VTEEKLtf 0R30$ ; STATESMAN, ' TUESDAY, ? JEIVT ? 1903; 'xF , -.TEIHS I.lany Foreigners Landed at the United States Forts RECORD Nearly a Million Aliens Come to America Dur ing the Fiscal Twelve Months Ended the Thirtieth of Levst June -L" Italy ; Sends the Greatest- Num- : . S t ber Many Hung- . WASHINGTON. D. C, July 25. The jsumbw of immigrants to, the United Statrti for th fiscal year ended June Zi. 1902, l fcr.7,048, This Information Is gleaned from a preliminary report Just made public; by T. P. Fargent. commissioner general of toe Bureau of Immigration, Depart jaent f Commerce and Labor,, and the figures place this last" fiscal year a the record breaker in the matter of th arrival of foreigners to this county. The only other year in American his tory which approached this total Was JS2 when ther. landed at American port people of foreign birth, irther high years were 1881, when the number was C69.431; 1883. when it was MJ.322; 1S88. C46.889, arid 1891, 560.219. la 1898 the-total arrivals was '229,299 wUjr. The arrivals of immigrants In , the I"ibtt-d States... by months, during the m-sI year just endel were as follows; 1902. , - July.. .. .. . ugut.. .. .. fjjtPmbT. . .. October.. .. .. '.. .' November. .. .. .. .... Pef-etllber . . .. .. '" 50.782 45.549 58,228 63,614 55,177 50,291 vm. : January. . . .. -'- .. 31,851 February.. .. .. .. . .. 47,267 3Harh. .. .. 91,666 At1 .. . i.l2.28 May.. ..137.514 June .. .. ... ... 98,821 Total.. .. . .. -.. . ..857.046 The full returns for the fiscal year 3f03, furniohetl by Commissioner Sar-K'-nt fn.n all countries, compared with the returns for 1502, follow: Country. 1902. 1903. Incr'se. Au.tria- llungary .. ..171.99 206.011 34,022 873 1.498 TielKlum... .. ... iJenmark .... J-Vance, 'including Corjiicit .'. . . ,. Ionium Empire . C.r.-ece .. .. .... 3.450 7.158 5.578 40,086 14,030 5,r,C0 3,117 2S.304 8.104 2,4-61 11J82 5,986 Italy. inclmlinff. Bicily and K;ir- dinU.. 178.376 2?,0.622 52,247 PORTS. few York. N. Y... hwtnn. Wm. . .. l hi!Jelphl. I liallltitore. Mil . Hn KranciM-n, "! VuW-- lid M. Joho.CKD VaDruufer. I'anjul. o Jnn, f. H Kef Wrut. i'ls Kvw Orlaano, La. t,ajvtn, Te l ort TownM-nd, Wash ... rorttan1. Me ... Hoo.ttnlu, II. 1 . l'orUni. Or ... New Hedtonl. Man HrTidnr. K. I port Newa, V .... . Tampa, Kla MuibUFI,.. . tifar. Me...,, " WntHMlfP, Man .. f :iwliUIro, Mtaa K'roanJina, Kla H.lngtB. Pet.. aort,s.c., Total . . 1 IB ViJfM .... 1 27.7i .... 1 7.f .... 1 1.977 2.120 .... .... 4JM &.UW 2 2.1: 2,79 li ... 4W .... ... 3,:W9 2T1 9 1 207 1 3 . 4 .... . . .'. 1 15 1 .... ... S57.M6 I lt 23 A HEAVY SENTENCE ft . " - rrWlLI' A LONa TIME BE TWEEN DIllNKS FOR HARRY. Harry Dunn, the notorious character. V . . ' " l" nimseir ana much f iasiJL T PeOP,e- WlU not have I 'amion to atinor i- n - - - lime in Am ...... L, -b.t.ir 7 Al wul '. long time wui nave an tu . : . rat him f i ."l-Poriuniiy io T! W . - r. , v.uence was s severe a. severe 4 ; .'r :-;.f!tU; 20 cents per dozen for Eggs 35c per square for Butter ,Hens 10c: Young' Chicks ik . i : Less 16 per SpEE'R:::.:B;RO: rp, i State -t ne largest buyers in WillamettQryalley, , CQUN'iriLY ...' 4 Netherlands , . .. 2.284 NorwarW'. 17.484 Portugal, including : Car Verde and Azorai Island,., , .307 Roumanial. . ... 7,196 , 3.99S 24.461 ,1.714 6,977 9,317 9,310 4.010 2,114 Russian Kmpire . and Finland!.. 107,347 136,093 28,746 Servia,' Bulgaria ; . and Montenegro ,. 831. Spain, including " Canary and j ! I 5 Balarie Islands v 975 Sweden . . ..... 30,894 910 2,080 46,028 1.105 15,134 1.639 1,342 12.644 6,172 3,583 512 Switzerland . , .MKy, 3,983 Turkey- in Kurort Jlt, l,i&i2 England.. .. j.. 13,575 26,219 Ireland.. .. 29,138 Scotland l. ..!.. 2,560 WalesJ. .. .;. j .. ; 763 Europe, not spec- .... ified:! ..'..i..' 37 35.310 G.143 1,275 Total Eurap ;19,t)C8-tS113:QJ 195,439 China.. .. .. Japan.. .. .. ... India. J Turkey in Asia. . Other Asia...! 1.649 lf,270 93 6,223 36 22,271 37 , t 384 126 56 it- " 636 " 61 -:; ' 254 709 ,'337 2.209 19,968 94 7,118 577 29,966 176 560 5,698 1 895 541 Total Asia., ,,. Africa. ... .... Australia, Tas mania, and New Zealand . . ,j .. Philippine "Isrds Pacific Islands, . not specified . British North a America ,... British Honduras' Other- Central ' " America. . .j Mexico. . . . . .; . South America . West Indies, i .. 7,695 139 1,150 - 132 766 6 11 422 30 Mt 252 3,459 - 67 1.058 81 597 ... 528 5S, 8,170 1 25 4,711 All othet countries, r JOS'." Total imrnl- ; . . .. , , - gration L . .649,743 857,046 ,,208,303 . The following -ki .a 8taemmt shoe ing the number ofNalienBand'ed, !i "de barred, and returned In or ear afWf landing, by United States " ports, dur ing the year, ending June 30, 1903: - , ..; ; , DEBARRED-! 2.a a a O' o s o o 9 t h2 m n a o r t3s o S D " : ? o it 3' : as- s 9 7.V4 34 V. M 39 300 5 87 it 2 54 - 9 7 IS 17 3 S44C SCO 126 235 85 4r 34 41 2S 42 83 24 10 641 "29 10 400 40 49 21 1 2 "ii 3 3 41M in T7 . VM Iti 22 29 31 3U 16 7 7: 10 "f" - 4 -. . - . i ... .j... 6 3 4 7f.9 l 5812 I 17 73 61 13 M7 blow ;t55lhls 'orthref91ndiv1duaI, but his face has appeared in the court room on so mauy different occasions that Judge Judah "thought 'it best to make Harry be good, for th reat?t length of time pose tbH..iiler ihe tatute cov ering the offense ; with ' which he was c harged, and to ' which he pleaded guilty.- ' i . : The breaking of the glass' in the win dow of the Whit House Ttestauraot on Friday wa;iluon!aahlrd offense of ft similar nature, he having one bne oc casion hurled a. rock through, a. window In the Ladd t BOfh Irnhk bdllding. and on another tbrfeh affront wlndow, of Eckerlen saloon. J " ' 3 X tS. sr rrt. 3lt. -"' Start your candidate early U best. cent for Cash Street ; T of country produce: 0 ver-Vork - Weakena , . , YdurKidrieyss' rnhsaltiyJKliaej'S Make. Impure Slod. : All the blood in your body passes through you? kidneys once every three minutes. SZ ' Hi' ns kidneys ve your ici . cut Lnc wssie or irr.pucitics in the fclood." , If they are sick or out cf order, they fail to do their work. . , Pains, aches and rheu matism come from ex cess of eric acid in the blood, due to neglected kidney trouble." i Kidney trouble causes quick or . unsteady heart beats, and makes-", one. feel as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-working. In 'pumping thick; kidney poisbned blood through veins and arteries. It used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but Bow modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning; in kidney trouble. Ifr fo - J If you are sick yoa can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and Ihe extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is soort realized. It stands the highest fcr its wonaertui cures o the most distressing cases afid Is sold on Us merits' by all druggists in fifty cent and one-dollar siz es. t You - may have a sampte come Dy man ; eom x tvamp-Rooc -free, also pamphlet telling you how to, find out if you have kidney er bladder trouble Mention this paper when writing Or; Kilmer 2c CcrBinghamton. NY.r : I .a ' Don't make any mistake, but remember mechanic, Swamp-Root, t Dr. . Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N.Y on every bottle. lt .-"'.. , ' FIERCE MOB IN Started to Lynch Negro As saulter of . White Woman i FIRED : UPON BY NEGROES And Stopped to . Lynch and i uurn une oi me new : ! -Offenders ,'' HACKED BODY TO PIECES AND THREW.; THEM INTO FlRE-PRO- . CEEDED TO COUNTY JAIL OJi A FORMER' QUEST" AND WAS RE rULSEDBT THE SHERIFF. DANVILLE. Ills., July 3. While a jnpb of six hundred men was' on its way to the county JaiJ to lynch' James .WJlson.. a Bloonilngton inegro who' had confessed to assaulting Mrs. Thomas Burgess,' an unknown negro shot and killed oni of tbemob. 1 1 Thia" negro, .Mayfield.i then fled; but was iCaujjfit by ' the officers within a block of. the scene and hurried to the police station, with, the mob In hot' pur suit. The officers . barricaded them selves behind the doors of! the offices. They could not check "the ; mob, how ever, for it battered down a section of the wall and the doer. The negro was seized and rushed to the. scene of the shooting. A rope ' was thrown around his , neck and he was swung up to a telephone pole. ,'; " ."' .;! Leaving htm hanging, the mob pro ceeded to the county jail. After going IT" short distance, however, " the mob changed its tnind and returned to the scene of the lynching, cut the body down; took It to the principal square, built a bonfire arid, hacking the body to pieces with knives, - pitched the pieces Into the flames. Remembering the first mission to lynch Wilson," they once more resumed the, march to the county JaiL, .There the sheriff refused them admission and also threatened to shoot. The mob, frenzied In the deter mination to reach Wilson, threatened to lynch the sheriff, his deputies, and the negro turnkey. " They charged the' jail and the sheriff and deputies fired; Wounding three members of the mob, one fatally. The mob. being repulsed, gent t an adjoining camp- fordyna mite threatening to again attack the , "-.. . . ; .i;;-.- -., - A LEGISLATIVE INCIDENT. The late Elijah MU Haines, when a Speaker of the Illinois House of Repre sentatives ,was called on one evening to preside at a meeting of the lawyers assembled In ' Springfield for the . pur pose of considering the best means of passing a certain billHhen pending fn the Legislature, rays the Brooklyn Eagle. Mr. Haines had explained the purpose of. the meeting and was .pro ceeding to suggest wnai n wwigm was the best way to secure the pass age of the bill when a man in the rear of the hall Interrupted him with;. . ; "By the war Mr. Chairman, If I jmay make a suggestion right here ' ' ; , "The gentleman's suggestion Is a very good one, the chairman In turn Inter rupted. v:;G' ,T'."'":;tV'-'V . "How dd yon know T asked n.he man; a little miffed. "I haven't made It yet. ' . -; - -J ' "Oh. replied Mr. !Halnes, with. ad. mlrably affected surprise, ft thought you sail "buy the way. - , I "ri, : ry 7 m i it v- I EACH CENT COUNTS A VOTE. t: . E. BAILEY, D; r,l. D. ; Dentist , , Graduate JVorf h gapific Dental . College . r . Especial attention to Crown and Bridjre Wok. The latest and inost scientific methods in every branch of dentistry at lawtst prices.. ' ' t Botas 1-2 KcCoraac Kiy ' , ; Over Meyers t Son Store. - - 0 -SMtem Ortje ILLINOIS IWTERVIEm-'rv WH PEOPLE The Wheat Heads Are Filling WeU and Yield WiU' . .Be Large, FIVE HAY BALERS ARB RUNNING . IX SPRING VALLEY .ON A VERY LARGE CROP-tW. O. CONSTABLE IS BUILDING A : NEW ' PRUNE DRIER. ' '. - - .. --' . . - - u (From Sunday's Daily.) - - Notwithstanding' the fact that .w are in the? midst of , harvest, and farm ers are the busiest people in . the stale, a' large number pi them were In the city yesterday laying in supplies for the next w eek's -work, and ; many;, f the Salem merchants reported that the day was one of the best for business In a long time. -" : . ; 11 i . . .' 1 The farmers say that threshing sea son is almost at hand and some of the machines ' will start up" In - about ' one weeki - Nearly everyone is. busy cut ting grain, and large numbers of wa gons carried away a. supply. of binder twine.'""':' - ' ' :'" J'" ' ' . '." O. E.' Price, of Lincoln, poik co'uhty, purchased the 'John Ttwier threshing outfit last summer, and "so well satis fied was he w'ith the "season's business that he has Just purch5sel anl entire riew Outfit, turning In the old outfit in part payment. . He : purchased . every Wiew attachment, "getting";"'" aft Advance outfit1 complete," with wind, stacker and self-feeder, and an1 Advance 1 8-horseJ-power engine which he intends to pull the separator over1 the- country "with, hills and all. J.'-R. Shepard; in the same: neighborhood, also has a. new Russell " outfit, and - Intends to start threshing In two weeks. ! f ; 1""! , A good run is'expected, and the ma chines will make money, as th straw ps short, and the heads, which- are :ex tra long, are filling very evenly, and will give a -large yield. ''; Prune Crop. Good. . T T C O. Constable, the Rosedale fruit grower, was in Salem yesterday to at tend the' meeting of the prune' growers; Mr. Constable s a manwho Is always glad to ;tell the news, and usually has some news, to impart, so a Statesman reporter asked him about i. the prune crop -and he"'sald: ;k 'i ';?'''- '"";' "Well, I think we'll have "about as many prunes , at - Rosedale as we had lajst year, but' the stalk will produce a great many' more, as" there' Js abig crop, in ; the valley, whereas9 last year the calley; prune crop; was ;a failure. Where. I- live the prunes are more hea vily loaded than last year, and the dropping is very light," but ' that is no indication of a good crop: j . I judge a. crop by the price it brings, and not by the amount, of prunes pfiQduced. vIX the trees are more lieavBy loaded ihe fruit will be small, and nbY nearly'"sb valuable. I believe frVm present irr- dicatioria that the crop will' beMabout the same as twd years, agojj and the price will be on 2 3-4 cent basis. "On my Rosedale farm I will have a very good crop ' of pears and some of fny neighbors "orchards are so heavily loaded' that they were Compelled-" to thin them by hand,' as'hi;the ea4 of M. B.J Baldwin..; ? " "On my ranch three miles north'of Salem, where I have twehty-two acres of prunes, I am building a new- drier of 300 bushels capacity. It Is one of the new, Kurtz tunne driers. You know; new. X am always trying something . ..... - r, . -. The drier will cos about $1208 When, completed; You 'had " oughfto see how the trees on that orchard are growing. People thought that or chard was not worth anything, but it all It needed -was proper care, and it will be better than the Parrish orchard across the road. :''' -v--. '!I"?..i ; ' , "During the week I marketed several bushels of Yellow Transparent apples, and got $t per bushel for them. 1 will brtng a lot more in this week and in tend to graft a lot more of my treea to this early and profitable! variety of apples. . . - Hops Looking; Splendid. : ?r : L. Purvlne, the prosperous Polk county farmer, living about three miles north of - Zena. was si Salem - visitor yesterday, having come in to- attend to some business matters.'"'' " ' He was seen by a Statesman report er; and, - said r Yes,hops: are .looking splendid and it seems that nothing can prevent us from" reaping- a j large crop of grain."' This cool, damp weather is just what we want, . as the grain f is ripening slowly, arid the heads are fill ing (n splendid shape, Had the warm weather of a few weeks ago continued the grain would probably have shrunk, but now they will be very plump, being so heavy that the straws will be taxed to support them.-. -'v ';"; 1: .?The threshing machine men wiU do better than anybody eUe this fall, as the straw is very short, and j will tdrn out "more than . the .usual I percentage pf wheat than oats. ' This will-also please the shockers, as the bundles will not be nearly so heavy aa usual. . , i "Did weiave aT good crop of hay ? Well I should say we'.'didtli Spring Valley: never before produced so much hay. Everybody raised hay, and the yield was- immense. , It was cut and cured without ever being touched by a drop of rain, and now the greater por tion of it has been baled. There are four or five balers running In the neigh borhood. , . . - "Just look af that automobile, now Isn't that taking life easy. ; A. . man wouldn't have to spend his time raising wheat and oais to feed a machine like that, would her -No. aald ; the reporterwell ,aU ride-in automobiles when we make a raise. . . . ' - .,, --t. i- : ' .. Mob Is Increasing- , ', '. DahvilTe. July 25. (Midnlght)The mob has increased to several thoasand the square In front of he 'jail being packed with shouting men" and women who are-waiting the arrival of the dyn- "c- Mt'CH BUILDING. - - The .Dallas Itemliet- reports that there Is , more" building of bams and farm ; structures In . Polk county than ever. before, notwithstanding1 the high er prices of lumber and other materi als.5 The Eugene Journal of yesterday had the following: fc "There has never been- so much building going on in Eu gene, as at the present - time. V New. houses are going up everywhere. ; Eu gene will ; be second to Portland : In a few years , ,There Is no occasion for jealousy -to Springfield. Eugene is as m.uch Interested in the growth and the prosperity of Springfield as Portland lsU In- the growth and prosperity of every other town In Oregon. Every 'thousand inhabitants added to Springfield will add live times - as many to Engj. Ttuiidlng' up 'Springfield Is a good .w ay to . bond up Eugene. .- (It Is not'Tikely that "Eugene win be second lo Phrtland though It is a' good town andwill be second to' Salem.) . ' WAS INSANE OF JEALOUSY Henry Keller Killed His Wife and Then Himself IT WAS A TERRIBLE DEED Suspected "Wife of Undue In v' timpcy With -Another y Young: Man x -r. Started L out to find . man WHOM HE ASSOCIATED WITH HIS WIFE, BUT CpiiLDNT' FIND HIM SERIOUS WRECK BE TWEEN CARS." ' M"aRSHFELD, Ore, Jnly 25. Henry Keller, of Langlos, today killed his wife, mfe Appelby, and . then shot himself. Keller was. extremely jealous of his wife and suspected ' undue intimacy between her an a' young man named Adolphson. - '..-; This morning he -started out after Adolphson, armed ,wIth a reyolver. but being iinabie to find him; Keller went Home, where ".he committed the terri ble deed. , Two children, small Iboys, survive the couple; , J ' ,v "Keller was of a retiring; disposition and kind to. his family and his friends can oniy attribute the crime to a state of mind bordering. on insanity.- "4 ? . - A Disastrous Wreck. T VOrcester, Masa, July 25. One dead and forty-eight Injured is the: result of head-on 'collision , at a. sharp curve on a Boston & Worcester street railway a rnlle west of Westboro late this after noon." j The accident, it Is alleged, was the result of negligence on the part of the? crew Ih charge of the westbound car. 1 The cars telescoped, each smash ing 'into : the other the length tif four or five seats. There, were i50 passen gers oh two cars. Jilore than a half of ,tlje forty-eight are in a serious condition. ! j Some of them Will not re cover and.'many will be crippled - for lif - " .. . . .. .5 Vv.: -W-' DQjnSBN OQJK CLE AKANGE SALE i . .1YILL BUY A ; 6UIT whose price before thii'salc was 0I4y 015p ? 010f 010.CD, 1 01O-OO, or 020 The saitts now reduced to $7 were, lefore thU sale $10, i , $11, $12, and $12.50. Then there's a lot reduced tb $8,50, another lot to $10, another to $14, etc., etcn . i. - ti,, (' , !'. in alii are to he i thus sacrificed to inake -way "for fall linei There's only one or two of a kind, so if you want the other fellow to get your choice, just delay a day or two. "Those Ouccr Mexican flats are going all over Oregon. We sen t 1 4 to Portland , the other day and some to Idaho. The 73 dozen alresdy ordered w ill not sufTica.' No better straw bat was ever sold for 23 cents' Post-' age Gc extra. - ' HAftlf SUITS t for boys, ' For ; mer price$1.25 ' ' NOHS1.0O V IIS Laid to Final Rest With -Sadt -y' m of Gererbriv SCENE Amid Wails of "Miserere" and Sweet Sinfjin by Chapel Choir. Work of Sealing Dody in Caskets and Placing' Into the Temporary Niche Was , Accomplished by v Ca'rdinals ,; ROME, July'25. The" body of ', Pope Leo was .Interred In St. Peters tonight. At sundown the most important and most" s-oiemn of u!l,bbsequies took place The: 'front doors . of the Basilica were closed and the vast church, except for a row ofUgbts at the shrine of Saint Peter, the candles about the bier; and those 'persons who had quietly gather ed there, 'appeared deserted." ' Cardinal Rampolla; as Arch Priest of the , Basilica, was waiting outside the gates In violet: robes, surrounded by the Chapter. of the Cathedral, which was led by" Mgr; Capetelli, who" conducted the 5 services. T6 the strains of the "Miserere, which walled through the .ofty cnurch and, preceded by a glit tering cross held alOft, the-procession, carrying candles and " torches, slowly left 'the chapel and went to the church, rassing" the bronse statue and beyond the shrine f St. ; Peter, j--Atter a A slow progress a "und the thufch, the sad , cortege arrived at the chapel choir; the .bier being so ciarrled that the dead Pope entered head .first, according to the ceremonial, the chapel from the simi-obscurity flashing into brilliancy of suddenly turned on elec tric lights.! ' ; .Scene -in the Chapel. .The scene In the chapel was most re markably effective. The bier bearing the body was received ty Cardinal Qr effl la. It was placed In. the center, Around two sides of the chapel ,ln the rholr sats, were thirty-six Cardinals. The body was-sprinkled with holy wa fer and the absolution was glven.- BTojor Domo then covered the vener able features and the hands with a white silk veil. Over this" was spread a large silk veil which covered the whele person. A fire was lighted in a brazier and blown by bellows, sparks reaching almost to the ceiling, .-while" Mgr. Bartoioni read the oratio brevis, eulogizing the dead Pontiff and Notary Poponi, 8t years old, read out the buri al record," the services which - he per formed upon the occasion of the deaths of B ope Gregory XVI and Pope" Pius ix. .." - ' The Mpnsignors of the Basilica, aid ed try the; noble guard, ' then laid all that was mortal of Leo XIII in a cy press .coffin lined with red satin and bearing on the cover an Inlaid cross. When all had been arranged, supreme Eoyo Big new. line, EFFECTIiVLi. prayer was said and the test benedlc t ion given. . - " ' , -' ' The second coffin was xt led and. very heavy. On the cover at the head was a cross, just below which was a i skull and cross-bones This coffin was ' staled personally with the. arms of tho tabierlengo. . the Basilica lighted the braster whU h was used in soldering the coffin, pro-: daclng sounds and sights- strange to heai' and see in a church. Thes two coffins were closed in a third casket of pallkhed walnut without decorations. The tad duties were softened and rmoothed by the sweetness of the sing ing of the choir and tUe prayers of the cVjrg. When the last supreme mo n eht came, the heavy coffins, weighing In all 1322 pounds, were rolled out. of ths ckapel, followed by all of the Car-.' dinals. . . ? Laid to Rest. - Pulleys were attached to the coff.fV a.Rd It w as raised Into the stone par-' copSagus above the door to remain un- , til the grateful Cardinals created by he lita Pope shall erect a suitable tomb l.n the Basilica of St, John Later nsiv . : ".' i - .." ' . . ; Use Trib for liquor habit. . " WILL CONTEST VOTE ) - - - - SUif PTER TAXPAYERS OBJECT TO : BONDING CITY FOR NEW WATER SYSTEM. 1F3UMPTER, Or., July 24. Tha vote on bonding the city for 315,000 for a sewer age system having resulted in favor of the measure by a close margin of four teen, majority, there is some talk of .contesting the legality of the vote. While not as large a poll resulted as was' expected, there Was 'considerable Interest manifested, and the election was a spirited one. It is stated that'an attorney will be employed by several of the leading taxpayers here, and a con-, test originated, it being claimed that many were allowed to vote who had no rtghts in the premises. Should this Ih proven, it would result in the whole, thing beings declared Illegal, and th situation would be the same as before the election was held. 1 1 Waiot G sbiea 4 to 11 years, at. 50c to 7Gc c: mi reduced to clooe. ITqv,' I your c!.: .