbling, each man ready for business. ; Some of those who formed ranks were bleeding, from wounds. The detachment of American bluejackets which arrived some time after the blast were of Immense help. American relief t workers from New i or a, .tsosxon and other points are un derstood .to be , en route hers. They nave not yet arrived. - When surgical . help from nearby towns reached . here , last . night, the in jured were thronged around dressing; stations awaiting their turns. Thou sands who have .- no . other hurts are suffering from cuts received' when the air was filled with flying glass. A special train, bringing carloads of rood. clothing and other much-needed supplies. ' arrived here this morning from St. John, N. B. . Mayor Hayes and the majority of the surgeons of SK John have also arrived. Every hour brings additional rescue woraers. nurses and doctors, with am balances and surgical ; supplies. Lone lines of sobbing; men and women bea-an early today to file past the rows of blanket-covered dead. Formal Iaaalry Win Start A formal Inquiry Into the cause of the collision between the French munitions steamer Mont Blanc and the Belgian relief ship Imo will be made. Witnesses believe the Belgian vessel's steering gear croae. The most badly damaged part of Hall- rax: ts from Gottingen street to the stockyards. The drydock la wrecked. St.. Josephs church Is in ruins. Many big buildings were unroofed as If a tor nado had swept over them. The explosion gave warning of Its coming. It was preceded by a noise like thunder;-then came the terrific smash- that 'shook the earth, caved In strong bulldingm. ruled the air with death-dealing- fragments and knocked thousands . of people off their . feet. Many families are believed to have been annihilated. The , blast played : strange ' freaks. Many - doors were blown open, the locks being ripped from then places la the , - woodwork.. . . Live . el ec trio - light wires lay in - the streets. Nobody seemed to know what had happened. Then the fires began spreading. , Freight - sheds In Richmond - wars pushed over like houses of cards. Many of the . Injured were removed by train to Windsor today - . j Vpv '. .. '. r ' New Nominations . By President Wilson Washington. Dec tr TJ. P.) The president today -sent to the senate the following- nominations : . - . - s - To be chairman' of the aircraft board, Howard E. Coffin of Michigan. To be member of the aircraft board, IWcbard Howe of"-New. -York.-, To be assistant . secretary of the treasury. Russell ' C. Leffisgwell 1 of 4 New York t .- . Delegates to" Be Chosen by Meet ing in Progress Here to Ap pear Before I. C. C. Fifteen thousand carloads of apples. out of a total production in the North west states of 21,000 carloads, were rep resented at a meeting of apple growers and shippers held today In the chambers of the public service commission at the court house. , The purpose of .the meeting was to arrange a program for protection of. the apple . Industry front application of a proposed IS per cent Increase, in freight rates. -Delegates will be chosen to pre sent the ease of the fruit growers and shippers at a hearing on the proposed advance to be held before the Interstate commerce commission at 'Washington, D. C, December IT. The shippers maintain that they are already "paying- an exorbitant rate to points In the East, compared with the rates from the Middle Western market; that freight rates on bananas, the strongest competitor of the apple. In the market, aremuch lower than the rates on apples. . , . Osjeet to Heavy Lead lag ' They also contend that the use of box cars and .the methods of heavy loading; required, work injury to applea Ip tran sit; that- the railroads have Induced thousands of people from the East to settle" In apple growing sections by rep resenting the sure profits obtained from that business and the ease and economy of marketing the fruit, and saw . dis criminate against the apple growers of the sections developed by their advertis ing; methods. - 1 . Frank Reeves of Wenatchee, Wasbl, stated that &0O0 box cars of apples were shipped from that district this season, the average number of apple boxes to the car being 42 compared with an average of CIO boxes in previous years. He said that the apples often reached their - destination in poor condition as a result of too heavy loading and of unnecessary delays en route. . Xaertase Declared , Xeaaes . , C. A. . Malboeuf called attention to the- increased cost 6f production and handling apples over previous years and predicted that an increase in the freight rates would kill the apple in dustry in the Northwest., Those in. attendance at today's meet ing were B. A- Perham. representing the Earl Ftxrit company of Spokane ; J. C. Robinson, . Northwestern Fruit . Ex chance of Seattle A. W- Stone and C W.'McCullagh, Apple Growers associa tion. Hood River, Or;; C A. Malboeuf of Portland, representing North Fa Afic Coast Fruit distributors and the Dufur Orchards company; Frank Reeves, representing apple growers ef the Wenatchee valley; Washington. ;.F. W. Buff." Fruit Growers'- exchange. Hood River. Or.: A. W. Peters, Hood River-Apple Storage company; Chris R. Qrtesee, representing the - Oregon State Fair association, and D. D. Mo Clure. a fruit grower of Portland. . Tb Oregon public , service commission was represented by F; J. Miller. H.; H. Corey and Examiner' A. Reach." BIS LOSE 2000 111 ATTkCKS Hi! BRITISH Two Violent and Fruitless As saults Around Vial Wood Fail, Massed Troops Being Wiped Out in the Second. British Army, Defending Hinden- burg Line, Looks for Biggest, Possibly Final Drive by Teu tons in Near Future.' ' By WUllam PtiOlp 81m res WITH the British. Armies In , Jth Field, Dec. 7. (U. , r -At least '2000 Gdrmani " perished In two violent and fruitless attempts to break the ' British lines around Vial wood today. . . .OTwenty-fiTw separate Gar-, eltrfxiaaa lr ken li. " tlfled as composing tna enemy offensive forces In this sector. Indicating; , the Germans have at least 875,000 men - massed therb. It was the British who were entrenched on the Hlndenburs; line today the same line that the Germans held so firmly until Byngs smash. . They defended.the erstwhile enemy line against several powerful attempts - to retake It. The enemy was stubbornly determined. Along one are massed troops were thrown forward and driven offt Al most Immediately a second at tacking wave formed. . This second wave of densely packed masses of men was caught In the British artillery, stormed and wiped out. The British army expects Germany's biggest and perhaps its final effort of the war shortly. oenerai rros retirement rrora - iwjur - ion wa regarded today as the first prune-preomauonarr Mar ivr mm British to witnstana sucn snoca. am the British see it. Germany. Is now at ! the senith of her military power. With Russia out of the war, Germany is en abled to draw on Increased manpower, heretofore held 'along the Russian I itnea. She is apparently preparing to throw, every ounce of her energy into a supreme attempt at a military vic tory 'before arrival of American troops on the fighting- line. In the Bourlon sector there were only two alternatives open to uenern. syng. One was to push ahead and the other was to step backward to a more secure footing. With the Russian situation permitting the enemy to mass great forces -on the Cambrai line the back ward step seemed the only thine to do. The withdrawal .puts the British into a much better position to receive the expected attacaa. 11 was caraea out zj&is: on unoccupied land. The Boscbes shelled the uninhabited land and thereabouts for hours with hurricane barrage, r Then they attacked with ; dense masses. Their storming waves found the forest of Bourlon far rtsoued only with the dead. Patrols from ' the enemy lines later cautiously worked their- way to the 'kJ-IT.I-wiJ. I " v.,. ; T " - ins a. ' v - OI onuai ui m.iaxmt mciii. Una urrTtogback. Th came thick ware. nn.u.. """- "'a ing over ue ri ""wi of Bourlon. They were , charging po sitions occupied at that moment only by around rats. When the Boscbes got there and were trying to puxxle out the withdrawal. British aruns pelted their closely packed masses with sheila. The British did not leave a lingle piece of material in the evacuated sec tion. Every fugout was destroyed. ' Today the German airmen were try ing in flocks and with all their might to find out what was occurring-behind Byngs. lines of. retirement.' ..- .- y - . .-. i French Repel Two Attacks . " Paris, Dec . If V. P.) Repulse of two German attacking waves, which followed a violent bombardment around Besonvauz and Beaumont, en the right bank of the Meuse. was announced in today's official statement. The attack ers were thrown back in fierce French defensive fire. - , . . ; - '. i Active artlllerying was reported along the Rhone-Rhine canal region. HALIFAX ONE OF WORLD'S CALAMITIES H' OW THE HALIFAX CATAS TROPHE COMPARES IN LOSS OF LIFE WITH OTH ER DISASTERS: 1MI M4NT PELEB VOL CANIC ERUPTION ; 40,000 LIVES LOST. . 1S01IROQUOIS THEATRE FIREi . CHICAGO ; 67i LIVES LOST. lo SINKING OF STEAMSHIP GENERAL E LOCUM IN EAST RIVER, NEW YORK ; 100 LIVES LOST. 1906 EARTHQUAKE AT SAN FRANCISCO; 1000 LIVES LOST. IMS MESSINA EARTHQCAKE ; ! 00.000 LIVES LOST. Ull SIN KNQ OF TITANIC'; 1S01 LIVES LOST. 1314 SINKING OF STEAMSHIP EMPRESS OF IRELAND IN ST. . LAWRENCE RIVER; 1027 LIVES LOST. 115 EARTHQUAKE IN IN TERIOR ITALY; 15.000 LIVES LOST. 1116 TORPKDOINO OF LUS1 TANIA ; lll LIVES LOST. WIS SINKING -OF EASTLAND STEAMER IN CHICAGO RIVER; lit LIVES LOST. 1117 MUNITIONS PLANT EX PLOSION IN AUSTRIA; 4000 LIVES LOST (UNCONFIRMED).' - 1117 DUPONT POWDER PLANT EXPLOSION. CHESTER, PA 113 LIVES LOST. DECEMBER. 1117 EXPLOSION T HALIFAX; 1000 LIVES LOST ( ESTIMATED). : f Order Stopping 'Daily Map Held Dangerous by Shippers, Fruit "'growers and Farmers.' A second stab at the efficiency of the Portland weather bureau office." That is the wsy shippers, fruit growers. farmer. ' school and the Chamber of Commerce fl ahoui tit ardar Aimt-m. tlnalnr Dubllcatlon of the daUv weather man bv tae. local office of the weather bureau. The order becomes effective next Mondar. . ShlDoers ana boat owners who have relied upon the storm information will be deprived of the service and receive in substitute a card so condensed as to be practically unintelligible. Fanners and fruitgrowers, who have many times been saved great losses by uvwiHit vi m appiTmcn vi iroec ana ""Ql rSTli" JT-TT . FDl "p " . I w9 '?c1Jon1 5T lZJrEXJZ-r.'JT2Z ww be deprived entirely of the sen Ice. 1 m.. -v.k.- . ,n i tset the action not onlylusef the eaaened efficiency of the service, bat i because it puts Portland in a .im subordinate to the service given at Se attle and San Francisco. Seattle and San Francisco win con tinue the publication. Portland could have done so, but when a circular ques tion was issued rrora tne Waehlne-ten office of -the weather bureau asking- if I the publication of the maps could be dis continued as a measure of economy. A. H. Thleesen the meteorologist in charge I or the Portland office, resiled that tt I could be done. Thieseen was sent to Portland from Salt Lake as successor to E. A. Baals. He had -never been here in a time of high water, impending frost or-abnor- mally unsettled weather. But despite tCoectaeed ea race BLsteea. Conusa row) i y-r y j T 5 Hoover Puts Lid on When Finn Disobeys Washlnston. Dee. T-tT. P.) Many bl food dealers throughout theUnlted Slates are in imminent danger of being put out of business by Food .Adminis trator Hoover Because tney are .vioiat- w the federal regulations under which I they are licensed to operate, K was! llaarnad Thdradav. 1 . . ! JIMi. I 47 not think Hoover means busS (Katlthe food admlnlstralAr the license of the Morris Sinter 1 Commission company here for allowing two carloads Of potatoes to rot on the track. The revocation order puts that firm ' completely out of. business . nntfl such time as Hoover sees fit to grant it a new license, .-'. Slavic League Asks "For War Against AU San Dleo, CaL. . Dec T L N. a iVeedom for all forlver.. : ; - With this as their motto, members of the fBOUln Slavic r SUOnat league,-W1U heedauarters here, telearapbed today to President Wilson, urging- him to declare A.,mtt Tnrkm ami BnlraH, JW. are with the" United Btatee la this war agalnat enemies of humanity, and will help with men and our money," 1 - - the telegram .stales. . con DECLARES uiNtin Mills Resolution - U Pissed- by - Both Houses With .but One, Yota in Opposition, That of Meyer London in the House. , President Is Expected ; to , Sign ' Measure Tonight;' La FoIIette Leaves Chamber During' Vote on Resolution. V , V . 1 1 J ASHINOTON, Dee. T. VV (D. P.) President WI1 sonslftTied the resolstloa de- daring: war on Austria-Hun- ftry at S:0S p; ta - - " . - Congress 'declared',' war. on Anstria-Huns&ry t this - aftsr ; oob: A r-'- ' " " ' . Adoption 'Of the war re sol a- . 100tJa..UjOaJLeu'b7..TO C of 3 4 to 0 was fouoved a lew hours later by its passare'ia the house by a vote of JS1 - to 1, - ; v . ; . , . , f : ... ' - Speaker Clark signed , the resolution at 4:20. ; Vice President. Marshall signed the resolution at 4:S2. The- action by concreaa ahovred aa unexpected sweeplnc avay of paeif lam. CbntTeeswotnaa Rankin. . who votea aa-alnat the declaration of a state of 1 war with Germany, voted to make AUf I trta a lormai enemy or tae unuea I State. , - ' ' ' "-" Meyer Lonaon, nw xera Booaust. I cast the only, neratlve vetaw I The resolution was immediately I ruahed to the senate, which remained in I session, to receive the vice president's 1 signature. I . President Wilson was awaiting' the resolution at the White House and will immediately, affix his signature. i . 'Lesdea Baiaes Storat The action of London, in masrlag aa ! otherwise . unanlmoua action la both 1 A score of members denounced Len- don violently on the floor of the bouse.. Miss Rankin, who made a dramatic T.. I 77. r . w I neueve mag .war ls .ev stapid (Ceartsdad a Pass give. Ootsata rear) Big Bomb Found on Mmneapolis'iCar .... .. . . .' ' h in nsasi rvu isi i asw - 7 t itr a . m gas pipe bomb containing' enough dyna mite to blow a street car and its occu pants to fragments was found today on a Snelllng-Minaebaha. street car. The bomb was on a seat near the mid dle of the car and was found by the jcrsw while the ear was. being; cleaned. Harry Stark Dies . ? In: Naval Hospital , Telegraphio information was received tnAav UDIfi af Ota ulhlnf Vtmrr-w Warl I fit at tHr TfsvmaiJKv tsf tKaft fltgs s1sisbsb Its Has Uyy at the United States naval hoe- ttttal at Portsmouth. Va. He is the sen of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Stark, of Stella, Wah.:.;t ..";.". .,-.. CASUALTIES IN FORCES OF U.S. rmkiag mMrtad the eeetla ef fl AsMTleaa um Is nc udani eisartnwst taeay. I Ta fa f mvw FBI T ATE ADOLFH BTTDZTCTCl. SW4 y. hir. 2. kaart OUm m: htmtm. Kddie BiMisfcfcV eses atenaa ixm, at LUnrr - - ..-- e, w.aiiM eae yitm, KineBla Mn. t. O. Lt4r. Aeey. WaMi. mbchajiio cuxauta C il MCTT. fWld attlUarr. I iili 1 1 rapuua, aaue, uuri Beaia. Caewf. W. fJUTaTBi wriJJxM g. starrHxws. fUir. neiswac. ZJ2' tnannd -JjUs taer. . Mr,- xt Mix. Baaua.., pmraTB - AB?aut L. ClAax. iafaafry. ISIed ! txr z. caae mat inn; some, Mr. 1 H. P. CJaxa. aaMWWoe. Mam. I - Wahiati. s. -. i' xe Ami- I fna amaa M ndwl Wadawday la ri .irTALrT rl? I b aMlML (Mot vm. Ma gntta. Lubiis. I jphjvats auwaao r. tBsEx, mr. eeasd. rataea, ttewse U. CbMS. kUi. aU.