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About The Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1899-1904 | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1901)
SEE » I 0 p £ » S' n to <1 •• I, bi bt n bi I d Ita ea tie I !ni M Ui :en ia ant I 1 tali 18' bin D it Ut eha ao1 litad as * pian ID I a'es 1 out I as a a ia lion i uber nat 266 . in 11 or tn DN’T Lake ng ar ad vio towns tbere*! 88, 1X> ksr. ;et sc a bit. up y< both your awk. Whet him. st to get oily. I alw ar. It elf alot you. i proven otan hi tber p jot rich re that on Ml ulder of |>eople' I. Not ■r. Kts II nien i le you much rent Y u don’t >. Dau’ A'xi wi You’ll id ol lun lees. A le like V ra etuck youreelf. knocker I MODE ' T Fogls uty Jot ieri!!«, hi ewhat det litualion: >me of on j Judge L did « Cbs vol the J< body y< ling for tl • to say hu bete ire for tb* Portlaac ’ are ' tl* JAPAN IN WINTER. I A TEST OF i IHR AGE. The Tortore of a Fla» Shirt. J. M. BENNINGTON. The most trying ordeal that Booker \> ashmgton «a» forced to endure aa 1 Man was the wearing of a ñu» TORTURES WHICH INDIAN SCOUTS Colder la Hon««« of the Klrb a Than lu Op«*u sauahlnr. BORE WITH SMILING FACES. In bis autobiography, "Up From shirt. “I supjiose that the American people .awl,»,** 116 ” and the Russians are the only western Slavery. In the portion of Virginia where I It Maa Ip to I.ieateiiMnt Farrow races that really ke«-p warm in winter. llve.i it was common to use flux as part Once to Emulate Their FYnniple. The Still th<**e who dwell 1n other countries of the clothing for slave*. That part but the West Pointer lard Ills Wits admit that they hare the name Ideal by of the flux from which our clothing aud Escaped the Ordeal. their Inefficient effort to attain to it.” was made was largely the refuse, writes Anna N. B* njamln In Alnslee’a which of course was the cheapest and 1 The Indian scouts that joined forces “The Japanese winter Is most trying on roughest [>art. I can acarcely Imagine with the United States army In 1878 account of its continual dampness, but any torture except perbap» the pulllug to make prisoner» of the Sheep Eaters the Japan« e are content to remain of a tooth that is equal to that caused In western Idaho were skeptical ^t cold. They make almost no effort to by pulling on a new flax shirt for the first of Lieutenant Farrow’s abilltms HIS LATEST OFFEHil. overcome IL The old 'busiildo’ (chival first tins*. It is almost equal to* the I to lead them Into battle. They bad rous) Idea of the ‘.-amural’ (knights) The arrest, conviction and »entencs ■ never seen his courage tested and was that It was effeminate to feel cold, feeling that one would experience if he plainly Intimated by word and action of J M BeriUiuatou u» the penitentiary had a dozen or more chestnut burs or a and such 1» their ere training that that they bad no Intention of obeying for ten year» for the crims of forgery, they do not really feel it as we da The hundred small pin points tn contact his orders unless be should prove hlm- wearing of some extra ’kimono»’ and with the flesh. Even to this day I can I self braver than any chief, subchief or Is »till fresh in the memory of mauy Eugene people. Thia wm over sig the use of n ’blbachl,’ or brazier, In i' all accurately the tortures that I un i buck in the command. years ago. which are a few tiny sticks of lighted derwent when pulling on one of these First they gave themselves up to all When taken to the l'«mt»otlary charcoal, are the only concession» to garments. The fact that my flesh was kinds of physical torture as a lesson winter weather. With the ’blbachl’ soft and tender added to the pain. But to him. They slashed tbelr bodies Beuning ou *us put to work __ kwipujjj ANOTHER HOT WAVE they never pretend to lo-at more than I bad no choice. I ba<1 to wear the flax with knives without showing pain. the books of tbs company which has shirt or mine, and bad it been left to their finger tips, which they hold over Hpeclal to the G uard . : They slit the skin on their chests, ran its »tove foundry at the penitentiary, the coals. It Is m- d if hen the house Is tue to chi.'we I should have cboeen to | skewers thereunder and jerked off be being a tine book-keeper aud ac K ansas C ity , M o ., July 20.—Another hot wave ia now entirely open. wear no covering. [ cutaneous and fleshly strips while smil countant. By his excellent conduct In «•■mnectlon with the flax shirt my "The houses, ns every one knows, are prevailing over Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska and many other ing happily In his face. They split as a prisoner he was made a "trusty,” brother John w ho is several years old built of thin, lie t wood, and tlie slid states. 'The suffering of stock is terrible and some ¡»eople ing their ears, pierced tbelr noses, lacer his term of sentence was shortened by er than I am. performed one of the panels which serve for doors and are leaving for the Eastern sea coast. windows have ptqxr panes. They are most g**neroua acts that I ever heard of ated tbelr cheeks, butchered their arms one-naif, aud he was released at tba ns apt to b»* open as closed during tbo one slave relative doing for another. and legs. Their stunts were so far explraliou of the fifth year. His ser A LONG STRIKE. day. IVh* n I took my first jlurlklsha On several occasions when I was being beyond anything Farrow could Inflict vices as a book-aeepei belDg so m»rj. ride through the streets of Nagasaki. I for* <d to wear a new flax shirt be gen upon himself that the poor young lieu tcrioue the stove compauy kept bitn la Bpeclal to the Guard. forgot my owu sufferings in my sym erously agreed to put it on in my stead tenant thought he "saw bls finish.” Suddenly, while rivulets of cold per their employ at a salary of |1(X) p*r pathy for this unhappy nation, which ami wear it for several days till It was P ittsburg , l’a., July 20.—The strikers in this district as surely as the c* 1*1 came endured such ’broken In* I’ntll I had grown to be spiration trlckleil down his spine, the month. He worked along steadily for refuso the terms offered and now they enter upon a pro misery from It. ’t he coolies wear thin quite a youth this single garment was West Pointer recollected that In bls a few month», uutil one day recently schoolboy days he was an adept nt he we» seen to be walking toward tbs longed struggle. The unions have a large sum of money blue cotton clotlx s ami an- always pad i all that I wore.” driving a pin into the thick of his Insane asylum, just north of the peni dling through the mud. The storekeep for months if and claim the}’ can and will remain out "vaatus externus” without feeling pain tentiary, aud has never been seen Th«* He.ln Haters. ers sit outln their <qx.*n booths, aud the necessary to win. women go bareheaded about the streets. "Resin eating.” said a south Georgln and the joyful Inspiration to thus illu since by the penitentiary officials or In the houses of the rich the still cold dix'tor, "is a habit acquired by the minate bls courage seized him. The necessary pin was In the lapel bis employers His dlBappearanoe MOONSHINERS KILL. behind the closed panels Is often more Cracker settler» who live In the neigh of bls fatigue jacket. Ruthlessly he wat a myet-r. until a few days after Intense than that outside In the sun borhood of a turpentine «till. The resin Hpecial to the Guard. shine, where the air Is stirring. The they use fsu't the bard, shiny resin of sift the front of his breeches leg from ward Il was discovered that he bad and public buIldlDgs are equal commerce, but lias beeu dipped out of pocket to knee, then his drawers till ruu away with «5uo or «600 of the Hove N ashville , Tenn, July 20.—A deputy collector of in schools the cooking caldron at an early stage the front of the tblgb was exposed to ly frigid. ’s money. It seems that ternal revenue was killed and two of his deputies woun- “It seemed to me that the only warm of the prix t hh , and when It cools It can the wondering gaze of the Indians company Bfuniugtou bad instructed the pur ded -------- in the mountains today . by moonshiners. • A largo things In Japan were the babies, who be kneaded between the fingers like gathered close around. Then dramat chaser of a large order of stoves to looked llko bundles of gayly colored wax. The backwoods resin eater will ically exhibiting the pin, an affair of make payment to him, which the force is being sent out to overtake and arrest them if pos crape, their round beads covered by bite off an liuniense chunk and chew It an Inch and a sixteenth, he readied sible. knit caps. They slumber peacefully placidly until it dlsapix’ars. The heat for a flat stone and drove the harmless purchaser did, and the money, tucked down tlu-lr mothers’ backs. The of the mouth keeps it fairly soft, but If bit of wire down to the head in the amounting to the above figures, was OREGON DEPUTY. attempt to keep warm In winter Is not tlx* chewing becomes too deliberate It unresisting muscle. Ills handsome not turned over to the company. From Salem Bennington went to entirely a*mod* rn Improvement,’though is apt to ’set,' as they say, and cement face was as unclouded as when he Hpeolal to the Guard. it goes with western civilization. The the victim's jaws together tn a grip of helped to haze bls first plebe. Montana. The other day he wrote to The red men nodded approvingly, a former friend in Eugene that he was S pringfield , Ill, July 20.—The Head Consul of the Koreans do it very thoroughly, the Chi Iron. grunted, looked wise and sat down on goiug to do better, but those who "On one occasion a big, rawlioned nese to a certain extent. Tlie Japanese, Modern Woodmen of America has appointed J W Sim as a race, continue to scorn It as they backwoodsman who used to hang tbelr haunches. They had seen some mons deputy for the state of Oregon. always have done, and this is merely around a still I operated came rushing thing new, but wanted something more know hie record have no faith in his one of a hundred examples which prove Into my little office, clutching his face ' convincing. Farrow realized tills and word. He has promised that before, DEFICIT $2,000,000. that the Japanese are still true to their In both hands and making a horrible ’ was In the seventh heaven of despair but it seems he is a natural crlmiual, traditions In their dally life aud as yet gurgling noise lu his throat. ’What on as he smilingly pulled out the pin aud and is bound to be caught again at KpecUl to the Guard. little affected in the ordering of their earth is the matter?’ I asked In alarm. held it aloft for Inspection. some crooked w’ork. lloNoi.ui.t , July 20—The reports to tho treasury show homes by the Ideas adopted from the 'Ilis rosum’s sot.’ said another Crack 'fo show tlie white feather meant In bexninuton ’ s crimes . er. who brought up the rear. I was non that hostile country insubordination a deficit of $2,000,000 for the first biennial period. The west” Bennington came to Eugene from plused at first, but finally grasped the and treachery. Involving Farrow's people are considerably worked up over the matter. fact that tlx* man hail been chewing a ' mysterious death. It was a moment to Tacoma in 1894. Being handsome and NOVEL CURES. monstrous slab of resin and liad try a »oul—and to fry it. The lleuten- of a pleasing address, he soon became Unique Methods Employed to Over«* thoughtlessly MISSIONARIES TO INDIA. suspended operations 1 ant whispered to his trusted sergeant: a lavorita with bi» acquaintances and come Certain lliseuses. long enough to allow It to solidify and “I am going to take a desperate chance. became quite prominent in religious Hpecial to the Guard Freezing. baking. Illuminating, tor- damp Ids teeth like a vice. We finally I am going to shoot myself through circles. He asjoclated with the beet turing. frightening and bruising are pried bls mouth open with a chisel and the bead with my revolver, but you N ew Y ork , July 20.— Missionaries sailed from here fori among the accepted ways of curing cer- , broke a couple of molars in the opera- stand beside your horse, and just an people in town aud it was rumored st India today to inaugural« trades-schools. tain diseases, says a writer In the Phil i tion. Next day 1 saw him chewing Instant before I shoot you tire your the time of bis arreet that he was en adelphia Times. For example, the bak | again.”—Exchange. rifle, yell ‘Si-wash!’ mount and make gaged to be married to one of Eu DRY DOCK FOR MANILA. ing cure: When one lias a well devel off through tlie woods as fast as you gene’s prominent young ladles. Ou oped rheumatism, lie Is placid lu a spe The White Shark. can ride. Don’t forget to Are before I 1 the evening of December 22, 1894, be Bptcial to the Guard. cies of stove and the crystals of uric was arrested at Springfield by Deputy The shark of sharks, the real "man do, else I Bliall be a dead man.” are literally melted out of his body. I enter" and the one most dreaded, is Sitting upon a jagged rock, he ex Constable J J Poill for the crime of H avana , .Inly 20.—The Spanish dry dock is to be re acid Another odd euro once tried for the white shark. This variety reaches plained to the Indians what he was rheumatism was burial In damp, n length of 35 feet and a weight of about to do, and with great delibera forgery, several checks on local moved to Manila. warm clay. The first rheumatic burial 2.000 pounds. Its head Is long and tion and some fine theatricals be cock banks had been forged at different J! a took place at Menominee, Mich. The flat, and the snout far overhangs the ed the pistol and placed tlie muzzle times previous to his arrest, and tba treatment was not n rucccss , and this mouth. Its six rows of teeth are sharp against Ills temple. The Indians were officers traced the crime to him. A HARD STIKE. DEATH OF S. D. HOLT. form of cure lias been given up. At the meetingof the circuit court ns lancets and notched like saws. Its wrought up to a high pitch. They had The freezing cure: This was first in mouth Is very large, so that one has in March, 1895, the grand Jury found never seen a man shoot himself through a Another Pioneer Passed to the Could This Reference Be to troduced by a Swiss doctor, l'nul llur- been known to cut a man’s body com the head and live. Surely here was ••a true bill” agaiuat Bennington on deyront He placed his patients in Eugen« Sheet? pletely In two at a single snap of Its Great Beyond. sheets Immersed In Ice water, packing cruel Jaws ami another to swallow one the bravest of all brave leaders. They six different counts. On March 14th would follow him through hell. he was sentenced by Judge Fullerton the patient all about with crushed lee. Ko(«u* Journal, at a gulp. Near Calcutta one of these The sergeant, unnoticed, fired his ri to serve a term of ten years in the pen Ually Guar J July 20 This treatment Is today used In ty phoid sharks was seen to swallow a bullock's fle, Ids "Sl-wash!” woke the echoes of Have you noticed the fellow who l- fever cases. The death of Rainuel 1» Holt oc itentiary aud was taken to Nalem tbs head, horns and all. Shoshone and Bitter Root, and the clat next day. polio always making au uproar ab >ut Or tlie patient Is plunged Into an lee curred at his residence, corner of Ni.nh Prom the stomach of another a bull's witter bath The treatment paves many hide was taken entire, and the sailor ter of his horse’» hoofs rang down the and (’Uarnsltoii streets, last nlgi at <>f hie worthy uoutemporar.ee wil'o Just before comiDg to Eugene Ben ( ¡ear Water as far as Fort Lapwai. :.g fever above 105 degrees Ilves 1* and aneaklugly purloining fiou t 9:44 o'clock aflet a long Illness from nington had completed a term of tbre» who made the discovery Insisted that ” Si-wasb? ” The Indians knew wbat u brought down by these gaslrllls. The deceased was a highly column* of tile pa|>er vorue of til« tree I hu* rmal—08 2-5 degrees— in the bull hail been swallowed whole that cry meant. In less time than It years in the Washington »fate peni means to nnd nil except the hide had been di takes to tell ft Farrow was alone. Ills tentiary, to where he was eent for for res peeler I citizen and Ills frleuils ell ured origination«, which he «»ou«- less than h u minutes. gested. From the stomach of another forces had scattered to the four winds. gery, from Tacoma. In the summer of oyer the county are numerous. He tlcally ibinka no one could ever think Neither of these modes of treatment was a consistent member of the Cum ol? If you have not, juat lay in wait actually freezes one. A physician of w.i taken a lady's workbox, filled with In the course of a few hours all were 1891 he secured »400 on a »3000 draft be berland l’resbyterlaa church, and was for him, for tie la abroad and from Parts, M Flgeau, Introduced In 181X1 an the usual contents, scissors and all. It united again, bat the courage test was had forged, but bls ffienda settled the Is commonly the white shark which a man who always attended strictly time to time you will hear him preach ammonia vn|H>r method, which really follows the v* ss< I at sea day, after day not renewed. Twenty-two years after this exciting matter and he wae not arraated. froze tlx* patient. The liodv was placed on the aubjecl of plagiarlxiu in Ills pa to his own business, never bothering ' lu the fall of 1891 the Tacoma police ami week after week. Incident, on a certain evening In 1900, per, but be boldly retralna fiom prac In a chamber Into which certain chem I himself with oth, r people's atlairs traced the forgery of a check for «120 to Farrow occupied a box In the Madison icals were Introduced. Ammoula gas, Lanahtpr. Hamuel l>ook Holt was born 70 years ticing aa tie preacliee. It la Intereating, by sudden evaporation, then produced Square Gardea when Buffalo Bill’s BeuniuRton, which resulted in hi* “’ Laughter Is a positive sweetness of Wild West was in full blast Chief rest, oonvictlon aud sentence as above ago In Green county, Fast Tennessee, indeed, to oluxTve the peculiar methode intense cold, nnd the blood In the body life: but. like good coffee, It should lie Joseph, the celebrated commander of stated. No doubt the fellow is guilty lu the spring of 1846 lie moved to of thia gentleman. He aoiuetluiva geta lost most of Its heat, M. Flgeau’» method did uot meet well cleared of deleterious substance the Nez I’ercea, whom Farrow had cap of other crimes of which we have no Andrew county, Missouri, where he up in print In ill* Blind'» eye, »*u>e enlisted in the quartermaster depart very flaming ornament to the editorial with success, Some of his patients before use. Ill will nnd mallet* and the tured 22 years previously and whom | knowledge. desire to wound are worse than chico ment of tlie army and served during page, which he tenderly waleliee to succu mlx-d to tin* drastic measures. ry B< tween a laugh and a giggle there he had not seen In the Interim, led a wild, whooping, yelling, screeching INJURED IN A RUNAWAY. the hostilities with Mexico. At th* aee that no obacure contemporary »hall aud the practice was abandoned. is the width of the horizons. I could niob of painted Indians out Into the either appropriate or mangle with •nd of eighteen months he returned to sit all day and listen to the henrty and arena for a dash around the circle. The Wheel Problem. Fort Lsavensworth. lu the summer eclMora without credit to the exaltad But the charge was Interrupted—cut Mrs. Emma Neet, of Zion, yuite Which, at any given moment. Is mov heartsome ha. ha. of a lot of bright origtuaiur. Ttrla ia well enough. He of 1648, he assisted In the erection of ing forward faster—the top of a coach and jolly people, but would rather be short When Joseph reached the curve should have proper credit, for it 1» Badly Hurt. shot than be forced to stay within ear near the Madison avenue end of the Fort Kearuey, on the Platte river, and wheel or the bottom? In 1649 went to Fort Larimer, where quite probable that lie lost sleep and The answer to this question seems shot of a couple of silly gossips. Cul amphitheater, he pulled bls horse sharp be was employed until the spring of labared hard to perfect the article. And simple enouglx. l»ut probably nine per tivate that part of your nature that is ly to the right cutting across the first Special to the G casd . G obhem , Or, July 20.—Thi* morning 1850. In June of that year Mr Holt he al»o *b uld return the courtaay, but sons out of ten. asked at random, quick to six* the mirthful side of things, file of warriors In most dangerous fash so you shall be enabled to sbed many was employed In ferrying emigrant* lie aeldoui d*Mw. Hts whole i>aper 1» would give the wrong reply. It would of life’s troubles, ns the plumage of the ion. In a mad gnllop he poked bls about 10 o’clock, Mrs Emma Neet, of acmes the North l’lalte. In Meplember, usually made up front the column» of appear at first sight that the top and bird sheds the rain. But discourage charger s head Into an arena box Zion, was badly Injared in a runaway •tralghtened up In his stirrups, held be went to California and engaged In other paper», and you may often read bottom must be moving at the same all tendencies to seek your amusement out bls hand and cried: “How! How! Just above the Coast Fork bridge on rate—that Is. the speed of the carriage. long articles reprinted verbatim with mining on the Middle Fork of ths But by u little thought it will be dis at tin* expense of another’s feelings or How:” The old fellow had caught the road to Pleasant Hill and Dexter. American river, but in January, 1*51, out credit from the very paper he covered that the bottom of tlie wheel In nught that Is Impure. It was Goetlie sight of FaMow, and nothing could Mrs Neet was carrying the mail In » returned Io Missouri by way of Pana alur*. Gentlemen, It you »leal, »wlj*e Is In fact, by the direction of Its me* who said, "Tell mo wliat a man laughs prevent him from riding up to salute ma, He uow engaged In agriculture or purloin from other p*|»ra, don't »ay ttou around its axis, moving backward. nt and I will read you his character." bls captor of 1878. It was a dramatic single rig for her busband, who ha» Incident—New York Tress. until 1852, when he came to Oregon, anything. It doesn't require the aid In an opposite direction to that w hich the contract for carrying It between The First Millionaire. arriving August 29, 18>2, but three of a teleaco|>e to i*ee that thoea that the carriage Is advancing and is con Goehan aad Dexter, and while coming Who was the first millionaire? Solo Bndaet. mouths thereafter returued to Mis- complain moot are the very on«» who sequently stationary in space, while credit lee». Now observe and aee If thia the point on top of the wheel Is mov mon? But const down to earth In mod The origin of the word "budget,” down the hill near the J D Wilson eonrl, purchased a band of cattle and la uot the general rule. ing forward with the double velocity ern tluiea Solomon's wealth was fic meaning an estimate of government place, the horse became unmanageable brought them to this slate, settling on of Its ow u motion around the nils and tion. like that of Cnesns, Mklas and revenues and expenses. Is thus explain the farm now owned by E P Coleman and started to run. The rig wa* over ths si*eed at which the carriage moves. the rest. Terhaps you remember Pope’s ed: Court Hoose Items. in ths vicinity of Coburg, where be re lines— Almost from time Immemorial It was turned, throwing Mra Neet violently sided until 1675, when he took up hie When II ijdns dirs. * theuMnJ lights attrnd Flower Harden* of «he Sea. the custom In England to put the esti | to the ground. She sustained aevere Th« WTlt.T sh. . Uvinf. asrsd s cntuHr rtkt residence In Eugene. J F. Holt of nui % • mates of receipts and expenditures pre The s*a bat its flower gardens, but Johu Hopkin* was generally known sented to parliament in a leather bag. injuries to her back and hip», Joss, California, a brother, aud Mrs the blooms are not on plants as they Jane McCartuey, of Podaville, Oregoo, are on the land. It is the animals of as "Vulture” Hopkins from his rapa the Word ¡Sidgct l<elng thus borrowed luckily no bones were broken. that make the gardens, the cious method of acquiring money. He from the old Norman word l>ougette. A na T Hat.d-aker and Geo W the a sister, survive him, B R Holt, an Shortly after the accident Mrs C * corals of the tropical waters particu was the architect of his own fortune, which signifies a leather purse. Curi ili- I *»ker to Mary M Miller 160 acres other brother, residing at Harrisburg dying worth »1,500,000 in 1732. — New Parker happened along and assist*) ously enough, the word has p * *sed back larly making a display of floral beauty York Press. in <i 1 * • r 6 w, «443. having died recently. again Into France from England.—New the injured lady into her buggy that fairly rivals the gorgeous color M ri» Howard to George Hiuilh laud Mr Holt was married to Miss Ange York Tribune. ing and delicate grace presented by W IIII bk to Hear of It. brought her to this place where eha i’ lins Wilkins, daughter of Mr aud Mrs ■ ' 17 s r S w, «¡0 land flowers. So closely do ft >y resem A Methodist critic, wishing to put under the care of Mr and Mrs A L M Wilkins, In March, 1667. Two V . «I le f Powell to Charles Rtueke ble plant blooms that It is hard to be 'T love company.” said a local Mrs. hl* bishop "tn a hole.” or a* Dr Wil daughters were tsiru to them, one et 156 75 acres lu Ip 18 its w, «.M00. lieve that they are wholly animal lu liam Everett would say. "to deposit Partington. “It makes things bright Roney. them dying In her Infancy and the organization. Dr. Blackford says that lively—It breaks the anatomy.”— The horse kept on runniDg and ba» Hi a i>.ville Times: Mr and Mrs among the coral gardens there are him In a cavity." asked In open meet and New York Sun. other, Mrs I.inula Lay lord, died in Fr»< k "kllliuan and Mrs Hugh Field, fishes of curious forms and flashing ing w better or not the bishop came to not been located at this time. ISM. the conference In a Pullman car. The deceased was a respected m»n - are rusticating at Belknap Springs Mr cokrs darting about. Just as the birds “Yes.” the bishop cheerfully replied. From a cliff 1.000 feet high one with Only a few Racine buggise left, but tier of Npeocer Butte l,<**1ge No, v Ol> Gro Coshov took them up there XA’ed and butterflies dart about plant gar "Do you know any easier way 7’ Roe- dear vision can see a ship at a dte- motber cm will be hew Jane*) F b F, of this city. den» ou laud.—Chicago Chronicle. il« aday. tance of 42 miles. tou Christian Register. t Report. O O o o o Mil I 1 . . -a T»W| b « • W-._ 14 ; bTkiKIN UK & WHICrHT o The s s TOR E BAfUf if y tains, Al A Hou* stable but« I. eh»rq Ur th« c Fo •ere, ltd torn hah lnqc Di « All I I I 1 2 1 1 1 1 ] 1