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Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ANDREW JENSEN, THAW HIMSELF LEFT WOMEN TO UTAH LEGISLATURE, NOT RESPONSIBLE WHEN DROWN HE KILLED hew bills luced in the house on the To make gambling purpose of a bill introduSV WHIT! UTAH UTAH STATE NEWS Senator Sutherland has Introduced for a a bill granting boulevard through Fort Douglas Mil Itary reservation. The Issuance of not less than worth of bonds to erect three new school buildings In Salt Lake was deright-of-wa- Half Naked Passengers Soon Succumb to Cold and Sink Beneath Icy Waves. $250,-00- 0 cided upon by the board of education last week. Of the old, folks present at the old folks' celebration in Ml Pleasant laBt week, there were 18 over 80 years, 13 over 75 years, 28 over 70 years and 80 " over 60 years of age. Some of the farmers of Mount Pleasant are already engaged In plowing, preparing for the spring crop. Winter seems to have gone for good, from present indications. The report of the building Inspector of Salt Lake City for the past year shows that there were 621 permits for new buildings issued, the estimated cost of which was $2,315,930. The Sweet Candy company of Salt Lake, one of the largest manufacturing concerns of its kind In the west, will within the coming year erect a y modern factory In Salt Lake City. The Utah Light & Railway company of Salt Lake, last week placed an or dor with eastern factories for eighty miles of steel rails and an order with Oregon firms for 150,-00- 0 1 five-stor- ties. Samuel Doxey, architect and builder, and for many years associated with the public school system of Salt Lake City as an Instructor In manual training, dropped dead In an epileptic fit on Friday. A great deal of the stock for the erection of the new opera house at Sprlngvllle has been subscribed, and the company will soon be Incorporated. The proposed building will cost $20,000. During the year 1900 a total of 237 fires broke out within the limits of Salt Lake City, involving property valued at $2,223,840. The actual loss, however, la shown to amount to only $60,293.60. The Commercial club of Salt Lake City, through the action of its board of governors at a special meeting held last week, has declared unequivocally against a railroad commission for the state or Utah. Survivors Tell Thrilling Tales of the Wreck of the Steamer Larchmont. Grave Charges Against Captain. Providence, R. I. Terrible tales of suffering were brought here by some of the survivors of the steamer Larch-montwhich went to the bottom In Block Island sound Monday night, and some of the passengers assert that In women the hour of peril helpless were thrust aside by men who cared only for their own, safety. The charge of cowardice was made lad by Fred Ileirgesell, an of Brooklyn, N. Y, He said that not only were women left to their fate, but that Captnlu McVey left the sinking ship In the very first life boat; that some of the ship's crew filled the boats to the exclusion of the passen. gers, and that at least one boat was without oars when It was put over tlfp side. A careful compilation of figures In this city early Wednesday shows that 138 lives are known to have been It is known lost in the disaster. that there were not less than 157 persons on board. Of that number only bodnineteen survived. Seventy-on- e ies have been recovered, thirty-eigh- t of them having been Identified. There , the Two Hundred People on Board the Vestel When She Sailed, Only Nineteen Appear to Have Survived Disaster off Rhode island Coast. Of Rock Island, R. I. About 150 persons went to their death In Block Island sound as a result of a collision of the three-masteschooner Harry Knowlcton and the Joy line steamer Larchmont, bound from Frovldence to New York. It Is estimated that, including the crew, there were nearly 200 persons on boat'd the steamer when she sailed from Providence. Of these, only nineteen appear to have survived the disaster, ten members of the crew Forty-eigh- t and nine passengers. bodies have been recovered. Awakened from their slumbers in their staterooms, the unfortunate passengers were at the mercy of the fates. Many it Is believed, went down with the ship. Others, temporarily thankful that they had escaped drowning, prayed that they might be relieved of the terrible pain caused by their frozen bodies, and one unknown passenger plunged a knife Into bis throat and ended his sufferings. The few who survived were In pitiful condition. In almost every case their arms and legs hung helplessly as they were lifted out of,the .boats in which they reached shore. During bodies came ashore, the day forty-eigh- t either in boats or thrown up by the sea. The cause of the accident has. not been satisfactorily explained. It occurred just off Watch II111 about 11 oclock at night, when the three-maste- d schooner Harry Knowleton, bound from South Amboy for Boston with cargo of coal crashed into the steam-erport side amidships. Captain George McVey of the Larchmont declares that the Knowleton suddenly swerved from her course, luffed up into the wind and crashed Into bis vessel. Captain Haley, of the Knowleton, asserts that the steamer did not give bis vessel sufficient sea room. The steamer, with a huge bole torn In her side, was so seriously damaged that no attempt was made to run for shore, and she sank to the bottom in less than half an hour. The Knowleton, after she had backed away from th8 wreck, began to fill rapidly, but her crew manned the pumps and kept her afloat until she reache1 a P,nt Quonochontaug, d Allen Forshue, aged 75, attempted ulcide In Salt Lake City while In a fit of despondency, taking a quantity of laudanum, but was picked up on Ut " the streets by a policeman and saved Swed There were no fatalioy prompt medical attendance. ties on the schooner. A majority of those aboard the William F. Rigby, aged 45, of Rich-moCaohe couuty, was struck by a Larchmont had retired for the night, and when the collision occurred there witch engine at Cache Junction and were few, with the exception of the Instantly killed. He was standing on crew, prepared for the weather which the track talking with other parties. prevailad- - They hurried from the aPPrcaCh ! axerf atmosphere. dth? He Chilled to the bone, many rushed thinking It would pass in front of him, when headlong below to secure more clothing; while others, barefooted, barethe engine struck him. headed and clad only la nightgowns, James W. Iredalo, 35 years old, n stood on the deck fearing that to go motorman, met Instant death In Salt below would mean certain death. Lake City by coming In contact with MINISTERS QUIT CABINET. a live wire which was lying across the track. A spectator started to Parliament of the Netherland sweep the wire from the track with feats War Budget a broom, when Iredale pushed him to The Hague. At the opening of the one side and grasped the wire In his sitting of the second chamber of the band, being Instantly killed. Netherlands parliament on Tuesday, V illo experimenting in the chemis- Dr. De Mecster, the acting premier try laboratory st the University of and minister of financo, announced Utah, Geo. Roberts, a member of the that the ministers had tendered tlielr freshman class, was severely burned resignation to the queen in conseon the arm by a gas flame and on quence of the rejection of the army the left side of bis face by concen- estimates. The chamber then ad Journed. trated nitric acid. The rejection, February 9, by the Governor Cutler has received letters first chamber of the states of and telegrams from Japan which Inu. the war budget, because of goneral the abolition cate that the Japs who are wanted In by the minister of war of the long Utah for the embezzlement from their service term for the militia, led to a cabinet crisis. Tha Is an outcountrymen in Ilox Elder county of come of the desire confllrt of War Minister bard-earnetheir savings, are now In Staal to relieve the country of some of Its public financial burdens by a recustody In Nippon. of the military forces. organization Oliver C lluntlngtou, one of the oldest citizens or Sprlngvllle, died at Mondell Wants to Know Why Hitchbis borne lost week artvr an illness of cock Should Act so. only a fow hours. Mr. Huntington Washington. Representative Mon-decame to Utah In 1818 and settled in on Tuesday Introduced n resoluSalt Lake City. He aa the first male tion, which was adopted, asking Secschool teacher in Utah. retary Hitchcock to report to the house Retail lumber dealers in Suit Lake by wbat authority of law he Issued orare making elaborate preparations for ders on January 26 and other dates the snnuul convention of the Western under which 64,000,000 seres of Retail Lumber Dealers' association, lands in various western statespublic and and of the Western Lumbermen's Mu- territories were withdrawn from entry, and under which all public lands In tual society, to bo held In Halt Lake Alaska were withdrawn from all forms City Feb. 14, 15 and 1G. of entry, filing and selection. Authority bus boon granted the supervising engineer of the Strawberry President Roosevelt Favors Exclusion of Japanese Laborers. Valley Irrigation project, Utah, to obtain proposal front as many firms ns Washington. It Is announced that Iroa. Roosevelt, through Soc. Root, tnay be practicable for the machinery required for the power plant to be has proposed to Speaker Cannon and used In excavating Strawberry tunnel. to the chairman of the senate and A revision of thn northern tariff of house ooinmlttees on Immigration and the Oregon Short Line just completed other Republican leaders In congress makes n reduction on third and fourth that n clause be Inserted In the ImClass rates between Suit Uke, Ogdon, Twin Falls and Boise of front 7 io b migration bill now pending In congress cents per hundred pounds, The reduc- which will bar Japanese cooil labor tne United states. tion went into effect the first of this from Mayor Schmitt's delegation favors such a Ninth. provision. n, tT rd 7'!, SAVED Twenty-nln- d Publisher - - SPANISH FORK CAPTAIN KJSdlK d ll are still 100 passengers who are either missing or unidentified. A thrilling story of the disaster is told by Harris Feldman, of New York, who with his wife was saved. After dressing, Feldman aud his wife ran to the hurricane deck. A wave struck the top of the steamer and riped off a huge piece of the superstructure upon which they and many other passengers were standing. As the wreckage slipped off Into the sea many of the passenger either fell backward Into the saloon of the steamer, or were thrown Into the water. After the wreckage, which was in effect an immense raft, had been away from the ship a few moments, Mr. FeldBeman counted his companions. sides himself and his wife there were thirty-thre- e on board, but they were crowded so badly that one by one they began to drop off into the sea. Some, crazed by the cold, jumped from the raft and were drowned. Oth ers, sitting near the edge, were swept away, and still others, frozen to death, dropped Into the water. An hour after the raft had been swept from the steamer there were but sixteen persons on It, and of these only eight were alive. 8 ' louse by Mr. Meeks. I . B. No. ,5, by advertising sale of tree?a3 jaals, met its death In the Fifteen new bills were t.i In the house on February r he number of measures ntftH up to that date 118. 8uch Is the Conclusion Reached by the Superintendent of the New York 8tate Hospital for the Insane. Fears Entertained at Port An Prince That Complications May Ensue. r ? I AP.T l ho. jy ha Art--- ; him. and id New York. Answering a bypothetl- , . k Mu: - a w cal question covering every detail of x JUrtM uprovfilnj ,d bln the testimony up to this time In the use of broad tires on -"SOB Sj , , seed Trouble Caused by Refusal of German Thaw trial, Including Mrs. Evelyn Nes h I the Bankers to Obey Orders of Court of life her bit Thaws narration his NephI United States Centanniv v whip in returning to Government sen's bill, making it a crime Z tory, Dr. Charles G-- Wagner, superinto .fur ' Monlee Obtained Fraudtendent of the state hospital for the false statements regarding m fr ' tlon, has passed the house. deInsane at Binghamton, ulently. N.( Y j! wb Mr. Hone has Introduced s clared on the witness stand on Monby which it Is proposed to tax ir in K. erto I his Thaw that opinion Harry day poratlons in the state by nrovu whlc Port Au Prlnco, Haytl. The rela- did not know that his act was wrong license fee for each one. a plac 1 tions between the governments of Hay- when he shot and killed Stanford The house has slaughtered tk. I lewa tl and Germany are strained owing to White. offered by Nephi Jenson, provlfcVt Dr, WagnerB opinion of a bypothetl- the exemption of pumping Dw . . they w the refusal of the German bankers, J PIP CO Hermann & Co., by direction of the I cal Question, the man under considers-- 1 Irrigation purposes from taxau 1 dy tlon of which author the I court at Port Au Prince, to return to tr'ee-- s been' lroducedaT emanaUng I Ia th 8enat? 74 bills had the Haytlan government large sums from Harry Thaw during his estrange-- troduced on the 5th. Of this ya .up of pa8sed the upper of money alleged to have been ob-- ment with Evelyn Nesblt after their as also ,ave concurrent resolute prc vjng a talned fraudulently. i Among the al- return from Europe in 1903, furnished Senator Sam Park has introduce day of legal sparring between leged transactions of Hermann & Co. M. Delmas, of the defense, and bill to regulate the stamping with the Hytlan government, was one Mr. Jerome for the prosecution. cles or merchandise made o! gok t which is said to have proved favoraMr. Jerome effectually blocked the alloys of gold, and providing i ble to the government. This was con- completion for the time being of the for violation thereof. cluded by the Haytlan minister of fin- testimony of Mrs. Evelyln Thaw by IL B. No. 1, by Nephi XJ. the si Insisting that before she should go ance, the German legation and Her- further competent testimony as to Jensen, making taxes a lien oi era t xutln In th mann & Co. The German minister Thaws unsoundness of miDd should property as of the second I ea? ya.r kas keen dtfsr, The st n,lLar demanded that this transaction, as be given. Mr. Delmas tried to earry 010 house. I 8peater s t --p of well as others, be annulled, but the forward the young wifes story, but the district attorney was on his feet B. 125, by Dyrlng, provides ht-'nII. Haytlan government In terms that the with an objection to every medal of honor for each of the Ik question. this tli German minister demed offensive, reWar veterans for actual service hV'Tjfused to acquiesce. The German min- ASKS JUSTICE FOR SQUAW MEN. pressing Indian hostilities In Utah- - in hn ister at the same time demanded the lng the years 1850 to 1872 indusi,, withdrawal of the phrase objected to. President , s wero Message in Behalf of This also was refused. The Calllstcr bill. No. 22, tl Whites Who Married Cherokeee. Fears are entertained here of grave for tho loaning of the reservoir and complications ensuing. Washington. President Roosevelt grant fund to Individuals and and bt The official monitor recently pub- sent a so much diowltb. his vi special message to congress ations, which caused lished notice of the expulsion of Mr. slon Thursday, was passed unaniihaftd ta Mansour, an American citizen, but Monday, urging the enactment of a 1, oa KMv. Mr. Furnlss, the American minister, bill, the draft of which la included In IL B. No. 12, by Clegg, making Itcloud, and believing the call for the mans ex- the message, which grants white per- lawful for any person to require greeted wltl pulsion unjustified, asked for the with- sons who have intermarried with drawal of the order. This, however, members of tbe Cherokee nation of In- giving of surety bonds in corpora.of all that i not authorized to transact busines "Prince ( was refused, and Mansour has left for dians sixty days in which to dispose the state of Utah, and providing New York. The seal of the American of improvements have on conrad, he they placed legation has been placed on bis shop. lands in the Cherokee nation which alty therefor, has been kllle-princet w H. B. 7, by Pederson, prohlb .Courtland U have heretofore occupied. The they MAY BE AN EXTRA SESSION. sale of such Improvements is to be the marriage of persons aubjecths craven! made only to members of the Chero- - chronic epileptic fits, persons whovlte! The ' President Wants to Get Action on kee nation at an appraised price to be flr&t cousins and persons wlthli princet Santo Domingo Matter. fixed by an official to be named by not including the fifth degree ots, I the of has been the Interior. secretary sanguinity, passed. Washington. The treaty between L SLMa 10C y Crltchjow, k . tome whh the United States and Santo Domingo, cominThe Sulk? RaSSrJ which has been pending in the United which excludes all intermarried per-loke display STffire!iourSs J116 began States senate for ratification since son. from receiving an allotment of jamestown eiDositlon at Norfolk 1905, Is to be displaced by an entirely ftUd? ln 1907. nd appropriating $25,0vBata were si b expeDded by tbe commls8,0- new treaty, which will be sent to the I lsUthe 0 1898( hb ment suggested by the president The senate has rejected Wespb ont the I hill The Santo Domingo treaty as nego-requiring owners of tractioi tlated two years ago now ceases, there-- UII Inveztigatlng Brownsville Shoot-- Sines to pay for damages to cm:uio .living I I I roads while the engtne was lrUBa DlHl fore, to be a possible cause for an exing. tra session of the senate. The new moved, and the bill has bees sent braa 9 Washington. The "shooting up of conference committee from tbit Laclc the treaty, which will be In a greatly simBack. I say! plified form, freed from nearly all the Brownsville was In the form of an at- houses. causes of controversy embodied ln the tack on the at Fort Brown, If garrison the Galveston Idea of gown; convention that has been pending, may an be ratified before the expiration of according to the testimony given Mon- a municipality by three trustee1618' n arp lor the adopted by legislature by Mingo Sanders, former first this congress on March. At this stage day back It will be necessary for of the session, however, the slightest sergeant of Company B. of the Twenty-f- Lake, rl ifth Infantry, before tbe senate board to hold five public sieetwho had resistance would compel postponecommittee on military affairs. San-de- n weekly, three In the daytime ni ankle rings ment of Its ratification. Jielr files. said that while running from bis In the evening. to B. quarters barracks af- . The senate has passed tbe Cart0088 rom Company PROTEST OF WOMEN. ter being awakened by the firing upon usury bilL The bill provides that?8- 8- chaei Say Thaw Case Is Disgusting and the night of August 13, tbe shooting I legal rate of Interest shall be 1 At last a was going on, and it came from the I cent; that the Evidence Unfit to Print parties to any eoBCZBd tended, town and was toward the hospital on I may In writing for the payaKatae voi agree Chattanooga, Tenn. Women of this the military reservation. This Is the of interest upon loans, not to zxenpea bis fe 12 per cent per annum. city met Sunday and protested against Ltrt him the printing of details of the Thaw U A bill, which If passed will prsctl v Lout murder case and similar criminal ly put peddlers and Itinerant veca-out of business and which ta aimed lt a la bis pi court proceedings. The protest It was ea 81 Btated, was made In the Interest of Dlatr,et Attorny Wants Newapapar I ?roicct .holmon,U8trl:a' too troducea iq I I UH, ...cut, or .ur hoc. Clreul.tlon Ob. ..d Ut. I Matter In Thaw Trial ure prohibits peddlers from set puritj of our children and to protest wj the minute New York. United States Diatrict thcIr BOOd8 wUhout and detailed aoagainst are i llccD80 Ie0, counts given In the dally papers of Attorney Stlmson of this heal city on Mon- - I the sensational and scandalous pro- - I day served a A now flsh and gam0 bni 1,88 Introduced lu the house by Mr. ceedlngs of tho criminal court" ers ofallth nrinr1,,n?niu th. Mayor Frierson, lu an address, de-h? hi chairman of tho committee ea flstue I he that tr. b city r clared the reports of the Thaw trial fori The Croft bill provides r?ttlS were disgusting In their detail. He criminal United of fish nd earn tate supervision prosecuUo ca 18 said some of the newspaper had gone the thL dcp the dlrectlon oI a 8tata warden8' laws I I to. 1. .Mr "rS-re jSXKt ,l0 uvuiuuk more than six chief game warden) the Thaw Trial FEMALE TERRORISTS. salary of not more toon $990 a j V each. -- j Alfonso Builds Chapsl for Hla School Girts in Russia Make Bomba King The house last week patmed k Mother-In-Laand Plan Assassinations. Nos. 18 and 19, by Robtnaon, the t' Madrid. An Anglican chapel , was Moscow. Another rcarch at the Increasing the powers of the H Moscow female university baa ro-- recently Installed In the Palace of EJ board of equalization so that It - f - I V. i T -- 1 n Del-phl- lJdn sr MoBdj-taz.'- j g! iktt 'J othetioB ffSenaa 1 1 WELL CAVES IN ON DIGGER. 1 o Was Buried For Twenty-Fou- r Hours, But Suffers Little Injury. South Omaho, Neb. After being Imprisoned at the bottom of a forty foot well, covered with tons of earth, for twenty-fou- r hours and receiving bis air supply through an iron well pipe, Herman Frankholdt, a well digger, was dug out and found uninjured. Frankholdt was digging a well near South Omaha Monday morning. Monday night he failed to return home. Tuesday a search was made for him. The well where he bad been working had caved in. Taps were beard on the gasplpe iron ladder which he had been using and a con rersation was held through the hollow tube. Frankholdt was protected when the cave-loccurred by the irou lad der through which a supply of fresh air reached him. He kept up a continual tapping on the ladder, hoping some one would hear him. After eight, hours' digging the man was released. n FOUR KILLED BY GAS. Employe was Looking for Leak When Explosion Occurred. Los Angeles. An explosion of leak Ing gas in a restaurant in the heart of the city, on Wednesday, killed four persons, mangled and seriously In jured nearly a score and completely wrecked a brick building In which was located four small business concerns. The explosion occurred in tbe restaurant of B. Ossartl, 114 1 1C West Second street, shortly before noon. The restaurant vug completely wrecked as was also the tailoring establishment of 11. I Yerger, and a mail laundry office. Offices of several small concerns on the second floor were completely ruined. two-stor- Right to Appeal. Washington. The senate has passed the bill giving the government the right to appeal to the supreme court for construction of the constitutionality of any law Involved In a criminal suit This measure has been under consideration for several days, and was passed only after many mendmeuts had been adopted at the luggestlon of senators who have criticized the provisions of the bill. It was explained that the amendments did not la any Instance detract from the original purpose of the bill Government's Interposition In Dominican Affairs Unwarranted. The new treaty with Washington the Dominican republic, which reached the aenate on Wednoaday, was the subnet of consideration by the aenate committee on foreign relations. Owing to Senator Bacon's opposition, no progress was made toward acruring a favorable report. Mr. Bacon finds the now treaty objectionable on the aanu ground sa the old, because be considers Interposition In Dominican affairs unwarranted. PPo 1 ?.' PYhere - - r, pb,h' sS to wr . Sto .t-cou- ' ' ' ' ' f -- d- sa- m .r,,, found. It that the eight girl Btudenta arrested In connection with the threat of the terrorists to execute the death sentences imposed General Pnvloff, S1 General Yon Dor and Governor drumhead trled court martial. of Ilattenberg, mother of Queen Vic- torla. when she la staying there This caused some comment among the rome fanatical officers of the court which when It came to the kings ears. cauasd bla majesty to remark: "Well by ,enor8. 0,088 who do not Ilka It need not go there." The hint was Instantly understood. to, ....to, h,.hl. . rotor I jMatSS betwicn thl t6.5 .Sto sag too Ing, but not before the to bt. ro. c.rfo,dtotoU The eluded Its work.lorjltohor,. German 0,10 1,18 d . 8ultans Favorite to be Banlehed. Tho special comConstantinople. mission of Inquiry ordcrod by the suV ton to examine Into the chargus against Fehrnl fash!, chief of the seo- ret police of the palaco, who. It was alleged by the German embassy, ro- cently caused the seizure of a ship's 1 more In-an- sus-- 1 pension of tho rules cn the first day of Tho other ,. h, pro vldlng for a commission to codify and annotate the laws. The third It a bill sew ddng business In d Incrcw coun,Jr and th aaIarles of the members of uoard frora t0 1,600 a ycaf Senator Hulanlskla measure, No. deeding 40 acres of land to tho teie' government for a post cemetery t 'ort Crittenden; Senate bill No-by Seeley, making it a mlsdcaic to sell less than sixteen ounces of N Power cf the 8hah of Perela Haa Been ter for a pound, and throe bills by X llngsworlh. Nos. 58, 59 and Curtailed. first two slightly changing the Tehertn. The shah - on Monday gardlng tho service of summoua night sent a massage to parliament the last changing the name of 8 State School for the Deaf, granting all the popular demands tha formal recmrnitinn passed by the senate loot week. I eluding constitutional "anti-LukeTwo WHs government This message was tele passed by Ute senate lost week. 7; i In Thirty Days Utah Lawmakers Past Three New Meatures. Salt Lake City. Tuesday marks the first half of the sixty days session of the . legislature. Up to date three bills lhroUBh boll houses sent to tho governor for his sp- - proto. On. of I. gent expense bill pasted undor panl1'8 become threatening. b situation had " STS5 i and sin evils which are sold te Ml"1 he methods ot the Jm.tloo court Vn Murray, presided over by Juntlcd rand- - l a fact fcorsen S ITInc ar yot k bo f. antler, Tk e jirl" ; Tbe senate on the 8m bad of the eighty eight hlch have boon Introducedork of clearing the ealondar W l nore Important measures ta prolong cf horso ng nicely and It looks as IT ail j Ivan tree will have a fair chance to t f a jjl( ,card' ck toward In a bill Introduced In the boos "It Is you -- Princess Looses Trunks for Dobt . Prls. Princess Louise of Belgium, the divorced wife of Prince FhlUo ot Saxe Coburg Goths, in an open Isttoi published In the 6onPl Matin on Monday bitterly of the hearties ,2.?b,,b J18' I'hiVorttojrtih 8th8r, Kin. KrU' wenty-fou- r - lads Y-'- r. Marks, provision la made fof pproprlatlon end selling apart out embaa from the late y, st the sultan's request, waived a seized fur debt.queen mother to b my moneys In tho state twam" It was announce therwiso appropriated, public trial, but Insisted tht Fchml from Paris, l(U),0M iasha bo 'banished, which It la under- trunks for February 6, that th until .unity, otherwise presided Princess Louise had boo. stood mill be duuu. aw, for the purposo of eroaUnf I attached for $15,uuu, the amount of a state capital. jeweler's hill. V Le mut til come hi u Arc! tt |