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Show WE MORNING EXAMINER OGDEN, UTAH, SUNDAY MORNlso, RUSSIAN ARMY IS CUT OFF BY OYAMA MARCH 13, 1303. MRS. STANFORD CONQUERS CATARRH THE WORLD OVER. PE-RU-- NA WAS NOT 7 POISONED Profs. Jordan and Hopkins Giva Their Vitwa aa te Coh ef Death. rsav? r ' ' aa Francisco, Muir'i 18. The Call today tbe fallow ing as the statement uu the death of Mrs. Stanford of President Jordan sad Timothy Hop-kiikhued before their from publishes Petersburg Has Received no Word in 24 Hours and There is Great Uneasiness-B- ut Mobilizing of New Army is Underway. St. tt Petersburg, on the ground p. m.1 rammauder-la-chief- , the with THnphic that retreating Russian araijr haa boea cut i the UB,0 t i, tec0KDlct lor over 24 hour, but the aiiibarius . Kuropaikin'i failure alao real on oth-ar- e only temporizing, declaring Ibat r abouldera and pity 1 expressed at hi. aad fata. they have no informal ion that the Japanese bava eut ilia railroad Id Gen. WHY RUSSIANS FAIL. JJnavlteb'a rear. Nevertheless with l ha rurtaia down, the war office 1. the prey of tba diraat forebodlnga. The St. Petersburg. March IT. 11:13 p. last word from the front ai contain- w. 11. KjrUoff, tr correspondent, of the continuing bin disclosures of Russian ed in a trfagrani from ona . Associated Fresa Ruariaa corrrapon-deataarmy conditions, attributes the failtbo only eorreauumlent with tba ure of the g no era! staff to map propretiring army. It presaged an attack erly the region between Liao Yang la the rear. Tba talt'graai. although aad Mukden the Russian loss of 45, (Kill dated Chnug To Fu. 44 uiifa north swa south of Mukdes in October, of Tie Paaai at 4 o'clock Thuraday when the troops wart ordered to afternoon, was neat from Kaiyuan. 30 make n turning movement against n mile north of Tie Iawi aad only naturally iaipregnable position. reached Si. Petersburg tbia morning. Kirikiff asserts that tbe Grippen-ber- k It waa brief, ayiug simply that tba episode aaJd other events indiarmy wa. retiring in good order and cate tbet tbe fault had not bees remdestroying ibr railroad aa It want, edied - when tbe battle of Mukden but was constantly pressed by tba began, and there were encountered Japanese the rearguard action being "obstacle that were unt expected becontinuous. cause. tba country was unknown There were ominous words in the unmapped, and maplesa because himself, though concluding sentence as follows: "We nobody bothered bclleie tbo Japanese are making n tbero bad been ampin time and opporvide turning movement north and that tunity. a Kirlfoff citaa Ibe cane of a Chinese they are ready to fall upon ua when an get out of tbo ring-likgroup of aa a missionary la Mukden mountainous country which surrounds calliug that the and casually mentioning the Tie Pass gorge." Russian were preparing to burn tbe In the long retreat to llsrbln the stores at Ylukow, aad who, wbaa Russian only have the advantage of a said be bad told the Ih Mandarin road na far aa Kalyunan. queaitunad, that "Tbia would cause whence It beers eastward at Kirin, Kfriloff coucluded failure, while Ibe railroad continues north to that tba chief rauae of the reverse general was the Inactivity of the general Jlarbln. .According to the staff, however, a good wagon road taff. Clado who waa chief runs parallel to the railroad. Hut fur tantlciaaCaptain and Vice Admiral Kojeat-veaakmen of million a a of an army quarter to Iho Novoe Vremyn. encumbered with impedimenta, with attribute,writing to tba navy faults much pursuan active eqemy relentlessly tbo name as those which Kiriloff ban ing and operating on im flanks sad ascribed Is the army, the main shortclonof th threat enemy tht constant coming being tbe lack of adentifle ing iho linn of retreat, it In admit- training aad treating tbo science of and railroad wagon aar in general with contempt. ted that tbo single read afford poor prospects of General Unsvitcb being able to bring off the MUST CONTINUE THE WAR. remnant a of tba army confided to bln earn withont a tramendoua sacrifice New York, Marcb 18. Tli Japanese of lire. If the Japanese actually suc1 now, ceeded In throwing a strong form press considers that Manchuria serosa tbo lino of retreat, It la rec- says n Times diepsteh from Toklo, virognised that tbn army might bo forced tually Iq a state of Japanese occupathe tion. but tha papers dismiss to capitulate. In tbo meantime, the mobilisation thought of speedy peace la view of tba of a now army ban already begun la Ruaelaa reluctance to admit defeat. Unaavoral places, although tba order baa der tbe eircumrianrea, therefore, It la held that It will be essential to prosenut yet boon published. A dlvlalon of tha Imperial guard at cute tbe war vigorously. The premier, spenklag Friday nlgbt 8t. Petersburg waa reviewed today. The newspapers generally endorse at a dinner of tha bankers club, eaked as temporary ble bearers to conceive themselve la Liuevltcg'g selection March II, communication MU , bo-cau- e Cos-seck- 's y, the petition of Russia, who, although enormously superior in resource. population, and military renown, is now confronted with the painful qureiinn of sulug for peace with n nation hitherto regarded with contempt. It would bo unwise, be aaij, to anticipate such a conrsssion. The Japanese, lie added, must be prepared to continue tlw war to tha bitter end. Honolulu: "la our judgment, after careful coast Jeretfoa of all the facts brought to our knowledge. are fully convinced that the death of Mr-- . Stanford wa not due to strychnine puieonlug nor to intentional wrongdoing on the part of any one. "We And ia the ulemenu of those who were with Mrs. titsnfoid la her last moments no rvidmre that any of the characteristic symptoms of strychnine poisoning were present. "We think H probable that death wa due te a combination of condition and rimimstancr. Among tliee we may note, in connection with hrr advanced age. the accustomed exertion, the surfeit of unsuitable food and the unnoral exposure during the picnic to which she went on the day of her death. "These roadtUoas were, perhaps. mi mew hat aggravated by the pieence of strychnine and other drugs in tlia aUn by y medicinal cap.ule and the presence of the small amount of strychnine contained iu the do of bicarbonate of soda. "Tbn occurrence of this strychnine ia the of soda baa not yet beea explained. The fact that It waa not in excess of usual medicinal proportions suggests that it appearance waa due either to the error of a pharmacist, or else that the combination waa prepared for tonic purposes. We must recognize that Ihe preliminary liypol heals of svcidetital poisoning seemed a Batumi one under the extraordinary rlrcumetanco. We regard it, however, as being without foundation, and wholly incompatible with tha evidence ia our posesnsiun." pos-lbl- RETREAT FROM TIE PASS. st Paris, March IE The of the Matin st BL Petersburg corrt-puadr- tele- graphs a description of tbe scem-- witnessed during the railroad Journey from Tie Pass to Harbin. The wounded, tha correpoadent says, were lying exposed sud unattended everywhere and the soldiers wen unable te obtain provision. Hundreds of stragglers cannot And their regiments. Tha trains wen Anally attarkad by Chinese bandits, who, at several places, displaced rails. The correspondent adds that Russian officer are indignant, saying that the retreat was ordered when the positions at Tie Pass were still tenable. s MESSAGE FROM KVROPATKIK. SENATE ADJOURNS. Washington, March IS. At 3:39 p. m. tbo senate adjourned sine die. Unevilcb. la a telegram to tha emperor under the same date, said: "la pursuance of tha orders of your majesty of March 16th, 1 assumed command today of all our forces, military aad naval, operating against tha Japanese." A couple of brief mcaaege from General Kuropatkla, dated March 14, ay: "The rear guard of our armies was engaged March 15th, on ridge southeast of Tie Pass and near the village of Pelitiuan, southeast of Tie Pasa. At night the rear guard fell back to a position at tbe bead of the river near tha village of Kamlultxa without being pressed by tbe enemy. "On March 16th our armies continued their marcb. On March 15th the town of Fakomau waa occupied by Chinese bandits. HAfliED DEATHLY Washington. March 1. President recently scat to tba 8enata tha anmiuetloa of George L. Dobson of Iowa to be consul at Nottingham, England. vice Frank W. Mahln. The appointment crrati-,- a flurry ia tha Iowa delegaliva in congrpk. Mr. Mahln is an lows niau. his appointment to Nottingham having been obtained orlginar-l- y by Senator Allison. Ruth Bcualur Allison and Dolllver objected to his Iowa displacement even by another man, aud aa a conacqueacc, Dobson's After a appointment wa held up. consultation between tbe President and the Iowa senators, it was derided to nuke a change in the nomination of Dobum. Today, therefore, the President at to the Croat the nomination of Mr. Dobson to be consul at Hangchow, Rooravelt Chicago, March 18. The human rare will be extinct on this earth la the course of a few million years, according to Profewr Bamuel Wllllaton, professor of paleontology at tha University of Chlcagix While lecturing on the fu- ture of the earth's Inhabitant. Prof. WlllUtoa daclared that, ia hla o pinion. Instead of men at this futuro dale, which he told tha students would not com for some! king like 1,000.000 years, the earth will be dominated by birds. "It will only be a natural com of events that will ultimately drive men from the dominant sphere on earth. aid Prof. Willlslon. "First came the flaliev. They were dominant for a while and had to give way lo the amphibians. Then came ihe reptiles aud ona they yielded to Ihe mammal. Now tlw mammala are weakening and ihe newest cls, the birds, ia growing to China. prominence and In time, I sincerely believe. will be the dominant Inhabitant of the earth. "Each of these clause developed to tha highest degree of specialisation and then began to wane. Man I developed lo tha highest degree now and little more can be expected of him. Prof. WlllUtoa is considered one of Ihe leading experts la paleontology in this country and haa written eeveral Threatened tha Officers of tha Craw treatises on evolution. of a Ship. s-- PASSENGERS UNITED IN A REVOLT GERMANY IS ANNOYED. of the ship's oflisn aboard the French steamer Montreal at Hurts, Azores. been have cabled by tbe New York Herald's correspondent at that port, who eayn that the vessel put back when six bundled mil out. She was short of coal and provisions and the passengers refucd la Feruns ovar tba ATknown and used for catarrhal world T, a. ii Tba Ferunn Girl baa traveled 'round the globe. Her face Is familiar every where that civilisation reaches. Vmtrmatty Pruhti From Africa to Greenland, from Manchuria to Patagonia, the faea of the Feruns girl la familiar and tbe praises of Parana aa a catarrh remedy are beard, gwcossarf le Nwtb aadSeath. Parana crossed tbe Kqnator several years ago, to find in Gia Routharn sne-ceIlamlaphet the aame triumphant that baa marked ita career la the Northern Hemisphere. A St 44. Feruns is a standard catarrh remedy the world over. It cures catarrh by eradicating It from tba system. No other remedy baa so complatoly PALE dominated the whole earth aa Fernnn. jslmylMpa all As He Was About to Sail Across the Atlantic. In languages 1U glowing testimonials am written, in nil climes tbe demands for Forum WAS AFRAID OF THE DIG STK FOR Inside Story of the Reader Syndicate's rn-cel- RIGHT KIND OP EDUCATION. read and ubonio guitar Studies Are Net Plague Drives People. Away 20,000 Sufficient. Chicago. March 18. At the annual banquet, of the Chicago Alumni association of Brown university. President William II. Faitnre has discussed the present tendency of colleges aid universities lo emphasise what i termed the "bread and butter studies," and offered a plea far a return, to some extent at least, to the classical studies aa the necessary basis of a broad education. 1 went to one of the beet technical schools in the country and got a thorough education in electricity, said he. "but when 1 got out of school 1 could not writ a respectable letter. Before i could flll competently the position 1 now hold. I had to lake g course in tit-da- y pas.-engr- Catarrh. ASKED . Indlf-tingha- Die j Annually of WUMlifan ARE Ovar Delay in Bettiemant of Samoan economy. "The ideal rlrmenl as well as the Claims. tnsteiisl should be developed, and this Is done to a greater extent ia the Berlin, Msrvh IS. The settlement of rlSMlval courne. Ihe Samoan claims has become a rather LABOR ORGANIZER GUILTY. touching point with the foreign office, a it is not understood why so small a Will Gat Six Mentha in Jail far Aa sum as 120,000 should cause the United aaulL Piste aad England to hesitate. The absolutely to proceed. delay of a year haa, it is pointed nut. . Kansas City, March 18. A special been out of proportion to the amount of Owing to the failure to Scad the by a faster steamship all unit- claims anJ aa the damages are owing, from Winfield. Kan., ar: ed ia a revolt and It wag necessary to Arthur K. Ireland, organiser far the oroiriing to the arbitrator, lo a lot of a armed fore. . indigent pernas. the impression heie Is Federation of Labor, wa ronvictsd A Poruiguere gunboat was called on that England sud the Tailed State on a charge of assault on J. D. liar-rltfor aid. hive riiosn delay amounting to ctf Arkansas City, a The passenger threatened Ihe officer Pants Te nmchinM. He wa convicted having been obtained original-howevewith crew the claim that tbs cummirr for $12(1.000. under flection 42 of the statue whirh vengeance yad should they attempt to leave Hurts in which er prepared be an American provide for a mtence not to exceed .the lice of the terrific wrother, and lawyer ar It rtreaa ot the actual tiro years in the penitentiary and not ii. i ihe prevailing ararrity ot fresh amount. Germany has tint made inv lets than is month in tbe rotntv jail. provision. or The amaulr wa made in July last veer proposition to tbe I'ntted Plate Tli tieair.fchiM La Fayette ia expectGieat Hiiiaia. but wuld probably acnd Ireland ws accompanied by ravetal 'd to take the Montreal's to cent half tiw amount of the claim if It striking machinists. Hsrrity ws struck Ksw Yoi k todsV. was offered. with a billy and teiiou-l- v hurt. n-- One Million It obviates tha necessity of all local treatment and its relief is of permanent character. New Yotk, March 18. Secretary ot Slate Hay, as be was boarding tha steamship Cretic to sail far Europe, was seized with a lit of weakneaa aa be stepped upon the gang plauk ang nearly collapsed. As be was going aboard with hla daughter. Miss Hay, and Henry Adams, a friend, the secretary was seen to turn pale, stagger, gasp aa If fur breath, and he would have fallen had not hla friend supported him. He was taken to a pile of freight, whet he aat down until attendant! brought a wheel chair, ou which he was taken aboard toe ship. At the dock there are several short flights of atairs loading to the .econd floor, from whirh floor tha board of tba steamer is made. Ia going up throe lairs Mr. Hay had to rest st each lauding. Juat as h reached the top be reeled back, but recovered himself, aad kept on. Aa bn waa about to alert up Ihe gang plank he wa seen to turn deathly w hite and stagger and be would have fallen had he not been supported. Tba secretary was assisted to a heap of freight piled near the gang plank, where he sat down and waited until Warsaw. March 18. The directors aa Invalid's chair waa brought from tha of tha Vistula railroad have asked for at earner. troops to guard the bridges between ' It waa within a few minutes of the iedlce and Malkin, because of the steamer's sailing Time when the secreof letters threatening their dotary went on board and it was believed st met km. if the turn was regarded a serious There has been a revival of strike that w hiie would have been some there agitation in tha Lodx district. A party phvali'ians were summoned. delay ' of strike leaders tried to force workAa she passed Sandy Honk the Cretir. men at the mills at Pablanlce to a signal saying that Secretary displayed leave their work, but the men refused. A light followed, an agitator was Hay wa much better. killed sad others were wounded. CITY IS DfcSERTED. Knglih literature, histoiy and political Kaw York, March IE Details Conflict between passengers and 1,400,000,000 . JXiwnr Cis Senators From Iowa And Birds Will Domi- Destruction of Railroad nate on the Property is Fcard Objected to a in Russia Earth. Nomination. t Ike Population of the Earth is aa 8L Petersburg, March II. A telegram from General Kuropstkin dated March 17. say a: "la accordance with Ihe order of bin majesty received March 16. 1 banded over to General Linevltch today tbo command of tbo land and sea forces operating against tbe Japan-eae.-" GUM PRESIDENT n non-unh- Owing to he ravages of bubonic plague not more than live hundred, inhabitants remain In Ihe city of Piagim, Chile, according In a despatch from the New York Herald correspondent there. The place had a population of 20.000, but all who were able have fled. Only one doctor remains to attend lo The sick. I wo others having fallen ill. There are 134 case in tbe Twelve new ones were reported in one day, live resulting fatally. New Yotk. Man-- 18. ho-pit- al. INJURED BY A RUNAWAY. Mrs. Dunna and Her Husband tba Victim. Were Chicago, .March 18. Mr. Edward F. Dunne, w Ife of the Democratic: nominee for mayor, was painfully injured and Judgo Dunne lightly bruied when a team ot runaway h'nrs dashed into Ihe brougham :n'cvbich they were riding. The brongham was wrecked and one of tite so badly lacerated that g polireman Riot it. The tongue of The calVlage To which the runaway team was litvlied crashed on the left Through the wide of the bcotham and atmrk The rolling uf the vehicle. Just above the head of the occupants, j from galies Mr. Dmme. about the face ouaed IF the flying glass. fai:ttrd sit waa carried into a nearby reMeni-e- , where she recovered -- s tin I cvncionnr non after eard. The coachman, who hid been hurled fr.-n hi seat in the street al the I of the collision, was bruited about the head and Inc k. and probably sustained internal Irjuries. rue-me- Negotiations. New York. March 18. Athola B. Render and his wife, mentioned by Senator Morgan of Alabama In the auto Domingo treat discussion m co m poring the Reader syndicate which had in hand plan for raising tbe debts of the Dumintchn republic and tha sale of a naval port in the island to the American government, are in this city. It la stated that Mrs. Reader waa formerly Miss Ella Rawls, of Alabama, a stenographer who came to New York In 1891 to seek her fortune. In the course of Arc year she had become owner of n large stenographic bureau in Wall street, and, in the course of her business, did considerable work for the Venezuelan boundary commission. Later she went to London and, representing a prominent English bsnking firm, procured from the Sultan of Jabore a $3,000,000 railroad contract. While in London she married Reader, n native of New Zealand who traveled widely and acted as secretary to well known persons. The couple claim later to have taken charge of n big Peruvian mining deal and by the diplomatic efforts uf Mrs. Reader to haft; averted a revolution In that country. In u long statement issued by' tbe Readers they act forth their scheme far relieving the Santo Domingo situation which fell through when Mr. Dillingham arrived on tbe scene. They claim to have been engaged in the mutter by one Perez, a secret agent here of President Morales. Reader asserts that be consulted a well known attorney here who yesterday Issued a denial of all interest ia Santo Domingo affairs, and after outlining bis plans to lawyers, took a steamer for the islands. There he was received by Morales and daily conferences were held during which documents were formulated Mrs. appointing Reader fiscal agent of tbe republic in the United States and giving her authority to negotiate treaties for the debt settlemmi at Washington aa well as the entire financial rehabilitation of flunto Domingo. These matters had. the Readers claim, almost reached a conclusion hen President Morales announced be had received word through Minister Itawson that Cummander Dillingham was coming and all negotiation with Reader was instsmlydropped. Reader felt much hurt over the outcome and declares 6me interested person, aware of his secret negotiation. had informed ihe authorities at Washington. In reply to a query as to whit be was going to do shout It. he aWed. "What ran I do about it? Mr. Reader said that, on January 9th. he railed ou Prrsidrnl Morales (Mid saw Mr. Sanchez who said that .United Sta'c Minister Dawson had . EihwAs f stirfiy. To supply thin remedy to tbn whole world taxes to the utmost on of the beat laboratoriee in the United States. A HeeJ Pnm Aattimllm. Walter H. Woodward, Bo madter Royal Australian Artillery, Hobart, Tasmania, writes : I suffered tar several years with a distressing condition of tbo bead and throat, caused by continual colda. "My head and nostrils war stopped np most of the time and there waa a discharge, and my sense of smell waa affected badly. "After two weeks use of Peru ns I found this condition quite changed, and so I continued to use thin remarkable medlclna for over a month. "I am very glad to any that at tbe end of that time X waa cored and felt in fine health generally, and am pleased to give Ferona my honest eadorso-auu- Am advised the Dominican government not to proceed with Reader, but to negotiate direct with Washington. I asked him, said Mr. Reader, "if thie was not very sudden and unexpected, and he eemed confused and anxious to avoid giving offense. I asked him if he was quite sure of Mr. Dawson's authority and hd said that the president had seen a cabin from Washington and that they were awaiting to receive another cable from Washington that day to tbo .effect that a special commissioner wa leaving Washington within twenty-fou- r hours for Banto Domingo city. I saw President Morales and asked him why be bad proceeded so far with me, had accepted everything and had gone no far as to make out tbo telegram appointing Mr. Render his Ascii agent to report In Washington, if he had not intended to complete bis arrangement. "President Morales also seemed confused and upset. He said, What can 1 do? 1 am frightened of the big stick, and I dare not, under present offend President circumstances, Roosevelt- - I asked him if Mr, Dawson proposed to make any arrangements for the cancellation of the external debt, or to relieve Santa Domingo from Its present embarrassed and bankrupt condition, and he said he did not think so. aud begged me to return in a month's time, when be would be free to take up the question of the external debt and the. other concessions. 14. Com "On Saturday. January mundcr Dillingham arrived at Santo Domingo city from Porto Rico on the gunboat Canine and immediately prowith ceeded with his negotiation Morales in conjunction with Minister On Tuesday. January 17, I Dawsnn. left Santo Domingo City." . ENDS A SPIRITED CONTEST. Illinois Political Pluma Are to be tributed. Dis- Prince Jonah Kalanlanaole, delegate in Congress from Hawaii, writes from Washington, D. C., as follow : "I can cheerfully recommend your Perana aa a very effective remedy for coughs, cold and catarrhal trouble A raise JUsMsr. Senor Qnesada, Cuban Minister to ths United States, writes from Washington, D. C., as follows : "Perrin I can recommend as a very good medicine, it is on excellent strengthening tonic, and is also an efficacious cure far tba almost universal complaint of catarrh. Gonialo Os Qnesada. Pnm AM Qmuhn af Iks DM W have on Ilia thousands of testimonials like those given above. We ran giva our readers only a alight glimpm of tbe vast number of grateful letters Dr. Hartman Is constantly receiving from nil quarters of the globe in behalf af bin Inmans catarrh remedy, Feruns, Gets Four Years for His Escapades With a Girl New Brunswick, N. J.. March II. Cordova, the unfrocked minister who twice eloped with Julia Bnwne of South River, and who was convicted ef abandoning his wife and three rhildmi and aaaulting bis wife, today was sentenced to serve four years In prison. A soon as sentence was pronounced. Cordovas counsel filed an application for s writ of error which will art aa a stay until n derision has been given ia the supreme court. J. F. OPENING OF RESERVATION. President Told Indiana it Se Postponed. Could Net Washington. March 18. Francis E. upp, commissioner of Indian affairs, s de'e" lay presented to the President Uintah thm of Ute Indians from the serration. The Indians came to ine ashington to protest against rning of tbelr reservation as prqtM-ba recent act of congress fa t lef address to the Indiana, the Pted-ninformed them that the rssetr-would have to be opened and tost th I y moat adjust themaelves to itable and get along amicably who might benmr p white rattlers ;ir neighbor. He assured them tW pry right they possessed would " utectrd fully. Appa. one Pwa-n- l bite River Utea. replied to the and far himself requested tht some fw permitted to locate in remove Mipre or other place aa far Stole from the whit 8rttlr, unab piret the President wa will be opesro int The reservation or to September 1 next y Washington, March 18. PrealJsnt Roosevelt bad a conference today with Senators Cullom and Hopkins and Speaker Cannon of Illinois, at which it wa determined to appoint C. C. Kohl-asanow district judge of the northern district of Illinois, to be circuit jujgc for tbe seventh' circuit, it also vu decided to appoint Solomon H. Bethea, now United State district attorney for the northern district of Illinois, as United State Judge for that district, and Kenesaw M. Landis aa additional United States judge for the same district. This agreement end the spirited contest which haa been In program tor two or three weeks. The nominations wilt be sent to tha Senate today. Mr. Landis 1 a brother of Congressman Landis of Indiana. t, REPEATED EARTHQUAKES. 18. Repeated New Yoik, March are reported at earthquake shock Naples by the New Y'ork Herald correspondent there. The t remora were felt in many other cities and town where in some Instance the inhabitants fell into a panic. No serious damage is reported. flan Francisco. March 18. The -- perm whalers have been cruising In the of the Hawaiian Islands for some time! but the only vernel that han met with any success in the bark Andre Hick, she has captured erven whales which netted about ninety barrels f oil. The ice i notr commencing to melt la the north and the fleet will soon leave the tropics and journey to the Arctic. ? STORM IN COLORADO. of Cripple Creek Blockaded. March Ai .team andelectncHnci cripple Creek distort In a state ofboc 8h a storm. The has moved fa Fk i last nlghl.gotThea iple Creek 11 Creek between ie Midland Terminslj storm .Jed fury. Tk. feet deep on the |