Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1905-1915, January 03, 1911, Image 3

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    NAVARRO YIELDS
TO REBEL TROOPS
•COMPROMISE REACHED.
Terms on Which 1 Engineers
tied Fight.
I
:
Mexico City—General Navarro has
surrendered to the rebels, according to
a report that has reachèd here from
authorities which have heretofore
proved reliable in the matter of war
news.
The government denies the report
and says that he is awaiting ¡reinforce­
ments. Officials say Pedernales is not
menaced seriously by the rebels.
It is known from other sources that
Navarro has been having a hard time.
His men are not used to the severe
winter climate of Chihuahua. They
are not properly clothed and are short
of food and ammunition. It is consid­
ered here that if Navarro has not sur­
rendered, he is liable to do so at any
time.
Another report says that Navarro
has not surrendered, but has deserted
with his men to the rebels. This is
not believd.
The government now acknowledges
that the situation is very serious. All
available troops are being sent north
as fast as possible to assist Navarro.
Three hundred prisoners were taken
from the Belan prison and drafted into
thè army. A ¡considerable portion of
the army at present is made up of
prisoners.
In all the battles that have occurred
so far, it seems that the rebels have
been shooting particularly at officers.
The per Ventage of these wounded or
killed is very large. At the battle of
Mai Paso, the rebels, who were en­
trenched on mountains forming the
side of a canyon, rolled immense boul­
ders down on the troops.
These did
more damage than the shooting.
The serious condition of affairs in
the North is the principal topic of con­
versation here. There is much specu­
lation as to the outcome. It is expect­
ed that the reverses suffered by the
government recently will lead to other
uprisings throughout the republic as
soon as they become known.
ELECTRICAL TRUST SUED.
t
Amount of increase in yearly ?
Mexican General in Dire Straits, wages,
$4,000,000.
♦I Average
increase, 10 1-3 per cent. t
Forced to Surrender.
Average demand by engineers, 15 t
Further Revolts Are Feared as Re­
sult—Government Rushes Troops
to Scene of Hostilities.
NATIONAL GOVERNMENT NEWS
NOTES OF GENERAL INTEREST
Locomotive, Engineers Get Increase
Aggregating $4,00-000 a Year.
per cent.
.
•
Original demand, 17 per cent.
|
Increase offered by roads, 9J£ per
t cent.
Increase asked on Mallet type en-
♦ gines, 100 per cent.
t
Increase granted on Mallet en-
♦ gines, 75 cents to $1 differential. I
I Other increases granted were:
|
Forty cents per day in passenger, |
suburban, or through freight service. |
Monopoly of Power Sites and Plants Rhode Island Leads; Washington Has
Largest Growth.
To Be Shown,
Washington—The suit of the gov­
ernment against the so-called electrical
trust will rival in magnitude the pros­
ecutions of the Standard Oil company
and the tobacco trust, according to at­
taches of the department of justice,
and it is predicted that the govern­
ment will win the case. The suit has
been brought under the Sherman anti­
trust law.
The evidence which the government
will lay before the courts, it is assert­
ed, shows startling price juggling. It
is alleged that the General Electric
t company and the Westinghouse Elec­
| tric company secured control of the
electrical business by buying up the
most valuable plants and by control­
ling most of the water power sites.
The suit will be filed early in Janu­
ary. W. S. Kenyon, assistant attorney
general, is preparing the papers in the
case.
No criminal proceedings are
contemplated.
Twenty-five cents differential on
engines 215,000 pounds on drivers.
Engineers or helpers on wrecking |
trains, snow-bound or mixed trains, |
increase of 40 cents per.day.
|
Switching rates, ,50 cents increase t
in yard and transfer service.
Twenty-five cents increase per day i
• for hostlers of trie Brotherhood of ;
| Locomotive Engineers.
3ontrollers of motor-cars
ts increase,
loads involved, 61. ■
Engineers
affected,
37,000.
Chicago
—Four
millions
of dollars a
year was what the officials of 61 West­
ern railroads put in the stockings of
the locomotive engineers. The gift
brought “peace and good will” and
averted what might fyave proved one
of the most disastrous strikes in the
history of the country.
Commissioner of Labor Charles P.
Neill played the part of Santa Claus to
the engineers.
For seven ’days he
worked to bring the railroads and the
engineers together and with his work
accomplished he left in the afternoon
for his home in Washington to spend
Christmas with his family.
In spite of their repeated l assertions
that they had reached -the limit, the
managers made concessions in the face
of a threatened strike. < Concessions
were made by the engineers also, but
they established two of the chief points
for which they contended—jurisdiction
over motor-trucks and an increased
schedule for the Mallet type of engine.
The increase granted the men runs as
high as 14 per cent on certain engines
and as low as 8 per cent on the higher-
IRON WORKS DYNAMITED.
paid runs. The average increase to
the payrolls of the railroads is 10 1-3
Los Angeles Concern
Involved in
per cent.
f
t
POPULATION GROWS DENSE.
Washington — Rhode Island has
508.5 persons to the square mile, thus,
according to census bureau figures,
leading the list of states in the matter
of density of population.
Nevada, with only seven-tenths of a
person to the mile, finds a place at the
lower end of the table giving these
facts.
Second in the density list, Massa-
chusetts supports 418.8 persons to the
square mile; New Jersey, 337.7; Con­
necticut, 231.3, and New York 191.2.
The other states possessing more than
100 to the mile are:
Pennsylvania, 171; Maryland, 130.3;
Ohio, 117; Delaware, 103, and Illinois,
100.7.
Wyoming, boasting IX persons to
the mile, more than doubles Nevada,
while Arizona, with 1.8, stands third
from the bottom.
Montana, New
Mexico, Idaho, Utah, Oregon, South
Dakota, Colorado and North Dakota,
all have fewer population than 10 to
the square mile.
Of the states of large population,
Washington takes the lead in the
growth of density, having advanced
from 7.8 to 17.1 per square mile in the
last 10 years, thus taking a place be­
tween Kansas, with 10.5, and Nebras­
ka, with 15.5. Washington exceeds
her neighbor, Oregon, with seven per­
sons to the mile, by more than 10, and
even surpasses California, with 15.2.
Idaho increased from 1.9 to 3.9; and
Oklahoma from 11.4 to 23.9.
The figures for other states are:
Indiana, 75.3; Kentucky/57.0; Ten­
nessee, 52.4; Virginia, 51.2; West
Virginia, 50.8; South Carolina, 49.7;
Michigan, 48.9; Missouri, 47.9; New
Hampshire, 47.7; North Carolina,
45.3; Georgia, 44.4; Wisconsin, 42.2;
Alabama, 41.7; Iowa, 40; Vermont
39; Mississippi, 38.8; Louisana, 36;5;
Arkansas, 30; Minnesota, 25.7; Maine,
24.8. Texas, 14.8; Florida, 13.7.
ardener
Probably more women come to grief at them. Set the pots in saucers and.
over their ferneries each winter than keep the soil wet to counteract ex«
over any other kind of indoor plants. cesslve evaporation.
It is ' discouraging to pay several dol­
Boston ferns can be stood with
Third Assistant Postmaster-General
lars to a florist to fill the fern dish other foliage plants on the porch, as
Makes Annual Report.
only to have it turn yellow, if not die, they are much less delicate. One
Washington—That Postmaster Gen­
woman who has a number the same
in a few weeks.
eral Hitchcock is determined to put
The trouble lies in two things, first size plunges the pots in porch boxes,
the Postoffice department upon a self-
the kind of ferns attempted to be on a semi-shady side of the house,
sustaining basis is evidenced in the
grown, next in not growing them un- where they make an effective show­
annual report of the third assistant
ing and thrive well until time to
der proper conditions.
postmaster general. Though expendi­
If you attempt to ràise most of the bring indoors in the fall.
tures for last year are still in excess of
Ferns can be grown in any old pan
maiden hairs indoors you are doomed
receipts, there is a masked decrease in
to disappointment. The hardy ferns or dish painted a rieh green or dull
expenditures compared with a year
that thrive in shady corners of the red. Bore hole in the sides and bot­
ago.
woods do not take well to transplant­ tom to give air. For fern dishes for
The total postal receipts for the fis­
ing into hot houses, however much table use, it is wiser to have an inner
cal year ,1910 aggregated $24,128,657.
pan for the planting. This can some­
you may read to> the contrary.
This is an increase of $2,556,274, or
times be set in a pan of water when
There
are
enough
varieties
of
ferns,
10.1 per cent when compared with
it shows signs of drying out.
however,
to
have
a
fine
display
in
those of the preceding year,.
The fern grower who likes to ex­
your living roomg. In maiden hair
The expenditures for last year were
ferns, or adiantuiris, the variety that periment with more delicate species
$229,977,224, an excess over receipts
will stand heat and dryness best is. can do so with a Wardian case. This
of $5,848,565.' To this amount should
A croweanum. Another good one in­ has a wood base - about six inches
be added $32,915 lost by burglary, fire,
doors is A. capillus veneris, while A. deep lined with zinc or is. sometimes
bad debts, etc., making a total of $5,-
caudatum, a creeping variety of of earthenware. There are glass sides
881,481, a decrease of $11,598,288
maiden hair, has been grown success­ and, top, the latter hinged.
when compared with the deficit of the
The top must be lifted an inch
fully in a hanging basket indoors.
fiscal year 1909.*
Professionals will tell you that every few days to keep the glass free
Marine Disasters Few.
adiantum farleyense, which is the from moisture, otherwise no ventila­
SHAKE-UP IS COMING,
Washington—Only 53 out of 6,661 finest of all the maiden hairs, cannot tion is necessary.
persons involved in 1,464 disasters to be grown out of a green house. It is
Delicate ferns when grown in this
Rumored Four Important Changes vessels of all classes within the scope
tender, but I have seen it raised in a way get almost the atmosphere to
Will Occur in Cabinet.
of the United States life saving serv­ family living room and flourish finely. which they are accustomed in their
Washington— Rumors of a coming ice lost their lives, and but 74 vessels It cannot stand intense heat or native haunts and do well even in a
hothouse.
shakeup in the cabinet have been re­ were destroyed during the fical year changes of temperature.
newed. It was reported that the ended June 30 last, according to the Among the most satisfactory ferns
changes said to be contemplated by report of S. I. Kimball, general super-' for indoors either in fern dishes or
School Luncheons.
President Taft involved the resigna­ intendent of the service.
separate pots, are the various Boston
The
following
suggestions for
The
report
shows
operations
in
the
tions of Secretary Knox, MacVeagh,
ferns. Among the newer varieties of
13th district, embracing the coasts ofl this fern, which is known as nephro- school lunch baskets for a week may
Ballinger and possibly Wilson.
Strike is Victim.
Knox, it is known, is dissatisfied Alaska, Washington, Oregon and Cal­ lepis Bostoniensis, is the feathery prove a lfelp to perplexed mothers:
Los Angeles—A mysterious explos- TWELVE LIVE ON SI.35 A DAY. over his loss of influence in shaping ifornia, as follows: Vessels involved, Whitman! and the dwarf Scotti, which
Monday—Two devilled eggs and let­
ion, presumably of dynamite, wrecked
sandwiches, using Graham
'136; vessels lost, 9; persons on board, is especially good for windows or tuce
the administration’s policies.
a considerable portion of the building Pittsburg Family Holds Record for
bread; Bartlet pear; slice of sponge
Politicians say the time has arrived 670; lives lost, 37; persons succored at ferneries.
of the Llewellyn Iron works, one of
for President Taft to dismiss Balling­ stations, 24; number of days’ succor Various of the pteris ferns are suit­ cake.
Thrift.
the big industrial institutions of the
Tuesday—Two sandwiches made of
afforded, 29; value of vessels, $1,901,- able for "house culture. One of the
er.
Pittsburg—A tale of comfort and
kind in the Southwest, at Redondo, and
A report that Congressman Charles 875; value of cargoes, $238,690;. To­ loveliest is pteris Victoriae, with sil­ bread, filled with two tablespoonfuls
Main streets, at 1:45 o’clock this thrift contrary to the usual ones of Scott of Kansas, will succeed Secre­ tal value of property involved, $1,330,-
of devilled ham mixed with chopped
distress was unfolded ¡in the Juvenile tary Wilson is generally credited. 565; value of property saved, $939,- very variegated leaves. Somewhat olives; two apple turnovers; nuts and
morning.
J. E. Asbury, a nightwatchman, court here by Miss Nance Oppenheim­ The President’s secretary, Charles 455; value of proeprty lost, $291,110. hardier is pteris Wilsoni, which has raisins. *
odd crested fronds.
who was in the office of the building, er, a probation officer, to the court and Norton, is named by politicians to suc­
Wednesday—Two minced •, chicken
A fine fern for indoors is the holly
was slightly injured. Windows of the spectators. A family of 12 is support­ ceed MacVeagh, who it is expected
No Extensions for Irrigation.
and white bread sandwiched; sand­
fern,
or
eyrtomiuffi
falcatum,
which
adjoining plants of the Lacy Manufact­ ed on an income of $1.35 a day, but will retire on account of ill health.
Washington — General Marshall, has broad, glossy foliage quite unlike tarts; olives; a banana.
uring company, the Johnson Machine how it is done has not been disclosed.
Thursday—Boston brown
bread
Senator Flint and Representative formerly chief of army epgineers, but
Miss Oppenhemer told the story Tawney are mentioned as possible suc­ now consulting engineer for the Inter­ the ordinary ferns.
works and the Stearns Gas Engine
A good fern for hanging is platy- sandwiches, filled with chopped nuts
company were blown out and minor when she requested Judge Cohen to al­ cessors Of Ballinger.
ior department, in a statement relating cerlum alcicorne, or stag horn fern. .and cream cheese; bunch of grapes
low Antonio Elf, 10 years old, to go
damage was done.
to the assignment of the $20,000,000 These roots feed on air and when and an .orange; piece of molasses
Residents of the Westlake district home. He was arrested for being in
in certificates of indebtedness to rec­ planted should be hung in a warm candy.
DEAL IS CLOSED FOR DAM.
two miles away, were awakened by the the streets late at night.
Friday—Sandwiches of bread light­
lamation projects, said:
room and kept wet They can be
force of the explosion, which shook
“He has a splendid home, your
ly toasted, with crisp fried bacon fill­
“The board of army engineers made
the whole neighborhood. Who placed honor,” said Miss Oppenheimer. “His Mexican Concern ¡to Build Levee on no recommendation for the extension grown in baskets or shallow pans and ing; gingerbread; two peaches.
dp best when potted in rough peat
the supposed charge of dynamite is not mother,” pointing to the woman stand­
Lower Colorado.
of the Umatilla project, but this action and sphagnum.
known. The company has been in­ ing by the lad’s side, “is a splendid
Washington—Arrangements between was not discrimination against that In the care Of ferns the chief thing
volved for many months in a strike of housekeeper, and they have 10 bright the State department and the Mexican project, because they made no recom­
Dinner Gowns.
union metal workers.
children, of whom the oldest is a girl embassy have been concluded for the mendation for the extension of any . Js not too much dry heat. Keep the
Shot satins in pale colorings are
room
at
a
moderate
temperature
and
A hole in the ground 18 inches deep 13 years old.”
being used for some of the prettiest
construction of a dam and levee on the other excepting possibly the Yuma pro­
and about six feet in diameter bears
“I don’t know how they do it,” said lower Colorado river in Imperial val­ ject, for which they recommended the on mild days give outside air by open­ of the new dinner gowns, de^igp.ieli on
witness to the place of origin and prob­ Miss Oppenheimer, later, “but they ley. Congress at the last session ap­ inclusion of certain Mesa lands. No ing windows in an adjoining room. very simple lines, with long, tialnoi
Never let cold air blow directly on skirts and draped bodices. Theiekirts
able cause of the damage. This hole are nice people and better home condi­ propriated $1,000,000 for the work.
extensions were recommended in Idaho, ferns.
is just outside the business line and tions couldn’t be asked for. Every­
are left without any trimming; but
Under the arrangements tne con­ Washington, Oregon, Montana, Colo­
Many a fern dish is ruined by the for the adornment of the bodiless
adjacent what was the wagon entrance. thing is neat and orderly, and there is struction Will be carried on by the Col­ rado, Utah, Nevada, North Dakota or
maid
opening
the
dining
room
window
On the other side of the hole was a no lack of wholesome food for the en­ orado Land company, a Mexican Cor­ South Dakota. The United States has
bugle fringes are frequently employ­
wooden shed, which, with its contents tire family. The father is a laborer poration, the stockholders in which undertaken, all the work it can carry over them to air the room each ed, carried out in a mixture of closer
of stored iron, was reduced to a mass and earns one dollar and thirty-five are Americans. It is provided that through With the resources at hand.” morning. It is little trouble to move crystal and the colorings which are
the pots into a warmer atmosphere.
of debris.
cents a day. That man is a credit to the United States does not acquire
seen in the shot satins. As the weatlb-
Ferns like a rich soil, one of good er grows colder, velvet dinnep-gowns
The front of the main building, a any community.”
any right of ownership or easement
Civilians Not Allowed Arms.
loam with leaf mould and sand is will be more and more frequently
three-story frame, for a distance of
Without further ado the boy was al­ either in Mexican terrritory or the
Washington—No instructions have
probably 75 feet was shot to pieces and lowed to go home with his mother.
works executed on Mexican territory, gone forward from Washington to best. The pots must have drainage, seen-, aiid will most undoubtedly play
its contents of furniture, arid office
where the dam will be located. The General Duvall or anyone in authority as soggy roots will kill every time, a prominent part in* the fashions of
i
»
paraphernalia are piled together in ap­
works are to be built from-surveys ap­ in Mnaila to conduct a search of the ■Use pots large enough to keep the the immediate future. In style these
Son of Rich Man Starves.
parent ruin.
The material damage,
ferns from getting root bound and
proved by a Mexican engineer.
homes of the Japanese there. It is as­ quickly exhausting the nourishment also will be exceedingly simple, and
New
York
—
Half
delirious
from
however, is confined to the chipping
will need little or nothing in the way
sumed
that
General
Duvall
is
acting
in
room, the office and' the space above starvation, John Smith, who says he is
: in the soil.
Gunboat at Amapala.
trimming, beyond a bertha or fichu
conjunction with the civil authorities..
a decendent of Joseph Smith, founder
them, and is relatively small.
Faults in watering is the chief dif- of
Washington—The gunboat Yorktown It is reported by secret service agents 1 Acuity in fern care. They like plenty of fine real lace, and possibly a touch,
of the Mormon church, and the son of
that stores ¡of arms and ammunition ‘ at the roots, but must not be kept of fur.
Charles Smith, a wealthy retired pub­ has arrived at Amapala, Honduras.
Sugar Trust to Pay Back.
The Warship was sent to investi­ have been collected and secreted by soggy any more than they can be
lisher of Princeton, Ill., is in Bellevue
New York — The American Sugar hospital critically ill. Twice an hour gate conditions and protect American civilians in the Philippines. No civil­
.allowed to dry out Do not spray the
Fur to Be Popular Trimming.
Refining company will shortly hand to he is fed warm milk like a baby. His interests in Hdhduras.
ian is allowed to have these.
foliage, especially of maiden hairs, as
Fur
is undoubtedly the most popu-
the United States government a check greatest desire is to sleep, but in lucid
Two thousand rebel soldiers, who
it scorches them and turns them yel- lar trimming of the year for after-
for $700,000 in settlement of a further intervals he gave his name and de­ have been gathered during the past
Japanese Assault Consul.
( low.
noon and evening dresses, for even-
series of customs frauds, according to scendants with a history of family few months, are reported ready for an
New York—A special dispatch to
Unless your house is very hot the ing coats and afternoon coat suits.
the Herald,
troubles, wandering days and no work. attack on Tegucigalpa. According ’ to the Evening Telegram from Tokio, , amount
of water given to ferns can be It is a little harder to settle on any
This, will bring the total amount For 21 days he says he had little to Federal officials, the revolution, which Japan, states that the American vice
from November to February one material that holds first place
from this company up to nearly $3,- eat.
has been threatened for months, is consul at Dalny, Manchuria, Adolph A. lessened
000,000. This latest settlement is in
about to break out, and the first battle Williamson, was assaulted at a fish as during these three winter months with the fickle public. Velvet and vel­
ferns rest.
vet striped and embossed chiffons are
connection with the so-called “draw­
Wolves Barely Miss Feast.
is expected early in January. Prepar­ market by several Japanese and Chi­ ■ many
-, Few ferns like hot sunlight, so-keep
back” frauds, which have been under
Duluth—While wolves howled around ations to repel an attack on the city nese, It is said the affair will be re­ slightly back from the window and among the latest arrivals, (but they
investigation since the original customs the Darrah cabin, Mrs. Walter Darrah, are being made and Federal troops are ported to the State department.
are* still too new to be general. The
where the direct rays of the sun do brocades and' laces are very lovely,
frauds were detected two years ago, as 34, years old, gave birth six days ago being mobilizedd at Tegucigalpa.
not fall on them.
a result of the Parr disclosures.
Forests Are Eliminated.
but they ar® too costly for most peo-
The _ revolutionary army has been
to a baby in a partially roofless shack
' The chief dangers to fern growth pie and for most purposes. The satins,
Washington
—
Proclamations
order
­
drilling
at
a
point
about
20
miles
from
near Pelican lake, in this county.
is violent changes of temperature, chiffons, silk crepes and mousselines
Steel Men in Rebellion,
With the woman in the cabin was only Cape Gracias. Lee Christmas, an ing additions and eliminations in na--
New York-—The rebellion in the her four-year-old daughter. Mrs. Dar­ American adventurer, who has played tional forests in California, Idaho and soggy, sour earth—from imperfect de sole are neither new nor original,
steel trade last 'week against the Pol­ rah claims she was deserted by her hus­ an important part in the revolutionary Utah were signed by President Taft. drainage—and wetting of the leaves. but they are good to look at, and per­
In growing Boston ferns, cut off all haps have a wider and more durable
icy of restricting competition and band some weeks before. It was only movement and has led armies in Hon­ The changes made were as follows:
maintaining rigid prices was expressed today that the woman, her baby and duras and Nicaragua, will share the
Modero forest, California, 20,967 the runners - and allow pnly two or popularity than anything else.—The
on concessions of $1 a ¡ton or more in the little girl were found. All were command of the revolutionists with acres eliminated, 182,050 acres added; three crowns to a plant, otherwise Delineator.
prices of steel bars, structural shapes, temporarily removed to a farm house. former President Bonilla.
Boise forest, Idaho, 9,940 acres elim­ the pot will soon be filled with crown
plates and steel pipe by some of the
inated; Sevier forest, Utah, 93,730 and the foliage will suffer.
Novel Tunic Effect.
The chief enemy of ferns is mealy,
independents in the interior and by ex­ Germany Soon to Import All Meat.
Haste on Treaty Sought.
acres eliminated, 2,560 acres added.
A pretty Idea for the finishing of &
bug. Keep a close watch for this and
ceptionally low prices on fabricated
Washington—In the course of a few
Washington—If a Canadian recipro­
pick off with fingers and kill them. tunic, especially one of veiling or oth­
Bogota Buys Out Americans.
steel in the Eastern territory. The yearsjGprmany, in all likelihood, will city treaty is to be concluded during
holiday spirit was against any im­ consume nothing but imported meat, the present session all records in the
Washington—The final payment by Red spider and thrips also attack er soft material, is to slash the tunid
in front, like an overskirt, and knot
portant expansion in the business.
according to consular reports. There matter of negotiation must be broken. the city of Bogota to the American ferns, but can be fought by fumigat­ it loosely at each side, drawing it
ing
with
tobacco
smoke,
This
must
is an immense decrease noted in the The incentive to haste lies in the real­ owners of its street railroad was made
away so as to show a great part of
Many Killed in Indies.
number of animals for slaughter, ac­ ization by the administration of the this week and the road now is the be carefully done, as . too strong the
underskirt up to the knees. The
San Domingo— News has reached cording to the last count, made on Oc­ diffiulty of framing any sort of a .Re­ property of the municipality. This 'smoking will ruin the plants.
here of an engagememsent along the tober 10, 1910. The especially notice­ publican reciprocity treaty that can terminates a source of constant trouble Most professional gardeners to the knots are made about half-way from
Dominican and Haytian borders. Sev­ able decrease is in young animals. safely be steered through the' nèxt con­ in Colombia between the United contrary, pots of maiden hair should the ankles and the tunic falls loosely
eral are reported killed. A gunboat As a result, prices of animls for gress with its Democratic house. The States-owned company, the govern­ be stood outdoors in summer in some below them. Of course, it is caught
will be dispatched with troops to be slaughter are expected to rise very house must be afforded bn opportunity ment and the natives of Bogota. The sheltered angle of the porch or in a with a few stitches in back, to keepj
shady nook where wind does not get It in position.
city paid $800.000 for thejproperty.
sent to the scene of the trouble.
• high.
>to deal with the subject.
0
POSTAL RECEIPTS LARGER.
y