DAILY EVENING EDITION 1 S , ' -glSIl . ... if DAILY EVENING EDITION Number copioft printed of ycAtorriay' Pally I million WEATHER FORECAST 2.742 Thl paper In member of and audited by the Audit Bureau of Circulations. VOL. 30 DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, MARCH 2, 1918. NO. 0372 COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER -- -- CITY OFFICIAL PAPER JAMES STURGIS IN I PARIS AIR RAIDS nil ii iii i mill nnrmr n t t.m h u,..ni, (1,. N now in France aH an artillery uf- j?" NT -r, recently experloired the r PORTLAND ON SEDITION " ; ' : Elsie Thomas of Prineville and Mary Thomas of New York Are Held. SIMILAR ARRESTS IN OTHER CITIES Literature Circulated Decry ing War and its Purposes. POHTTiAXIJ, Mureh 2. Federal agents ' today arrested Klslo Thomas of lrliievillo 11 il Mary Tliomas of Now York, memliert of thofclnterna llonal Ilihlo Students Association, on a charge, of rimiliil.lnff. seditious lit erature. The- orgnnlaation decries war. '. Federal officer Hay similar arrests are being; made In lxs Angeles and other Ics, following the arrests ut the association's 'w York headquar ter.. Keecnlly a speaker of this or Sanitation sought lo siicak in no vera I Oregon towns. In eaeh caw. tho lo om! defense councils queried ax to Uiolr beliefs and purimsos ami what they had done toward the IJlM'rty Ixmii, eU'. In rw'h on ho the scakor wax not allowed to (rlvo the lecture, CAPTAIN HATTERY LEAVES MARCH 15 HRCKI VKM IXSTItrCTIOXS TO t ItJJl'OIET FOR ACTIVK Il'TY; VI Mil NOT 'A.Mi;i. Captain H H. Hattery, Pendleton physician and Kurxeon. who recently received hifl commlmdon in the med ical corpH of the army, has received j inKtructfons to report for active duty March lo. Ho Ik instructed that he will have a HtirBlcal powltlon but he not informed yet an to where he will be Hent. Captain Hattery has been nervfhK an city phyHtclan and his departure will caiiHe a vacancy In that office, j The doctor has Hold his auto and j household furniture preparatory to' leaving in the near future. Mr. Hat tery will leave Khortly for Portland where whe will take up special work at Heed College. UortH of being under an air raid. HIh mother, MrH Una M. SturglN, this morning- received a letter from him In which he HtateH that durlriK one of hla two tripH to Par la German airplanes flew over the French me tropolia and dropped bom ha. He saH that It won not aH exciting1 as one might think though, several wero wounded. ' Lieutenant Sturglg is now on de tached duty atending an automobile HChool. The work in very interesting and Instructive, he mat oh. The cen sorship is so strict, he states, that lie was unable to write of many Interest ing Incidents and experiences. GERMANS ARE "JAW PUNNING FOR infm ciminr iifAnc I ill iuiuiil rmnoi "Big Business" Confidential Memorial Demands Sei zure French Iron Mines. LAWBREAKERS TRY GUNPLAY ON GAME WARDEN BUT FAIL LUST OF CONQUEST STILL UPPERMOST IS DISPATCHING TROOPS SIBERIA; CHINA SENDING IN TO KHURIA REPORT SAYS 111 GERMANS SWEEPING ON TO PETROGRAD Government and People Ap parently Unchanged After 3 Years War. UMATILLA COUNTY RECORD IN FOOD Tho local high school boys' bas- jketball team added another victory to jits list "when It defeated tho Haker boys at the high school last night by the score of 45-17. Thouiih the score would indicute a one-sided game the mountain bnvn showed their tdiink DRIVE IS POOR'y tlKlllnK ni"t "ds- every min ' i ul f Play. hm--m Bellar, l'endlcton forward, was the I'matilla county did not maintain !s,Hr of ,ne Kame. according to the he fine patriotic rcord in the food.; number of points made, ho having conservation drive. According to sta- annexed seven field baskets and seven tunica given out bv Arthur M. Chur- i tn"1- Strahorn threw five baskets. chill, assistant to Food Administrator i Lny ""d uunsun mrowing rive ana Aver. ITinutllla county ranked fiflh OIlt respectively. ( HENRY WOOD.) WITH TUB FitE.VCII ARMIES, March 2. German "bit? business" is already preparing for future wars. French jnllilaary men have a copy of -i m 1 it o l a rigorously coniiuenii.il memorial OeOrge Tonkin IlaS Several the Herman associated iron und steel Nflrrnw ' Flijr'Jinps Wit h ! manufacturers sent the. Cerman gov INttllUW JlrbCdiJeh Willi .ernnAnt amJ jmperial military com- SoUthem Oregon Hunters !mnn''' demanding forcible annexation , i of French iron basins at iiriey and George Tonkin, district warden 0f 1 1ngwy owing to the "extreme import Vmntllla, county, la Just now engaged : ance. of German national economy, In a campaign against deer hunters 'and for lne conduct of future wars." In southern Oregon where "shooting11 Proves that business, government. CORF OF dZ. 7 7il5ame wardens is considered a legiti- Junkers and apparently the German is -r x r k, ,Mi ipeople themselves are absolutely un- ing back to this city, he has made ! changed regarding the lust of con good with a vengeance and is In 'meat .despite their three years and a BAKER TEAM IS DEFEATED BY fair way to clean out a gang of law- t half of war. In capturing these men. Tonkin Three additional j had an excltlnir time of It and exner- from the bottom in th return of food;'Mint were tho lotwls for fenced the sensation of having a re breakers even though he has had sev- ! Iron .Minos Prolonged War. eral narrow ewcapes. j The memorial states: "If, at the According to Marion Jack, member ! outbreak of the war the French had of the state fish and game coin mi- i destroyed their own iron mines at lon, Tonkin was sent into southern i Hriey and Xmgwy basins and simul Oregon because he was unknown und taneously had shelled their iron mines becaiiKe he had establinhed a reputa-ifn the German side of the Lorraine lion for fearlessness. He has already frontier the war could have lasted arretted one organized gang of four'nly a few months. Only with iron men and neized a great quantity of from the captured French mines in fleer hides which they had accumu- these basins was Germany able to luted. ! meet the artillery needs of last year"." It wants all French iron mines there seized, holding that France will never ;niake the Kime m intake again, so the conservation vleMVTfT percent J, on Browne -ilak.T cntrr.i v Irer poked into him amidships. He 1 raine frontier mtg be extended to age or 7.l. The average for the j U1 . R,iimr i iiiw.an( a r.inw worker had already statu was 91.7 with Wasco courity unn "eM auueu me oiner .our. seized tho hides and had trailed the leading with 99.4 per cent. I It was estimated sthere are 4 70f j families' in Umatilla county. The to- tal pledges signed in this county was ; 3595, tho number of refusals 119, the j number nut seen 391. Notation is j made, however, that 500 additional pledges are expected fiym I'matilla county which would make the show ing much better. Considerable diffi culty 'was encountered in conducting the campaign in the outlying commu nities because of bad roads. The number of 100 per cent districts in this county was only two, Adams and ft district near Milton which has 40 and Lie be added the other four. The line Liu for Pendleton was: i liellar and Strahorn, forwards; Casey, I center; Hudson and . Jens Torgeson, guards. Foh; liaker, Burchstorff and' Llcbe, forward. Drown, center; Wnard and Halleck. guards. I gang to a small house In the moun tains. He knocked at" the door but there was no answer. His demands for entrance were repeatedly refused and he was ordered away. Finally he burst the dor from Its hinges, and, as he jumped into the room, a young girl stepped forward .shoved a revolver into tho pit of his stom- ( ach and ordered him to back out or The precipitation for the month of nro,im, Tnnkin nnrJ j ver. It was then that the wardens T-'u i i f t wi Kin nvjn .ti i n. litiuia a - FEBRUARY RAINFALL WAS BELOW NORMAL February was less than half the nor mal umoiiht, according to the offi- iPtr-'y Jky&m. sua 4c3 tJiJr VESEN8ER0 NARVA j J JWENOEN JoSTROF fLIBAU - yCA K,tolJ NsMITAU;3fe " reietxaciisrAor yiETizA OPOTChkaI SMAVU ""i&fc. 7SEBESH "T-Vf UKIYC ' " IsuwalkiV N; , (! L-SMOUMS ' y. r I X 1 fOKSKA . -VdROONO 1UOA V . (borissop J & " SUJTSK' f N X i .-- yZyTv - - I -) KOVEL ' . ' y - II , cholm r- k.,vi., xy L sour or uiLer GRADVOLWYHSK Klfcff' P Jj Loitdon Papers Publish De layed Dispatches; San Francisco Cables Declare i War Minister Has Been Summoned for Conference MOVE REGARDED AS PRECAUTIONARY ONE a point where it notonly gives Ger many all the Lorraine iron basin but Places these outside the range of . Freneh guns, in this way, preventing ( tht? French from checking Germany's! future wars. Leading German mine- f ralogists report Germany's iron mines ; will be exhausted in forty or fifty; j years, so the memorial adds: "Iet no, ;one lulieve Germany in peace time' ill 1.. .it. I,, tn. ncullPA r,.,lf in ' reserves for future wars. During the I Tne arrows ln.ihi man pnow the ma' ptrike the iipitaI f,rst' Another t firt fnnv rt.Mnfhe ,f r (lormanv lost positions of the German armies rmy is on its way through Livonia j spent over fifty million tons of iron. , marching through liussia on to the i steel, in a single tiay or war using ; capture of Petrncrad families. Pendleton i estimated to. have 1540 families and only 1321 cards were signed in this city, a percentage of 85.7 which Is lower than that of any city in the state, except Uend, having 400 families or more. WOm fin Vinrl fiarl t U ij-m rrU Knt jerlll. The total for the month wa;aoor )n(o (he tlmber i .C of nn inch, whereas the normal is, , 1.47. of this amount .31 of an Inch L ey gave chase at once and soon fell on the Hth. During the month : "J", nree 01 lne men "nar nrrest. there was only seven Inches of snow. Tonkin was left with the three on his There were eight days upon which ! nnm'8 . wh,,e tno olhPr warden pur- there Tfc'as precipitation, six clear more iron and steel than was used throughout the France-Prussian war. DR. C. J. SMITH BUYS LARGE WHEAT RANCH SI KV.TirOlSAXD ACIXK FA11M IX . 11. 1. 1 AM X)VXTV l'l IMH A.SKI) YKSTKKIAV. PORTLAND, March 2. A 7000 aore wheat ranch In Gilliam county, owned by J. O. Klrod, of this citv, was bought yesterday by Ir. C. J. Smith und 8. F. Wilson, of the Bank ers' Mortgage company. This is one of the largest realty transfers In a long time. INFORMATION ABOUT WAR SAVINGS STAMPS eneral von JMcnnorn, who has been on the east- ies at Novo Gradvolwsynsk on the ! ern front since the beginning of the south to drive- the Holsheviki out. A war. is leading a host along the south fourth army haas taken Minsk and 'coast of the Gulf of Finland, and he gone on to Rietza. Tready Said to Have Been ; ' Made in 1916 is Made Public. N LONDON, March' 2.-7a-jpan is dispatching troops in h Siberia and China is send- ing troops into Manchuria, Tientsin papers announced 1 Wednesday, according to de layed dispatches. 1 OSITIMA is WMMONRD. ; SAX HUNnsPO, March 2. Cables to the local Japanese newsna- i pers say the Japanese 3f inister of War Osliima has been summoned by the emperor to attend conference regarding tile Siberian situation. The ! cables do not mention the actual j. wilding of troops into Siberia as lion dmi does. Informed Japanese say any activity by Japanese troops In that connection would be merely a precau tionary measyre. They do not believe Japan would act toward war measures until the allies sanction them. i THEATY DETAILS CIVEX . . 1 NEW YORK. March 1. The Even-: ing Post today published a treaty pur porting to show that Japan and Rus ' sia formed an alliance In June, 191s, to "safeguard China from political domination by any third power what ever having an? hostile designs against Japan or Russia," also letters point 'ins out Japan's territorial desires. ' It Says the treaty binds each nation to go to the other s aid in case of mili taary operations, and not sign peac without the others consent. A letter from the former Russian, ambassador at Tokyo points out tha hurrying east and north. General von Linsengen has joined forces with the new Ukraine I'eople s Republic arm- Japanese desires for the districts for merly occupied in the province of days, 11 partly cloudy and 11 cloudy. Tho minimum temperature for the nionth was 13 above zero on Febru ary 1 and the nucximum was 70 on the Kth. La Grande Pro-German , Forced to Sign Pledge I .A ORAXDK, March 1. What seemed to be the first showdown of whether people here would stand for Herman sympathizers Injecting their feelings into this community when Ornnde Ronde boys are at the front fighting for the colors, came lust ev ening when a man by the name of Ilach. who runs a shoe shining parlor sued the fourth Tnahle to take the three back with him on the long trip he handcuffed them together and left them at the house, while he took the third to town. I'pon his return he found thnt the two had hud a neigh bor chisel their manacles in two and made their escape. However, he took up Hie chase again and recaptured them. ion Adams Rvenue refused to purchase The Klrod ranch consists of 3000 ! flour substitutes nt one of the grn acres now In wheat and 3000 acres In iCery stores, according to federal food summer fullow, 6000 of tho 7000 acres , regulations. Not onlv did Hnch re- being agricultural land. Dr. Smith and Mr. Wilson acquired the complete equipment of the ranch and take pos session of tho place today when their ranch foreman arrives. Dr. Smith has been interested In wheat raising for many years and is the owner of extenstve wheat acre age In Rasteem Oregon, , where ho lived prior to transferring his prac tice to Portland a few yenrs ago. Mr. Elrod Is a well known real estate op erator of this city. Consideration for-the ranch has not neon maue puonc. I fuse tn. follow orders from Washing ton hut he faftve vent to his feelings In such a way that one of the gro cery men had to be restrained from using violence with liach. The case was Immediately reported to T. J. Scroggln. chairman of the I'nlon county unit of the Slnlo Coun cil of Defense, who exneted pledges of obedience to every federal order In the future from Hnch and the prom ise of a still tongue relative to his Herman sympathies. Officials Are Proud v Of U. S. Troops Fight WASHINGTON, March 2. Tho per formance of the Americans north of Toul sent a. glow of pride through army men who today nre awaiting casualty lists. Tho story of tho men fighting In the snow until their am munition was gone and then using their fists showed the men ore sea soned and ready to meet the Uermun drive. Repeated German attacks with every form of terrifying mea sure causes some belief this sector may bear the brunt of the drive. To Guard Health Of Women War Workers ! WILL DEPORT ANY ALIENS ADVOCATING SABOTAGE. NEW RULE WAPHIXGTOX, Fell. 2. I. .V. M membership is not sufficient evidence to warrant deportation. Secretary AVilson announced, but any alien advocating sabotage will bo deported, however, re gardless of the organization to which he belongs. Wilson or dered immigration officers at Seattle to proceed immediately with the pending I. W. W. cases there in accordance with the new rulings. It is understood the rulings were put up to the Presi dent at a "recent cabinet meeting and received the President's ap pro va 1 . Th is on 1 1 i lies t h o gov -eminent '8 future policy toward radical organizations, their lead ers and uprisings. ) For the Information of the hun- I ; dieds of war stamp buyers In the j county and fr- hundreds of others j I who expect to invest in these patriot- i ! ic securities, attention is again called j by the secretary of the treasury to : the fact that interest will mt be paid' on them after: maturity, January 1. i 1922. ! Further. In case the certificates are ; If-st. stolen or destroyed they will not j be paid or duplicates issued unless t he cert ificatvs have been registered 1 i n a cc rda n ce wit h the regu la t ions j issued by the postmaster general, if 1 the certificate is registered and Is I then lost or destroyed, the holder may ! report. it apply to the post office, where it was ' The Yankee registered, either for the Issuance of a duplicate or for the amount in cash. Sufficient proof must be given in either case. In case of rcpistered cert ificates, I they may be made out in favor of a ! beneficiary. The form for this use i K "John Smith, payable on death to Mary Smith." Parents who desire to purchase war , savings stamps for their children Vi'hlTP thl rh ibl i llnahln ill . mi : Its name, mav reulsler .he lfi., FOI5MFK COOK OV :iKl OltKtiOX ! in the name of the child In this man-i Al!l!l:sTi:i AS Sl'Y FACIvS 1 ner. ".Mary Smith by John Smith, her1! XFAV CMAIttiKS. j father." This may he done by either j . parent, or by a duly appointed guar- j PORTLAND, March 2. William 'Uian or by a person wth whom thelrolfen i cnuti lives. a child who Is capable NAVAL GUARD ON U.S. STEAMER SINKS DIVER AFTER 2 HOUR FIGHT Shantung and the acquisition of is lands north of the equator now occu pied by the Japanese.. Another letter from the Russian foreign minister says the Japanese ambassador at Stock holm was approached by German agents with a proposal of peace be tween Japan, Russia and Germany, which Japan refused with the state ment it should have been made to all the allies at once. WASHINGTON, March 2. The na val guard on the American steamer Hyanza believes they sunk a subma rine after a two hour battle, accord ing to t'hief Gunner's Mate Groves' occurred January 1 St h. despite the shrapnel fire of two guns, cooly pot the position and fired four shelU when the sub keeled over and disappeared. Secretary Paniels commended Groves for his zeal and efficiency. Tho report said just as the periscope was FRED LOGKLEY FINDS PENDLETON BOYS ARE NUMEROUS IN FRANCE 01 iniini; out and signing a registra tion card may register the certificate ' Itself. Is CRUSE OFFERS ARMY I RECORD AGAINST THE CHARGES OF GRAFT CANADIAN PREMIER WASHINGTON. Mar. 2 Is work In American munitions factories under mining the health of women workers? This Is what the Ijtbor Department alarmed by Kuropean reports lias started out to discover. More than 1.2'ln.ftoo women are to day employed In war industries In this country. Is was slated ; and a large pro- WASHINGTON. March 2 llrign porllon of these In munitions plants. ,n,.r General Cruse, charged with no Kuropean reports, have told of i renting graft In nwar.linu- ..r,, i severe strain on women workers re j tracts, following the arrest of H II paired to lift heavy metal castings Upper, textile Jobber, who is held on and shells. Overwork, too, nnd tin-charges of defrauding the government , wholesome moral surroundings are re- : in its contracts, issued n statement ported to have-taken heavy toll In placing bis til year armv record ' muny lactones iroronu. Many rum- against the charges. He orous Attention fact thnt no I more t han S I oo ' ings stamps. again called to the one person may hold worth of war sav- IlVAn (IP PVPTTAfOVf V 'r""a nlHcn'u' must ne adapted to cepted tho advisory work for Llppert ...uu...vw...v.MMiii wooien. olily after bo retired from the army The Labor Department probe Is de- and consulted army lei-al advisers as CAIXJAUV, March 2. 11. C Tlrew- j signed to result In needed re-adlusl- to the propriety of the a. ;. He said scter. premier of Ilrllisli Columbia. Is ments throughout munitions plant-" he was never any party lo am ron rtrud of iic uiiiouia, contracted en ur.d to see thut wuHoa of women work- tract Lippert secured w bile Cruse was route to Oltuwa lo attend the confer- i ers are maintained on the same level in uctivo service In the uuurtcrmust cntc of provincial nil 11 Inters. ' us these formerly paid men. ens department. I j The following I'niatilla county . ooived from the district hoard morning: Glen Oscar Rust 1-h. Jens R. Skov bo 2-c. Roy F. Rauler. 1-1. Carl K. Huilemann l-e. I'lydo If. Harris, 1-1. .Joseph 1!. I.ajie. t-l Raymond A. Hix by l-e. David T. Stone 4-e Th,u,i-, said be ne- Grimes, l-e. Richard Thompson l-e Gilliert H. Collins 2-c. Kdsar K- Stick ler 1-1. Oeorce II. Carnilchael l-c. William i ;. Gray t-c. Robert C. Still -c. Dallas W. D;i;-nis r-c. llelwiV .1 1'reMin; -e. R- s.-or ,. cho,l,-s l-e i-a. Kucene C. Si hrimpf 4-c. Cleve Clark l-e. shelnon l. Taylor l-e, Kmil Mucllir 1-c, cirln Gllibs 1-f. alias Sib io el Ron. cook for the oltl oil i 'recoil, who was taken off the train at lVn.y.-ton as the troops were starting east, was indict ed today by the federal grand jury on a charge of perjury. Dolf. n -.t.ts ori ginally hel.l for violation of the es pionage act. but when he swore that he was Italian b lorth, data in Ho llands of the federal pn"-eeators was sufficient to convini-e the uraml jur Ws that he should be held for fiul. Others in the ! general true bills classifications of wor,, Jis Rhub.-rc. indicted for al I'Clstrants were re- l,.s,.ti inciting lo insubordination ,.f this enlisted men at K.-nip. ore.: Arthur Thays. n, perjury, for swearing that lie was Norwegian when in fact be bad applied for Tiatur.tlli'.ation papers' swearie.a that lie was of German birth and lla-1 eonie lo Hits country on I ht1 German lark D.ilb. k; Russ,-! F. Haines, hi Id for making false statenn nt in nftrii of war .rtestiui:- sighted lee' yards distant, a torpedo was seen approaching the Nyanza. i The ves-sel swung and dodged, miss ing it. The submarine came to the surface, started its oil engines and gave chase, firing shrapnel and zig zagging astern the steamer so as to v ie able to use two guns against the Pendleton boys are numerous in steamer. Getting in the rear by this. France these days, judging from a the ulr came within 5'Hul yards, got note just received from Fred Lockle?. the range finally and hit the Nyanza "On active service with the AmerC five times until Groves' gun ended can Kxpeditionary Force." Mr. the conflict, (.ine on the steamer was ' Lock ley, who is with the Y. M. C. A. slightly injured. ; coriwi. has w ritten as follows to K. tl. . Aldrich, editor of the East Oregonlan: , ; "Somewhere tn France, about j:0 miles f.oin I'aris. Made a 30 Hirs ute tall, in this little village in sur.- nue last night. After my talk I. lick of I'ilot Rock came 'ju and we had u talk about 1'endleton. Then Geo. H. Rhyner who rodo in the wild horse race ut the Round-l'p. Have met lots of the bo s who have been tn I'endleton. This is a wonder fo country. Mighty ulud 1 came est regard to all. Met Lieut. Htur g.s ip.t long ago.-- KliKIl I.OCKI.KY. DOLFIN IS INDICTED ON PERJURY CHARGE-J BULLETINS 23 DRAFTED MEN ARE CLASSIFIED nane; fa!sel th'I'M:. Marie in t m ; re. T-.'i f'-r .wisp:r.nv UTOU. hi aiilitit'ii Were returned. T.ntor. for ffit'r.Mit mi :i to i!!i 1 -.it I i Inn..1 s. n t war a rim: t .v.r- rr; WHKt KKI). V SIM(,TOV. lnn h 2. Seti-c-tary lanicN nntmunctl that lu m orican naval aniliary tug' Martnor. wn VM-cxkexl by a heavy gale Tues day. All tho officer and i-rtv rciinl and laiMlcvl a-dmr ntKXfll AT (4l i-:k.xstov. I.OMHIN. liitrli -2. ljrtl IimIi cHUimiaiKh r of tit homo diteu4 fro ts. Iia aniMl tit itMiotMi-toMi itli hK staff and timtorrd to Uiiblin. Tho imbue of hi mi -ion is not (IImIom-iI. i:U.WAV STXTIOXS HMCKI I H I i;m.KAI. Man-h 2. s a ro ult of do-erier-i fnmi tho fnint M'i. hiic train load-- of supplies., 1k th fi'iio onimi(too tb'- atlrrnooii ortltr nl ail raiha i.tiiou harrol and ru Uilli disarmed. TOKMk. lar.-h 2. Tho ItoUhoUM M'ird a p.l'T j:t l.n't t.(ok cMilalii- Spokane Court Rules For Insurance Head fl:-: lllu .-t fH;iti( JO .-wili'v, lo ;i i!-rl,iir: ii , It.tro. ii wi'i'i- rcj rino- lottitwin tn ti i-e -i.: -i: U.n f. j. ( nt' t.itinition-, -('., ;:(! I'uilV Which :i h -i ill I i!H riii.: to land ma- fM1-inMikt thrt-ut :xi. i- h.:nt -h j i SI'PK.WK, -M.aeh 2.- In n decision hantled low n t-f.terda afternoon Jiid U ", ZtMif. N)eeial nuprrior etlurt jmUe of spokan county, found a entut for John J, fadman, prei dent, and K. J. t t'Shea, Secretary -treasurer of New World Ufe Irwur anet Cuutpnnv . Th. iii'.in- spirit of thin ncttoii hum Th'.iM.es T, k. t-jll. former vie, president of th t uropdtiv, tio woioshr thi-M.h ititio-Iiu-tton of a reniuti..ii !o re-trtti Mr. t'adiK-iii. thv pr'-Mjilcni . in ofn-: iimx:. thai h;it he.Mi Kixnr. 'o lot it le. tho MtoekholdcrM h i.oliUtoti re-trot.- I th !'r.-KMwrit votn:i; f'.r fertitn rhan.;- in th ti -hiw. and fur tto; r-lf Hon ,f IhfrM tt ,ist. e w toi.iii turtnw vktri- expiring, th iriMirm the p r p-t in t ion ,f Mr. llli ;tfol hi rtSuri.i:- lf .ffie. Mr t .idik; in . u d (troiterl-, tht ir irt r !''!, tn vttrmir th pronorn ' ordtrtaj to i: a h ..t J i-ix- no fit.