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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1934)
The Weather Forecast: L'nsettled with rain tonlfht and Tuesday. Moderate teniptra turc. Highest yesterday - ...0 Lowest this morning 41 Medford Mail Tribune WINNER Pulitzer Award FOR 1934 Twetitv-ninth Year MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1934 No. 182. Kim mwm As HUGE FREIGHTER Bjgt d DAMAGED WHEN iBSfi DRIVEN ASHORE By PAUL MALLOS. WASHINGTON. D. C . Oct. 32. An ether thing president Roosevelt ha In mind for business Is the Idea of financing relief expenses on a practical basis. Don't raise your eyebrows If he aoon announces a plan of selling i from door to doo.' a bond issue which will fully cover the. relief outlay. That is, you will buy a bond, like a vlc- , tory or liberty I bond, the pro ceeds of which will budgetry requirement iri other word, the care of the needy. In such cir- eumstances. few people who have j money could refrain from buying. H i would be a patriotic duty. j Under such circumstances the ordl- nary government budget could be bal anced. The new deal could be put on a bankable basis. Confidence in govern ment securities would be re-etsabllsh-d firmly. The limit of feared excels wolud be defined. I Guy Conner Aboard Floridian With 31,000 Boxes Of Medford Pears On Test Trip To East Coast Ports. Paul Mail on pay the excels It seems to be Mr. Roosevelt's own Idea, growing out of the conferences he has been holding with business men. Few have found any objection to It, but the White House apparently wants to analyze it befor speaking publicly. . The unnotloed campaign of the home loan crowd la an obvious and not a very good experiment In that direction. They have decided to ring doorbells to solicit financial support (at 3 per cent Interest) for the home expansion theory. It is supposed to be a test for the grander Idea of selling . new deal bonds to . the public. The experiment probably "will fall. Few people care whether building is expanded, but the Imagination of the country could easily be swayed by a program of buying relief bonds. On the private desk of Donald Richberg lies an unopened confiden tial report. It was placed there a wee' ago. Only three or four persons In the highest Inner circles have had a peep at It. 8 ptly wlllrerl Jpshrdlucmfwycmrre The report was drafted by one of the keenest analysts in the new deil family. When Mr. Richberg peruses It he will find It packed with figures and Jacts. Some of the report will not be pleasant reading for one who has play ed so large a role In NR as Mr. Rich berg. The subject of the report Is thit Inner administration bugaboo the consumer. Its tightly-written pages contain the first full length study of the consumer under the new deal. M This report contains more than a mere analysis of the burning con sumer problem. One conclusion Is that the income groups between MOOD and 110.000 a year form the greater part of the consuming public. Tills group is said to comprise between a third and a half of all gainfully em ployed workers. Their purchases ac count for two-thirds of all retail buy ing. The report asserts the consumer has been neglected; that his Interests have too often been subordinated to thoM of business and labor. It li not sparing In Its criticism of some prominent new dealers. The charge Is made that consumer boards f AAA and NRA have been thrown for a loss on vital policy Issues. Guy Conner Aboard Guy Conner, Medford fruit man, Is aboard the freighter Floridian which was blown ashore near the Columbia river bar last evening. Conner was making the trip to the east In order to make tests and observe the condition of a large shipment of Medford pears In the refrigerated hold of the vessel. The Floridian later pulled off the beach and rode out the storm but there was much anxiety here last night due to radio report that 8.0&. signals were being sent out from the ship. rajLEi ' o 17 SuBKl M Scott and Campbell Take Lead in Air Derby "PRETTY BOY" SHOT, KILLED BY FEDERAL OFFICERS ON FARM FIGHTS 10 LASHREATH Slaying Of Notorious Bandit Ends Months Long Chase Adam Richetti, Chief Lieutenant Is Captured. ASTORIA, Ore.. Oct. 33. (AP) With three of her crew of 32 men re ported badly hurt, the freighter Flori dian made her way up the Columbia river to Portland today after having suffered a terrible beating yesterday by a gale off the mouth or the wide stream. ASTORIA, Ore., Oct., 22. (AP) The freighter Floridian, pounded and battered in one of the wildest storms to hit this coast In years, crossed Into the mouth of the Columbia river at 9 a. m. today en route to Astoria for survey of damage. The big ship ran Into the midst of the sudden storm before dawn yesterday as she left the river on her way to the Atlantic seaboard. Her master. Captain George John son, flashed a distress signal when the 80-mtle wind caught the 337 foot freighter and carried it help lessly toward the beach. Escapes Sand After grounding once and damag ing the rudder, the Floridian was worked off the sand and managed to ride out the raging gale. It was impossible yesterday to send aid to the stricken vessel be cause of the force of the gale and the height of the sens. The coast guard cutter Redwing, which tried several times to put out for the Floridian. failed because of the heavy seas that swirled around the bar at the mouth of the Columbia The Floridian carried a cargo oi 5,000 tons of wheat and 31,000 boxes of pears. She Is owned by the Soutn Atlantic Steamship company and is under charter to the Kerr Giffora company of Portland and the Pin nacle Packing company of Medford. The terrific gale which damaged the Floridian. also caused thousands of dollars in damages to various localities along the Oregon coast. Including Astoria, Tillamook ana Seaside, as well as delayed train service and disabled power and com munication lines Inland. Duck Hunter Drowns The death of Chris Paetow. 26, of Astoria, whose rowboat overturn ed while he was duck hunting, was the only fatality reported. Several were Injured by falling power lines and toppling lumber piles. ' Hundreds of plate glass windows in Astoria stores were broken dur- ( Continued on Page Seven) F.AST LIVERPOOL. O., Oct. 22. Charles 'Pretty Roy" Floyd was shot and killed today by federal department of Justice agents. MelTln Purvis, head of the Jus tice department Invest (gators, here, said the agents found Floyd on a farm eight miles north of here. In Purvis' party were four fed eral agents and four other offi cers. When Floyd was cornered, the agents opened fire, the shots finding their mark In Floyd's bod. The body was brought by the agents to the Sturgls morgue here. Gets Quick Sentence WASHINGTON. Oct. 23. (AP) The department of Justice announced today that federal agenta had snot and mortally wounded Chartea (Pret ty Boy) Floyd near East Liverpool, Ohio. . Meager details coming into the de partment aatd that Floyd was being brought to East Liverpool. The desperado escaped local officers in a gun fight near Wellavllle. Ohio, when Adam Richetti, hla chief lieu tenant, was captured. The fatal wounding of Floyd ended one of the most sensational criminal chases in the history of the country, a pursuit that had lasted for months and spread over hundreds of miles of j territory. Full details of the shooting here were not Immediately available at the j Justice department. Only a little I while before the announcement, J. Edgar Hoover, chief of the division of Investigation, told the Associated Press he was not certain that the man believed to have been wounded at about the time Richetti was cap tured was the long-sought "Pretty Boy." Agents, who surrounded Floyd, re ported that the outlaw exchanged shot for shot until he was hit. Officials ssld reports were that Floyd apparently would live only a short time. An ambulance was sent to the scene to rush the wounded man to East Liverpool. Hoover said that the federal agents began an Intensive search for Floyd Immediately after their arrival at Wellsvllle, where Richetti was captured. Lesa than 24 hours after his an rest in Detroit as the writer of an extortion note received by Edsel Ford demanding $5,000 under threat of death, Edward Llckwala (above) wn Indicted, arraigned, pleaded guilty and waa sentenced to 10 years in the Leavenworth federal prison. (Associated Press Photo) Teleeraph wires vibrated last weet with this message to democratic na tional headquarters from a western state: "Campaign going splendidly. Sena tor safe. Congressmen safe. However, understand you have some mons? there. We want our share." B'.and Attorney-Oeneral Cummlngs never loses his savior falre at his lengthy press conference. His poiss was never better Illustrated than whn two persistent newsmen tackled him the other day. One wanted publication of '.he names of all politicians who hava In terceded with the Justice department mlng clemency for gangsters. It is known the department has an In terning file of such sppeaJs. The other asked Cnmmlngs to sut his views on payment of ransom t' kidnapers by families or friends oi the victims. Legally, the payment of such ransom may be construed as en couraging kidnaping But Cummlngs turned aside both embarrassing questions by Jotting them down as excellent topics for dls cuaslon at his forthcoming crime con ference. He then topped this by asking the newsmen to appear there ani state their views. The on'.v three new dcslers ahJ have money (at iesst two of them hsvel secretly purchased a farm Jour nsl about a week ago It will be op erated hereafter as a new deal pub lication. Incidentally, Bcrnarr MvFadden Is h.uit tr burst out with a nations! political weekly It will be on nw ttanda the first of the year 'WIDOW'S' BITE IS FATAL FOR CHILD KLAMATH FALLS, Oct. 22.JP Blossom Case bier. B, 0f Merrill, died here late yesterday, believed the vic tim of a black widow spider. The child lingered 10 days in a semi-conscious condition. Dr. A. A. Soule. the attending phy sician, said he was convinced the girl had been bitten by a spider. Before she became Incoherent. Blossom told the doctor she was bitten by a 'big black bee that ran sway. The spider has been prevalent In Klcmath county this year but this was the first fatality. S KLAMATH BASIN KLAMATH FALLS, Oct. 23. (AP) Strong gales, rain and snow lash ed the Klamath basin country over the week-end, leaving the region blanketed In a light fall of snow this morning. Temperature was be low freezing and snow continued to come In flurries today. It waa the most Intense blow ol the season. Although no damage has been reported, potato digging has been seriously handicapped by the soaking received by the fields. Ran gers In the outlying mountain sta tions reported heavy snow. TREE FLATTENS SCHOOL HOUSE ' Blown over by the strong wlnds that awopt through the valley Satur day night, a huge black oak tree fell on and completely demolished the Pankey school house In the northern section of Sams Valley. ' James E. Bdmlston of the Medford Neon Sign Co., brought word of the damage to Medford, having spent the week end at his nearby ranch. He said the structure was smashed far beyond repair by the falling tree, which had stood clow bestde the school house. The small frame structure with Its single room was one of the oldest school buildings In southern Oregon, and was attended by four students, who may be transferred to the Sams Valley school, six miles away, after a meeting of the Pankey school board today. STEIWER ADVISES LEGION AGAINST National Convention Told Prestige Would Be In creased By Waiting Until Country In Better Shape. Forgotten $1000 Grows to $3727 After 34 Years MONROE CITY, Mo., Oct. 33. (AP) By forgetting ha had $1,000. I. N. Wright, of Loa Ang eles, Calif., made 93,738. Thirty-four years ago he de posited the 91.000 In a bank at alesburg, 111. Wright forgot about the account until recently when a statement of account reached htm after being .forwarded through several of his old ad dresses. The statement showed he had a balance of 3,72B. MIAMI. Fla., Oct. 33. (AP) Unit ed States Senator Frederick Stelwer (R.. Ore.) told the Lelon 1U rep utation for ''disinterested and pat riotic service presents a question whether this or : vent ion should take an unequivocal stand for the Im mediate cash payment" of the vet erans' bonus. "The Legion can, with the utmost propriety, stand vigorously for program of Justice to Its disabled comrades, but adjusted compensation affecta all alike. I am doubtful ot the ethics of able-bodied men mak ing a demand for immediate cash payment of claims not yet due when many of them can well afford to wait for payments until the certifi cates mature" in 1045, the senator said In the prepared text of his address. Ask Cash When Posalnle Senator Stelwer proposed the Leg ion "consider the advisability ot standing for early payment and asking only that our government meet this obligation at a time when It will result In the minimum bur den to the people of the country A position of this kind would Increase the prestige of the Legion. There is much reason to believe (Continued on Page Seven) W. C. T. U. CONCLAVE Delegates to the state W.C.T.U. convention which opens here tomor row evening, have already started ar riving In Medford. and will attend the meetings and conferences sched uled for Tuesday. A large number of Medford people besides members of the organization, are expected to attend the banquet tomorrow evening at the Methodist church, at which Miss Helen L. Byrnes of Evans ton. 111., general sec retary of the Young People's Branch, will be guest speaker. DELAYED BY RAIN SUVA, Fiji Islands, Oct. 22 (AP) With heavy rains continuing un abated. Sir Charles Klngsford-Smltn late tonight poatponed until Wed nesday the resumption of his trana Paclflo flight from Australia to Cal ifornia. Albert park, where be landed bis plsne, Lady Southern Cross, Sunday after a perilous 1.860 mile night from Brisbane, Australia, waa under water tonight. Sir Chsriea said there was little possibility of a takeofl In the morning, even if the rain did stop soon. Wednesday morning he and his navigator, Captain P. O. Taylor, plan to fly to Naselal beach, where the plsne will be refueled and then start about noon on the lonely 3,107 mile trip to Honolulu. 4 BOY DRAGGED TO DEATH WHEN SADDLE SLIPS THE DALLES, Ore.. Oct. 32. (AP) Tobtss Joyce, 15. waa fatally In jured last night when he was drag ged by hts pony after the saddle had slipped and swung underneatn the horse. Young Joyce, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Joyce of the upper Wapinttta valley, had put too large a saddle on the pony and had gone after some cows. When he did not re turn his parents started a sesren. The body, with the fri?htend pony tmding nearby, waa found la 11 MANILA, Oct. 33 (AP) The Ma nila Bulletin today listed eleven dead and one missing In the sec ond severe typhoon here this montn, and estimated the damage in Caga van, Camarlnes Sur, and Laguna provinces amounted to 11.300.000. The toll from the storm of Octo ber 16 remains at approximately 80. Thousands still are homeless. The insular legislature late today voted AOO.OOO for relief for the ty phoon victims. THE DALLES. Ore , Oct. 33 WTl Three fthelton. Wash residents wre treated here today for Injuries suffer ed in an automobile accident tnl momma st Rown. west of her-?. They were Mr. and Mrs. George Bur- iP0 4 toen f$a, goberW 500,000 POUNDS CHEESE SOLD TO GOVERNMENT PORTLAND, Oct. 33. (F) An nouncement was made by Carl Heb erlach, sales head of the Tillamook association of the sale to the govern-; ment by his organization of 500.000 Ids, j of cheese, which makes a total sale to federal authorities this year of 1,000, , 000 lbs. i Roosevelt Speaks at 7:30 o'clock on Community Chest WASHINGTON. Oct. 33 (AP) President Roosevelt will speak briefly over the air tonight in opening the annual mobilization of human needs. On the same program at 10:30 p. m.. Eastern Standard Time, (7:30 Medford time) will be New ton D. Baker, chairman of the campaign to raise funds for the community chest. T WILLIAM G, STEEL, FATHER OF CRATER CALLEDjJY DEATH Funeral Services Will Be Tuesday Spent Much Of Life Insuring Scenic Won der As National Park. BRITISH PAIR DIE E AFTER SMASH-UP Mollisons Out With Engine Trouble Turner And Pangborn In Third Place Only 13 Planes Left In. LITTLE GIRL VICTIM OF FRANKENSTEIN MURDER LOS ANGELES, Oct. 33. (AP) As strange a story- In Its MacAbre tragedy as the nineteenth century hotror tale of "Frankenstein" was disclosed today by police Investigat ing the killing of an 1 1-year old girl and the critical wounding ol her 7-year old sister and their nurse maid. For years, Robert Perea, 40, had lived in almost complete blindness over on the east side of the city. The neighbors knew him only aa "Robert" and although they regard ed him as eccentric, they believed him harmless. Perea had amused the children of the neighborhood with hla constant tinkering with inventions with which he planned to establish magnetic contact with the spiritual world. Among those who regarded Peres m a friendly neighbor . Lupe Perez, a grammar school atudent. numerous occasions to look at the strange contraptions the man had constructed, hts hands guided by almost sightless eves. Yesterday, for some unexplained reason, police reported, Perea ran berserk with a revolver. He shot Lupe to death, wounded the younger sister Concha, In the abdomen and then shot the nursemaid, Mrs. Adeiia Rlnron, 48, In the leg. Police aatd he then ended hli own life. Police said there were no appar ent reasons for . the killing of the young girl, and they were unable to explain why the min's body from his waist up waa covered by cons of copper wire, although they led nowhere. Beneath the desd girl's body, po lice found a contraption of tubular copper which officers said might have ben part of Perea's experi ment to establish magnetic contact wltb t&e intui world, - BEFORE IMS A detailed explanation of the legis lation in congress affecting the grsnt land In Oregon, and the consideration of road building as a national instead of local problem, were brought before the Klwanla club this noon at ti-e, regular luncheon, by Jamea W. Mott, United States congressman from Ore gon's first district. Congressmann Mott explained the origin of the grant land as property turned over to a railroad company for settlement In this section where a railroad was being constructed. Whon the company failed to follow the agreement, the land was placed under the federal government again, all the time remaining tax-free. As a result when Oregon became a state, 64 per cent of the land wis under this grant, and could not be taxed. For this reason, Mr. Mott de clared, land grant states sought fed eral aid to offset this loss from non taxable property. He explained how .Senator Robert N. Stanfleld put a bill through eight years ago. which crested a aa, 000, 000 fund for land grant states, which fund waa used until two years mo, when It became depleted, due to the change of policy of the Interior de partment. Mr. Mott stated that many of the eastern and southern states could see no reason why allowance ahould be msde land grant states, and for that reason It has been difficult to put through legislation concerning them. Congresamsn Mott Is a member of the public lands committee with four democrats, be being the only repub lican member of the group. He com plimented his colleagues on the non partisan, intelligent and fair-minded consideration of the measurea con cerning the land grant amendment, which proposes money be paid these states directly from the United States treasury, with re-lmbursements to the government whenever funds come In from the sale of this land or timber on the land. This, he stated, would make the Income to the state steady and unconditional. He told of obtaining the amend ment to the Taylor grazing bill through congress, which allows this congressional district exemption fwn Its provisions. The Taylor bill repeal ed all homestead laws, leaving such to the discretion of the secretary of Interior, concerning withdrawal of the publlo domain from sale and entry. Being a member of the roads com mlttee. Mr. Mott urged that the fed ; eral government enter Into larger aid 1 of the states. From the two road bills i psssed in tha last congreastonsl ses- slon. Oregon received amounts total i Ing between nine and ten million dol lars. t Mott spoke briefly of the New Deal. the recovery program, and criticism of them. He told the Klwsnlans, "I don't think that the criticism Is legitimate, because most of the republicans in congress supported the legislation. 1 sm somewhat provoked by the stats men t that the measures were advo cated by the majority and opposed by the minority." This evening Mr. Mott will speak In the city hall at Ashland at eight o' clock and at the Rotary club lunch- ean here tomorrow noon. His radio ad dress will be from 6:20 to 8:35 p. m . instead ot ? p. m. ss originally announced. James Stevens sang two numbers at today's luncheon, Lawrence Tib- be it's "Tramp at Sea" and "Ooln to Heaven on a Mule, as sung by Al Jo! son, He was accompanied at t'.ie plano by Sebastian Apollo, and w.ta accorded hearty applause. Frank Hull spoke briefly of the forthcoming Community Chest drive Quests today were J. F. Haws, Den Newbruy, Frank Ferrell and Coun'.y Judge Karl B Day. Olen Arnsplger was program chairman. William Gladstone Steel, United States commissioner of Crater Lake National park for nearly twenty yeara and familiarly known as "the father of Crater Lake," passed away Sunday morning at six o'clock, at the Sacred Heart hospital, where he had been lit for the past month. Past eighty yeara of age, Judge Steel had been In falling health for two years, and during the past two summer seasona had not been well enough to remain at his summer lodge In Crater Lake national park. On February 18, 1000, he waa mar ried In Everett, Washington to Lydla Hatch, who passed away here Novem ber 0. 1933. Judge Steel made his home at tho Medford hotel. As a hobby he kept records of tho origin of the names of places In the United States, and at the time of his death, the collection Included 67,000 such names. Surviving him are hla daughter, Jean Steel, and two nephews, Luther and Raymond Steel of Portland. Funeral services are to be conduct- ed Tuesday afternoon at the Perl Funeral home, with Father Francis W. Black officiating. Pall bearers are to be rangers from Crater Lake na tional park. Interment will be In the Siskiyou Memorial park. Judge Steel, who waa superinten dent of Crater Lake national park from June 11, 1013, to November. 1010, succeeded W. F. Arant to that position. Arant was superintendent from August 1003 until June, 1913. Steel was named commissioner on November 13, 1016. William Gladstone Steel was born In Stratford, Ohio, September 7, By Oscar Leldlng (Associated Press Foreign Staff) MILDENHALL AIRDROME. Eng., Oct. 33. (AP) Burly C. W. A. Scott and Dapper Campbell Black high balled their brilliant Red Comet Into the last 3,176 mile stretch of the Melbourne air derby today out ot Port Darwin, with two Dutchmen four hours behind them and the Americans, Turner and Pangborn, In third place. The record-smashing pacemakers, who sliced a dangerous two-thirds of sit existing England-to-Australia speed records In two daya, four hours, and 33 minutes, limped into Port Darwin on only one engine but repaired It In a few haste-rid den hours and sped on to claim the $60,000 prize at Melbourne, First Fatality The first fatality of the air race occurred today when Harold D. Oil man of Great Britain and his co pilot, Balnea, crashed in flamea in Italy, between Soggla and Bart, ac cording to word reaching the Royal Aero club. Both were burned to death. Last to arrive at Mlldenhall, they were the first to die In the great race. They had been dogged with trouble, first by a foroed landing at Lyon, then hopping to Marseille where engine trouble developed. They were racing for Rome, almost at the tall end of the profession, when the accident occurred. The disaster left only 19 planes competing In the derby out of an original 30. Americans Get Lost Colonel Roscoe Turner and Clyde Pangborn In the I big (Boeing) transport plane had reached Singa pore without mishap and without trouble except for becoming lost over Allahabad, India. They remain ed an hour and 33 minutes at Singapore and raced on after the leaders, 3,084 miles behind. The Dutch team, K. D. Parmen- tler and J. J. Moll, arrived at Ram- (Contlnued on Page Two) NEW YORK, Oct. 32, (AP) While police maintained guard over the uptown home ot Mrs. Gloria Morgan Vsnderbllt, the legal Joust for the custody of her daughter aiorla, was resumed today In sup reme court. The police guard was prompted by the receipt of a letter by Mrs. Vanderbllt which threatened the lite of her 10-year old child, heiress to a huge fortune. Laryngitis which last week pre vented Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney from attending the guardianship hearings had subsided sufficiently today to allow her to testify. Mrs. Whitney contends that Mrs. Vanderbllt la not a fit parent. Mrs, Whitney Is little Oloria's aunt, ana the child Is at present living in her Long Island home. W AA II I NOTON . Oct. 33. (API Senator Robinson of Arkansas, the democratic leader, announced after conference with President Roosevelt today he would Uk the stump In the political campaigns In Indiana, New Mexico WJd WZOtnU) ROSEBURO, Ore,, Oct. 32. (AP) Douglas county corn-hog contract signers at meetings held last week In Canyonvltle, Roseburg and Reeds port, voted 80 to 30 In opposition to continuing - the adjustment pro gram for another year, according to a report by J, Roland Parker, county agent. The vote against the one con tract per farm plsn, for control of all grain and livestock, was 37 to 10. Fifty-nine of the 06 contract signers in Douglas county cast bal lots on the corn-hog contract plan DANIELS DENIESlviLL BE SENT TO NEW POST MEXICO. D. r Oct. 33. (API- United 8lala Ambassador Josfphus DanKla today dtnlfd published re porta that ha was to ba transferred to another post November 3. "Ite news to me.'" the ambassador commented on tha reports, which iwera attributed to local American (Continued oa Pag Two) CALIFOlTPiTS KILLED IN CRACK-UP OAKLAND, Calif., Oct. 33. (AP) The bodies of Robert Duncan of Bakorsfleld and Robert S. Strong of San Marino were found today In their wrecked airplane, which had struck a hillside In A canyon nine miles from Hayward during a heavy rainstorm. The plane had crashed In Dublin canyon, apparently killing the two filers almost Instantly. The plane had not caught fire. LAS VEGAS, Ncv., Oct. 20 Tho Mailnme and I just been visiting "Hoover Dum." That' not a typographical error. It's Hoover tlnm. There must be some justice left among us. Well, you should see it under construction. It will bo finish ed in less than a year, 2J4 years ahead of time. They have done i great job. If they decide to plow under every third dum, they are going to havo' a tough time with this one. Found the best way I ever ivent to Arizona, by a cable and a bucket. The dam grows a foot high a day, that sounds like Oklahoma, weeds. One old boy got fired from down there the other day, and he walked out, he got on a high peak and declared "I hope she leaks." That sounds like a rich Republican's wish to the New Deal. They hope "it leaks." 1 ,t i5iMfiui.f at