Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, December 06, 1899, Image 4

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    THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, December 7, 1899.
New Line of Clothing,
including a Varied Stoek of Fine
GENT.’S OVERCOATS.
SWETTERS !
SUlETTERSI
All Grades, Colors and Qualities.
MACKINTOSHES—The best
Stock in the City. We only
carry First Class Goods.
Headquarters for Buckingham & Heeht
Boots and Shoes.
COHN & CO ■J The Leading Merchants
Fisher that the timber of the Nehalem | pino force and secured their arm», the
I
for we find, notably at the “ Hoxie the entrance shifts or plays between INTEREST IN COAL LANDS.
valley and tributaries will some day rebels supposing Monroe had un army
place,” on Tillamook spit, banks of shells “great gaps of time.”
Nehalem Valley Property Again alone warrant the construction of a rail­ I behind him.
feet in thickness covered by three
But the spectre of a waste basket, for
Commanding Attention.
road thereto, but whether that railroad
Some Observations Upon the several
feet of black soil and sand, those beds of this already too lengthy article looms I William Fisher, of Vernonia, Columbia
will go to Astoria or Portland will de­ WERE FOREST GROVE MEN.
Formations, etc., of Our shells, called “kitchen middens,” or up before me and I must hasten on to a
pend entirely upon the energy, co-oper
county,
thinks
that
portion
of
Oregon
"kitchen refuse,” on the coasts of Den­ conclusion after a word as to the late
The McNamers, Who were Drown­
Bays and Bars.
I will soon become known as a great coal ation and perserverance of the inhabi­ I
mark, Cornwall and Devonshire, and shoaling of Tillamook bar. The winter
ed in the Yukon River.
tants
of
which
ever
city
first
starts
to
also at points along the shores of of 1887-8, in Tillamook, was a remark­ I mining region, as it is now famed tor
[ by an old settler .]
F orest G rove . Or ,Dec. 3 —Miss Alice
build the railroad that Mr. Fisher pro­
i
its
big
timber.
The
United
States
gov
­
France, where similar deposits are found. able one in its meterological history by
M-'Namer, of this place, received word
The sudden shoaling recently of Tilla­
Said " refuse” being the cast offs from the its extreme minimum of rainfall, the ernment, he says, owns a whole town­ poses.
W illiam R eid .
this morning confirming the former re
mook bar naturally brings up before us
ship
which
has
been
reserved
for
settle
­
daily peasts of prehistoric man, whose I stream emptyinginto the bay. remaining
some momentous questions as to its
port i hat her two brothers, Theodore C.
"when,” “who” and “what,” seems to ! comparatively very low throughout the ment since the lines were first run in that
c use, and will it continue to indefinitely
TILLAMOOK WEATHER.
and Con vet ce W , were drowned in the
i portion of Columbia county, many years
have been swallowed up in the shifting ; winter, an unusual lack of rainfall, not­
remain thus, a serious obstruction to our
Yukon river November 11, about -Joo
| ago. This township, known on the
Temperature.
past without leaving even a dream.
withstanding that there was the ordin­
growing commerce, also causing to
Rain­ miles from Dawson, by the ice up.iet-
maps as 4 north, range 4 west, possesses
Maxi-
Mini­
The sandspit of the Columbia we find ary amount of southwest winds and
Spring up theories as back-ground ad­
fall. iog their scow, which was loaded with
Mean.
mum.
mum.
large veins of as good coal as that mined 2
juncts to these questions, concerning the runs due north from its starting point | gales within that period. Now the re­ in Coos county, but its remoteness from
..
0.00 stock. No futher doubt exists. Con
..
53.0
64
...
42
1
..
early forming of our bays and bars, and at Tillamook head, this course being sults of this uncommon state of affairs transportation lines has kept the fields
.. 53.0 .. 0.00 McNamer was 25 years of age, and will
...
42
64
2
..
their probable future, the latter a most somewhat contrary to the direction of! was that it was found in the spring that from being developed. The government 3 .. 59 ... 50
.. 54.1 .. 11.58 tie retnembened by most of the football
serious matter just now to citizens of th ? southerly current, by which it was the bar had shoaled to an alarming de­ price of these coal lands is $10 an acre. 4 .. 60 ... 50 . .. 55.0 .. 0.30 players in Oregon, and was formerly a
49.1 . .. 0.02
Tillamook county. So,along with others, created, seems to have been caused gree. The only company doing the trans­ Several years ago, a corporation pur­ 5 .. 60 ... 39 . .
.. 50.1 .
0.12 member of Pacific university’s first team.
the author is pleased to advance some bv the pushing back of the ocean current, portation business here then (Lienenucher chased a number of acres and proceeded 6 .. 56 ... 45 .
0.90 Theodore C. McNainer was 44 years old,
.
56.1
.
62
...
51
.
7 ..
&
Brown,
of
Astoria)
was
severely
con
­
by
the
vast
volume
of
fresh
water
flow
­
thoughts of his own to-day, as to the
55.1
. O.oo and had been a farmer and experienced
to develop a very fine ledge, which 8 .. 59 ... 52 .
This bay demned by many citizens here for caus­
origin of bays, etc., together with some ing in from the great river.
1.25 stockman in this county for the past 20
. 57.1 .
showed six feet in width at the surface 9 .. 60 ... 55
0 60
history of past shoaling of Tillamook must be one of great age for those ex­ ing w hat was supposed to be false re­ of the ground and widened to 11 feet as 10 .. 57 ... 50 . . 53.1 .
years. Both were born five iniies north
bar and its removal therefrom through tensive timbered flats with deep black ports as to the conditions of the bar to a depth of 40 feet was attained. At that 11 .. 55 ... 51 . . 53.0 . . 0.65 of Forest Grove, and had been residents
.
0
08
59
...
45
.
.
52.0
.
12
..
soils lying within the half triangle be be circulated in order to keep out pos­
the simple working of natural laws.
. 55.1 . . 0.57 of this county continually until their
time, Mr. Fisher says, everybody ex- 13 .. 60 ... 51
0.28 trip to the Klondike the past two years.
The creation of bays may be divided tween Seaside, Skipanon, Young’s river sible competition in the carrying busi- j pected a railroad to l>e built between 14 .. 61 ... 51 . . 56.0 .
an
I
there
abouts
was
certainly
included
ness
of
this
bay,
but
the
writer
of
this
.
53.0 .
1.08
...
49
.
15
..
57
into two classes: First, “Landlocked,”
these
Hillsboro and
Astoria, and
16 .. 52 ... 44 . . 48.0 . . 0.68
as that of San Francisco and Puget in its former basin, but deposits from article, along with others, thought differ valuable coal and timber lands at 17 .. 52 ... 41
.. 46.1 . . 0.04
Quaint Features of Life.
Sound, where points of land or hills that mighty stream covering long ages cntly, and so in an article in the H ead ­ the head of the Nehalem, at once 18 ... 56 ... 48 . . 52.0 . . 2.02
of
time
has
filled
it
in.
Tillamook
spit,
light of April 16 of the latter year,
56
19
...
...
48
.
1.04
.
52.0
.
closely bound the entrance; second, bays
miles
sprung into prominence. Several
Some society girls of Brhylon, Ling
protected by spits of sand from the ocean with a less projecting headland south under the head of "Bar Opinions,” the of the road were graded out from 20 ... 51 ... 44 . . 47.1 . . 0.85
21 .. 54 ... 47 . . 50.1 . . 1.75 Island have formed the Giddy Girls’
and
moderate
inflow
from
the
land,
.
writer
gave
as
a
reason
that
said
shoal
­
swells, to which class all Tillamook
Hillsboro, but the building of the other 22 ... 53 ... 45 .. . 49.1 .
0.34 Darning Club, the avowed object of
bays, including that of the Columbia takes nearly the natural direction of the ing was caused by the usual filling in road down the Columbia river from 23 ... 58 ... 49 .. . 53 1 . . 0.02
which is to keep in order the hosiery of
southerly
winds,
its
be«l
or
“
flats
”
being
effects
of
the
southwest
currents
meeting
river, belong, and hence will be the only
24
...
58
...
46
.
52.0
..
.
0.28
Portland took the wind out of the sails
These gid ly
0.07 their bachelor fl tends
class we need consider to-dav. These pretty well divided between the dark | at the bar with only a minimum amount . , of the Hillsboro projeet. and so the coal 25 ... 61 ... 48 . . 54.1 ..
girls, however, will only darn the socks
60
sediments
from
inland
and
beds
of
sand
|
26
...
...
55
..
1.85
of
extra
freshet
water
for
the
time
of
.
57.1
..
sandspits, however, will have to be
fields were abandoned for the time be­ 27 ... 59 ... 54 .. . 56.1 ..
1.75 of such young tnen as do not smoke,
separated into two classes, those having brought in by tides or blown by the year to offset or washout its natural ing. The upward tendency oftimber in­ 28 ... 57 ... 47 ..
52.0 ..
0.04 drink, play cards or do anything really
a northern entrance or terminus, as winds from the spit, and, as a consc- labors, hence the ocean work prepond­ terests had recently brought the entire 29 ... 56 ... 44 ..
50 0 ..
1.76
50.0 ..
2.55 naughty—the kind of men, in short,
Netarts, Tillamook and the Columbia, quence, we find the sand flats next the erated and the bar was "shoaled.’’ The Nehalem country before the world again, 30 ... 54 ... 46 ..
western
and
the
mud
or
land
deposits
who are perfectly able to darn their own
article
pointed
out
that
under
this
and those permitting a southern en­
Sum..1 730.. ..1429...... 1588 ...... ..22.02 socks.
theory a resumption the next winter of ! and men who have patiently held on to
trance as Nehalem and Nest ticca, dejieiid on the eastern side of the bay.
their timber claims are now on the eve
Mean 57.5 ... 47.5 ..... 52.7 .............0.00
Bui Netarts having but little inflows the average conditions of rain fall and
ing in each case on the near by head­
Theyoung duke of Manchester is mak­
( of being rewarded.
Deeds can be ob.
south
winds,
(the
difference
between
the
S ummary .—Mean temp., 52.7 ; max. ing a copper-riveted donkey of himself.
lands or capes, or submarine extensions of land waters, we find its “flats" com-
I
tained
to
very
fine
timber
lands
at
30
of points of mountains, which, together posed almost exclusively of sand from amount of freshet water flowing over an acre, which Mr. Fisher regards as temp., 64 ; date, 1st and 2qd. Min. When Otero appeared on the stage at
with the winds, control the direction the ocean. Apropos of those deposits in the bar that winter as a minimum sea­ cheap, considering the millions of feet temp., 39; dates, 5th. Total precip. Lyons the other night, the duke ran
and weight ot the inshore ocean currents. our bays. This may be called the pass­ son and an average one he estimated i carried on these hitherto neglected tracts. inches, 22.02; total snowfall inches, down toward her, scrambling among
0; number of days clear, 0; partly the orchestra, and, with clasped hands,
The souther!v moving Japan current ing age of the genus clam, for within a would alone make a stream 500 feet ; —Oregonian.
cloudy. 1 ; cloudy, 29. Dates of frost— implored her for the cigarette she was
along this part of the coast being some few hundred thousand of years, more or wide, 5 feet deep, and flowing rapidly for
Light, 0. Killing, 0. Dates of hail, 0 ; smoking She gave it to him. he drew
miles off shore, it leaves eddvs or ■ less, even without artifical aid, our bays three months), would sweep the bar
RAILROAD TO NEHALEM.
sleet, 0 ; thunder storms, 21st; auroras, two puffs ecstatically, then extinguished
irresponsible currents on its shore edge, will be filled with sediment, burying up clear of its obstruction which it did as
0. Prevailing wind—Direction, S. W.
subject to being moved in any direction, the clam, relegating it to a bit of ancient we all know, for there h«*s been no com­
it, placed the butt in bis card case, threw
Coal of That Region Contains Too
agreeable to the course of the prevailing r i geographical history a petrified fossil for J plaint of the matter since until this fall,
C apt . J oseph J. D awson ,
a kiss to the Spanish girl and went out,
Much
Sulphur
to
Make
Line
Pay.
w
hen
nature
’
s
work
at
the
bar
seems
to
winds, which winds, being southerly in ( future spectated professors of that time!
Voluntary Observer.
leaving the audience in an uproar, The
winter and northerly in summer, drive . to ponder wisely upon. In that day, the ' got out of balance again by reason of the
j duke needs a guardian.
The following letter apt»eared in the
south
west
w
inds
starting
up
unusually
streams
flowing
into
our
bavs
will
Tillamook
Bay
Improvements.
respectively the currents in those direc­
! Oregonian:
tions. The sandspits ot the Columbia, noisely meander through beautiful sea strong for the time of year. The south­
For wavs that are dark the ’‘Heathen
"I notice the article of Willi» ni Fish­
The Portland Chamber of Commerce
Tillamook and Netarts bays arc doubt, level prairies on their way to the ocean. west winds of September in velocity ac-
Many of
er, of Columbia county, Oregon, in your is not selfishly and exclusively interested Chinee*' still holds his own.
less caused, first, by the elevation from The prepotideracy of the heavy south i cording to weather bureau at Portland
the Cninamen who have been working
paper this morning regarding the coal in Portland.
It
works
for
the
entire
beating
all
records,
the
accompanying
the ocean depths, at some remote geo- I current over that of the north or sum-
beds there’n. I speak from experience Northwest, It has indorsed and will j on the Mexican Central railway and who
logical |>criod those huge and far ex-1 i mer current ought to construct then all i rainfall being only about an average,
. .
| j now want to return to their native lana
land
when I say Mr. Fisher’s reports are cor support 4 the petition
to improve the en-
t
i i.-
tended wipes, that now so safely protect I our sandspits, and indeed it would, weie 1 hence as a natural result of such unbal-
. «...
, ,
. fiee of expense, have crossed the Ixjrder
rect. and furthermore, that these coal trance to
Tillamook bav. lhe petition I, » m
. i
»
i
i
them in each case on their southern i | it not for what we can reasonably con- | ancing shoaling is inevitable, but with a
r . ,. adrnntn<n-c
.
’ ,
1
into Texas, where they
beds are (as reported by United Slates recites
J have been taken
recites the
the advantages tliot
that ,..,^..1,1
would _ ac.
.
. .
..
shores. After said elevations, it would ! sider as effectual hindrances to that re- resumption of average conditions of
___ ...
..
.
.
"'to custody pending deportation, ill ac­
geological survey) 10 miles in length by ! crue
to the surrounding territory if such
iuiincdiMlely follow that the southerly 1 suit in the shape of submarine ridges or rainfall with the south winds this com­
not exceeding two miles in width, of un-' improvement were made, and states cordance with the provisions of the ex
ing
winter,
unless
there
is
an
increase
in
spurs
of
mountains
at
intervals
project
­
currents, fiercely driven by the wintery
broken coal veir.s of six to nine feet. Re- that competent authorities have placed elusion acc. There are several hundred
gales and winds, would in each case, ing out from the shores, whose sub­ 1 the width of the entrance, which is not
of them and the cost of returning them
lying upon these reports ami of those of I
the cost of the construction of a jetty to
after rounding those caps, take a merged sides, detect the heavy position common (under the theory of it as
»■ill be about $500 per capita, but per­
six different mining engineers from!
northerly course, in harmony with the of this current from hugging the shore corn »borated by past experience) the
accomplish the end sought at $250,000.
haps Uncle Sam, who has just discovered
different
slates
whom
I
ha<l
investigate
direction of the winds, its inner edge; al all points. Under this theory then, bar w’ill bv next spring be swept out by
The matter was explained to the trus­
ibis little game, may find some way to
marking the outlines of the present sand-1 ! we may conjecture that at some point the winter freshets to its normal con- these mines in 1800 and 1891, I was in- ' tees by W. S. Cone and J. H. Bridgeford,
structed by clients last spring (1899) to I of Bay Citv, Tillamook county, the lat- beat it.
spits, (nr the simple reason that along ' Inflow the month of the Nehalem, prob- dition.
pre|»are for the construction thereto of a
R'isie Davis, a bearded lady now iu
this edge would be deposited sedimen­ ably at the “halt way rock,*’ twixt
tea gentleman stated in support of the
local railway from Portland to these
Real Estate Transfers.
tary matter, mainly of sand, from the there and Garibaldi, a submarine ridge
measure, that because if impeded navi- Chicago waiting to fill an engagement
Upper Nehalem mines, but liefor? doing
ocean outlie one rn.lt, and the dark soils sheers the current off shore, which, con.
gation, their are now hundred of tons with a circus, got lost the other night
and vegetable matter that constitute sequence would ¡»ermit the north current U.S. to J. W. Steinniitz, lot 3, Se % of so to find out the true amount of sulphur of butter and cheese in Tillamook await- while out walking in Lakeview and not
N\v ’4 and E »•*.» of Sw *4 of sec. 4, the.ein. Accordingly, three separate ing transportation to the outside world. le8'r',,K to ,>e conspicuous went to the
the fresh water dv|M»sits carried in from to do an unimpeded work of construct­
large parcel« of these coals were shipped At present, lie stated, the depth on the i,ac'< d°or "I a house to inquire her way.
tp. 2 N. R. 8 W.
the land on the other, those spit deposits ing a sandspit at the Nehalem that
Lanarkshire, in Scotland; to lean­ liar is. approximately, at mean low tide *,le re8U*t w“s a great fright on the part
once built up to the surface, was rapidly allows only of a south entrance, such Clara C. and J. D. Edwards to W. W.
Fcnelon, E »? of Ne V4 and E
of cash ire, in E-igland, and to the United 12 feet. In lhe summer time, when j
clevatvd, in those troubled ages, when entrance, would, of course, I k * as per.
t,le l*oP'e w,,° U’eJ in the house,
States assay office in Washington, D C.,
Se of see. 11, tp. 2 S, R. 8 W.
the elements played fierce games with manent as those of the other class were
northenily winds prevail, the depth is
ree 'voll,en going into the hysterics
every thing terrestrii.1 that was mova­ it not for the evident fact that the su b- Theo. Steinhillier to Florence Hardman, with s|nx'ial instructions to each to care from 16 to 18 reel at low tide. But with ami ' a man running out the front door in
a tract of Bailey’s pre-emption land fully anal)zr the same and find the sev
ble.
Forming them into those long, mergence of the aforesaid ridge, acting
each recurring winter season, » hen the j search of the police. The bearded lady
claim in sec. 21. tp. 1 N, R 10 W
eral pr«»|M»rtions of sulphur. The result wind changed from northern ly to south- i Hed and tried another house, at which
sinuous ridges, and mounds that we as a break water to the south current,
I ehold to-day. their elevating indeed |x*rmits a greater or less depth of water John S. Clark to Abraham Jones, lot 3 was as follows; The Scotch people re­ erlv direction, the channels fills
i up to | her appearance caused a woman to faint.
and SH of Nw V4 and Nw *4of Sw ported 4 per cent, the English ® people a »bout 12 feet, and even less.
still goes on, but slowly now, tor gcolo. flowing over it, which fiercely driven and
“
There is ' By tliis time the police arrived with a
Hof
sec.
2.
tp.
2
S.
R.
7
W.
little
over
4
per
cent,
and
the
United
gical history, like that of man s churned by the wintry gales sometimes
no question as to the feasibility of the ' patrol wagon and the free exhibition for
shows a more quieting state as time tears and rends at the bar the work of Ella S. Jenkins to Abraham Jones, W v9 States geoiogimi survey office reported project fm maintaining a channel at a which people generally pay to see was
of Sw
Sw l4 and lot 4, tp. 2 S, R. 3 97 KM) per cent of sulphur in these U|»*
goes on. The marine construction of the Mimmer current, often creating a
suppressed,
constant depth of 22 feet.
7 \\
per Nehalem coala The latter analysis
those sandspits would naturally begin second opening or otherwise shifting and
It w as moved and carried that reww ' Le > Frankel, a Chicago peddler who
at the southern or ca|»c etuis and build troubling the former entrance, and this Aug. C. Kinney to Joseph Lyons, Sc ’ t was made under direction of the Unite*» lutions be pass«! indorsing the petition i
sold books, argue I fi r nearly an hour
novtWrly, pushing the bar or outlet uncertain stale will probably, without
of Se
of see 9, tp. 3 N. R. 10 \V.
States geologit^l bureau officer, Peter
The trustees all expressed themselves as
further sud further north, until the solid artificial improvement, continue.
The I’.S. to Charles Young, \V I, ot N w ', Foreman, the reporter stating: “These heartily in favor of the improvement of | < with Mis August Schiak of 307 Flet­
headlands is mrt thrtt W||| no| |<rmit a outlet working down (as it is graduallv
cher street, to induce her to buy a pho-
and W *4 of Sw
of sec. 8, tp. 2 N, coals contain an unusually large |»er-
Tillamook bar.
ograph album.
Wheu she agreed to
Oirthcr crowding
thM direction, and doing) the coast until it reaches the
R. 8 W
sentage of sulphur. After making the
here the work rots M thisl ||||ti| to.dav i submarine ridge al»ove mentioned and U.S. to Mark T. Cox, Ne i* of sec. 31, first analysts, with practically th-* same
take one he dropped dead. At first Mrs.
Bluffed the Insurgents.
Av the Miuthern current driven a iis it is by
tp. 2 N. R. 5 W.
i Schaak refused to buy anything, but fi-
nMults.” Thereupon the professor of
imdcr those protecting walls it will
the much heavier gale» of winter ia va»tlv I probably
I
I nally he went out to his wagon, which
Iwvome j»ermanent, like that of Kate and James St a sc k to Anna Kul- chemistry of the Oregon agriculture col­
M amila . Dec. t -The capture hr Lieu-
cher. N », of Nw If and Se t4 of Nw lege at Corvallis was consulted, who re­
.t!..»urr than the northern .invent, hence the
1
had I »sen left standing in the street, and
Nest uvea, which seems to have dug
’eimnt Monroe and M men nf the Fourth
it toll.»» . that Min<ta|nta constructed by its
'
and Ne t4 of Sw
of sec. 9, tp. 2 plied last summer that if the Upper Ne
brought forth an album with a bright
way down t ie shore to a point
cavalry of the Filipino general. Canon
R 10 W
»bv former are the more permanent of where it secures protection from its
halem coal contained such larire amounts
1 green cover, which he offered for $6-
with 800 men anil officer«, with rifles
•he twu j„ eviilcncv of which fact, we! *'utheru
1
Carrie
and
\V
J.
May
to
Effie
M.
Gray,
of
sulphur,
it
«wild
he
».f
httl?
vklue
She exclaimed that she would buy it.
enemy. |.«r if I am rightly in-
-vend American .ml 70 Spanish prim
have on
mort or )ws ani, at
• ft»rmed
J,rmed th)a
u(llkrg(<a n<
tht4 t>i|r
bar undergoes
no changes
son. lot 1. in block 1 of McDermott's for onumercial or st« am pur|»oaM.
* At that moment,” said Mrs Schaak,
afi'en Vdar^fl >-''*'’‘‘KrowthKw,th ■ Under thi. ,W1. ,he„. . ,„r
addition to Tillamook city.
Tb me these recent report« are a mat oners, st Rsyomhong. in the province of in telling alxxit the aff dr. “I looked up
en-
Nueva Vi«ay,. ... . .u.-oWul Wuff
and saw the man looking at um with an
!mhe.,t.both
W,th
I ttr,on‘hr
the moetpermaneut. Edward H. H irdie to The Astoria Co. ter of deep regret, as. having eight and
Monroe tapped the re^i wire, tele-
«S the otbo cuZ^Ty *"
‘
,h'n""” ,h< rid«e' “ '
E t> of W
of sec. 18, tp. 3 N, R. 7 one half miles of grade, which I con-
expression of bew *Ider ment on his ci»un
grsghed to Canon th.t he was advancing
W,
tenance. The next instant he stagger« d
com'trweted for a railroad to the Neha­
_
.
.
. the sandspit« ot both TiUa.n .ok «n I
wi«h
a
large
force.
,mi
demanded
his
fro„!X
“ h"" n"k' "F
f"’"' thr
and sank into a chair, his limbs twitch*
lem. wet of H^lslMiro. I WM laipeful of
surrender After neg<Hi.tk>,Mi taD,m
The Scoffer—Wlm flight have yon to
ing convulsively ”
Mr« Schaak sect
tho^. of th. <
k
A,,d.
•»««« nn interval offlatw„dt
utihzirg the sivne for the proposed coal
<m«ented to capitulate to the
sign your name wit!) an “A. M.” after
VUme.U.H.mthjX"^"
’
I 'm',r”
her little t-oy for a doctor. When he
railway to Uw.Nel^fem. an ordered it |<,
it?
-¿-Si
forve. whereupon Monroe telegraphed ; arrived at lhe Imyse life had jwowed from
.
k K
I ■won to point to a probability that this
be built l.xst apHng. bnt the large amount
The Signer—As
, fMSHHMMkg|a|||||jjBaM," internal ia trader ground. ' over which
^K^a^anv^oncof sulphur Heaped tint enterprise
At that he would enter the town with i a i lhe body of tlie pedier
Die physician
it mtaas, in
wage man.
lhe
• Mnall guard and receive the
n s pronounced theoase one of heart failufC-
He cafXured the
1» Fill-1 superinduced by a mental rhur*-
»
-A.
WHY BARS
SHOAL UP
I