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Show 1 BANDITS MAKE UTAH LEGISLATURE FUTILE ATTEMPT TO FINALLY ADJOURNS AM Band of Robbers Who Would Emulate the Deeds of the James Younger Gang Get a Set-Bac- Official Statement Regarding Number of New German Warships Causes Sigh of Relief. it Is Expected That in the Autumn ot 1912, Germany Will Have Thltv teen New Warships, All of the Big Gun Type. , Berlin. In view of the assertion made in the British house of commons ttat Germany In the spring of 1912 would have seventeen warships, all ol them of the big gun type, the nav; department authorizes the statement that in the autumn of 1912 German) will have thirteen such vessels, 'i'hest will be the battleships Naussau and Westfalon, which will he ready foi sea in the autumn of 1909; the bat tleshlps Rhelnland and Posen and the cruiser Von der Tann, which will bt ready for sea in the spring of 1910: three battleships to replace the Ol denberg, Siegfried and Beowuir, and a cruiser to replace the armored cruiser "G," which will be ready In the summer or autumn of 1911, and three battleships to replace the Frith of, HUdebrand and llelmgahl, and a vessel to replace the cruiser "If,' which will be ready for sea in the autmn of 1913. PRESIDENTS WILL CONFER. Central American Leaders See to Re move Cause of Constant Quarreling. City of Mexico. It is now bellevec a certainty that a conference of th five presidents of Central Amerlcat republics will be held Bhortly. Wori has reached here that President Cab rera of Guatemala, Davlla ot Hondu ras and Zelaya of Nicaragua hav agreed to the proposed meeting. It ii thought that President Flguero of Sai vador and the president of Costa, R es will also consent to the invltatlor which was sent out by Senor Kche verrla, president of the Central Amer lean branch of the bureau of Anierl can republics, and the purpose of tht gathering will be devising ways an..' means to live up to the letter anc spirit of the Washington peace pac' and thus remove all cause for Inter vention la Central American affairs ot the part of either the tnlted Statei or Mexico. The news of the acceptance of Es trada Cabrera rt Guatemala and hlr enemy, Jose Santos Zelaya ot Nlcara gua, comes as an agreeable surprise to the well wishers of Central Amer lea. It is considered likely that a re quest will be sent to tiie American state department as soon as Costa Rica and Salvador are heard from asking that the conference be permit ted to meet on board one of the cruisers of the Pacific squadron. The harbor of Amapala has been elected ns the meeting place. J - Bald Knob, Ark. While seven of their number rode about the streets discharging their weapons and hold-inthe populace In terror, others of a band of robbers worked for more than an hour on Friday In an unsuccessful effort to dynamite their way into the vault of the Bank of Bald Knob, abandoning their task after firing nearly a score of blasts, which demolished the outer door of the safe, but failed to force the Inner doors. One citizen was wounded in the parting fusilade of the band as they rode away. The first explosion aroused the citizens, who emerged from their houses and were greeted by the bullets ot the outposts. They quickly ran to shelter, while the robbers kept up an almost continuous Are, taking chance shots at any one who came within range. In the meanwhile those at work in the bank building continued to explode dynamite, but without success other than to partially wreck the building, as well as the adjoining structure, Before beginning operations the robbers destroyed telephone communication out of Bald Knob, but overlooked a railroad telegraph wire. A message to Augusta, over this wire, brought a posse of citizens from that place, who Joined several other posses hastily formed here, and immediately started In pursuit of the band. Members of Eighth Assembly Worked in Conoid-Eight Cays Over-tieration cf Proposed New Laws. Salt Lake City, The Eighth legisof Utah adjourned lative Saturday, March 20, after a session days, or just eight lasting sixty-eigh- t days longer than 'the legislators are supposed to be in session, their labors for the last eight days being without performed compensation. Thus the last day ot the session was 227 hours and 47 minutes long.' The house adjourned at 11:31 p. m., and the seuate just eleven minutes later. Just before adjournment a committee was appointed to wait upon the governor and inform him tuat the Eighth legislative assembly was ready to adjourn. A communication was sent to both houses by the governor, declaring he had no farther communications to lay before the legislature and congratulutlug both houses upon the' completion of their labors. One ot the last acts of the senate was to reject six of the appointments made by the governor, as follows: Fred W. Chambers of Ogden, state fish and game commissioner. W. D. Candland, Mount Pleasant, state land W. H. Thaln of Locommissioner. gan, state land commissioner. F. F. Alexander, Salt Lake, member optoSalt metry board. H. O. Jensen, Lake, member optometry board. John Walsh, Farmlngton, trustee state inass-nib'- dustrial school. At the time of adjournment the governor had made no appointments to fill the vacancies caused by the failure of the senate to coincide with WATER TANKS BURST. htm. and It Is barely possible that all Water Rushes Down Street', Causing of the rejected appointees may serve until the next session of the legislaDeath and Destruction. ture. . As to the work of the se'on just Parkersburg, W. Va. Two persons were killed, three others probably fa- closed, the governor has aproved 81 tally and many more slightly hurt, of the measures passed, and has 64 and ten or more houses completely now in his hands, which he may or wrecked and forty more badly dam- may not approve. These were not all of the bills introduced by any means, aged, when two large water tanks as a veritable flood of measures were supplying the city with water burst killed outright, or withThe immense early Friday morning. drawn. stream of released water rushed down The last bill signed by the presiProspect hill sweeping everything dent of the senate was the appropriabefore it. Houses were 6wept Into tion bill, making apropriatlons for the the street and the residents were support of the state government for knocked from their beds. One whole two years. One of the Important acts of the family was carried down a street seventy yards, their house being torn al legislature was the decision reached most to pieces, yet all escaped except to build a Btate capltol. The capltol, one girl, who suffered a broken col- when completed, is to cost $2,000,000. A measure of more than ordinary lar bone. The two tanks contained the entire Importance Is the Insurance departcity supply of water and a famine Is ment bill. This measure provides for now Imminent will the creation of a department of inThe damage surance. This department is to be amount to between $200,000 and run by a commissioner, whose salary is to be ? 2,500, and whose office exBank Cashier Goes Wrong While In penses are to be $5,000. , , toxicated. Comanche, Okla. John Campbell the fugitive cashier of the First Na tlonal bank, who left Monday night with more than $6,000 of the bank's money, returned $C,000 In a lettei written in Denver. He said he was Intoxicated when he left and that he had no intention of stealing. He regretted his action, he wrote, and would return the balance ot the FEAR FREE TRADE amount in a fchort time. The bank Residents of Philippines Concerneo officials have decided not to prosecute Campbell and withdraw the reward Over Loss of Revenues. offered for his arrest. Manila. Officials or the insulai government, members of the Philip Naval Aide to President Taft Will be pine assembly and others in close Paralyzed for Life. touch with the affairs ot the Philip Washington If Lieutenant Semmes pine government, are seriously con Reld, naval aid to President Taft, cerned over the loss In revenuet who was Injured on March 18 by bewhich will result from the establish ing crushed under a horse, survives ing of reciprocal free trade betweei he will be paralyzed for the rest of the Islands and the United States un his life. This, in effect, was the er the provisions of the Payne tar statement made Friday by the phyLieuiff bill. It is feared that the defioll sicians at the naval hospital. for the first year, due to the decreast tenant IUid's back was broken in In customs revenues, will approxt two places and he was paralyzed mnte 6,ono,ooo pesos (12,500.000). ant from the sixth rib down. There were that It will Increase from year to yea also indications of concussion ot the he with the growth of American Imports brain. The physicians has a chance of living.. , Making Japi Pay Poll Tax. Took Law In Their Hands. Oxnard, Cnl. Serlour labor troubl Elklns, W. Va. Joseph Brown, said is threatened In the beet fields her to have been an who shot over the situation created by the at tempt to collect county poll tax fron and seriously wounded Chief of Police the 450 Japanese living In Oxnard anc Scott White at Whltmer, near here, was taken from Jail by a crowd or employed in the beet fields. This at men and hanged upon a after bad tempt, they pnld the cltj pole. White, who Is a son telegraph of Mavor tax In this city, caused great, resent reWashington White of nient. The sheriff and deputy as monstrated with Brown Whltmer, for using ofsessora In many cases selxed horsei fensive language. Brown drew a reand goods owned by the Japanese anf volver and shot vVhlte. and then took later forced them to pay under th to the mountains. He was followed threat of selling their property, Mai) by a posse of cl:!er, cmtured and placed In Jail. White will pronably Japs have left the county. recover. A Hero of the Rail.. for the Fray. Como, Colo. An ore train on th Congressmen Preparing The Democratic Washington. & Colorado Southern railway, com posed of sixteen loaded cars, got be members of the ways and means comyond control Saturday eight on thi mittee met Friday and began considsleep grade from Boreas Pass on th eration of the Payne tariff bill and crest of the Continental divide and prepared for tre contest on the floor Jumped the track at a sharp curve of the house. Not h In of a definite while going at the rate of nlnot character was agreed to. No restrican miles hour. Engineer Hut tion has been placed upon the Itepub' Schwarli. who stuck to his engine Ir llran members of the committee n heroic effort to stop the train, war which would prevent them from offer Instantly killed. The other membert Ing amendments to tho bill, although of the train crew jumped and eacaper the measure represents the views of the majority of the Republicans on with a few bruises. , the tariff framing committee, v Foul Murder Near Seattle. Reeo'ttrs Reason After Three Years. gpokane, Wann. With three bulle1 Los Angeles. J. J. Drlscoll, GO holes In his head and dressed as ! for a weddlnz, the body of A. Lowatt years of age, who says that his for Mass., doskl, a rati net maker, was found Ii nier home was In Brockton, a secluded spot on Fort Wright mil and that he has been wandering for three years with his mind a blank reHary reservation Sunday afternoon His clothing had been saturated wilt garding his previous life, suddenly kerosene and set on Ore, doubtless t came to his senses while walking Hong Spring street. In this city. On destroy marks of Identification. I tit account of bis actions a policeman overcoat lay 200 feet from his body accosted him and drew out his been murderer had he that Indicating elsewhere and the bodv carried to tht strange story. Drlscoll claims that spot where It was found. Money an too lait thing he remembers was of and be believes Jewelry on his person ere tot takes being in Brockton, the time wsi 1900. . CHAOS III side-tracke- - - Advocates of good roads cannot help but be pleased with the action o( the legislature In providing for a state commission which is expected to see that the roads of the state are improved. Th' irrigation district bill was also a most important measure to be ap proved by the legislature. Under the; old law, a farmer could not back his Irrigation project with anything more than the water filings and canal systems; but under this district law, the irrigation system of any community can be backed by all of the real property of the irrigated territory. Thus, a farmer is enabled to float a bond that is just as 'sound and salable as any municipal or school bond. A most Important measure to the mining industry of the state, and especially to the western part of Salt Lake county and Tooele county, is the domain bill, which was eminent passed over the veto of the governor. The Utah National Guard was also the recipient of favorable legislation, three bills relating to mining affaire being passed. The most Important ol the three bills Is an act creating a state armorv board and authorizing It to borrow from the state land board $S5,C00 to be used In the erection of an armory and arsenal in Salt Lake City. Governor Spry announced on "Monday that he I' nil decided to veto four bills which since their passage by the'lesifcilVure have caused a great deal of criticism. The bills which the governor hhs announced that he would veto are commonly known known as the fire and pnllr bill, the liquor bill and the two Dc Moines government bills. The fire itr-- police bill placed the operation nnd control of the fire and police departments In the hands of a commlss'on of three members, to be appointed by the governor, the cltv, however, wh'le Imin vlrtuallv nothing to any regarding the departments, to foot the b'lls. The Pe Moines bills provided for the control of the city by a commission of five, comprising a mayor and four commissioners, together with sn auditor, the remaining city officials to be arpolnted by the commission. The l!q"or bill provided that saloons be cloed from 1 o'clock In the evening until 7 o'clock the follow! morning: limited saloons to one for every 1.000 population, based upon the census of 1900, which only gave Salt I aVe Cltv a rionulntton of 57.000, the saloons from and would rleerer-iapproximately 140 to 67: made treating a misdemeanor and embraced many other stringent provisions. RESIT GOVERNOR FUCE DISTRIBUTES OF STRIKE IbV7 PL 111111 U I u Business in Paris at a Standstill at Result of Strike of Telegraphers and Postal Gerks. Vssasiss V Governor Spry handed Us list of ap pointments to the senate, for confirmation, on Friday.' March 19. There were a number of surprises sprung, Famine May Result If Settlement Is when the list was read, and a num Not Effected, as Banks Refuse ber of applicants were compelled to Payment on Checks, and Supface disappointment. , ply of Foodstuffs May be Following is a list of the appoint-Curtailed. ments: Rpcpnfu nf the ITnlvfrnitV of Utah : Rlcn-- AI TABLE SOUTH-BOUN- ForPayon. Santaquin and.... t.lS Los Angelc..k No. Nrphl sod For Paynon, Mantl. 63 - pra . 9:itE NORTH-BOUN- ; For Provo. Pl.Grove. American Fork, Leul, Mercur, ...11:87 em Salt Lake Provo, Salt UWe sod No, For J.SOpta Internnxllaie polnu Palatial train are now running dully He- nu wo tween halt UTAH COUNTY Ii In direct touch with two M.k .i.iau Raai ImikI tr n irvicePamtxneer Agent. J. H. BttBTSsa. Dlitrlot Ticket Agent. N. PSTBBSSS, Depot No. 2 64-- lJe 1 ard W. v "5!' l.u Lake City: W. N. Williams, Salt Lake City; Frank B. Stephens, Salt Lake City. , lach to serve for a period of four yes, Al commencing July 1, 1909. Trustees Agricultural College Thomas Smart, Logan; J. W. N. Mathonihah Whltecotton, Provo; Thomas, Salt Lake; Lorenzo N. IIDGRAHDI Stohl, Brlgham; Susa Y. Gates, Salt Lake. Trustees State School for Deaf-M-aud Arrival and departure of trains from Depot: May Babcock, Salt Lake; John No. For 9prlngllle,ProTO.SaU Lake serve to W. F. Volker, Ogden. Each and all points eantand went....8:10m 29 No. for a period of six years. Forhprlngvllle Provo.Salt Lake and all polnu e'aat and wet....S:pmi Directors Utah 8tate Fair associNo. S For Kureka, Mammoth and SU- ationLester D. Freed, Salt Lake ..6:27pm verClty For Eureka, Mammoth and SilCity; William G. Winder, Salt Lake No. 28 ver V?Hy ,....:iaem City; Mrs. P. J. Rlter, Salt Lake City; Connection made tn Ogden Union depot with F. J. Hendershot, Ogden; W. F. Armall trains of Southern PaolUo and Oregon Short strong. Salt Lake City.. Each to serve Line. . OFFERS CHOICE OF for a period of four years. State Board of Education D. H. FAST THROUGH TRAINS DAILY Christensen. Salt Lake City; Carl A fot serve to Each Marcuson, Price. AND THREE DISTINCT SCENIO ROUTES a period of four years. Pulman Palace and ordinary Sleeping cart to' State Board of Labor. Conciliation and Arbitration John Pern, Salt DHnver. Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis and without change. Chicago Lake City; William Drysdale, Ogden. Free Reclining Chair Cars; Personally conEach to serve for a period of four ducted xcurloni; a perfect Dining Car Ser- Paris. There Is not the slightest Indication of a break in the deadlock between the government and its striking telegraphers and postal employes, nor is there any prospect of an imIn the situation. The provement strike, however, will be considered In the chamber ot deputies, and a solution may thea' be furnished. I - The cabinet has passed a. decree authorizing the dismissal of the strikers from the state Service, and renot to affirmed its determination , yield. With the failure of the carriers to deliver letters in Paris on Thursday, .he chaos was complete. The entire public service is paralyzed, and business, both public and private, is in confusion. The situation in the capital and the provinces grows worse every hour. The undelivered letters number into the millions, and not less than 300,000 telegrams were stacked up Thursday forenoon awaiting distribution. Foreign incoming malls remain unsorted and only a small proportion of the outgoing malls have . been sent away. A few days more of these conditions and Paris will be reduced almost to a state of siege as far as food is concerned. The funds necessary for the smooth running of the provincial trade are hung up In the postofflce and the supply of eggs, milk, butter meat and country produce threatens speedily to cease. Already merchants have been obliged, to send agents to the provinces to obtain supplies. The banks are withholding payment on checks in the absence of advices from their correspondents and prices at the stores are soaring. , A large body of strikers gathered at the Central telegraph station Thursday, and threatened a breach of peace, but when they found a company of infantry in rooms adjoining the rraln offices, they left without ireatlng any disturbance. The real element of danger lies In the threat of the General Confederation ot4 Labor, which is purely a revolutionary organization, and the railroad unions to declare sympathetic strikes. $ Q yearn vice. Eoard of Sheep Commission , ers U R. Anderson, Mantl; J. S. Nephl; Thomas W. Jones. Salt Lake City. Each to serve for a period of four years. State Board of Health A. F. Dore- mus. Salt Lake city; H. K. aierrui. Logan. Each to serve for a period of seven years.( atar.c noara or rnarmacy Alexan der Hertqulst, Provo; J. L. Franken, Salt Lake. SUe rt oTr - art. Salt Lake City. State Board of Dental Examiners Dr. A. C. Wherry. Salt Lake City; - For rates, folder, etc , Inquire of 11. T. MATTHaws, Ticket Agent, LA. BENTON. G. A. P. D., Salt Lake City. Os-ter- CI rrrmrt Inn QtotA nnlril B. Pfoutz. Salt Lake City; S. W. Stew- . orrit IF YOU HAVE 46000 lBUSINL S3 i PIT Of ttOUs I Ogden. Each for a period of four years. Dr. Enoch Van Cott, Salt Lake City; Dr. S. H. Clawson. Salt Lake City: Dr. E. A. Tripp. Salt Lake City. Each for a period of two years. State Board of Examiners of Bar bers William M. Piggott, pgden; David J. Watts. Salt Lake. Each tc serve for a period of three years. State Boarrt - of Medical Examiner Dr. D. Budge. Lean: Dr. A. S Condon. Ogden; Dr. Charles L, Ol I sen, Murray: Dr. F. E. Straun.' BIng i ham: Dr. A. P. Hlbbs, Ogden: Drl II. Z. Lund. Salt Lake: Dr. Robert R Hampton, Salt Lake; Dr. G. F. Hard .' Ing, Salt Lake; Dr. I. C. Smullyan i Salt Lake. , State Board of Examiners In Opto metry F. J. Alexander, Salt Lak City; H. O. Jensen. Salt Lake; L. W . ; Snow. Salt Lake. Park Commissioners Joseph R Murdock. Ileber City; Byron Cum ' j mlngs, Salt Lake. State Board of Accountancy W. J Bateman. Salt Lake:- J. P. Goddard Logan; D. A. Swan. Salt Lake. Utah Board of Commissioners foi the Uniformity of Legislation In th United States Benner X. Smith, Salt Lake City; Jerrold R, Letcher, Sail Lake City: L. L. Baker. Tooele. Commissioners of Indian Wtr Rec ords J. M. Westwood, Sprlngvllle: M. L. Pratt. Provo; J. E. Arthur Cedar City. State Bank Examiner C. A. Gift sler, Provo. State Coal Mine Inspector John E Coalville. Fettlt. ' State Chnilht Herman Harms Salt Lake Cltv. Tanner State. Engineer Caleb Provo. State Dairy Rnd Food CommlRlonet Wlllard Hansen. Salt Lake City. State Rnard of Land Commissioner W. D. Candland. Mt. rieassnt; W. H. Thaln. lpan: M. M. Steele, A. G. Clatinue. Snlt Lake; W. H. Farnsworth, Salt Lake. State Board of Equalization R. W Salisbury. Salt Lake Cltv; Harden Reunion, Vernal. Each for a period of four years. George A. Black Salt Lake Cltv. for a period of two years State Fish and Game Warde- nFred W. Onm'iers. Ogden. State Horticultural Inspector-- J. E Tavlor. Salt Lake City. . Trustees Industrial School Jlarrv S Joseph. Salt Lake: John Walh Farmlngton: Harold E. Peery, Og den. Dr. W. G. Dalrymple. HELD FOR RANSOM. San of Attorney Stolen, the Kidnapper Demanding $10,000. Sharon, Pa. Ten thousand dollars' ransom is demanded for the return ot Willie Whitla, Attorney James P. Whit la's son. who was spirited away from here Thursday morning by an unknown man. Accompanying the demand for ransom; ts a covert threat that the boy will be killed unless the money Is produced. Attorney and Mrs. Whiila are among the leading residents of the town. The former is a brother-llaw of Frank II. Buhl, the multl mil lionalre steel man. A man called at the school house and told the teacher Mr. Whltla had sent for his son. The boy was re leased from school and drove away with the man In a buggy, and that was the last seen of him. n HOUSE PASSES CENSUS BILL. Enacts Measure Vetoed by Presl-- dent Rooeevelt. The census bill In lt Washington. amended form was passed by the house Thursday after a lively attack on the rules by Representative of Mlsroiirl. The bill was passed at the late person, but was Rorsevclt vetoed by President of his objection to the provision taking from the civil service com mission the power of appointing the f4e a clerks.- Ijike-Cltv- mmm mmm V No.ei - Frank iS. 1 Submits to the Senate for Its proval a List of Appointive V State Officials. - Mr. DeAnnond objected to a conld eratlcn of the bill unless In commit tee of the whole, when a short recex was taken and a rule reported and adopted maVIng It In order to con aider the bill In the house Itself. Finance Committee at Work. Washington. The senate on finance will hold sessions dully henceforth. A variety of extort work. whldh will be necessary for a con slderatlon ot the tariff schedules, will iegln at once. The effect of some of he countervailing provisions ot the house bill upon the export trade of this country will be considered. The vacancies are to be tilled by the ap rolntmcnt of Senators Lodge, Hint, Smoot and Cullnm, and all the Republican members till probably meet next Monday. Crushed Beneath His Horse. Plan Fight for Restoration of Duty on lieutenant Semmes Washington. Hides. Read, U. S. N naval aide to Presl Washington. Republican represenwas probably fatally. In lent states Juied Taft, tatives from late Thursday while riding with have hopes of restoring the hide duty several other naval officers In Rock in the house, and of knocking out the Creek park. Ills horse stumbled and reciprocal arrangement with Canada fill crushing Ms left thigh as to free trade In coal. They pro- and tipon him,him Internally. IJenten Injuring pose to band together and resist the ant Read was riding Just behind Enadoption of the rule for the considerasign Jonathan Dowetl and I)r. Gray tion of tba tariff bill In the house unon, both of whom are attached to til their demands are granted and if the president's yacht Mayflower, the Democrats and Republican Insur- when tie accident oceurred. Ills gents act with them the can easily Mrotoloi Is rrtticai. detest the rut Intel-mountai- SPRY I CCT.1T , 1KB What's the inaiter IT IDAHO with 5 Thousands of acres of land have beeu reclaimed to cultivation by during irrigation in that State the past 10 years. Thousands-morwill be reclaimed within the next 10 years. This means an opening for many thousands of homes. . 4 Eat Toa Ikvestioated ; IDAHO? It has been truthfully termed a Land of Opportunities A Land of Homes The Oregon Short Line Railroad Co. will be pleased to sendaescriptlre mat ter regarding Idaho's resources. Write to D. E. burley, G. P. A or D. 8. Spencer, A. U. P. A- - "Salt Lake City, Utah. Spanish Fork Go-O- ,4 ' rati vg ps . Institution, Pan-ruiteh- ; Dill for Nevada. Carson City. Nev. By a vote of 41 to 6, the Nevada assembly lia con rurred In the amendments to the antl gambling hill, proposed and adopter hv the senate. The new law Is mad effective Octobef 1. 1910. Immediate!) preceding a state election, at which II may be voted on through referendum Jlrldge whist, poker and all banklm games are prohibited under penalty for misdemeanor, puntnble In JiihHc court by sti months In jail or (500 fine Dealers in ' General Merchandises O Grain Flour, and Harness, j Boots aad g Former College President Losts Life In Apartment Building Fire. New York. Failure of his family or the police to diKcover any trace nf him has led to the fear that John W. Flmpson, a well known Insurance ntnn and formerly president of Marietta college, In Ohio, met death In the tin which early Friday caused the Injury of a dofen persons and endangered In the seven story annrt many otln-il'n-- l' ment buHdlni at 24 Central Bcutb. Mr. Simpson Itved with his wife and dnuirhter on the tveotr floor ot the Imlldlnj. s Produce. ISaaataotnxers of , , Shoes. JOHN JONES, Spanish Fork i Supt j Utah " The Best Bargain la rsadlag saattar that yoarr. Booty can boy Is yoar local It ktps yoo pottos' sa the folate ot tht commsalty. pa-pa- This Paper , will ttll yos tht thtagt yoo vast U kaow la aa tnttrtalalog wty; vill flvt yoa all tht atwt ol tat eommsolty; Its tvtry visit will prove a pttaiart; It ftvte Bora taaa fall vtlns fot the pries Mktd tot it 45 |