Newspaper Page Text
% § V^%r I DISPATCHES
IRE NEWS UP TO THE
OF GOING TO PRESS.
Summary of Daily Happen¬
fm ings Throughout the World.
7 :
The lint snow flurry of the season
it over Orange and Sullivan coun
New York, Sunday night. There
quite a heavy fall, also, in Dela¬
ware and Chenango counties.
dlho knitting mill of the Aspinock
Company, at Danielsonville, Conn.,
which failed some months ago, has
been purchased by Mr. Sanford, of
Fall fever, and it resumed operations
Monday morning.
Advices received at Berlin from
Walfish Bay, southwest Africa, say
that the rebellious Dtmeraland chief,
Withpoi, has surrendered snd exprese
«d ur’willingneM to submit to a Ger
man protectorate over his territory.
At Milwaukee, Monday, Judge Jen
kina ’dismissed the petition of Ives et
aL, to have T. J. Oakes dismissed as
the Northern Pacific receiver, and
oonfirms Special Master Cary’s report,
exonerating Oakes from making any
money out of the road illegally.
A dispatch from Ogdensburg, N. Y.,
«y»: : Petitions for the nomination of
General N. M. Curtis, for representa¬
tive in congress, are being circulated
in all of the accessible towns of the
county, and are being signed by re¬
publicans and democrats indiserimi
A Are in a four-story building at
Chicago Monday morning, caused a
loss of about $85,000, distributed as:
Biehard A Co., chemical sapply works,
#50,000; Detroit white lead works,
#$5,000; Oliver H. Hicks A Co., paper,
#10,000. The fire was caused by an
explosion of chemicals.
The Detroit left Norfolk navy yard
Monday sod anchored in Hampton
roads. She will go to Newport for her
torpedoes and sail for Cadiz and Nap¬
les the last of this week, leaving the
Columbian exhibits loaned by the
hi government. She is nnder
to join the Asiatic fleet early in
comber.
fhe famous hat trimmings case, in
l«h importers of millinery seek to
.■ no a return of money collected for
ire on McKinley oertain styles tariff of ribbons nn
the law, oame up
ire Judge "Dallas in the United
lea eirouit court at Philadelphia
uday and wat continued until Jan.
, next.
The hew naval dry dock at Port
>yal, 8. 0., is expected to be com*
Red within a month. In anticipa
ia of this, the bureau of yards and
Oka has ootttreeted with Rittenhouae,
sore A Oo., of Mobile, Ala., to
edge out the ehannel necessary to
«& the doek to our luge,new battle
m Lumber Trade Journal, of New
in its issue of Monday shows
awing lumber exports from
l ports for the month of Sep
Total value of timber export
,178; lumber, $654,189; man
s of lumber, $74,829; total
IM,$6», against $579,504 for
or a gain for the month of
spraas officials at Biohmond,
r think that the Quantioo train
did not gat over five thousand
Mr. M ftnrrwr, who w handled the
and Out them open for the
says ha is satisfied from feel
* • Ms that the amount did not
-
He says tha bonds ware
, as ha threw tham in a pile of
ts of tha weavers at the Hath
I Aooahnet mills at New Bed
When a
________ »t strike, which
Urn mills in the city, was
» of th# conditions wss that
im to oonform to the ds
particulars law.
■o to the satis
exoept these
mAt that the
the of the
to Knoxville, has
to have
Virginia sad
now
by the dc
a* Pekin,
m<T to
-
.* had
ire
■i-'Ahs wi »
Mi-mH had *
a
of
JUDGE BLECKLEY RESIGNS. *
A Result of the Failure of tke Judt
ctal Amendments.
Chief Justice Logan E. Bleckley has
resigned his seat on the supreme bench
of Georgia In his letter of resigns
tion to Governor Northen the Chief
Jnstice gives at length his reasons for
taking this step. He strongly empJba
sizes his indignation at the failure of
the people to increase the number of
judges of the supreme court. The let¬
ter is as follows:
“Atlanta, Ga., October 18, 1894.—
His Excellency, William J. Northern—
Sir: In tendering to you, for the sec¬
ond time, my resignation of the office
of chief justice, it seems proper to
make a brief statement of my reasons
for so doing.
“For some years it has been mani¬
fest to the bench and bar of the whole
state that the business of the supreme
court has become too heavy to be ade¬
quately threg^fstices. handled and disposed of by
The fact has also been
twice recognized by the general assem¬
bly, and a > onstitntional amendment
to increase ti e number from three to
five has been twice passed and submit¬
ted to the people for ratification. The
people, either not being convinced of
the necessity for the iroposed increase,
or if convinced, not caring to better
the efficiency of the court by adopting
the appropriate means, have twice re¬
jected the amendment by a decisive
vote against it. Now, whether the
people know it or not, I have personal
knowledge that the necessity exists,
and whether they care to remedy it or
not, I feel constrained to care to the
extent at least of declining to remain
longer in the situation of high and re¬
sponsible public service in which three
men mast either do the work of five
or violate the constitution by leaving
undone a considerable part of that
whioh the constitution not only re¬
quires to be done, bat limits its posi¬
tive terms the time within which it
mast be performed.
“For several years iuy associates
and myself, in order to comply with
the constitutional mandate in respect
to hearing and deciding aH the oases
within a given time, have been obliged
to omit the preparation of written
opinions in very many cases in which,
acoording to judicial usage in this
state and elsewhere, such opinions
would rightly be deemed indispensi
ble to render oar work thorough and
complete.
“The opinions which I, myself,
ought to, have written and would have
written had time and strength per¬
mitted, in addition to those which
have appeared or will appear in the
reports, number, I am sure, not lees
than two or three hundred.
“Had there been two additional
justices to aid in deciding the cases
and in writing opinions, all these
opinions might easily have been
ten, for from such and a doable saving
of time would have resulted; first, de¬
cisions could have been made more
rapidly; and, secondly, the work in
preparing opinions beirg divided
amongst five instead of amongst only
three, each jnstioe would have had but
onA-flfth the whole number of opinions
to write^instead of one-third thereof.
“It may be thonght that as my
brethren remain at their posts and
straggle on, I should do likewise, and
that if the loss of the constitutional
amendment affords any why I should
resign, the same reason applies with
equal force to them. One of them is
ten, the other twenty years my jnnior,
and it is reasonable to suppose that
both osn hold oat better and longer
against the wear If and tear of overwork
than I oan. I remained with them
and did my foil part I oonld not hope
to rival them in endaranee. I should
have to drop out soon, and I might as
well do it now. Besides, they work
fester than I do or oan, and I sincerely
believe their onerous task would be
somewhat lightened .if theyoould have,
in my stead, someone more expeditious
thaa I am, in deciding **ntf** Being a
slow and cautious judge, unless I have
ample time for r ese ar ch ead study, I
oan decide nothing difficult with any
absolute assurance that my conclusions
Mw OOiTdCI. quite too alow to
oo-operate with them on equal terms
in the exercise of thif most well important
judicial function. less timid They and obn spare
me for u hesitating
mind, especially might, if their new excel colleague,
as he easily should in
legal laasmlng.
from the court with much reluctance.
At this period of my life judicial work
is that for whioh I am beat fitted, and
I would rather do it ‘for nothing than
be idle ou full pay. I . Imre ao wish to
retire from active life or to shun mod
labor.
health ia good, and both by
consti t u tio n and king habit, oc¬
cupation ia e sse ntial to my happiness.
No feeling that I ax
troubles I or remaining Gladly;
would serve out the four
yearn of the tom tor which I waa last
sleeted if I could do ao with jnstioe to
myaoU or with read advantage to the
“Finally, to those, if any, who may
be m my pr ese n t
would urge this
my I
t m m of
aad
& *e
w
in private life Ysball not the .ew
cherish sentiments of grateful affec
tion toward all those, the living snd
the dead, by whose favor and Ooufi
denee I have been trusted, promoted
and honored. t ,
“* desire this resignation to take
effect on Monday, the 29th day of Oc
tober, **Wiih instant >» ^' *
high and re ? pe ofhci*l, ^ ^° I n8I< e
tion, personal am y
obedient servant, Blxcxlm.’’
K E.
A RICH HAUL.
Highwaymen Rob m Express Train
and get Nearly $200,000.
The north-bound express between
Richmond, Va., and Washington, leav¬
ing Richmond at 7 o’clock Friday
night, was held np by a gang of rob¬
bers at Aqnia creek. As the train
rolled into the station two masked
men leaped upon the engine, covered
the engineer and firemafi with revol¬
vers and forced them to leave the loco¬
motive. In the meantime a number
of confederates in the dariqg deed
were engaged in uncoupling the ex¬
press car and driving therefrom the
passengers. This done the engine
palled np the road about a mile, bear¬
ing only the express car. The safe
was rifled.
It is believed that the robliers se¬
cured in the neighborhood of $180,
000, as an unusually large amount of
money went out of Richmond Friday
evening, to say nothing of the tbrongh
currency. When the men secured
their a wag they started the locomotivo
off at a rapid rate of speed, alighting
themselves. On towards Washington
rambled the engine with no one at the
throttle until it reached Gnantico,
Which place is only thirty miles this
side of the national capital.
As soon as the other train official* 1
realized what bad happened, the news
of the flying locomotive was telegraph¬
ed ahead and a number of ears were
rolled upon the track at Gnantico to
stop the engine and probably prevent
loss of life as well as property* The
engine crashed into the ears demolfeh
ing them and playing havoc with itself.
The messengers, according Tb%. to reports
received, were not hurt. were
B. F. Crutchfield and H. Murray, both
of Richmond. The safe in the express
car was not blown open. One of the
messengers was carried np the road
and commanded to open the casket of
treasure which he did iu compliance to
the dictates of half a dozen pistols.
There were seven robbers in the gang.
The express messenger said tljat the
safe contained $150,000. The robbers
secured this and all of the express
packages containing money, It is
thought this amount will foot np to
about $180,000.
STAMP STEALERS
Make a Big Haul From the Bureau
of Engraving.
A Washington special says: of ,The
stamp robbery at the bureau en¬
graving and printing, discovered a lew
days ago, turns out to be much larger
than at first supposed. Instead of one
package containing 50.000 2-cent
stamps, it is now believed that over
200,000, and possibly 250,000 stamps
of various denominations are missing.
Postmasters in all parts of the country,
it is thought, have received fewer
stamps than they ordered, and failed to
notify the department of the deficien¬
cy. When their quarterly reports are
made up these shortages may be found.
It will take two weeks to discover the
full extent of the robbery. Wheif it
is known that Thursday’s shipments of
stamps were served to 1,800 postmast¬
ers, some idea of the enormity of the
task of ascertaining what offices liave
received short packages, is bad. The
stealing has been going on for thirty
days, Mid seems to have been the re¬
sult of a plot
William B. Smith, formerly of Plain
field, N. J., and George W. Longsireet,
who were employed in the stamp de¬
partment of the bureau of engraving and the
and printing, are nnder arrest
detectives are looking for William A.
Beach, who was until recently hotel em¬
ployed in a billiard room in a in
the city, and a man, whose name is
believed to be SimmereliU. Both men
left Washington Thursday for the pur¬
pose of selling stamps.
Friday Smith made a proposition state’s to
the police Mid authorities make full to oonfesaion turn if
svidenoe a
they would sign a paper Kegaid gusranteiag would
him foil protection. ha
implicate govonunent employes mush
higher than himself. He was told
that such protection aould not be
granted. Smith then told the author¬
ities that he knew where Beaoh was,
but would go to jail before ha would
tell his whereabouts. The authorities
are at a loss to know what tobaaka of
Smith’s offer, as he has told ao saaay
conflicting stories since his arrest.
HILL’S OPPONENTS.
- Marts
The third ticket party of New York,
sta meeting held Tuesday
ticket: For
of New York; srsv'l for U
governor. UsM M.
Buffalo ^f orjndge of the
- . j
Lockwood would a_
raff!
wmww
|ass»w: klVnMi JSSf
EFFECTS OF FREE WOOL
vwm WAGES ASX> OBKATEB
FBOBFEKITY IK TEXTILE
mDTXSTKIES.
V qjieaper-Domestlc
Foreign Wools
Wools Dear/r-New Mills Sprlsg
v lag Up Old Ones Enlarging —
—
Tough Times for the Calamity
Howlers. > »
These are tough times for the calam¬
ity howler. He was dead certain be¬
fore the passage of the Wilson bill
not only that free wool • would knock
the bottom out of prices and ruin the
wcol and sheep industries, bnt that
the great reductions of the duties on
woolens would close up all our woolen
mill*. “His position is now most pitia¬
ble. Facts refuse to submit to his
pessimistic theories: moreover, they
stand out so plainly that he cannot
possibly deceive the voters until No¬
vember. While prices of foreign
wools have fallen about forty per cent
—just as the Democrats promised- ad¬
prices of domestic wools have
vanced fully ten per cent, over Mc¬
Kinley prices of three months ago,
and on top of this advance the Dry
Goods Economist of September 29
says: market in New York for
“The wool
the past week has shown a more ae
tive and general demand and fully
sustained prices. Slight advances in
prices have been paid for certain
classes of domestic wools, notably the
medium and quarter-bloods. Texas fall There wools is
a good demand for
and so mp sales of the earliest arrivals.
A fairly large and diversified stock
is being offered in the market and
manufacturers are showing better in¬
terest than they have evinced for a
year past. market has
“The Boston wool ex¬
perienced a good demand this week
and prices have been fairly well main¬
tained." .
mistaken _ and misanthropic
The ca¬
lamity ahrieker can get no more satis¬
faction when he begins to look for
woolen mills closed up by the new
tariff. Never before, in our history,
have so many woolen mills been
opened in such a short time. The
Wool and Cotton Reporter, by far the
greatest authority in America on
textiles, devotes considerable space
every week to a “Bulletin of New En¬
terprises." We show in the table be¬
low, compiled from the Wool and Cot¬
ton Reporter’s bulletins, the result of
the first month’s experiment with free
wool. In order, if possible, whole to induce table,
protectionists to read the
we have sorted out and placed at the
head of the table every “calamity”
item mentioned.
RECORD OF TEXTILE HILLS.
Chut-Meat too ct 18**—DurV»R week 20. eodinjt— Sep 2T.
notices. Sept. «. Sept. 13, Sept. .
Shutting down
becauso o I
low water. .. 3 l 8
Shutting down
because of re¬
pairs, usual
vaefttfons.ete, X 3 1 4
Shutting down
' because Of
strike.. . - .. 1
Shutting down
because of
lack of work. 2
Unexplained. . 1 2
New mills.. 5 15 10 10
Enlargements
and improve¬ 28 IS 14 13
ments........
Millsstartlngup 20 20 26 30
* Forty mentions of new mills, seven¬
ty-three of enlargements and improve¬
ments, ninety-six of mills starting np
and only two (or possibly five) mills
idle because of lack of orders is the
record for the first month under free
wool.
Protectionist croakers oan find no
such prosperous record with ao few
shut-downs, for lack of orders, during
any oonsacutive three weeks of the
four years of MoKinleyiam.
Free wool has'' caused the change
from idlen to setivity. It is set¬
ting the old spindles to turning and
bringing thousands of new onee into
existence. of September The 29 Dry £k>ods Economist
says:
yarn Spinners all a
first-rate condition. are
very busy and unable to supply yarns
ee q ukkly as users require them.”
Under the heading “Woolen” it men
tions four mills. eight mills
starting up ,and shutting down.
One of the mentions says that every
mill in Hudson, N. Y., started up full
headed and ou full time on Monday,
September IT; mill starts up
with sixteen new looms; another after
being eloead “several years,” Mid two
others after being dosed a year.
it may be admitted that the new
tariff * the eaaae of the one close¬
down ; bnt McKinley is wetooaM this to
all the eapstal he oan get out of
mill, for it “elosad down on eeeouat
of the oi
per cent, in c r eea e m wages. xne
Wool and Cotton Reporter Bawitser of Bros., Septem¬ of
ber 6 says that
brd Springs, had “settled with
tty-five per cent in
WoratedNmT^ iu toe Gon
il PhHadelphU,
•» *d of the above ad
m wi _ McKinley
explanation woolen for
part of
a ' -j
.
kA ggjr
$
P.'W*
l* only ofie oi these cases—of
workers at Fall River—were any con¬
siderable number of workers con¬
cerned, and the rise it, wages to a few
thousand of these amounted to abont
only' five per cent. " *
Since the passage of the new bill
several thousand of the textile workers
in Fall River and New Bedford have
gained substantial advances in their
wages, and several others are still on
strike with fair prospects of winning.
In New York City about 10,000 work¬
ers on garments, who have been get¬
ting from about $3 to $6 per week by
working twelve, fourteen or sixteen
hours a day in “sweat shops,” are now
getting $S or $10 a week for working
ten hours a day in factories. Protec¬
tionists may claim that reduced duties
had nothing to do with the case of
these “sweaters.” Perhaps, but it is
strange ^that the “sweaters” were al¬
ways unsuccessful during the McKin¬
ley times, but were successful as soon
as lower duties began to bring about
general prosperity. occurring in
Wage advances are Wool
many protected industries, The
and Cotton Reporter of September 6
8avs that the weavers in the employ of
Rawitzer Bros., of Stafford Springs,
have secured a twenty-five per cent,
advance in their wages. On Septem¬
ber 27 the Wool and Cotton Reporter
says that the proprietor of the River¬
side Knitting Mills, at Cohoes, N. Y.,
had promised to increase the wages of
his winders on October 1. He also
told the striking carders that no in
crease would be granted before Octo¬
ber 1. Other textile workers are now
on strike for advances. Of course,
some reductions are still occurring.
The protected manufacturers have be
come so accustomed to forming trusts
and reducing wages that they expect
to continue this sort of business in¬
definitely, Their expectations will
probably miscarry. General prosper
ity will put everybody to work, and
laborers can then have some say as to
what shall be their compensation.
Protection Prosperity in Australia.
Two articles in the Investors’ Re¬
view (London) for September present
ditlons in Australia. It says that the
farmers m Australia will soon be un
able to pay interest on the money they
have borrowed. The condition in
of the ono 200,000 V ono W men ° r8e in - J Sydney 1 ? 7 thoU8an are out ?
of employment and many are working
only on short time and at very low
wages “As many as 10,000 names
have been registered at one time as
applicants for employment at the Syd
ney Government Labor Bureau, nearly
all workingmen. Melbourne is in a
' rorf * e condition. The difficulty of
the bulk Of the Australian people at
present is to obtain the means of exist
ence. The unemployed are often
given free railway passage “just to
break them up and get them distnb
uted and out of sight. The country
is greatly troubled to provide enough
work and food to keep their own un
employed from crime and starvation
and to protest against the sending of
more unempioyed to their districts
This is the condition of affairs that
began soon after protection became
thoroughly established m all of the
colonies about three years ago. And
yet we are told by the Repub beaus of
New^York State that “The Path of Pro
tection is the Path of Prosperity. Of
course Austraha might have had a de
preasion if all her oolomes had re
framed from high protection. It is
certain, however, that ruin and starva¬
tion have followed m the wake of pro¬
tection in Australian colonies. An¬
other certainty, not in harmony with
the Republican claim, is that the first
colony to drop protection is now the
only prosperous one. In 1891 New
Zealand adopted free trade and direct
taxation and soon became the most
prosperous spot ou earth. Thousands
of unemployed have emigrated from
protected continental Australia to free
trade New Zealand, to get ont of the
path of protection prosperity. An¬
other event that may disturb the Re¬
publican theory is the recent decision
of New South Wales and Victoria to
return to free trade. Vietoria
been the most pronounced protection¬
ist colony; but even she has become
siok and tired of protection pros¬
Democratic Aehiev its.
whioh Sorely shows it eoonomy is no insignifleanhjlist in expenditure,
with a lightening of the taxes whioh
the people pay for the support of
their Government, and a much greater
lightening of the taxes whioh they pay
for the support of private industries;
an improvement and purification of
the pension system, which was ao
rapidly degenerating into a National
scandal; the wiping out of a law that
waa fraught with to sound
finance, and whose repeal opens the
way for a proper settlement of that
difficult issue, the obliteration of
election laws which lay right
the grain of our Federal system, and
failed to
produoe exasperation and bitter feel
lag, aad to involve wasteful and irre¬
sponsible expenditure of public
money, and a continued advance ia
the of oer Civil Service from
spoils. -Hon. — William L. WUeon, ia
October North American Review.
-to
be ia
to
mu i
d it i be but.
rt •
ig**^ae<eaMLfcl
' *
Party Traditions and Tendencies
The Democratic parfy, by principle
and tendency, by the tradition of its"
Ciders and its steady momentum,
tends to economy, to lower taxes, to
revenue tariffs, immedia.te responsi¬
bility Fo the people, and no Federal
interference with local rule. These
are the very essentials of free and pure
government. If the people want
these things—and... sorely they need
them more than at any other time in
their history—that party, and that
party alone, is the instrument they
must use to secure them. Upon other
great issues also the scale turns in its "
favor. It is as trustworthy as its op¬
ponents on the money question, while
its ancient financial traditions are
sounder than those of any great and
long-lived party we have ever had.
And what is truly a crowning merit:
it is, and ever has been, a National
party,
The Republican partf, by its tradi¬
tions and tendencies, the teachings of
its leaders, past an J present, and its
whole history, has a steady momen¬
tum towards sectionalism, high gov¬
ernment, interference with local rale
and local control of elections, extrava¬
gant expenditures, heavy taxes, boun¬
ties, subsidies, and exorbitant pro
tection. “Ideas of governmental
meddling and centralization denomi¬
nate it; class interests hold it firmly
to evil courses. ” These things are in¬
compatible with free and pure govern¬
ment. The American people need
none of these things; only a small mi¬
nority really desires.
No party can be expected to reform
abuses and evils which itself has pro¬
duced, if in their maintenance rests
their only hopfeaf continued p ower.
The streams of Republicanism is
poisoned from its source, and cannot
wash away the pollution which it
brings in its own waters. It is vain
for the people to expect it to cleanse
the Government, When it cannot
cleanse itself, or hope for any “power
divine” to henceforth wash the River
Rhine.—Hon. Wm. L. Wilson, in Oc¬
tober North American Review.
Wilson Asks a Serious Question.
.SffSltSiftiK BugZ andother
proteotive £ ^dules of the new
ar jg- ’siniste/inffuence and Q , the un-Democratic or
even which molded
them, w« may yet ask with great con
fidence wh ' £ Democrat B honld, for
the80 reMO isll to / ptmi8b or ^au
don Ms £ ' in th fftll election,
What altg either * to the oun
re c
try J or to his f party, ^ can he expect from
tn rni over he xt Congress to the
Eepublican? £ Not one of the things I
hft enumerated would they hare
eyen attempted £ to do, with the possi
bJe t n of the repeft i of t he
which they themselves
put upon U8 in i 890 . Against every
otlie t reform, whether accomplished
in fnU or im f fect mefl8are , they
hftye stnbborn fo ht .
With Republican * Congress there
could haye b n ao aotion the Fed .
eral election j DO repeal to tho
McKinl ' bill not one cent ] eS6eD i n g
of publi ^ taxe8 or of the tribntc paid
^ £ 1@ to the s Eduction Trugt and
mo 1 H no in
ej £ enditarea and no abo i it ion of use
. Je office8 . With a Bepub 4 i ica a ad
ministration there wool have been
n0 purification of the pension system
advaDCement Civil Servica
Wm . L WilsoD> in
October North American Review-
Cheap Lumber,
A Republican calamityite news¬
paper publishes as disastrous news a
statement to the effect that millions
of feet of Canadian lumber are com¬
ing into port at Saginaw. It is a good
thing. Thousands of men building
houses, termers building fences, and
other classes of consumers can pro
cure cheap lumber, Chcaper bnifaing
materials will make cheaper rents for
the poor. The tunal allegation of ent
wages at the lumber camps does not
aooompany the announcement ot
cheaper lumber, and the fact is that
wages are not reduced. Cheap Canada
lumber will hurt nobody but the pine
log barons and monopolists who have*
bought up all the pine lands in Wis¬
consin, Michigan and Minnesota. It
is charged that Senator Vilas is a
large owner of pine lands, bnt he
voted for free lumber, in the interest
of consumers. Sawyer always voted
for greater lumber tariff, to make
lumber higher-for builders, termers,
furniture makers and other classes of
consumers.—Chicago Herald.
For McKinley to Explain.
Mr. McKinley is talking a great
deal these days, but be is not trying
to explain why wool that kept telling
under a McKinley tax keeps rising
under free tirade.—New York World,
HAD FORTY PA86K&
Debs’ First Lieutenant, Mr. Howard,
• Traveled Like a Lord.
A Chicago dispatch says: George
W. Howard, vice president of the
American Railway Union, and widely
known as the first lieutenant ot Doha
in the great strike last J41y, recently
lost a pocketbook containing forty
annual paaaea, and he advertised for
them. 'The were over all
l ea ding railroads, and among them
n Pullman pass. The passes i
turned. subsequently found aad safely re¬
Tbo of Howard’s loss
to
gj apf,