OCR Text |
Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ANDREW JENSEN, SPANISH FORK . Publisher . - UTAH ill 912,000,000. The Reynolds Failure at Valdez, Alaska, Threatens to be Pro ductive of Trouble. No Money to Pay Men, and Half Off the Working the Business Helnze, Morse and Thomas Interest! Are Eliminated and Instltutlona Are Declared to be Sound. New York.-- At a special meeting of the board of directors of the Mercantile National bank, Sunday afternoon Seth M. Mllllken was elected president of the bank to succed F. Augustus Helnze, resigned. At the same time Wiliam Skinner and Gerlsh H. Mllllken were elected additional vice presidents, Gerlsh Mllllken being added to the board of directors. The clearing house committee met with the directors of the bank and the two boards were in session for about, four hours. Later William II. Sherer, manager of the Clearing House association, on behalf of the association, gave out the following statement; "A committee of the clearing house has examined the several banks of the association that have been under criticism and find them solvent. The clearing house committee has decided to render them such assistance to mee their deposits as the committee may think necessary. The assurance was given by tho clearing house committee that the Helnze, Morse and Thomas Interests had been eliminated from the banking organizations of New York City ana In the light of this fact the clearing house association announced Its readiness to lend all necessary aid to any of the banks which have been under suspicion, the clearing house lnvesti gation having established their' solvency. It Is believed that this action will prevent any crisis In New York banking circles. During the past six months fully of the Town Are on the Verge of cattle have been shipped from Modena. Financial Collapse, Nine attorneys were grunted permission to practice before the Supreme oourt one day last week. Seattle, Wash. Cable advices re Friends of Earnest Williams of Salt I cclved here from Valdez by local Alas Lake City, who has been missing since kans are to the effect that Instead of Oetober 8, fear he has met with foul the situation due to the failure of the pla?T Iloynolds bank being cleared, compliJohn C. Henderson, who shot and cations have so thickened that there is killed Oscnr E. Otto in Los Angeles a danger of a riot and the destruction ot few days ago, was formerly a resident property. No money has been received of Ogden. at Valdez to pay off the 600 employees Scattered over the state of Utah, of the AJaska-Nomrailway, who are are many dairies, whose product of without means to secure food and butter and cheese this year will ex- shelter, and the Reynolds Alaska Deceed 92,000,000. velopment company affairs have be A fight Is being inaugurated on the come so complicated that It Is expecteastern mail order houseB by the Man- ed half the town will have to pass ufacturers and Merchants association through the hahds of a receiver. It has developed that Reynolds bad of Salt Lake City. Frank Dowdcn, 25 years old, was branch offices In New York, practicalrun over by a threshing machine en- ly all the New England states, Wis Nebraska, Maryland, gine at Clover Creek and crushed so conBin, Iowa, In the south Louisiana and Georgia died. be that badly Frederick Sorensen of Nepht Is raisGOLD AND SILVER OUTPUT. ing a second crop of strawberries, which Is regarded as quite a novelty Increase In Output of Yellow Metal In In that community. 1906 Over Preceding Year. Utah day was celebrated at tha Washington. George E. Roberts Jamestown exposition on October who retired from the position of di15th, Governor Cutler and rector of the njlnt on August 1, 1907, Thomas making addresses. Two Salt Lake boys about 17 years has completed a compilation of the RECEIVER FOR STANDARD OIL. old are accused of holding up a China- statistics on production of gold and silver In the various states and terriman. The youthful highwaymen setories of the United States for the Chicagoan Wants Affairs of Company cured only 93 for their trouble. Looked into by Courts. calendar year, 1906. Mr. Roberts estiL. B. Wilder, employed as an as mates the production of gold In the Chicago. George F. Handing of this sayer by the State Mining company at United States during the calendar on Saturday filed a bill in the suMlnersvllle, was struck by lightning year 1906 to have been 991.373,800, as city court asking for the appointperior killed on and Instantly the 17th. against 938,190,700 for the calendar ment of a receiver for the Standard The state convention of the Womens year 1905, a net gain in 1906 of $G, Oil company of New Jersey and the was In The 193,100. principal gain Christian Temperance Union was held Corn Products company of New JerIn Ogden last week. Mrs. E. E. Shep- Alaska, which amounted to 90.439,500, in gold was $3,919,500, sey. Mr. Harding says in his bill that Nevadas gain ard of Ogden was elected president. 922,305, he is the owner of 500 shares o the firegon, $75,200, Tennessee On the Utah Arid Farm companys Arizona $35,800, and Virginia $5,300. stock of the 6orn Products farm located In Dog Valley, the big The greatest loss of gold Id any state capital and that Its management If company, steam plow Is being run night and was Jh Colorado, where there was controlled by the Standard practically The next decrease of 92.76G.700. day, and an average of seventy-fivOiJ company. In was loss $367,900. Montana, largest acres per day Is being turned over. Chaffces are made that the Standard California lost $.164,200; Washington, Ambrose Greenwcll, while mounting $267,000; Idaho, $300,000, and Wyo Oil company, with certain Individuals, a horse at Huntsville, was thrown and mlng, $18,000. The total number of conspired to wreck the Corn Products kicked and stamped on by the vicious I jlne pqnces of gold produced was company, capitalized at $SO,000,0004 and sustained a fracture of set- - j 6(55.330. and for this purpose formed a pool, or The total production of silver In the eral ribs, lie Is expected to recover. trust, unlawfuly regulating and fixing A receiver has been appointed te United States during tha calendar and the price of glucose, controlling 1906 Is given as 56,517,900 ounces take charge of the Ogden canyon sani- year of the commercial value of $38,256,400. grape sugar and corn starch. Harding factories were tarium, at the mouth of Ogden canyon. as against 56,101.600 fine ounces of charges that thirty-eigh- t The resort has been a losing proposi- flie commercial value of $34,221,976 In Joined In this pool by the tion ever since It was thrown open to 1905. The net gain In the production conspirators. the public. of silver during the calendar year CREDIT GIVEN TAFT. The products of the metal and coal 1906 In Arizona was 361.G00 ounces; Idaho. 710.600; mines and the clay products of Utah California. 435.500; In the 1.188.200. The loss will this year aggregate $50,000,000, and Utah, Policy Adopted by Him Proper Method production of silver during the year while the agiiculture, horticulture and In for the Philippines. " Montana was 914,400 ounces, and livestock industry will reach a total in Colorado 495,400 ounces Manila. There was an enthusiastic of $75,000,000. demonstration for Secretary Taft at CONSUMPTION OF MEAT. Frank Tierce of Salt Lake City wilt a banquet given. In his honor Saturday become first assistant secretary of the by William Morgan Shuster, a night In In United States Declined the Hat Interior department on November 1, member of the Philippine commission. Last Seventy Years. succeeding Judge Thomas Ryan of Loading representatives of callings Kansas, w ho has been moved to a less Washington. A capital- - of $10,623,-000.00- 0 and nationalities were present The responsible position. Is directly concerned In the speakers Included Senor Osmeua. the The Barne distressing condition with elected speaker of the assemraising of meat animals and their reference to the prevalence of typhola slaughtering and packing, according to newlyand Governor General Smith. Genfever In Suit Lake which existed last a report on meat supply Issued by the bly, eral Smith confessed In his remarks This that he was one of those who haa year Is reported again this fall. There department of agriculture. Is an amazingly large number of cases amount Is as large as all doubted the wisdom of the policy Inof this dread disease. the capital invested In manufacturing Taft eight Paul Angell, a collector, attempted In 1904. The stock of meat animals augurated by Secretary now realized he that but ago, years not has suicide In Salt Lake City while lntox-- 1 has Increased since 1840, but this had been the only method to bring Increased with the populapace was a kept but speccub'd, prevented by "That moat the two people to a common ground. tator who knocked a bottle of carbolic tion. The report adds: has declined He said that If one were to Judge the acid from his band and held him un consumption per capita1840 Is In this country since plainly future by tho past, the success of Mr. til the police arrived. indicated." Tafts policy would be unbounded. On the Levan bench a strip of land three miles wide by eight miles long, Auto 8truck Trolley Pole. Coat of Peace Conference. In Juab county this year 60,000 Pontiac, Mich. In an automobile The Hague. Now that the Internaas were bushels of wheat raised, accident here Harry Wood, aged 40, tional peace conference has closed It against 50,000 bushels last year, upou was killed and Karl E. Smith, an autois Interesting to study some of tho absolutely dry farms. mobile tester for a local factory, had figures which have been prepared on The settlement of the telephone hla right arm broken. Smith was the cost of the four months session. trike has had the effect of pluclng a home when Wood and three The general expenses of all the deledriving crew of men at work In Park City. The other men asked for a ride. Smith gates Is estimated at ' $2,970,000, ot company has been unable to make an took the men into Ms machine. While which $523,000 was spent to pay tho Improvements since the trouble began, running about forty miles an hour the cost of 317 dinners. The amount spent but now It Is rushing things. automobile began skidding and Wood, by the various delegations, the press G. U. Gregg, tho oldest member ot unaccustomed to riding iu a machine, and Individual newspathe Independent Order of Odd Fellows became frightened and grabbed the associations pers for telegraphic tolls amounted to In Utah, died at his home In Suit Lake controller, swerving the machine Into $225,072. More than a million words ot press matter concerning tho conferCity last week. Ho was eighty-fou- r the ditch, where It hit a trolley pole. ence were sent out years old, and has been prominent In Odd Fellowship for a good many years. Lifer Tries to Commit Suicide. Trouble Over a Transfer. Thomas Coughlin, an iron worker, Salt Lake City. Yielding to despair was crushed to death by a falling derFrancisco. As a result of tron San after serving ten years of a life sen- ale over & transfer on a Folk rick. while at work on the Newhouse Blip mura convicted tence, John Dougins, building In Suit Lako. Other work- derer In the state penitentiary, almost street car of the United Railroads sysmen had narrow escapes, but succeedone nmn was shot and killed, succeeded In ending his life by stab- tem. ed In getting out of harms way. so seriously wounded that death and is now In a serious William F. Strlrkley, an electrician bing himself, will probably ensue, and two other condition In the prison hospital. Dougof Salt Lake, is dead as the result of las was an Ogden blacksmith. Ten pien less severely Injured. The slain having a tooth pulled. Blond flowed years ago l.e killed his wife, and was man was Otto Moss, aged 34 years, a profusely from tho gums, and his nose sent to the penltenlary for life. Ha by occupation. Otto P. En also bled freely, all efforts to stop the was rrweln wss shot through the neck sno black-smln- h In he work prison given flow of blood being unavailing. Strlck-leleft eye, and will probably die. John shop. Should Douglas recover, Monger, a was shot died five weeka after the tooth was he will be a cripple for llfo. extracted. through the left hand. To move the cattle out of Utah Hisses For President Small. Low Wants a Million. would require 17,360 cars, or ncnrly J. Hmnll, forSylvester Chicago 30 cara 900 tralulonds of Washington. Seth Low of New each; to mer president of the Commercial Te- York, the treasurer of the Industrial move the horses In the state 6.600 union, was hissed and peaco foundation, has reported to Secears, or 220 tralntoads; to move the legraphers' 600 members of the Chicago by jeered retary of Commerce and Labor Straus sheep, 10,400 cars, or 350 tratnlonds, that contributions are being received while 400 cars would ho necessary to local union before whom he appeared Sunday afternoon in an effort to jus- to tho foundation. Secretary Straus move the hogs. says tho trustees hope that this fund Albert OBrien of Ogden, while rid- tify his aetlon in seeking to end the will bo Increased by contributions a third of thlso strike. presNearly ing his bicycle across the rallrona ent left the hall after from laborers as well as from capitalInsults shouting tracks, was struck by a train and at their ists. The fund Is about $40,000, and deposed leader. When order It Is hoped by tho foundation that it dragged for a distance of thirty feet He was uninjured, except for several had been restored, aetlon was taken will grow to at leust $l,0u0,000, as the the assessment npnn leased Interest on this amount will be re-slight bruises. His blcyclo was thrown Increasing for the benefit of the i wire operators under the wheels ot the engine and tr,kcrfc qUrp to carry out the purposee of j the foundation. demolished. 9,000 bead of e Men e flve-slxt- r hod-carri- entirely The aggregate market value of copper shares at yesterdays (Oc- 0 $610,045,-77tober 10) low quotations was months or ten nine was less than it Journal. Boston tho ago, says an Mining men will do well to keep lake section, Marshall eye on the Idaho. In addition to the richness ot Its ore, It Is free milling and can he worked cheaply. Timber and water for Bos-ton- UTAII STATE NEWS Two cases of smallpox were placed under quarantine In Ogdon last week. The new Swedish Lutheran church at Park City was dedicated last Sunday. The output of Utah's mines this year will reach the enormous sum of MINES AND MINING LEFT of Couple Charged With Murder Mrs. Pet Magill Are Acquitted all purposes Is by Illinois Jury. Proecutlon Depended Upon Declara- tion That the Conduct of the Accused Couple Drove Mre. Magill to Suicide, and Therefore They Were Guilty of Murder. Decatur. 111. Fred Magill and his wife were found not guilty Friday Ma-glnight In the trial for the murder of s first wife. W. E. Redmond made the opening argument for the state. He read a decision of the Supreme court of Illinois to the effect that If a person knows and her Intends to commit suicide, and it he aids, abets or encourages such . person In that act, he is guilty of inur-knew Fred Magill der. He argued that his wife was contemplating suicide and that he encouraged her, adding to her despondency by his attentions to Fay Graham. On May 31, last, Mrs. Pet Magill was found dead in her home at Clinton, 111., and a examination, post-morte- held six weeks after her death, showed that she had been suffocated by chloroform. On July 5, In Denver, Colo., Fred K. Magill, her husband, and Miss Fay Graham, a young woman, who hau been a close friend of the family, were married. Four days later, In San Diego, Cal., Magill and his second wife were arrested on a charge of murdering the first Mrs. Magill. They were brought back to Clinton and secured a change of venue to this city. In the trial the statement that Magill and Miss Graham, by their conduct, had driven Mrs. Magill to suicide and were, therefore, guilty of murder, was made. The defense Introduced letters written by Mrs. Magill shortly befje her death, in which she complained of "unbearable headaches and constant qagglng" of her husbands relatives, ftitness&s also testified that Mrs. Magill bad often talked of committing suicide. In a letter to her husband, written the day before her death, Mrs. Magill asked him to marry Fay Graham in case anything should happen to her. Magill was employed In a bank at Clinton, 111., the chief owner of which Is 3spaclan Warner, United States commissioned of pensions. The verdict was greeted with cheers, In spite of the efforts of the court to maintain order. The crowd in the court room hurried forward and offered congratulations to the Magllls. The Jury afterward filed by, and each shook hands with the detendants. PEACE CONFERENCE ADJOURNS. Head of the American Delegation Signed the Final Act of Conference. The Hague. Joseph H. Choate, head of the American delegation? on Friday signed the final act of the peace conference and the conference adjourned. In closing his speech at the after-aoon- s session, President elidoff said: Thanks were expressed to the aug-usInitiator of the conference, his majesty the emperor of Russia. The conference, I hope, will render homage to the president of the United States, who first proposed the meeting of the second conference, by authorizing me to send the following telegram: The delegates to the second peace conference having finished their work, and remembering with gratitude the tltial proposition made for Its convocation by the president of the United States, present to him their respectful homage. " e Hold Fairbanks Responsible for Cock- tails. Kansas City. The Presbyterian synod of Missouri has adopted a report commending the Indiana Methodist conference for refusing to send Vice President Fairbanks as a delegate to tho general conference at Baltimore, "for the reason that he had allowed cocktails to bo served at a public dinner to President Roosevelt." The report was debated with animation, and Mr. Fairbanks' name was eliminated, reference Instead being made to a "high official in the councils of church and nation. Texas Bank Fails. Houston, Tex. One of the oldest banking houses In Texas went to the wall Thursday afternoon when T V, House, banker, filed a general assignment under the state law. W. B Chow, V. D. Cleveland nnd C. S. Rice were named as assignees. It Is stnt-- d that the resources are amply sufficient to pay creditors one hundred rents on the dollar. Inability to realize on cnrltles not readily controvertible Into cash Is considered tho only cause of the assignment Creep In convenient Advices from Boston are to the ef feet that a prominent copper producer who Is In close touch with the situation says Calumet & Ilecla Is shipping cop In per to Europe In large quantities movement a of buying big anticipation Excitement Is running high over a report of the richest strike ever made In the Goldfield district. The strike was made in the Frisco Goldfield mine, two and a half miles south of the city, and the ore Is said to assay $150,000 to the ton. V H. Clark of the Nevada Hills has another bonanza at Round Mountain, thirty miles north of Manhattan, the Sphinx, it is strictly a gold property. and absolutely free milling, and a mill Is to be installed at once to manufaoacids, aqua regia, or alkaline solutions. It can be drawn into fine wire having a tensile strength greater than soft steel. Tantalum Is now employed principally as a filament in an electric Incandescent lamp, which was put on the American markM In 1906. The Amalgamated Copper company on the 14th declared a quarterly dividend of 1 per cent, as compared with a .dividend of 2 per cent, for the last previous year. This makes the annual dividend rate 4 per cent, as compared with 8 per cent the previous year. According to advices from Goldfield, a shoot of rich ore has Just been encountered on the third level of the Rea Top mine In a drift which was started south In the big vein on a seam of good ore. Samples of the new find re semble the high grade of the Mohawk. There Is a disposition In certain min. lng circles to contest the legality of the law passed by the last legislature regarding the special mine corporation tax. It Is claimed by companies owning properties, but not now operating the same, that their organizations are subjected wrongfully to double taxation. Pessimism on copper, both as to the metal and to the different corporation atocks based on that great commodity, is apparently 9n the increase, notwithstanding that sentiment has ben con tlnuously adverse to copper for many months. The copper metal markev shows no signs whatever ot Improve ment. The capacity of the Sunnyside mill at Round Mountain has been more than doubled within the last month and the dally run Is something like forty tons, with a proportionate larger t On the output In bullion. level a fine body of very rich ore has been opened up which shows free gold plainly. The Ubehebe district, to the north of Death valley. Is to have a railroad. The road will run through 'Willow Springs wash to Sand springs and will be accessible to all the mines on the south side of Gold mountain. It will also be within striking distance of Tule canyon, Revenue and the old Uncle Sam mine. During 1C07, according to statements emanating from Wall street, twenty-severailroads have depreciated $891, Industrial 319,720, and twenty-thre- e depreciated to the extent of $343,765,-018- . The Boston News Bureau now states that during the same period forty-sicopper companies have depreciated $520,000,000. Some remarkably rich ore has recently been discovered In the Dead-wooBasin district of Idaho, assays showing as high as $421 In gold and silver, the veins being large ones. Specimens of the ore show rich In lead and silver, some of It containing almost native lead. The claim Is 90 miles front Boise. 40 from Placervllle and 22 from Knox. - A. Friedman, the "father of the Seven Troughs district In Nevada, Is to build a mill of ten or twenty stamps in Seven Troughs canyon. The construction of the mill will be pushed with all possible vigor. Sufficient water ' m.erntlnn of such a p'ant has been developed, and the development ot district will be materially 'ded upon Its completion. On of the most Important strikes In the Goldfield district during the pan six months develiq d a (ow dnxs a;.0 on tho Victor, adjoining the Gold l'i,r on th. oast Hnd the Hat, one of the Blue Hun company'll claims, on thn west, the ore running $60 to th CHAP' barb lndo. . Sank cfosed 0:clock Th J n x 1- i- -e U'11. Due thousand tons of ore averaging per ton is the shipping record of 11"' Montgomery Shoshone for the month of S' pi ember. This means a valuation of $1011,000 In a single month and if t,(. sumo shipments are maintained an n initial valuation of $1 200-tie- u - jdolei J Wt tiled the Iron can5jJ5Je verified Lnumal and excessive and ow, currency and pier. piped mrnln- posltor8 riL?,'4 to? I :eoed initiate? cl which to pay demands which mav made, the management hag decide advisable In the interests of n & ltors to suspend for tho time bei The bank Is solvent." It is stated that the bank Is vent and will pay out inside of si days. Otto Helnze & Co. did not the bank a dollar, and F. A He. owes It less than $309,000, which Mr. Largey, amply secured. dent, owes it about $7,500, an. . able to pay many times that am The bank holds on hand about 000, and its deposits amount to a shot I ;tatO lour bi ipositk 'a nay Anita Th. uceI ire wslhle, (their dlove; ztdei ol SI I trage 4 her. t i A I wo re "4 eno he 1 i StO 1 to :emoc AI 1 HEINZE. 4 Amalgamated eigne From Mercantile Nat Bank New York. Sensations folio each other In rapid succession In financial district as the result of collapse of the projected corner United Copper and the suspension a prominent brokerage firm Th day. The firm of Otto Helnze 1 was suspended on the stock exchaij F. Augustus Holnze, the Butte cop; magnate, resigned the presidency the Mercantile National bank of N York. The Amalgamated Copper cr pany, at Its directors meeting, cut t quarterly dividend from 2 per c to 1 per cent F. Augustus Helnze Is one ol most picturesque and remarkable ures in American finance. A gra ate of the Columbia School of Ml: he went west, without capital, end gan the development of copper which brought him Into t filet with the great Anaconda Cop company, now a part of the Ama mated Copper company. This coat lasted for years and was fought from court to' court, until, s year more ago, a compromise was effect The terms of the peace agreed were not made public, but It Is kno that Helnze received enough, U a share, ta make him several times millionaire. t Of Is lire V sal toes fc trough coe ot af pat b. lings firay here," to my then ! being t of 1 his ev toted at, : some d old t ma ! 1 whei e had ewas 'ovard il feel Anita !e for 1 for t o be d both, ment 4 eap I had d to ttoppe 'ocerti OF MANITOBA! S devil st the The Sick and Helples Are Burned the Stake to Save Trouble. t Winnipeg, Man. That Indianmile living within a few humlred the m Winnipeg have reverted to out brutal savagery was brought the trials of chieftains of the Sa tribe, Just ended at the Hudson triple Hirst irk. m Lto, ppa torwar him a tonne Sic Norway. i will ctUm commercial deposits; the others savings of working men and won' The directors announce that will proceed with the building of new bank, which is nearing cos tlon, and which will cost $200. State Examiner Collins will charge of the bank. Former Foe of the t ;!cg There are about 6,000 posltors, and of this number 57 TROUBLES OF M Hull $3,000,000. companys fort at or ..ed t dltlonal currency BARBARITIES I (St ? ' 8hortlf JUJ I ;A the HtI 8 S' id 5 of , 250-foo- Butte. The State Savings k, lutte, one of the largest buu of the kind In Montana, .. which otes 1 members of the tribe strangled or burned at the no r reason than to relatives of caring for t1- - J: convicted Joseph Tosoqtinn was murder and sentenced to die-tfl Jack of the Sucker band of 8 trlbn, strangled himself to his cell the night before the for his trial. helpless Willy is U f'1., then wear1 LC teeovc - 4 his irtty Mhe chair tten Hamburg Bank old j.rtvato bn 1 So. h!" & Co f llabllltle of th '4 tv: . ha wted firm of Haller, n at Thursday. Tho How aro variously stated, and 11 And mated early In the day that Uiey In the neighborhood of $a,000. Undr; the Hamburger Nachrb hton ,wikli Informed by A banker the altlon to know that th" ,p l And rcarh $7,500,000. This DIPS' . fflf crash of this firm th r,h:. 'll th: 1 failure In Germany aim . J. breakdown of the I.wptKvr es t of June, 1901. Tho assets havo not yet been ascertain18fount . . - Min Workings Cause Half a Dollars .Damage, N. V. Dispatches from 8. Sydney, Newcastle state that a serious creep has occurred In the old mine workings under the residents! quarter of that city. Buildings en nn nrea of fifteen acres aro affected, nnd the damage so far Is estimated ns hulf a million There have been no casualties A min creep U a slow movement of rock surrounding the txtnvatlons to replace that taken out. until the move, ment often causes a change of levels on the surface. Million The Mule Florence Mining cm puny has found the extension of the llno "" ha loohuV'T'"1 "H' adding thereby an nr 1,1 Bn(J 2r'0 fret lertlet, Iv H large wealth of 7a t ! n"t Bny" ,Ji tJoblfleld 4 hnmtle Tho do-Inr- Independence mine. bv"t,elH "',W 21" r. "f ,f- Th lei n fhe .';,n nelr 1,08 m'n" - four b0rdl'' Chc .2! cost about ,c Record Price Paid for Hay " M Chicago. No. 1 timothy here on Thursday at - .P ,, ' which is tho highest prl here for that commodity inn of the year. Ti.o f B, said to be due to s',ir(l,f yt,jr Wr Chicago, notwithstanding crop Is larger than the tho litMt ten years. TH f maintain that they are una nUh enough cara to transpo I Most of tho hay eontea from Illlnola, 5M0 Nebraska And Kanaas. thin N. 1 dim $- re r )r(-- for V Oof akeq, r to knot to of cowat keen toss 1 3e for Ttotl t'd, hoq |