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Show MAY START COLLIERIES. THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. ANDREW JENSEN, PablUhan, SPANISH FORK, UTAH. UTAH STATE NEWS. Tbe prediction U made by J, T. Jonet that in ten years Utah will be tb banner iron state. An effort is being made to prevent the light from taking place in Salt Lake City. There is again talk of extending the street car line running from Salt Lake to Murray on to Sandy, During the month of July, Utah mining companies have declared dividends aggregating 8'.87,000. An enterprising Salt Lake saloon man has introduced the game of ping pong in his place of business. Millard county was the first in the late this year to select delegates to the Republican state convention. Smallpox has been stamped out all over Uintah county, and at present there is no quarantine at any point. The daughter of R. N. Gray of Salt Lake fell into a tub of hot water and was so badly scalded that her recovery is doubtful. Lewis Garff, one of Lehi's most promRoot-Gardn- er four-year-o- inent citizens, is dead from heart fail- ure, superinduced by being overcome by the tieat while working in the sun. A case of smallpox is reported from Ephraim. The cane is reported to be very mild and every precaution has been taken to prevent the spread of the disease. The amount paid out as bounties on grasshoppers in Sanpete county will yeach about 84,000, while it is figured this expenditure has saved crops worth over 8100,000. Pioneer day was duly celebrated at the state prison, when a minstrel performance was presented by some of the convicts for the edification of their fellow prisoners, Charles Ready, a Salt Lake City carpenter, was struck on the head by a falling brick while at work one day last week and received injuries which may prove fatal. The saloon men of Salt Lake are said to be organizing for the purpoee of forcing the authorities to stop hotels, pi ubs and drug stores from dispensing liquor on Sundays. The Socialists of the state, at a meeting held in Salt Lake City last week, placed a state ticket in the field. There were thirteen delegatee in attendance, representing six counties. G. Yuma, a Japanese, while engaged In cleaning windows in a building in Salt Lake City, fell from the second story to the pavement below, receiving Injuries which may prove fatal. J. Floyd Hamilton, who shot and killed Robert llrown in a Salt Lakv employment agency, has been released from custody, the testimony showing tbe shooting was in self defense. The peopleof Santaquln made a great slaughter upon the grasshoppers last week when about SOU bushels of tha pests were captured, one man bagging bushels in one days work. Tbe supreme court has decided that Annie Armitage Hilton was the legal wife of the late Dr. John R, Park, and, being now his widow, is entitled to d of his estate. and will receive Ann Stanley of Salt Lake, while going to the door to answer a rap, Stumbled and fell, her head drinking against the corner of a dresser, indicting a wound which will probably prove twenty-fiv- e one-thir- fatal. As the result of an overdose of wood alcohol, which wns taken accidentally Instead of whisky, Mra. Sopha Hillman died at the lirlghton hotel at ltrighton, where she had been employed aa laundress. Charles Short, a discharged veteran pf tbe Philippine war, wound up a protracted spree in Sait Lake last week by attempting suicide, taking an overdose of morphine, but his life was saved by a narrow margin. State Coal Mine Inspector Thomas declares that many lives could have mine if been saved at the someone who understood mine ventilation had been on the scene at the time of the accident. It ia estimated that45,0oo,ooo pounds manufactured by the of sugar will Six factories in Utah this year. Last year 32,000,000 pounds was the total output of tiie slate, so that an increase of fully 40 per cent is anticipated over last years product. Tbe directors of the Consolidated Mercur company, whose property is located at Mercur, last week posted tbe regular monthly dividend of or 3 cents a share, and reported the mines to be in better condition than ever before. Fire early Sunday morniug destroyed the entire upper worksof the Honerioe mine at Stockton. The fire began at midnight and raged for more than two hours before It burned Itself out. Tha origin of the fire is unknown. Loss about 875,000, fully insured. N. P, Matsoo, a miner employed In the Shower mine at Diamond, bad a narrow escape from death last week when a rock fell upon him, crushing several ribs and otherwise injuring him, bs being rescued by comradss In time to prevent suffocation. Daly-We- st 1 830,-00- 0, Anthracite Operator! Are Likely to Mato the Attempt During the Present Week, The beginning of the eleventh week of the anthracite miner's strike fiDdi apparently no change imthe situation althongh the rumor has been revive! that an effort will be made some da this week upon the part of one of till large companies to start one of theii collieries. The companies haveasuf ficient number of coal and iron police men enlisted now to prevent trouble should it arise, and all that would bs necessary to get a mine in operation would be a sufficient number of miner! and laborers to blast the coal and load it on the cars. No doubt plenty of ordinary laborers could be secured, but it Is a question whether a sufficient number of miners could be persuaded to go into the workings. At strike headquarters the belief is as strong as ever that the operators cannot resume, aud that it is idle talk to even suggest such a thing. President Mitchell implicitly suya that the situation is about the same, and that the strikers are as firm as ever. MANY FATAL ACCIDENTS. Interstate Commerce Commission Issues Interesting Bulletin, The interstate commerce commission has issued a bulletin on collisions and derailments of trains and casuailties to persons for the three montbsendiDg March 31, 1902. According to this showing, the number of persons killed in train accidents was 212, and injured, 2,111. All accidents of other kinds, including those sustained by employees while at work and by passengers iu getting on or off the cars bring the total number up to 813 killed and 0,958 injured. During this period there were 1,220 collisions and 838 derailments, of which 221 collisions and eighty-fo- ur derailments affected passenger trains, result fatal accidents to ing in forty-on- e passengers aud 820 Injured, The damage to cars, engines and railway by these accidents amounted to 81,914,258. at tha Age of 130. Mam Aupl Marl, a native of India, who has resided In Nan Francisco as far back as the memory of the white roan runs, is dead at the age of 130 years. Aupi Mam Mari had a most romantic career. According to the story of his life, told several years before bla mind became clouded, he was the son of an Indian prince and was kidnaped when he was a child and taken to the Hawaiian islands. There he lived for some years, a slave to a Chinese planter, and finally came to California as a fugitive. From a Malay on a sailing vessel he learned that hie father and brothers had wasted yeara in trying to trace him, and had finally met their deaths in resistance lo British rule in their own country. Die Nolle BATTLE WITH FITZSIMMONS LASTED EIGHT FURIOUS ROUNDS. Looked a Though the Oniluhman Had All the Bent of the Fight, When Two Lucky Fanchei Euded the Battle. After fighting fiercely for eight was rounds, Robert Fitzsimmons knocked to the floor by James Jeffries and counted out, after he had so badly punished the champion that it looked as if the Cornishmun must win. Bleeding from a number of gashes in the face, apparently weakening and clear ly unable to cope with Fitzsimmons superior skill, Jeffries delivered two lucky punches as Fitzsimmons paused in his fighting to speak to him, and turned the tide. The battle was brief but noteworthy ind will live in pugilistic history. Fitzsimmons tried once to arise from the mat but sank down again iu helplessness and heard himself counted out, where but a moment before he had apparently all the better of it. J will never fight again, said the veteran of the ring battle-scarre- d when he had sufficiently recovered to The fight was won fairly and to the best man belongs the laurels. You are the most dangerous man alive, said Jeffries in return, and I consider myself lucky to have won when I did. Fitzsimmons had been fighting at a furious gait, cool and deliberate, and chopping the champion to pieces with the terrific rights and lefts that have made him famous. It was the draught horse and the racer from the tap of talk. the gong. When the men came together Fitzsimmons appeared rather worried, but on the opening of the first round be assumed an air of absolute confidence aud fought with the deliberation ol the general that he is. As early as the second round Fitzsimmons had Jefferies bleeding profusely from mouth aod nose. Again and again he landed on his balky opponent, getting away in such a clevet manner that it brought down the great house with cheers. It seemed that Jeffries could scarcely weather ovt the gale. Then the eighth round came and after a series of hot exchanges Fitzsimmons paused with his guard down and The latter! spoke to the champion. reply consisted of two terrific blowi that brought back to him the fleeting championship and forever removed the veteran Fitzsimmons from tbe fistic arena. Fitzsimmons took his defeat witb VENEZUELANS DEFEATED. amaziog good cheer. He walked to Government Troop Routed end A in mu the center of the ring and raising bis hand addressed the multitude, saying: ntt4n aptured. The best man has won. Had I beaten The Venezuelan revolutionary genJeffries tonight I should have conceded eral, Luciano Meudoza, learning that him the championship and forever rePresident Castro was receiving reinforcements from Trujillo, state of Loi tired from the riDg. I retire just the Andes, awaited near Alto de la Palma same now but without having Iain satisfied. my ambition. a body of these reinforcements, 1,004 The for tickel sales the fight aggrestrong, uuder command of Leopold! 835,00o. gated An reRaptista. engagement ensued, sulting in the defeat of the reinforce TOWN FLOODED. ments by Mendoza's troops .and till of their Thi ammunition. capture forces of Baptists were driven back ti Western Tart of Irwin Inundated by Breaking of .Dam. Caraclie, seat of Los Andes. Not a manufacturing establishment Vendetta In Kentucky, In Irwin, Pa., is running as a result of The petition of Tom Cockrill, charge! Friday nights storm. The breaking with killing lieu Hargis at Jackson of the two dams flooded the entire Ky., asking for change of venue toanj western part of Irwin and at Coal Holother county than Breathitt, excep low houses, bridges aud railroad sidKnott and Lee, makes the extraordi- ings were washed away. The big nary statement that Breathitt and tin Westmoreland car shops were damaged other counties named are ao complete- thousands of dollars. In the country, ly under control of his enemies, whe many coal shafts are flooded aud dozThe hail are stated to be influential and wealthy ens of bridges destroyed. eat all the oats and corn to that he would be certain to he ad- and all vegetation is the ground destroyed. judged guilty. The plea contains I Near Washington the creek overflowed and the bound for train bitter arraignment of Hie Hargiasos. passenger Waynesburg, with 100 passengers, was Tbs Wyoming Tie Ring Retires From held up nearly all night. C accom-plisl- id ItllftlllMle Teller, the tie king, lias sold his business In Southern Wyoming tc the Carbon Timber company. Th deal includes tools, camps, unexpired contracts with the- Union Pacific and Teller's bond not to engage in business In competition with the purchasers. The new company has secured a large tract of timber near the bead of the Encampment river ami expects to have too men at work inside of the next thirty days. ii, C. - Two KiHetl Rmull Injured of I tplotloii. Two men were killed aud two others seriously burned by an explosion ol gas In one of the Nun Bois Coal company's mines, one mile west of MoCur-taiI. T. The dead are Andrew Pii.ell and James Brown. The naiuei i of the two injured men have not learned. Brown was tbe son ol Bennett Brown of Iluntlnglou, Ark., the southern manager of the Central Coal A Coke company, and was also s nephew of Superintendent Brown ol the Nan Bois mloe. miiiI U-et- Itiitts Burglar Fatally Wounded, burglar, who refused to give hit name and upon whom nothing wt4 found whereby bis Identity could be established, was allot and mortally wounded ns lie attempted to make Uii escape from the rear of the resldenct of Namur! Trctoar. in Butte. Mrs. Treloar heard the burglar at his work and gave Hie alarm. Hugh Anderson a neighbor, responded, and upon tin robber refusing to stop, tiled at him the bullet peueti sting hit abdomen Bod bringing him to the ground. A PERFORATED WITH BULLETS. Woman Live Eighteen Hoar With Bullet Wounil Through Heart. An investigation by the Coroner into the death of Mrs. Cecilia M. Sullivan of Baltimore, from bullet wounds, sliows that she lived eighteen hours, with one bullet wound through self-inflicte- d, Hie heart, another that penetrated the stomach, liver and spleen, and one that grazed her heart. Flglitlug Mil Treat. The announcement from Montreal that the Canadian laeific railway had, at the request of the Cunndian ministers now in London, offered to establish and work a weekly fast service between Quebec and Liverpool during the summer, and between Halifax and Liverpool in ttic winter, with a good freight service, is causing considerable Stir in England, where it Is hailed with delight as being an offset toJ. Iler-poMorgan's shipping rotuhine. The evening papers have flaming headlines, reading, English combination lo fight the American trust, etc. nt LEAPED INTO A FUNNEL. KILLED IN PHILIPPINES. JAPANESE CLAIM ISLAND. JEFFRIES STILL CHAMPION. Served on (iovernment That Claim Marcus Island. to lotted Urate Army During Three Tear' HontilUle. 's Major Jarnea Parker of the adjutant-generalstahas compiled department Casualties Jap The Japanese government has served notice on the state department that It the insurrection in claims possession of Marcus island, to- tistics, regarding the Philippines. There were 2,156 enward which is now heading an Ameriwith the enemy, more or can expedition under Captain Rosehill gagements between February 4, 1899, less serious, with a purpose of exhausting its guano of tattle of Manila, aod the date the deposits. Regarding it as extremely fixed as the virtual desirable that no collision occur, the April 30, 1902, The insurrection. of the downfall state department has taken measures atwere of these fights to advise Captain Rosehill that be must larger portion American on ambush the from tacks offer no resistance if he should fall in in which only with a Japanese warship which is also troops, or skirmishes took small detachments part. speeding for the island. The number of troops that have been Rosehill landed on this Island about thirteen years ago. He put up a sign transported to the Philippines and have 16 last was and deposited a bottle setting forth hia arrived there up to July The men. and officers 123,803 claims to the island, erected a flagpole 4,135 from taken monthly and hoisted the United States flag. average strength, Then he sailed away from the island, returns for the period of tiie insurrecwas approximately 40,000. leaving it unoccupied, a fact which tion, Major Parker summarizes the casumay vitiate his title. of the American army as follows: alties Of these facts he informed the state or died of wounds, 69 officers Killed for he hut many neglected department, 936 enlisted men; deaths from disand in tiie file to years treasury department the bond required by the guano ease, 47 officers and 2,535 enlisted men; island laws. In fact this bond was drowned, 6 officers and 257 enlisted men; suicide, 10 officers aod 72 enlisted only filed within the lu6t year. Mean1 while, finding a deserted island, some men; murdered, officer and 91 enlisted total men; deaths, 139 officers and 4,015 Japanese landed and began to take enlisted men; wounded, 19 officers and away the guano. There are believed enlisted men, a total of 2,897 to be two score of them now on the 2,707 killed and wounded and deaths other island, and tiie Japanese government than by disease, 282 officers and 4.188 enlisted men; total, 4,470. holds that their title is good. A large portion of the deaths by The Japanese 'warship carried the occurred in action or in acdrowning Rose-hil- l, from his to message government tive operations against the eDemy. advising him to offer no resist- Major Parker makes the percentage of ance, and as it will probably reach killed and wounded to the strength of Marcus island, distant only 1,000 miles the army 9.7. from from Yokohama, before the Rose-bi- ll CAUSED CHILDREN'S DEATH. schooner which sailed from HonoVerdict of Spokane Coroner' Jury Iu the lulu, 2,000 miles distant, it is believed Graham Case. that there will be no clash between the of the corner's jury verdict By the schooner's passengers and the Mr. sad Mrs. E. C. Graham of Spokane, Japanese coolies now on the island. Wash., caused the death of their three CREMATED ALIVE. children by criminal neglect. The inquest resulted ia a verdict That death Seven People Burned to Death In a Wrack was caused by diphtheria and that the on the Nenr XrulHt Ohio The Panhandle Limited train from parents, George Graham and his wife, Rose Graham, are guilty of criminal St. Louis, eastbound for New York, was wrecked at Trebins station, a way negligence for failing to employ or accept skilled medical assistance. stop a short distaoce from Xenia. EnThe jury also recommended that a Clark of Xenia was imprisoned gineer law be passed covering such state under his engine ami burned toacrisp. offiense and fixing a penalty, Mr. and Ilis fireman of I'iminnati, name unMrs. Graham are members of the known, was terribly mutilated, hia head being crushed, his right arm society known as the Church of God broken and both legs cut off. Neveo and do not believe in medicine, though surgery is permitted. When the chilpassengers were burned to death in a dren became sick they were anointed Pullman sleeper, and fifteen others by an elder of the church. Later a doctor was called and was allowed to were injured. lance the children's throats, but not to Train No. 2 was flying eastward at give them Three died and limited speed when the engine struck one recovered. Whether the parents a loaded coal car which had escaped will be prosecuted has not been defrom the siding in Xenia and had run termined. down grade to the danger point. The MADE A RICH HAUL. engine struck it going at a full speed and was turned over, with Engineer Train Rohbera Secure a Big Sum From Mexican Central Express. Clark underneath. Tiie postal car, A daring hold-u- p took place on the combination car and day coach, imMexican Central, Wednesday morning, pelled by the heavy sleepers behind, after the train left Bernijillo. At piled over the engine. Two Pullmans just three Americans boarded the Beroijillo followed aod were laid across tha two secreting themselves on the train, track at right angles. blind baggage and the other entering A gas tank under one of the cars exthe third class coach. As soon as the ploded, setting fire to tiie wreck, and train pulled out tiie two rid'mg on the the postal car, the coaches and two blind baggage entered tiie express car sleepers were destroyed. Cries for and covered tiie messenger with their help could be heard coming from one guns, and ordered him lo throw up his of the ullmans, and t lie helpless onhands. The messenger offered no relookers were compelled to see two sistance. women and one man burned to death The robbers then went leisurely before their eyes, unable to lend any the safe, securing 850,000 in through aid on account of the fierceness of the currency consigned to the Banco Min-e- ro fiaracs. at Chihuahua. They also took what other money package were in Solomon's Trtnpl round. the safe and stood quietly by until the The Neues Wiener Tageblatt says train neared a station, making a hasty that Dr. Zellia, a professor at the exit and dropping off the train as it was slowing dowu, made their escape. Vienna university, who is exploring Palestine in heliuif of t lie Imperial TRACY AGAIN HEARD FROM. Academy of Sciences, lifts discovered the walls and gateway of tiie ancient Declare Ha lla Biulucs In Nett! Will Merrill Brother Before Leavlug temple of Solomon in the neighborCountry, hood of Janoha'.'.M. .n Samaria. According to a dispatch from Tatrtk Lnilar IleaU Hiillijr o Conteniptof coma: Tracy, the outlaw, appeared at Court Charge. Miller's logging camp, four miles from At Parkersburg, W. Va., John L. Kansaskat, Wash, Wednesday, and Gehr of Colorado, an organizer of the ate dinner. When asked why ha did United Mine Workers of America, not lake advantage of the lull and pleaded guilty to contempt of court escape from Green River valley, Tracy after his case had been pending all day said: and many witnesses lotd testified on 1 have some business to settle with his speeches of contempt. Gehr Is the Merrill's brother. 1 understand that only person at Pai'koraburg now the brother wants to see me." '1 charged with contempt, tiie eleven racy ia not wounded and looks other cases which weie pending against fresh and rested. He is wearing a alleged violators of (lie court's injunc- derby hat, and had a slouch hat In his tion being rclcused on their own re- pockeL He still has his Winchester and two revolvers and lias a good sup-pl- y cognizances. of ammunition. Mur hi Wrt Mrglnti, IUre TOO MUCH HANDSHAKING. Two nefjroea wlmsp nmiios are were lynched ui Womelsdolf, rronilnent Iowa Maun Loir Hi Rlgbl W. Va., by an angry mob numbering Hand, several hundred. The first victim was J. N. McCiatiahan, a prominent polisliot and killed iu the stution house; tician of Cory don and Master tiie second was taken to the park, of the Masonic order of Iowa, has lost where he wns hanged and then riddled bis right hand from the effects of a with bullets auil cut to pieces. Both handshake with a friend. The grip whites and negroes are enraged and in received was ao hard that aavrral of arms. The trouble grows out of tha tha 'small bones were broken and murder of Chief of Police Bud Wil- afterward caused a cancerous growth. moth of Elkins. Several other arrests have been made and lynching teemed Amputation became necessary and the Imminent. operation has been performed. I'mi-llMm- ll anti-toxin- e. wn An Imllan Bad Man, About noon Thursday while Assistant Governor Ferguson of Oklahotni Kansas Maa Adopt llorrilila Method U Cashier Prrtllpa was In the Fortvilla, commuted the death sentence ofCe Fmt Filatenre, d Ind , bank alone, a man Bruner to life He imprisonment LeavenOlln Grellsh, aged 23, ef came In, pointed a revolver at Prettlpe to have been at Tecumse hanged worth, Kan., committed suicide be- and fired. The ball went wild, Tha Friday for the murder of Martin ' tween Lebanon and Npringfleld, Mo., man then demanded that Prettlpe give near Violet Npringa, Okla., In De Tha shot atby leaping Into the funnel of a loco- him 82,500 or lie killed. ber last. The governor had motive drawing the westbound 'Frisco tracted the attention of people outsids ecret the decision because it wa According to passengers and the robber ran. He escaped to the leged that mobs were passenger welling on who witnessed the scene, Grelish wood half a mile away, where a posse decision to act. liruoer lisa hen climbed on top of the water tank and e men captured him after moved from Tecutuaeh. The rt with a whoop dove Into tbs funnel. of twenty-fiv11s was pulled out by the trainmen wounding him. lie fired hie pistol re- for the commutation was the yout the prisoner, being only H with difficulty, terribly burned and peatedly, but hit nobody. while tbe murdered boy was years 4ad. 12, well-dresse- news smiiilid Torrential rains in Vienna V damage to buildings. Generals Delaney and Bou, left Pretoria for Europe. loir j Sir Ilr for King George of Saxon, deaths door with pneumonia ' It is announced that ther, eases of cholera at M ukden, Mt There haa been a terrific nJj eanio eruption off Horta it nci D: irye seals jwn Fayal. The Illinois miners during tk, week gave 8100,000 to tli r miners. Flood conditions in Texas proving, the water suhsidinJ. rapidly. Consternatien prevails j0 Egypt, owing to the terrifying gress of cholera. Six thousand of the 30,000 sir garment workers in New York 1 returned to work. cholera are reported from In forty-eig- ht hours. Manila, Recent storms in Austria and gary did much damage, many logs being destroyed. Edward Dangler of Seattle lit deaths door bs a result of a txi given him by footpads. Ross Douglass, former treasw-thisland of Cebu, has been ft guilty of embezzlement. Tbe treasury report last t showed, available cash balanwi, gold, 899,941,808. The Republicaus of the Kin) tail r 636,540; Aiwa Sixth ) sour! district have nominated Job 001 T for congressman. Lindsay ub In Nan Francisco another exped. lost to search for buried treasure on 0, tyi island is being organized. tut I Carl Koehler, a prominent Gr architect of Seattle, was killed: train near Eau Claire, Wis. About 7,000 cigarraakers of Be have gone on strike. They dean material increase in wages. Mias Katherine Foley fell frot saddle horse and wbs instantly K, at Butte, ber neck being broken. Charles Iliatt, suspected of nor: ing his wife in Ntillwater, If ins., 1897, has been arrested in OUlabomi The Bulgarian minister of tgrie ture and commerce has forbidden : Importation of American grApevine ' As a result of an attempt to taxes to pay the Boxer inder. there has been an uprising it. Chiu. n b c During ths past fifty year 3 , persona have emigrated from Iro 83 per cent coming to the It' Ntatea. Information has been received! the commander of the Topeka to attack is expected on Puerto Cat Venezuela. The plants of the Oweuboro,I Cc Planing Mill company and the nenlal Tobacco company were stroyed by fire last week. Total 1100,000. A cloudburst caused heavy dw near Dresden, N. Y. Afres of e were destroyed, and a numberof i ings, barns and other buildingi' washed away. In Savannah, Ga., the first b.( new cotton of the season of sold at auction for 11 cents a F The bale, classed full middling,1 exported to Liverpool. head of native M Sixty-on- e cattle shipped from that state awl to fanners at Ntronghurst. found to be suffering from I'1 fever. Nineteen head have died. 1 en At Atoka. I. T., James surrendered to the police, Keen1 at exp-th- it was bo who killed hit ' there several days ago, also ber er, Mrs. Grant, and John Houck Galveston, Houston ami SaoAl 8' CBst bound passenger train was milesesstoD' by a washout eight Blanca. Two trainmen wer I and several passengers badly brl Good rains are reported all South Arizona counties. Tbt hsve'come just In time to prevent mous losses to cattlemen. Tb ready will reach many thou1 dollars. W'otkmen excavating in agrtt two miles south of Dallas. Tes earthed the remains of a toast' The jaw bones were in perfect1 and eight feet In length, but c011 when exposed to the air, At Depoy, Hopkins county Mrs. Ellen Turley shot tuJ j I her child, attempt kill two other children, and Sh shot and killed herself. been HI and probably was teP j Insane. The gross revenue from Cblufj tbt migration to Canada for amounts to 1304,872, 8178,703 for last year. Th w J last year was raised from 15 The number who paid the tax j 19(L In with 2,518 J compared j The navy department k step to Investigate the rcprf klpP' ference with American which Venezuelan waters, molted from thererrot declared by President number of porta lo the rep'1 A i in i I have h. 1 t :o ! mi i ! i. 1 2 T i |