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Show erald tut Weather Forecast T7TAII Generally fair Sunday. Maximum temperature v-Friday...,.-..- .......... 67 Minimum temperature Friday . : SO Four Newspaper With no private axes to grind; no selfish personal interests to. serve, and no financial strings leading: to any other source of power or Influence. he ilk PRICE FIVE CENTS - VOL. NO. 36 PRO V 0, UTAH C 0 U NT Y, U T A H, S U N D AY, APRIL 8, 19 3 4 4 A Daily Picture of What's Going On in Natioi Affairs By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT 8. ALLEN WASHINGTON The president presi-dent is slated to go on the air again with one of his intimate inti-mate radio talks to the nation na-tion Behind the broad- cast plan is the tremendous under - cover campaign of misrepresentation and distortion distor-tion which Wall street is directing: direct-ing: against the . new deal. . . . Inner administration circles report re-port that Roosevelt is aroused by it and ready to Rive the Wall street gang a public spanking. . . . Yankee gobs may be promenading the wide boulevards of Moscow and Leningrad this summer. . . v One of our newest cruisers will make a good - will voyage to Russia, according to present navy plans. Data on the channel, harbor, etc., at Leningrad Len-ingrad already have, been gathered. gather-ed. . . . The private bathroom of Soviet Ambassador Troyanov-sky Troyanov-sky in Washington is as large as most people's living rooms. It contains a sunken Roman plunge and several, showers. Moscow bathrooms frequently lack running run-ning water. One of the most important western hemisphere engineering projects since construction of the - Panama canal is under discussion in the PWA. It is the first lap of the proposed Pan-American highway; would reach from Texas Tex-as to the Panama canal. . . . The ecnommlc value to the United Unit-ed States is considered tremen- dous. Money advanced would be repaid through tolls, gasoline taxes; etc. "... , Herbert Hoover's friends report that his trip through the west was a great relief re-lief entirely aside . from - politics. Ordinarily most active, he has got tremendously bored sitting still in Palo Alto.' . . . This is especially; true stnce:lie. abandoned abandon-ed medicine balUr Hoover's horse ' "Billy" was given to the faithful .ex-secretary, . Lawrence Richey, and the onlv exercise Hoover "! takes (a a'&rolf over Xelarid Staii- ford -campus every morning after breakfast. . ... ! t- III - I I 1 . .LI J t MORAL TURPITUDE I u - ju 1 - "" ' ' i The state department has unloosed un-loosed some really harsh cuss-words cuss-words in , the direction of the American v consul in Nicaragua who gave v a visa to Col. Camillo ' Gonzales, alleged slayer of the bandit1 chief. Sandino. . . . Bearing this visa, Gonzales entered New York harbor the other day, thereby there-by presenting the United States with another. Lady. Cathcart case. . . . Gonzales, by confessing the killing of Sandino, was guilty of "moral turpitude." But what made it bad for the. state department was that South Americans always suspected the United States of inspiring in-spiring Sandino's murder, and with his arrival in New York, they became be-came convinced of it. . . . Ex-Sec-fetary Stimson, age 64, plays deck tennis regularly at his home. Recently Re-cently he played against three state department boys, in five minutes min-utes had them panting. He was as fresh as ever. The committee for the nation, instrumental in the attack on the brain trust, has as its secretary, Edward A. Rumely, former owner of the New York Mall and convicted convict-ed during the war of disseminating . German propaganda. . . Son of a German blacksmith, he manufactured manufac-tured plows in Indiana, later went broke, despite that, bought the Mail, later served time in a federal fed-eral pen. . . Roosevelt's yen for fishing has ample precedent. Most of our recent presidents have been ardent fishermen. They include Cleveland, Teddy Roosevelt, Taft, and Hoover. . ... Coolidge at first scorned fishing, but got such a (Continued on Page Four) Flier Is Killed EL PASO, Tex., April 7 OLE) Frank Glenan, Tulsa, Okla., was killed yesterday when a plane he was flying crashed in mountainous - . desert country 40 miles southeast of here, according to word brought here. " ' .- . 1 .'- Airnnrt nfflrfal-- ald that ' Glenan was en route from Tulsa to Los Anceles. but thought that the flier had; lost his way as he . headed east when he left the airport air-port here. ; .i: -." The Herald extends congratulations congratula-tions .to Mrs, Ralph Jones Heber J. Done, mail carrier and Floyd .Harding, all of Provo who observe birthday anniversaries today. 5 50 DIE WHEW TIDAL WAVES ENGULF TOWN Tremendous Land Slides In Norwegian Fjord Brings Disaster AALESUND, Norway, Apr. 7 (U.R) A tremendous mass of mountain rock which crashed into the narrow, deep Norddalsfjord today, caused three- waves that overwhelmed overwhelm-ed the fishing villages of Tafjoh and Fjoerra, and killed perhaps 40 to 50 persons. The peasant fishermen and their families who make up the villages were asleep when the rock crashed into the almost bottomless fjord at 3 a. m. Immersed Power Plant They thought the judgement day had come when the first great wave roared through the villages and struck their little homes. It immersed the power plant and plunged the valley into darkness. Cries of, drowning persons, groans of victims buried in debris of houses, continued until there came a second wave, which swallowed swal-lowed up many who were calling from windows for help. Pastor Gives Story The- pastor of vthe tiny church at Taf jord the larger of the villages, vill-ages, with a population of 200 said to a United Press correspondent: correspond-ent: "Motor boats and rowboats were tossed half a mile up the valley by the waves. The crash of the rock had been expected, as it was overhanging, but nothing could be done to avert it. "The dead here included 12 women, 11 men and 17 children. Several whole families were wiped out, including one family of the two parents -and' seven children." The villages, along-wltJj tAale-sund, tAale-sund, are on the island of Aale-sund, Aale-sund, one of many off the west coast of Norway. - The villages are on either side of the Norddalsfjord, which runs in to the Island between steep towering tower-ing mountains at whose feet the .villages nestle,- At least 30 houses at Taf jord were swept into the sea or destroyed. de-stroyed. It was believed that 22 persons were drowned in1 six houses, but so great was the confusion that an authentic estimate was difficult. Taf jord was strewn with wreckage wreck-age of houses and boats. POSSE PURSUES BARROW GANG FORT SCOTT, Kan., April 7 (UP) Federal and state Officers and Kansas national guardsmen followed fol-lowed a hot trail in their search for Clyde Barrow and his outlaw companions near here early today after the notorious desperado released re-leased a hostage kidnaped in Oklahoma, Ok-lahoma, yesterday. Police Chief Percy Boyd of Commerce, Com-merce, Okla., suffered from a minor scalp wound received when his companion. Constable Cal -Campbell of Miami, Okla., was killed by the outlaws near Commerce, Com-merce, told of a wild ride with Barrow, Bonnie Parker and a second man he though was Raymond Ray-mond Hamilton. Boyd was treated well, he said His captors treated his injured head and Borrow gave him a clean shirt to replace his blood-drenched garment, he said . Released on highway near here ,just before 1 a. m. Boyd walked to a farm house and immediately telephoned the sheriff here. A hurried search was organized but no trace was found of the fugitives. Noted Speaker Brought To Provo In Return Engagement Employes and salespeople of Provo and Utah county are invited to hear Howard "Pat" Patience, dynamic Denver . speaker, district manager of the Western -j Auto Supply company, in a "pep" talk at the .city and county, building Tuesday, April 10. The meeting is scheduled at 7:30 o'clock in the south court room. Mr. Patience will be making his third speaking trip Into Provo Tuesday and comes highly recommended recom-mended by the members of the chamber of commerce and the Ki-wania Ki-wania club,; who heard him before. His talk before the : chamber of commerce was declared to be one -of the most inspiring ever heard here " . ' Crand Exalted V Walter F. Meier " of Seattle, Washington, grand exalted ruler of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, U. S. A. who is visitmg Provo today on a tour of the lodges of the state. ELDERS PLAN TWO-DAY MEET , Over 750 Elders and their wives are- expected'tei-attend -the Utah stake. Elders' convention to be held next Saturday and Sunday, April 14 and 15 in Provo, according accord-ing to W. H. Callahan, chairman of the Elder? committee of the high council who -have charge of the convention. High priests and seventies of Utah stake and their wives are invited in-vited to attend the two-days con ference. " Saturday Program The program will open Saturday evening at 7:30 in College hall with W. H. Callahan in charge. The program as outlined follows: Congregational singing; prayer; elders' quartet from the Second ward; talk, . Dr. Weston Oaks, "Fraternal possibilities of the Elders' quorum"; saxophone solo, Fred Webb; talk, G. Ott Romney, Recreational Possibilities in the Elders' Quorum"; quartet, Man- avu ward; benediction Recreational activities in the La'dies' gym following by a dance will conclude the Saturday session. ses-sion. Sunday Session The conference will reconvene Sunday afternoon in Utah stake tabernacle with Gerrit de Jong, Jr., in charge. The program is as follows: Congregational singing; prayer; elders' chorus, comprised of 50 voices; talks. Pres. T. N. Taylor, Gerritt de Jong and Fred G. Warnick; string trio, Professors Profess-ors Robertson, Buggert and Nelson. Nel-son. The principal speaker of the Sunday session wil lbe Elder David 0,x McKay of the Council of the Twelve. A roll call by quorums, will take place Sunday afternoon. QUILT PATTERN MONDAY The Nancy Page quilt pattern pat-tern which is regularly printed print-ed in the Sunday Herald will be run in the Monday issue of the Herald.- The visit of Mr. Patience is sponsored by a group of Provo merchants, negotiations for his trip being made by the chamber of commerce through Executive Secretary Clayton Jenkins, and the local branch of the Western Auto Supply, of which J W. Halliday is manager; -i-!.Vii-- V- ' As a member of the auto supply firm, as .well as member of the Denver chamber of commerce and the v Denver Klwanls . club, :;. Mr. Patience has had. occasion to . make many speaking trips -throughout the west. He is in demand at many school and public meetings for his talks, which are invariably characterized char-acterized by , optimism and, spirit.; Ruler: Here f V r S " "X. Rivalry Seen In Clean-up Drive Rivalry among the block workers work-ers of the Provo wards in the clean-up campaign now under way is getting keen, according to Jacob Coleman, chairman of the committee. com-mittee. The campaign objective is a cleaner and more beautiful city and the drive includes backyards back-yards as well as front lawns and ditchbanks everywhere. Taylor Claims, Honor "Charles H. Taylor, chairman of the First ward, maintains that his ward is now the cleanest in the city," reported Mr. Coleman Saturday. Sat-urday. His claims are challenged by William C. Carr captain of the Third ward forces who contends that his block workers have done the best work of the nine wards." The following list contains the names of the volunteer workers in the wards as submitted by Mr. Coleman. Remaining lists will be printed as fast as received by him: Piqneer Ward H. C. Walton, chairman, J. S. I Pullen, Peter Beck, James T. Lid- diard, Grover Miller. John J Peters, Alvon Snyder, Dutton Miller, Henry Hollermau, Michael Strebble, Kemp Anton, Wren Wil-kins, Wil-kins, Dave Cox, Milt Perry, Darwin Dar-win Perry, Elton Hartley, E: A. Batty, Elsie Moner, Joe Gourley, Mrs. Carlyle Hinckley. Fourth Ward Chas. D. Sessions, chairman, W. H. Boyle, Js Fleming Wakefield, Mrs. Christen Jensen, Mrs. Jos. C. Clark, Mrs. Glen Bennion, Mrs. Anson Hatch, Mrs. Theodore Taylor, Tay-lor, Mr. and Mrs. Royal Chamberlain, Chamber-lain, Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Porter; (Continued on Page Three) SNOW COLLEGE WIS CONTEST The Snow junior college won the one-act play contest at the speech tournament held by the Brigham Young university, Friday with "Drums of Code." Branch Agricultural Agricul-tural college placed second with its presentation of "Confessional" by Shaw. Carl Adams of Parowan high school was declared the winner In the male division of the high school diction contest with Louise Barton, Wasatch Academy, Mount Pleasant, first in the girls' division. di-vision. More than 50 teams were entered enter-ed in the junior college debating I tourney which continued until a late hour, Saturday night. Favor U. S. Control SALT LAKE CITY, April 7 (UP) The Utah Cattle and Horse Growers' . association was on record rec-ord today as favoring federal, administration ad-ministration and control Of public domain in: the 11 western states containing such lands. The association asso-ciation also went on record for the inclusion ' of cattle under the AAA as a basic commodity, v PROVO ELKS TO WELCOME LODGE CHIEF Banquet, Public Meeting Arranged For Noted Fraternal Head Extensive and elaborate preparations have been completed com-pleted by the Elks of Provo for the reception and entertainment enter-tainment of Walter F. Meier of Seattle, grand exalted ruler of the Elks of the United Unit-ed States, who is scheduled to arrive here late this afternoon from Eureka. A banquet in honor of Mr. Meier will be held at the Elks home at 6:30 tonight. The affair, with J. Edwin Stein as toastmas-ter,' toastmas-ter,' will be for Elks only. Meeting Starts at 8 An opportunity for the public to hear the distinguished visitor will be given at 8 o'clock, when a meeting begins at the Elks home, in charge of Ed. Scherer, exalted ruler of the Provo lodge 3Xo. 849. An address of welcome will be given by Mayor A. O. Smoot and Bishop W. P. Whitehead will give the invocation. Mrs. Alene Peterson Pet-erson and Donald Aldrich will furnish yocal numbers. Mr. Meier will be escorted from Eureka by a caravan of Provo and Tintic Elks, who will attend the meeting in Provo. in civil life, ir. Meier is a member of the Washington bar and has served in many public positions, later returning to the practice of law. He was born on a farm in Lancaster county, Nebraska, Ne-braska, September 12, 1879. Following Fol-lowing lus graduation in 1903 he came west, settling in Seattle. For a number of years he was engaged in the teaching profession profes-sion and lived for a time in Spokane. Spo-kane. His contributions to the Elks lodge have been outstanding since his- affiliation -with the Seattle Se-attle lodge in October, 1919. He is the first grand exalted ruler to be elected from the states lying ly-ing west of the Dakotas and north of California. NEW PROGRAM FOR RELIEF With the prospect work under the new FERA program postponed post-poned indefinitely, relief work in Utah county will go forward just as it did before the CWA work which closed on March 31, except that several new regulations are in effect. As an added measure of relief free seeds were being given out Saturday under the terms of the new "subsistence garden" program. pro-gram. Seeds are being given to families passed on by the social workers in the various communities under the program supervised by Lyman H. Rich, county agent. Thus far individual in-dividual plots of ground only have been considered, but W. Lester Mangum, county relief administrator, admin-istrator, Saturday negotiated a lease for 16 acres of ground to be used as a community garden in Provo. This is expected to provide garden stuff for 64. persons. Work Out Relief Under the relief setup now in force, as announced Saturday by Mr. Mangum, it is mandatory that ajl relief applicants physically able to work shall be given work (Continued on Page Eight) Registration For 52 CCC Vacancies Slated On Monday Registration of unmarried men from Lehi, American Fork, Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove, Provo, Springville, Spanish Fork and Payson between the ages of 18 and 25, for placement place-ment on CCC work will be held at the city and county building in Provo, Monday, April 9, only, from 9 a. m. until 12 o'clock. The Utah county allotment will consist of only fifty-two men to be placed solely on the basis of need. Only those men recommended recom-mended by local FERA committees will be considered for placement. All applicants will be examined either at Provo or Salt Lake and must be preparedtojreport immediately im-mediately following notice. Applicants Appli-cants - must furnish their own transportation to point of examination exam-ination and return i'f rejected. ' , No person, is eligible for registration regis-tration who has already been employed, em-ployed, in the CCC for any period whatever. . . Utah Beetmen Oppose Power Grant to Wallace Gillman Wires Senator King Approving Jones Bill On ' Main Points. Opposition to the granting of unlimited powers to Secretary Secre-tary of Agriculture Wallace over the sugar beet industry, was voiced by JWV Gillman, vice president of the National Nation-al Sugar Beet Growers' association, asso-ciation, in a message wired to United States Senator William H. King, Saturday afternoon. In response to a query of Senator Sen-ator King, Mr. Gillman declared that in general, the Jones bill is satisfactory. However, he qualified his statement by stating his opposition op-position to granting Secretary Wallace unlimited powers. No Overproduction He also urged a careful consideration consid-eration of the penalty provisions in the bill.' "It is important that we have legislation on sugar beets passed immediately," he stated. Mr. Gillman clarified his message mess-age to Senator King Saturday by pointing out that the sugar beet crop, unlike wheat and other basic crops, is not one which is being overproduced. He said that he feared if unlimited powers were granted to the secretary of agriculture agri-culture that the production might be materially cut down in the future. Senator King stated in his message that the Jones bill will probably be before congress the cominer week. He has sounded out a number of well-informed sugar beet men on their reactions to the proposed legislation. CLUB SPONSORS SHOW BANQUET SPANISH FORK Members of the Spanish Fork Kiwanis club will sponsor the annual governor's banquet Of the Junior Livestock show which will be held Wednesday Wednes-day evening, March 18, the second day of the show, it is announced. Wednesday is the big day for the livestock show and is known as "Governor's day." A special invitation in-vitation has been extended to Governor and Mrs. Henry H. Blood to attend the banquet Wednesday evening and to be in attendance all day Wednesday at the show. Other attractions for Governor's day will be a street parade of livestock on main street at 1 p. m. The horse pulling contest in the1 afternoon with horses from all over the state competing on the dynometer for the cash prizes, promises as usual to be the big attraction for Goycernor's day. The management of the show has received assurance that Future Fu-ture Farmers and 4-H clubs from all over the state will exhibit 5f While this is the first year that the show has been designated &f "Junior Livestock show" it is believed be-lieved the show will be bigger and better than ever. M. I. A. play: IN READINESS Some of the outstanding dramatic dra-matic talent of the Utah stake has been assembled for the annual M. I. A. stake play, "White Collars" Col-lars" which will be presented in College hall on Tuesday evening, April 24. Rehearsals for the play are already well into the final staeres. Each of the nine wards of t.hn stake is furnishing one actor .forT1,111 husband Eric Madison was the play, which is a modern corn- edy, unusually successful on tbeD311 Moody of Dillon, Mont., fol- New York stage as well as on the road. The play is directed bv Kathryn Decker and-JR. Paul- son, stake M..I. A. drama leaders. The personnel of the cast is as (Continued on Page Three) Frost Damage To Fruit Greater Than First Closer examination of fruit trees in Utah county disclosed a greater great-er damage from frost that was at first supposed, although the losses vary somewhat with the location, according to agricultural inspectors inspect-ors and growers. In most sections, peaches and apricots, .whose buds are farther advanced at this time, suffered from 50 to 75 per cent damage. A possible exception is . the Provo bench fruit belt which often escapes frost damage when other sections are hit, because of the Provo canyon breezes. Silver Nationalization" Objective of New Diwe Launched In Congreks ' - Restoration of 1926 Commodity Prices is Sought; Administration Leaders Are Alarmed; Compromise Possible. By LYIJE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright 1934, by United Press) f WASHINGTON, April 7 (U.R) A bill for nationalization nationaliza-tion of silver and restoration of 1926 commodity price levels is circulating secretly today on Capitol Hill. It is part of a powerf ul movement to enaclilver legislation legis-lation this session, compelling President Roosevelt either to accept or veto. . Administration leaders appear somewhat alarmed by the silver threat. They now are proposing a compromise, built around the Dies silver bill which passed the house two-to-one over administration objections. ' , Opposes Premium Feature White House spokesmen in the j w- QZgrwe senate believed Mr. Roosevelt ROOSCVelt OlgUS would accept the Dies bill if its 1 premium provisions were elimin- W 5) 11 3 TIT tft KrUlCT i ated or modified. As now drafted If Oil lV 1"C the bill would give a premium in f-,.-!! ; f TT " purchasing power to foreign sil- illSuiL lO Ue Om. ver spent here for surplus agri culturalproducts. The proposed nationalization plan includes remonetization of silver. Silver advocates predict a veto would make silver the prime issue of this, congressional campaign. cam-paign. Senator Elmer Thomas, Dem., Okla., drafted the new silver sil-ver proposal. It was Thomas who drew the currency expansion amendment enacted at the special spec-ial session a year ago this month. It became the foundation of administration ad-ministration currency policies. Offers As Amendment Thomas proposes that the bill, or something like it, be attached as an amendment to the Dies bill. The Thomas bill provides: 1. Nationalization of domestic sliver bullion by purchase at the highest spot price prevailing the day prior to issue of a nationalization national-ization proclamation. 2. Payment to be made with silver certificates. 3. The secretary of treasury would be authorized henceforth to purchase in the world market foreign silver up to 50,000,000 ounces a month. These purchases of foreign silver sil-ver would continue untilv: 1. Commodity prices had been uestored to 1926 levels, or: 2. - Silver reached a ratio-parity with the gold dollar. Silver would be reckoned at $1.29 an ounce in the issue of silver certificates, thereby, as Thomas explained, creating a considerable profit for the treasury. treas-ury. For instance, if 300,000,000 ounces of silver were nationalized and purchased by proclamation at 50 cents an ounce, the paper profit pro-fit to the treasury would be the difference between that price and i $1-29 approximately $240,000,000 Purchase of foreign silver also would be made with silver cer tificates, Thomas said. His plan is a substitute for the Wheeler purchase-remonetization bill, ; the Fiesingef bill, and other congressional congres-sional silver projects. "This plan would make money for the treasury," Thomas said. 'It would do what the Democratic platform demanded rehabilitate silver. It amounts to controlled inflation." Expects Acquital LOS ANGELES, April 7 (U.R) Confidence that his sister, Bellie May Madison, would be speedily acquitted of murder charges growing out of the death of her expressed today by former Sheriff lowing his arrival to aid her defense. de-fense. "I am satisfied my sister 1 has an adequate defense," Moody said after concluding the interview. inter-view. "I am confident ,of her acquittal." ac-quittal." s- Report Pears, also well along, suffered approximately 50 per cent damage, as far as can be estimated. Some of. the cherry varieties, particularly particular-ly pie cherries and the Windsor, may have' suffered as greatly as the peach crop. The extent of the damage to the strawberry crop is more or less uncertain. un-certain. Only a few of the earliest varieties were out in bloom and all such blooms were killed. However, How-ever, the strawberries keep blooming bloom-ing for a period of several, weeks, thus reducing the damage at this time of the season. . Grop WASHINGTON, April 7 (HEX A presidential warrant for the arrest of Samuel Insull and' his return to the United States has been signed by President Roosevelt Roose-velt and the full text cabled to the Turkish authorities, the state' Butron Y. Berry, American vice consul at Istanbul, was named in the presidential warrant as the American,: acent to briner Insilf back to this country. . j The route which Berry and his. prisoner will follow in leaving Tur key and what ship will bring them mottara Via cf a to Hanortmonf ea A for decision by the American am bassador' izr Turkey, Robert; P-Skinner, P-Skinner, arid Berry. . r , AUDIT BRINGS ACTION Governor Henrv H. Blood's deA mantis f nr sneed v cnrrmlptirtn nt n recheck on an audit which disclosed dis-closed an alleged shortage - of X24.j4 in flnonnnta 1 nrtminiotorfiH by Secretary of State Milton H. W?lliriir RaturHuw ViiriicrVif w." Q mm, v ""J MAWWUl AW suits. John A. Malia, state bank com- missioner, autnorizecp C Preston Allen, accountant in charge of 4.1 i . . me cwHci;., lu employ as many additional workers as needed, to complete the work within the ne":t week or 10 days. Attorney General Joseph Chez, following a conference with the governor Saturday morning, asked ask-ed Comity Attorney Harold E. Wallace to prosecute: persons implicated in the asserted shortage, short-age, without delay.. The audit now under consideration consider-ation was started in . February. A second audit shows an additional alleged shortage of approximately $1600 in funds turned In to the secretary of state's office' from truck capacity increase' fees,, but not reported; ; Secretary Welling has placed suspicion upon one employe in his office, in connection with -the shortage and has urged speedy prosecution, of the person or persons per-sons implicated. 3 V 5flys: HOLLYWOOD, CaL, April 6 Can't bring Insull back yet I see by the papers today where . he . hasn't finished his . memoirs. N. Y. Stock exchange Is having its own investigation. They are investigating 14 different dif-ferent stocks that have been ; acting so fanny that Wall street itself didn't know what . they were doing. In other words, you can fool the public but you mustn't fool the members mem-bers of the lodge. The high income tax come pretty near passing Thursday in the senate. Only lacked -about six , votes. So it won't be long now. Well, there Is millions and milllonsvthat are not making It, that would be glad to give up 99 percent If you would let 'em earn a hundred thousand or more. ' :. -. VTv- Yours, O J OJOTcKaugM Syndic tt. tat. mwm DLL 7 V . |