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Show THE SPANISH ANDREW FORK PRESS COEBff MYSTERY JENEN, Publisher SPANISH FORK UTAH ENGAGE LABOR Oil FIGHT v.v,urmicK to death ln the Ferrla-Hu- . mine at Battle Lake, Two sons of o driving in Cottonwood r BE UTAH STATE NEWS Michigan investors have purchase! $90,000 worth of land In Millard county for agricultural purposes. The herd of buffalo on Antelope Island recently has been augmented by the addition of twelve rulves. A four-yea- r course In mechanic arts will be added to the manual training department of the Salt Lake high achool. The Western Tactile will inaugurate regular freight and passenger service on its line between Salt Lrke and Bews, Nev., October 1. The Y. M. C. A. of Salt Lake Clt has provided the meat's for over 20d boys to enjoy an outing of from week to ten days during the summer, A shocking case-oneglect comes from Ogden, a child dy ing in squalor and misery while Its mother was locked up In jail for I Caleb Power Say He Will Name Real Murder of Kentuckian, and That Jin Howard it Innocent. Heavy Fire of Warships at Casablanca Too Much for Tribesmen. Lino of Battle Extended Over Two Miles Casablanca. During the fighting be tween the French forces and the Moors on Friday, near the French camp, the Moors at first retreated, and It was was Etatcrent of Democratic Nominee For believed that the engagement over, when suddenly tl?e enemy reapGovernor Goads Powers to a Dec- -' peared In great force In two directions. laration That the Real Mur-itrThe Saphls Irregular Algerian cavalry Has Not Been Brought found then t dves almost surrounded, to Justice. but formed a square and slowly feil back until reinforced. Meanwhile tho shells showered French warships Georgetown, Ky. Goaded by the among the hills, scattering the enemy. statement here In the opening speech The engagement lasted three hours. of Judge S. Whager, Democratic nomTho line of battle extended over two inee for governor, that he would not miles and It is estimated that about pardon Caleb Powers If convicted for 12,000 Moors were engaged. The loss conspiracy In Ihe murder of Governor of the latter Is believed to have been William Goebel, Powers on Sunday heavy, as the French officers counted night Issued a written statement say- the bodies of twenty Moors In one roading that he had at last learned the way. drunkenness. The French loss was fifteen killed name of the man who murdered Goebeen The price of coal Ins again or wounded. The cruisers Glolre and could and out. him bel, point boosted by Salt Lake dealers, WyoGuardo later bombarded the beach beNo previous statement made by ming coal now being sold at $7 a ton yond Casablanca, where the force of for lump, while the Utah product is Powers has created so profound a sen Moorish cavalry gathered, but It was sallon, for It is believed at last the soon dispersed by tbe warships fire. priced at $6.50. It, B. Boyd, a section man, was run real murderer of Governor Goebel SEVENTY-FIVMEN PERISHED. down by an engine near Ogden while will be learned. Powers says that the man who 1b not killed Goebel Jim walking along the track and sustained Result of Horrible Bridge Disaster in fatal injuries, his left arm being cut Howard, who Is serving a life sentence Canada. In the penitentiary on that charge. oft near the shoulder. The time has comp," said Powers Quebec, Canada. The toll of death While feeding a hay baler the young when my name must not be dragged caused by the collapse of the great aon of Gustav Felt, of Huntsville, sevenbroke one of bis legs. Young Felt was Into political campaigns to be used to cantilever bridge numbers at least one aid eighty-fiv- e candidate a dlsad or and reach ty-five may prove pushing the bay Into the machine with Tbe terrific height of tbe great steel vantage to the other." bis foot at the time of the accident structure, from 180 feet above the Arrangements are being made for a JUST A LITTLE PRACTICE? surface of the river, crushed the bodies big sham battle to be held In Ogden of many of the workmen In a frightful on September 26. It Is probable the occasion may extend over two days Frenchmen 8ay Conflict With Morocco manner, and It Is feared many will never be found. Is Not a War. and be followed by an old fasblonet " Many of the dead were Amerlcaus camp Are. Ramboulllet. The cabinet ministers David Dose, who killed himself at met here on Saturday and discussed brought here by the Phoenix Bridge Laramie, Wyo., with a .22 caliber rifle, the Moroccan situation with President company of Phoenix. Ta., which had the contract for tbe. iron work on tbe was practically blind, being unable to Fallieres. Although desperate fighttell the difference between darkness ing occurred between the French bridge. A locomotive and several freight and daylight, and waa despondent troops and the Moors near Casablancars loaded with steel girders were over this fact ca, August 28, during which the Moormoving out on the bridge Jdst before It is rumored that a grand jury Is ish fanatics demonstrated their cun- the structure collapsed. Engineer Jess to be called to investigate the exces- ning and tactical ability, and bravery, went into the river with his engine, sive cost of living In Salt Lake Clt, it Is scouted that France has a real but was picked up 300 feet below the It being chargeu that a combination war on Its hands, wtth a probability bridge. Fireman Davis perished. mer- of a long amj enormously expensive exists between the different ALMOST CAUGHT BY FLAMES. chants to keep up prices. compalgn In Morocco. At the conclusion of the conference, Writers on Louisville Courier-JournMrs. Mabel Miller, of Nebraska City, Neb., became frightened when the fuse a dispatch was sent General Drude, the Rescued From Burning Building. blew out on a Salt Lake street car, French commander at Casablanca, givLouisville, in him instructions Ky. The Courier-Journto his and jumped from the moving car ing regard at and Green streets, Foarth building nature of future but the movements, on the her bead, fiacturlng striking which are located tbe plants of the skull, death resulting a few hours the Bteps determined upon was not an- in y and Evening Times later. . nounced. Honors were voted for sev Courier-Journwas destroyed by fire early Friday A crusade against poolroom keepers eral officers and men who were woundtnd saloon men, who have been ed at Casablanca., General promotion Tbe structure was five stories high and occupied half a block. The fire start guilty of allowing minors In their of the participants In the engagements ed at the top of an elevator shaft, sup places and contributing to the delin- has been arranged. Insulation of posedly from (defective quency of children, has been Inaugurelectric wires, and spread with great VISIT WAS A SURPRISE. ated by the juvenile court of Salt rapidity. . Lake City. The editorial and reportorial forces Leland Browi of Ogden, the seventeen-Emperor of Russia Risks Life to At- of tbe Courier-Journstuck to the year-old son of Captain William In tbe hope that the blaze tend Consecration of Church. building Brown, who waa killed by Abe Majors, would be subdued and that they could SL Petersburg.--F- or the second time Issue the had the misfortune to have a horse paper. They were caught Red Nicholas since Sunday Emperor fall with him last week. His right napping with fire at all exits and had atto be taken out on ladders. leg was broken at the ankle and just on Sunday entered the capital to tend the consecration of a church to below the knee. A LUCKY AERONAUT. R. S. Riddle, a Salt Lake jeweler, the memory of his grandfather, Alexbad a narrow escape from death near ander II, who was assassinated In Geneva while returning from Provo March, 1881, on the spot where the FeV Two Thousand Feet and Is Stiti Alive. on a Rio Grande train, a bullet, fired edifice was raised. The date of the by some careless hunter, crashing trip, coincident with the conspiracy Barnstable, Mass. Nearly 5,000 per through the car window and barely trial Just closed here, plainly was de- sons at the Barnstable county fair saw signed to raise the loyalty of the army Professor Maloney, a balloonist, droj missing his head. : In .broad daylight burglars entered and the people. It was a complete sur- 3,000 feet to earth, strike on top of i the residence of Gus Becker, In Og- prise, and no untoward Incident oc- cedar fence-pos- t and escape with hit den, and secured $15 In cash. In addi- curred. The police neglected no pre- life. For fully two minutes Maloney tion to about $500 worth of jewelry caution to Insure the safety of the em- floated along, with the gas rapidly and cutlery. The crime was commit peror, and even went so far as to leaking. Mahoney and tbe balloos ted while the family were ifiment, be- thoroughly search the city and Inspect came down rapidly. He struck in s tween 4 and 6 oclock, the passports of suspicious Individuals. half standing position on top of a big Several Greeks were taken to a Salt The emperor was In excellent spirits, cedar post. His back was terribly tors take hospital from Helper last week, but the empress had tho same care- and hla left arm Injured. He wai condiall suffering from burrs. The Greeks, worn, sad look that has been remarked picked up In a tion and hurried In an automobile te who are laborers, were living In a cat so often. a hotel. The physicians said he was near Helper and the stove In the cai not Internally Injured and that he will Spanking Results In Disaster. was upset, causing a Are. The men recover. were burned on faces and shoulders. Wil.Sheboygan, Wis. Mrs. Fred An enterprising dealer raised tlw liams, living at Bear Point on Crooked BECAME HOMESICK. butter famine for a short time In Sail Lake, near thla city, was severely InLake one day last week, and stole ( jured and her son was Russian Mutineer Returns Homs and ' march on his competitors by shipping fatally hurt when a dynamite cap In Is Executed. In a large quantity of Idaho butter, ll the boys hip pocket exploded while Odessa. Matushanko, the Russian went like hot cukes, for 30 cents the mother was spanking him. The officer who led the against 35 cents for tho Utah butter boy had been watching hla father using mutiny on the battleship Kntaz Potem William Henry Little, the proprletoi dynamite In blowing stumps and had klne and was In command of the vessel af the Central hotel, In Ogden, while slipped one of the caps In hla pocket during the sensational ciulse about the The Black sea In the summer of 1903, wai Bitting In a chair In the office of hit Mrs. Williams used n shingle. overcome ex, and first blow exploded the rap and tore a hanged Friday night at Sebastopol hotel, was suddenly At the large hole In the boys side. The After abandoning the vessel he fled pi red in about three mluutes. time Mr. Little was rtilcken be wta mother lost two fingers and sustained to New York, worked there two yeari In an Iron factory, became homesick Joking with a party of guests In the other wounds. hotel. returned here, was detected, arrested, and sentenced to death The Instructions to the fish and Parker Has No Desire For Office. game warden to tear out the acrecm Portland, Me. In an Interview SunGreat Actor Dead. at the private fish ponds In the trlbu night. Judge Alton B. Parker deday New Conn. Richard MansLondon, accordIn tsrles of the Ogden river, clared he has no desire ever again to field, the best known actor on tht ance with the opinion of the attorney-general- , hold public office, and In this respect American stage, passed away will not be canted Into effoct Friday atnee not his changed until there has been a legal battle ta his views have morning at his summer residence, defoat for the presidency. Seven Oaks, Ocean avenue. Death was the courts. I do not desire ever again to hold due to disease of the liver, aggravated In the Brown, Dixie and Wasatch 1 stated my position on by complications. Dr. A. H. Allen, a national forests 40 acres In each for public office, situation the last election In 1904, local physician, who ha. been In charge pst has been withdrawn from appro- that I have not changed my mind. 1 since Mr. Mansfields arrival here from and priation and use of all ktnda under all shall, however, always be Interested Saranac Lake, N. Y., states that death public land laws, subject to prior valid In any question affecting public welfare waa not entirely unexpected, although use administraas for adverse claims, 1 end In said purpose to express my views the fact had not been mado public. tion sites by the forest, service Mansfields wife, son and bis brother when It seems desirable. national forest. were wtth him at thorend. of claim tha C. H. Calland, adjuster ENTICED TO HI3 DOOM. Harrlman lines, and who resided In Futile Attempt to Rob Bank Messenger New York. A daring attempt was Ogden, mysteriously disappeared a few Magistrate days ago and Is being sought for by made to rob a batik messenger as ha Former Kentucky derad In Cincinnati. the special officers of the llarrlmnn was leaving the paying tellers window lines and If located he will be callel of the National Park bank. The teller Cincinnati, O. R. F Singleton, a upon to explain a shortage In his ac had counted out $1,500 In cash and the former magistrate of Covington, Ky. counts said to amount to $3,000. messenger boy was plnrlng It In his who was found terribly beaten In I W. T. Jullff. formerly of Park City. wallet, when a young man made a Richmond street house In this city an killed was elec for The fo robber failed money. by Utah, Instantly grab last Wednesday, died at the City hos trie shock while working In a mins get his hands on the money and pltal on Friday night Singleton wai In Goldfield. Jullff came In contact turned to run. He managed to reach enticed to the house by a woman with the deadly wires, which carried the street, when the bonk policeman known to the police as Mrs. Walter 6.600 volts, while cutting a hole In a arrested him. lie was recognized by West. Arriving there l.e was set upon and robbed by two men The police partition which separated the trans the police as Henry Dlolme, alios Ce aid Meyers, of fludnnntl. have no trace of the men or tbs former room from the engine room. tr four-year-ol- E 1 semi-conscio- seven-year-ol- court-martiale- wean. Riot In San Two Men Are Shot During r I Hand Francisco, While Girli Take in Fight in Ohio. , New Bridge Under Construction Near and Quebec, Canada, Collapses Workmen Are Drowned. Wai Nearly Half of the Bridge, Which Into Went a Mile and a Half Long, the River, Carrying the Doomed Men Down to Death. Quebec. Canada. The new bridge andor construction about five miles below the city, collapsed late Tburs workday afternoon, and fifty of the their met have to men are known death in the seething waters, while the total may reach one hundred when ail of the workmen who were engaged In the construction of the mammoth bridge when the accident occurred, are accounted for. The bridge was about a mile and a half long, and was nearly finished. beNearly half of the fated structure, ginning at the south shore, fell Into the river, and the hundreds of workmen were precipitated Into the raging waters without a moments warning. A steamer with thirty doctors and newspaper men was rushed to the scene of the accident as soon as the message of the horrible occurrence had reached the city, and those who had been able to escape from the waters were made ns comfortable as possible, and the work of recovering the bodies of their unfortunate companions begun. AGREEMENT AT DENVER. The Railroads Make Concessions and Also Certain Demands. Salt Lake City. An unofficial report from Denver Is to the effect that the Joint conference of the representatives of the leading twelve western of railroads and the representatives their employees have come to an agreement between the roads and their yardmen. The agreement concedes the advance in the wages of the railroan yardmen, providing the unions agree to certain conditions regarding overtime and the right of thf. roads to employ and discharge men for what they consider to be good cause, irrespective of the' opinion of union officials. The railroad representatives also demand that the concessions shall not be used as a club to the members of the telegraphers, con ductors and engineers unions. Grand Master P. H. Morrissey, who has virtually been delegated full power by the yardmen, is quoted as saying that. In his Judgment, an amicable settlement would be arrived nt before the week was out RESTRICTING JAP IMMIGRATION. Hereafter Only 500 May Enter Canada During a Year. C. Hereafter Vancouver, B. no more than 500 Japanese a year will be permitted to land In Canada. This ts the announcement that comes from Ottawa. For some time past the Canadian and Japanese governments hsve been negotiating regarding th restriction of emigration from Japan. Canada asked that Japan agree to su pervlse the departure of her subjects for Canada, and permit only a limited number to embark for that country. Japan has now agreed and fixed the maximum number of emigrants at 500 annually rather less than have arrived on one ship In the past. Furthermore, In tho 500 are to lie counted all who come by way of the Hawaiian Islands. Death From Plague In San Francisco. ashlngton. Advices received b the surgeon general of the public health and marine hospital sendee show that from August 12 up to August 29, there have been nine cases of plague at San Francisco and deaths. Two of the cases were six ora from coasting vessels. The sail other cases have occurred In tho county and navy hospital and In other parts the city. Instructions have been to all quarantine officers on the sent pacific coast to carefully Inspect ve. sels from San Francisco and at tha litwr stations to fumigate. At Indian Languages Show No Change Muskogee, I. T.-- The Indian has made no progress In the adaptability of his language. An Interpreter In of the five civilized tribes win ml twice or three times as many words L rLPm ,nK hls ,own lanKe what he In say Engllnh. This has become very apparent In errltory In the last six months whX It haa become necessary on of politics and various other account events to I? disseminate Information to the who cannot understand any language except their own s Had Palm Read, Becomes Inians Moines, Ia.-F- rom over a terrible fate which a brooding palmist told her would overtake her her death, Mrs. Elisabeth Co" ,e thwalto an Eaat Side woman, la vlo- Cowperthwalte h? her palm read by a lady tnt i her that she would meet en.S The lightning. Information woman into a state of terror, threw the and so when a thunderstorm was brewing. finally she began to Dee llwtric current' w,tJ nlng and badly hurt. Thn.v' killed. While on a dove hunti. near Golden, Colo., j, Labor Day, Hams, a lad of San Frauclsco. Monday, one probSeveral men were wounded, a riot which ocably fatally, during on Market curred shortly before noon The landing. street near tbe ferry on attack an by was precipitated riot United the cf inspector a In by Railroads and was participated several thousand people. affilThe parade of tbe labor unions Council Trades iated with the Building corner had Just been dismissed at the a of Main and Mission streets and the at ferry was waiting crowd large to go across the bay to Shell Mound and Park, where literary exercises athletic games were part of the days program. For some cause not clearly understood but believed to have been the running of a street car close to the assembled people, an attack was made on Inspector J. W. Hall, who was starting the cars for the United Railroads. Fearing the rubh of the angry crowd,n Conductor Janies Watkins and Motor-maF. L. Duston of Sutter street car No. 1615. drew their revolvers and fired into the mob. This Infuriated the crowd still more, and the fighting soon extended along Market street from the ferry to the Junction of Sansome and Sutter streets, a distance of about seven blocks. When one of the union men was arrested, the crowd attempted to rescue him, throwing bricks and stones at the officers. The mob was finally driven away from the station. Car No. 1615 had proceeded as far as Sutter street, followed all the way by a hooting crowd of men and boys who bombarded It with bricks and other missiles. At this point the crew of the car agal discharged their reand John volvers In Peterson received a serious wound In the groin. The conductor and motor man are under arrest. non-unio- n i 1 ,ddent.ali.y.!h0t hla Wend Roj, len, of Golden, aged H, 'Spontaneous combustion mountain of coal stored t Mont., caused a fire that ha.? all efforts to subdue. Th?!A longed to the Billings Bugs, The story comes from n?l that a draft horse, when he automobile for the first time , I dead from fright, and thatll1? also dropped dead when he ? R automobile on the road. William Naughton. a bnW. the Union Pacific, living at ul dislocated hls left shoulder hr Ing. This is the first time on, that a similar accident ha o Years ago Naughton injured the 1 fnAv CHAP! tra ,iy Con doub sr ee m b itzatloi ;her I s when ihy 61 feed w der. Sympathy for Bisbee minen J are striking, denunciation of i eral Judge who issued an lnjJ against union men, and in financial support are embodied r. resolutions adopted by the Butter era union. Umatilla county, Oregon, hu visited by a severe hall & which cut a long uj J path through the grain fields, cm2 a loss on the reservation of X a1 per cent on account of the straw beaten down. James McCarrick, a miner, feS staging into a shaft about eight J deep, at Manhattan, Nevada, mi so badly Injured that he died lit moments. He Btruck on hit b the bottom of the shaft and hh (cause Into r dont le pr the no c Lang'l v thi time some jgh ie t grim re be eh? xactly. nbuckl get tin Do y tl on j of is then ot nec was fractured. though of hi and i more ?rtles I f j J bat on no 1 the stock i 1 5od, lean 1 tO 81 Hun ticked ned and t nda; ill be the 1 reach tghed ad B facts, uck w: frown ag tt lips, drt penc w i ie low it. led c to tb to this to tb in that ly dli irgunu wed. a is 1 rd In were, t forg ilte g unow you." non-unio- e hls of non-unio- n tW tl) me il ew. reel. '4 to F "da 0 tly h and It prebt Ie 8ci until with I amt 3. dill how '4 a l appctt ere w ha, n rr to ply Following closely the adraua from 20 to 40 per cent ta hi granted the coal miners of tbe n of Wyoming comes the announces that the barbers of Sheridan k Girls Protect Mob's Victims. agreed to advance the price of Steubenville, O. A Labor day riot ing from 15 cents to 25 centi A party of engineers running t that bade fair to end In a tragedy had It not been or the bravery of two between Uinta, Fremont and hi young women occurred here Monday water counties, Wyoming, hire afternoon. The victims of the crowds covered that a strip of land tvoii rage were Joseph Robison, who re- wide, heretofore regarded as lyta( ceived a fractured skull, and John Uinta county. In reality helots Hatton, who was cut and bruised while Sweetwater and Fremont count shielding the men. Mbs Mary Magee Captain Gough, state humane and Tulla Rooks received cuts and ciety officer of Wyoming, will m bruises on the head and body and are the county fair at Cody, Big & in a serious condition. Rolilson and county, to witness the entire Hatton came here from St. Louis to horse race. The riders will to work In a mine where a strike is In fifty miles, and he will be there tt progress. As they left the telephone that the horses are not abused or j office they were set upon by a crowd den after they show slgne i. eto and were being badly beaten when tlon. V the two girls rushed into the thick of transietla The largest single the trouble and frantically pushing conmumuted and shoving their way through a crowd ranch lands, ever acreage be as the far bo of about fifty men reached tbe two Montana, la U victims, to whom the young women cerned, has Just been closed were Btrangers. The girls threw them ton. The Billings & Northern if selves on the prostrate men, protected way purchased from the Sap & their heads and received on their own Sheep company Its entire holdtrp bodies the kicks and blows of the mob. 26,000 acres at $10 an let One of the men, who was wielding a $260,000. CoEa piece of Iron, hit Miss Magee on the City Engineer W. S. head. During a lull in the assault the is suffering from Basin, Wyo., nollce reached the scene and rescued as the result of M ik Robison and Hatton. Only one arrest b!cbi new at the city reservoir, was made. A tip1 course of construction. broke under his weight and bet, Woman Started a Riot. of eighteen feet, align distance Louisville, Ky. A Labor day riot, and shoulders on iFi hls head which but for the timely arrival or I loose rock. the police might have assumed formidof A. I Ham, a resident able proportions, resulted In the injury killed near of four street car employes IVyo., was Instantly tit on tabor day. The trouble occurred 'ey, Mont., by falling under 1 at First and Walnut streets and waa flngton train, on which he u started by a woman. The Labor day senger, en route for hls low inparade had Just broken up and the Wyoming. The body of the for found were was not participants swarming on the nate man cars to go to a park, when the woman hours afterward. The body fU mused to rid on a car operated by ered up ln a basket. men, and Jeered the unionThree men were killed and ists for doing so. exhorting them to lured by a premature pull the scab off. M blasting powder at tbe 0 , Butte. near railroad camp Two Killed In Auto Race. , men, Pero Janlk, aged 22, Denver. Colo.- -E. V. Dasey and W hls Injuries when heme B. Felker were killed In the fifty-milto town. The brought endurance automobile race at Overland him cued after the blast wete I ark Monday afternoon. Dasey was to dig him out of the dobra. m.'11 Klrk ln the Apperson "Jack Tbe long distance office and rounding the turn wai Rocky Mountain Bell Telephoot heaTSnrtM0 ti!,Car 1,0 f,n on hl pany at Butte opened last was crushed. He strike-breaker-s died a few minutes Inter. ,!, Dasey was lady board. The windows of tut manager of a local automobile shop - - far ,. Pxp,rt haiiffeur. Feller was have been frosted. k lied on the twentieth the unions lap. A tire on learned, tentlon to. the actlou a"d lhe n,nrhlne nto'Yhe re In resuming the long distant fence, throwing Felker against a post. j Again the steer roping j of the great west la to be Treaty Will Open up Perils, for In Cheyenne. The t , of CjJ wilt be Angus McPhee t,!tmb,lrK-T- he waa signed aIMtr worl. of the Saturday. R champion at the regulates the respective Interests of award of the Judges an r p celebration, ,n tier day T,M' Afghanistan inVv erson of Douglas, Aria., in While the i here In concert with thoforeign offices the ropers of the sonthww- n vi the kas.y refrain from giving any detal". A peculiar tangle la ,be treaty at present, It was learn lion laws arose at I a rami XnlEta of S'"1 ,mp"r,nnt Mature when three Norwegian, 1 ,J a V ln New York early In J,a5r be registered for natural tk subject and the south of Persia m to of them had a certified P" migration officers at the Anglo-Russla- V yOU ill lave, loll 1 Of houil affe, r iloiiH Gun. Ie gu lieforr 1 pi Med t o as try. ,f v 'hero commlwi Harlmin on Oregon's fair state The fl Future. If ranged for a band of forty K rhavt'i n' r Uarrlman, aft- - the com, Pine Ridge 8',nC3r,t,V fto concluded n visit of Several w state fair at Douglas, Wy sever1 j MAnlt, p, Ration will Include I' own ,cd chiefs, among them bad Jack Red Cloud, Red ES' d ' An Bun. for the state. rull,r There was sold at uc'jrgF ' buck ,, tl1 n urr, cago one day last week plain, ) of Ju! Northwestern of assorted ln hl ,,tl ear waa from the niatlon, inn tin t wlt'h un Uh taxunlsm toward folio, ,lu fruit farm at Wall it I Vow-T" , n"w luck p, f gross sale waa $1,870. niak InveMnC't. 0 plums sold for from $' Kavursi si p i .n 1 aging $1.91. |