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ISMARCK TRI BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1917 The Weather Generally fair. Evening Edition THE B BUNE'! / ( » wich. # may be limited to 25 at a time, who PEACE PACT T0 _ BE EFFECTIVE TO NEW YEARS Cannot Be Cancelled Without ALL NAVAL FRONTS ARE ALSO AFFECTED Point of Demarcation of Euro- pean Zones is the First Line of Defense. Petrograd, Dec. 16.—The terms of the Russo-German armistice obligate no transference of troops until Janu- ary 14, according to a statement is- sued here, which means January in Russian terms; no increase of troops on the fronts or on the islands in the Moon Sound or a regrouping of | forces. Thé Germans are not to con: | centrate troops between the Black Sea and the Baltic east of the 15th degree of longitude east of Green- Intercourse between the troops may exchange newspapers and un- seal mails and who may carry on trade and exchange articles of prime necessity. Special Arrangement. A special agreement will-be made by the naval general staff, regarding the extension of the armistice to the White Sea and the Russian coast in the Arctic zone. It is agreed also that attacks on war and commercial ves- sels must stop in these regions in order to avoid attacks in other seas. The armistice on the naval front embraces all of the Black Sea and the Baltic Sea east of the Meridian 15 de grees east of Greenwich. .The ‘de- marcation line fixed for the Black Sea is from the lighthouse of. Slinka’ to the estuary of the Danube to Cape Garros. In the Baltic, the line runs from Reoguel to the western coast of Worms Island, to the Island of Bag- sher to Kegarne. Russian war vessels must not cross south of this line, and. the other parties. must not go north. The Russian government guarantees that the Entente_war vessels will obey the rules of this provision and that Russian warships will not be allowed to sail among the Aland Islands. RMISTICE WITH RU RED CROSS DOLLARS SAVE LIVES - OF DYING BABIES IN WAR ZONE; HERE IS HOW YOU ALL CAN HELP HOME GUARD IN | THICK OF DRIVE “POR RED CROSS BELIEVED PEACE WITH RUSSIA 10 FOLLOW SHORTLY | Large Masses of.German Troops | | | i | GENERAL SKETONS KILLS SELF DURING CONFERENCE No Confirmation’ of Report That | Kaledines, Cossack Leader, Was. Arrested. London, Dec. 17.—The predominant fact as regards the Russian situation at the moment is the signing of an armistice, which is ahnounced official- ly at the capitals of all the countries | concerned. . Accordiffg to special dis- patches from Petrograd, everyone | there believes that a permanent peace between Russia and the central pow- ers will result. Correspondents, in general, treat as negligible the under- | taking of Germany and her allies not to withdraw troops from the eastern front. A Petrograd dispatch to the Times says that large masses of Ger- mans ‘already?have been removed and that probably the’ German command 2 etl Soe a ee bites French refugee children being out | fitted with warm clothing by Ameri- can Red Cross women behind the ‘French lines in France. The baby in|. the pictpure below is getting its first) "2% transferred all {ts foces it pro- tath in the same refugee station. poses ‘to: employ “elsewhere so that That's what Red Cross is doing for | Plans are not to be deranged seri- the tiny victims of Hun ruthlessness. | US!Y. : z May Have Been Murdered. The reported. suicide during the | armistice negotiations of the Russian General Sketons apparently has made a considerable. impression at Petro- grad, althotigh the Russian ‘ntional commissarieg are silent in regatd‘to it: A’ Petrograd dispatch to the Post says General Sketon was responsible ' By C.C. LYON, The Daily Tribune’s Staff Writer in France. - A Behind the French Lines in France, | —(By Mail)—Women of, America, de you want to do something vastly/ for the armistice conditions, including worth while for France in this war?) the evacuation of Moon Sound, which ‘Then interest yourself in some poor, | 0. Offerided: the Germans at tho first | meeting of the negotiators and ren- dered nugatory the‘efforts of the first missioh. General “Sketon returned most unwillingly for.the second meet- ing, under imperatiye orders of his superiors. The corréspondent. seeks sick, homeless French baby. Get in touch -with your American Red Cross and tell them you want to ‘sew for and help'dfess an uhfortun- | ate mite’ whose father hasbeen killed | to'show there la hothing to prove he in the trenches’ and whose mother ; committed -suicide, which is almost daily struggles against overwhelming | improbable and insinuates he was SUBMARINES IN NORTH SEA SINK MERCHANTMEN Allies Show More Sympathetic LABOR STRIKES SEEM TO BE OBSTACLES NOW Except for Short Stretch in France Battle Lines Are Quiet. SIX SHIPS SUNK, London, Dec. 17.—One British and five neutral merchantmen, a British destroyer, and four mine sweepers, have been sunk in the North Sca by German naval for- ces. The losses were the result of the attack on a convoy bound from Scotland to ‘Norway, Sir Eric Geddes, first lord of the ad- miralty, announced today. The to- tal tonnage of-the lost merchant- men was 8,000, BY ASSOCIATED PRESS. / When the armistice agreement be- tween the Russian government ang the Central powers goes into effect on the eastern front today, the emmis- saries of the several countries will be- gin negotiations looking toward peace between Russia and her former ene- mies. . Meanwhile, it is indicated in Lon- don that the Allied powers may be preparing to deal more sympathetic- ally with the Bolsheviki government. ‘London newspapers ‘forecast that the ‘allies will’ givé’recognition bf the Bolsheviki' “in’ order to prevent’ Rus- sla from passing’ under’ the’ political and econoinic heel ‘of’ Germany." Great Britain 1st’said°to have’ decided’ to re- lease Tchitcherin, a Russian ®politicar prisoner, and Bolsheviki’are now per- mitting British subjects to leave Rus: sia. To the American delegates at the Paris conference is said to belong the credit for the tempering of the allied attitude toward ‘the Bolsheviki. Labor Strikes an Obstacle. Labor strikes appear to be the greac obstacle before the Bolsheviki at pre- sent, especially in the Petrograd dis- IA OFFICIALLY SIGNED STATE SEEKS TO SHOW THAT HALL COVERED UP "$1200 DEFICIT IN 1916 W. R. Edwards of Examiners’ 0 ffice Claims Secretary of State Seven Days’ Notice—Sol- ' Have Been’ Moved From Treatment of the Bol- Put One Over Marwick, Mitchell, Peet Co. and Took Credit diers to Fraternize. That_Front. sheviki. for 400, 1917 Automobile T ags in Last Year's Business. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL BRENNAN SAYS DUTY IS UNPLEASANT ONE FOR HIM Prosecutor Devotes Hour to Opening Address to Jury—Makes It Plain That Hanna Hired Chartered Accountants—Exhibits by the Bushel and the Drayload—Trial Expected to Con- sume at Least a Week : The question of admitting any statement made by Eugene M. Walla, late clerk in the automobile registration department of the secretary of state’s office, and charged by the state with the same offense for which his chief is on trial, became a very live issue in the Hall case this afternoon, when an hour was taken up in arguing the point. Drys and Wets Equally Assured The state of North Dakota is seeking to prove that Thomas expensive Minneapolis firm of accountants whom the state paid $30,000 for an audit of the various state departments ending December 31, 1916, and that a deficit of $1,200 in the auto- was covered up by taking credit for 400 1917 automobile licenses. = It has been a practice for several years to send out application blank» BOTH FORCES the new year, testified W. R. Edwards : of the state examiner's office, first fl witness for the state in its prosecu- { f D N jon of an embezrlement charge Fa the secretary of state. Dur- ‘approximately 400 of these applica- ‘tions came back accompanied by a $3 fee in. payment for the 1917 licenses. The secretary of state's office depos ited these checks, without serial, nunt- they covered, as a part of a 1910: ‘ ; i H business, testified Mr. Edwards, and i in Claims for Victory on this alleged deception was: not detect- National Prohibition. testified, but the $1,200 which acty- ally anticipated 19147 business, . Ea- wards claims, was ‘accepted by these a which a record had. been :kept | 2 WAR CHIEFS COMING in this way a balance was struck, and. |the accounts in the state ‘secretary’ office squared. $ Hall, secretary of state, put over Marwick, Mitchell, Peet Co., an mobile registration department of the secretary of state's office two or three months in advance of ing NovemYer and December, . 1916, bers. identifying the licenses which ed by Marwick, Mitchell, Peet Co., he BIG SHAKE-UP AMONG accountants. as covering 1916 tags’ of Books and records, Major General Goethals Offered: which, are -to Text of Agreement iid Sous odds to keep bedy and soul together. murdered. trict. The railway and fuel situg- « % . The text of the armistice agree-}Campaign Which Is to Cover| There are thousands’ of such. chil There is no confirmation of last/ tions are serlous. The: counter revolt Job of Quartermaster per or ectecn earner et ment follows: ; E Ane dren in. the war zone. | neha ah ace a te; is still more or less of,,a, menace to load and in bushel baskets. Only. six- “Between the representatives of the, very Home in Bismarck Near Toul, duly’ afew milles ‘be Meas THE ltuaticn in Aeuthera Inde. Bolsheviki authority, and the constit: General. 1 teen exhibits had been introduced .up higher comand of the Russia ou. the |, one hand gad of Bulgaria, Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Turkey, on the other handy for the purpose of achiev-} ing a lasting and honorable peace be-| tween both parties, the ‘following | armistice is concluded: i... «Launched Today. 1,000'NEW MEMBERS AND jhind the 1,000 RENEWALS IS GOAL' he, Wrench front, hundreds of! sia continues to: be obscure, and news children”, rangiag in age from 6° is fragmentary ‘and: contradictory. het up,,. ‘to, “Al, ree have bee! The latest returns from’ the: elec- gathered together in a Red Cross in-| tions to the constituent assembly, as stitution and for the first time since! upplied by the Bolsheviki show that the beginning of the war they are Te | of 937 delegates, 85 are Bolsheviki, ceiving proper food, housing, cloth:| 115 ‘socialist revolutionists, 10 constt- uent assembly Is angther knotty prov, lem. The confiscation of ‘all broper- rties; lands, and'‘tioney of the Rus: | ‘sfan church has ‘been decreed by’ the Eolsheviki, who also have abolisted’ all privileges of the clergy. No Marked Action. —— to noon,'and the examination: of Kd; Washington, D. C., Dec. 17.—~The wards had’ only begun. At the-pres-: house vote on the federal prohibition ent rate'it becomes apparent tiat'the amendment resolutions, set for 5/pi {trial will'‘consume at least ‘a’ week, m., took the center of interest over and probably longer. Each exhibit is war issues in congress today, witi| being carefully examined by each in- prohibition leaders confident of the| dividual juror at the request of As- “The armistice shall begin on De- Three hundred and twenty four |ing, medical attention and schooling. | Except on the short stretch between {wo-thirds majority necessary for)sistant Attorney General Brennan, cember ath (Dec. 17th) at two o'clock| new members for the Bismarck | ir}. PY Sedgwick of Minneapolis, | een areata end cn otherd | tae rena, end Flav. rivets; (here. bas adoption: conducting the prosecution. chapter of the Red Cross resulted from three hours’ work on the part of the Home Guard this morning. This result was report- ed at noon by eight of the eleven teams which set out at 9 this in the afternoon and continue until January 1st (January 14th). The con- tracting parties have the right to break the armistice by giving seven | days’ notice. Unless ‘notice is given, the armistice automatically continues. famous specialist in childrens’ dis- eases, was sent into the war zone by the Red Cross to see what should be done. He gathered around him a staff of specialists, among whom ere Dr. J. 1 delegates are now in Petrograd, but no further at- tempt has been made to hold a meet- ing. A strike at Moscow began yes- terday. been no marked infantry activity on| 4, si s presented to the house the reso- the front from the North Sea to the jytion requires ratification by three- Adraitic. Although their losses have fourths of the states within seven been heavy, the Austro-Germans con-. years, while the draft approved by tinue their strong attacks in an ef-, the senate last August fixes a time fort to break the Italian northern de- jinit of six years for state action. Fa- Edwards told of finding that license tage were issued two and three months in advance of the year which they covered. The fees, he stated, covering these registrations, to the number of 400, deposited with the “The armistice embraces the land} morning. Durand of Seattle, Wash., Dr. N. O./ fense. In hard fighting, just east of yorable house action today means the! state treasurer in November and De- and aerial forces on the front from| | The teams lined up as follows: | Pearce of Minneapolis, Dr. Alice! CAPTURE HOLY CITY the Erenta, the enemy has gained Col./ airgerence must. be adjusted in confer-| cember, 1916, were no identified by & the Baltic to the Black Sea and also| No. 5, Copelin . - 82° | Brown of Winnetka, Ill., ‘Madame Del- Caprille, at the head of the San Lor-! once, and a conference report adopt-| license number, as were those cover- the Russo-Turkish front in Asia Min-| No. 4, Fields . 54 |ebecque of Chicago, and Miss Bessie] beer valley after two attacks had) eq py poth bodies before it is submit-j ing business for the remainder of or. During the armistice the parties| No. 9, Brown . - 51 | Spanner of Cleveland. ORRENTI L RA oT Fepulaed: ted to the states. the year. : concerned obligate themselves not to| No. 7, Whitney . 42 |" “We literally pulled these poor chii-| Topps son, the, Camm bret trent tere Galleries Jammed. The entire morning was consumed Increase the number of troops on the| No. 3, Lahr . 31 lqren ogt of the dark, damp unclean — repulsed ralds made by infantry and] rhe gatlerles were jammed as the | with the introduction and examination above fronts, or on the islands in the! bites Sava . i caves and cellafs constantly under) cdi he Led nee res ot the: Se eae the southert eu debate opened. It began amid a round of enti for the Aas including ; mak groupin; jo. 1, Lomas . . r HT a a! © el i G a < er vie rad on @ Thr practically every book and ledger and “a pose pond or, tommahe &: roeroupine No. 2, Marks . . 15 SR ee ack: Dee betewicih and the Turks employed storming troops the British improved their position. (Continued on Page Three) tits feahilea ithe bookkeeping ma- : “Neither side is to make operative | —_— “it is well. worth all the. money| i successive assaults on Nebi Samuel| The, artillery Pattle has been more) BAER INTRODUCES chinery of the automobile registra any transfers of units from the Baltic- | Total ...... 66sec e eee e ee eee 324 | and effort we are putting into the en-| northwest of the Holy City, then held ae en ae oe Be Se ance Hs TOWNLEY BILL IN tion department of the secretary of * convenience has resulted. Black Sea front until January 1st! (January 14th) excepting those begun | before the agreement is signed. They | obligate themselves not to concentrate} Promptly at 9 0° k this morning, troops on the parts of the Black Sea eleven squads of tue Bismarck Home or Baltic ie pee fifteon degrees | Guard launched from the offices of ot onerinde Tae venavea tion on the | the Commercial club a campaign European front is the first line of de-| which is to carry the great Red Cross fense. The space between will be|Christmas membership drive into neutral. The navagible rivers, will be) every home in Bismarck, and whose} neutral, their navigation being forbid- results must be, the guardsmen in- den, except for necessary purposes of sist, not less than 1,000 new members commercial transports or on sections | and 1,000 renewals, meaning at least where the positions are at a great dis-/a 25 per cent Red Cross mem»ership Not reporting: Larson, McGray, Capt. E. G. Wanner. terprise to see the little things blos- som and improve under proper care.” There's tiny Julia, for example. The day Julia was born, 18 months ago, her father was fighting in the first line trenches not 20 miles from his home village. A French army doctor usheréd Ju- lia into the world in a bomb-proof dugout constructed in the yard behind the shattered walls of the family home. That same night the mother learn- ed that her husband was dead. For nearly 15 months the mother and baby eked out a miserable exist- by London troops, according to a | Reuter dispatch from British head- | quarters in Palestine. The dispatch, | which was sent by airplane, gives de- | tails of the capture and the entry into Jerusalem. | The final Turkish attack was pre- ' ceded by such a heavy shelling that it appeared the enemy was confident the British would be blown off the sum- mit, but all their attacks were re- | pulsed sanguinarily. The Turks had a strong line west, south and north- jeast of Jerusalem. They were well provided with machine guns, and their artillery dominated the crusts over Flanders. In Champagne, and south of St. Quentin, German efforts have been checked by the French, while in- termittent artillery activity has con- tinued over a greater part of the front from S. Quenin to Switzerland. GERMAN PEACE PLANS. Confirmation Comes That Kaiser Will Make Another Offer. Washington, D. C., Dec. 17.—Inform- ation received here today among neu- tral diplomats agrees with intimations from adroad that Germany is consider- NATIONAL HOUSE Measure Calling for Appropria- tion of $50,000,000 Put in by N. D. Member. Washington, D. C., Dec. 17.—Repre- sentative Baer of North Dakota intro- duced a bill today to appropriate $50,- 000,000 to aid western farmers in buy- ing seed grain, and feed for livestock. On account of drought and crop failure in some portions of the west, many farmers, Mr. Baer said, may \be unable to crop their farms or main- state's office. Each was introduced singly and identified with much min- uteness of detail. Original nnd dupli- cate typewritten records of deposits made by the secretary of state with the state treasurer from Noc. 22, 1916, on were produced. lems shown-on the deposit slip for Nov. 22, 1916, were identified by numSers corresponding with the tags for which the fees were received. Deposits made on Dec. 18, 1916, are recorded in the same manner as those | for Nov. 22, except that serial number of tags for which fees were received are not indicated, and this mark ot tance. for the capital city. - , aS a h Id hi to ad- lentification does not reappear dur- “On the Russo-Turkish front, the| ‘The first fruits of the campaign|ence in their cave-home, “I-nourished, Which the British should have to a0|ing another offer of peace. ‘tain their livestock in 1918. identification sae Wht line of demarcation will be arranged were reported at a gathering of the, With hardly enough clothing to cover vance. Some Turkish guns wets = ne Te ae crianclls Peet report at the mutual consent of the chief! squads at noon today. “There's noth- commander.” \ing to it—we're going over big,’ was Sa oe | ine message brought in by every one BANK GETS CHECK. of the eleven committees. . oerry . | Bismarck homes are taking Rea Hamberg Institution Reimbursed cross memberships for each unit ‘of | the family, and sometimes more than for Burglary Loss. jone. Practically every home callet Hamberg, N. D., Dec. 17.—The Ham-| upon to date has started out with one berg State bank has received through| $2 membership, in order that it may Secretary W. (. McFadden, secretary | enjoy the monthly visits of the Re of the North Dakota Bankers’ associa-| Cross National Magazine, a periodical tion, a check for $3800 as payment} which every thirty days brings the from the North Dakota Casualty Co.,; latest news of the organization and its on the loss recently sustained by the | activities. Hamberg institution in the wrecking | Memberships taken prior to July 1, and burglarizing of the bank safe | 1917, are being renewed an‘ extend- men:her- No trace of the yeggmen responsible | ed to Dec. 31, 1918. New for this very thorough job has been ships taken in this drive teri discovered to date. | the same time, as do those PALER ree Y | been renewed since July 1, i%i7 For fs each of these membershins taken WATER MAIN FROZE 6 | since July 1, the holder is entitled to for Gar- 2 star on his service flag, and the Intense Cold Too eral cK. Bismarck home which on Chri.:tmas rison’s Plant Last Week. | eve does not display a Red Cross ser- Garrison, N. D., Dec. 17.—The large | vice flag sporting at least one star main at the outlet of the city’s water | will feel and appear very peculiar. them, terrified night and day by the German shells. Then, one day, the Americans came along and persuaded the mother that Julia would do better off in the chil- dren’s refuge station behind the lines. ' Today. little Julia is getting fat and rosy. She no longer cries from fright at sudden noises. “I gave Julia her first bath here,” said Miss Bessie Spanner of Cleveland. “It was the first she had had in months.” tots as soon old. as they are two years Tne other day a mother from aj er, Ralph: Cornell; placed just outside the city walls, making it impossible to reply to the fire without endangering the town. “A torrential rain made the roads impassable,” the correspondent con- tinues, “the problems of supply and transport almost drove us to despair.” LEITH LODGE ELECTS. Pythians Name Executives for | the Ensuing Twelve-Month. ) Leith, N. D., Dec. 17.—Concordia hool instruction begins for the, Lodge No. 84, Knights of Pythias, has elected for the ensuing year the fol- lowing officers: Chancellor command- vice chancellor, shell-swept village brought her two-' Jay Somerville; prelate, Thomas A. year-old baby to the station. | Wray; master. of work, William F. “I can't keep her at home with me, Wessel; keeper of records and seals any longer,” she said. “I have to run} and master of finance, George W. to the cave so often that I'm exhaust-| Oebhard; master of exchequer, Clair ed from carrying her.” Another mother, always: comes at, nes; nigat. | Cornell; master at arms, Olaf Anden- inner guard, T. R. Weatherly; outer guard, Claud Lackey; trustee “The German sharpshooters try to! for three years, James Glavkee. pot me every time I stick my head, out of doors. I have to dig my pota-; REPRESENTATIVE JOHNSON CLOTHING OF MISSING MINOT MAN FOUND NEAR WEST BANK OF MISSOURI Mandan, N. D., Dec. 17.—A month- old mystery surrounding the disap- pearance of Deputy Sheriff Clark F. Hovey of Ward county may be clearea u pthrough the discovery on the west bank of the Missouri river last night of an overcoat, vest and trousers, which apparentily have been positive- ly identified as the possessions of the missing man. In the trousers pocket were found seven cents and a jack- knife bearing the name of “Clark F. Hovey, Attorney at Law, Akron, 0.” On the suspenders attached to the trousers was pinned a Ward county deputy sheriff's badge, and in anoth- er pocket is a receipt for house rent concealed in underbrush. The wear- ing apparel had been hidden near a point where the cutting of ice now is in progress, and was only thirty feet from te river bank. Mr. Nordholm reported immediately to Night Officer William Meissner, who with Sheriff Oscar Olson went to the scene of the discovery and made as thorough an investigation as possible. Sheriff Olson then com- municated with the sheriff of Wara county, who now is on his way hither. The local authorities regard every in- dication as pointing to suicide. If this should prove the correct solution ct Hovey’s disappearance, there is was made Dec. 31, 1916, the depart- ment was not charged with the 400 1917 applications for which it: had received credit to the amount of about $1,200 in the state treasurer's office, thus balancing the books for 1916, sai Edwards. The witness then gave specific instances by which he sought to prove that there was deposited in November and December, 1916, and credited to 1916 business fees for tags which did not go out of the office un- til January, 1917. The report of Marwick, Mitchell, Peet Co. for the period ending Dec. 31 was introduced and offered in evt- dence by the state. This report dates back to July 1, 1918. July 1, 1918, $1,741 was shown as balance actually on hand in banks where it had been deposited by the secretary of state. Receipts for the period were shown to be automobile licenses, $4,624, totaling $25: H 4,297 otorcycle tags, $12,891, and other items making the total receipts for the 3% year period $267,276.04, in which Marwick, Mitchell, Peet Co. made no charge for Aug. 1917 receipts, reservoir froze up during the intense The Days of the Week. —| toes at night and wear a gas mask in Minot made out to “Clark F.| much question as to whether his body , cold last week, and, while the pumps) Each day of the ensuing week willl while 1 work.” gas mask!" ENLISTS AS PRIVATE AND | Hovey.” bver will be recovered. ‘The waters but siving,the secretary of state's of: have been kept working, and Garrison | have some especial significance in this} “[¢ js the children of such mothers | Hovey came from Minot to Bis-{ot the Missouri now are locked in by) fice ere! Of THE i has not been without water supply drive. | Tomorrow: hie be ect en: who comprise the population of the} ASSIGNED TO CAMP MEADE marck boat thirty days ago. Since|a heavy coat of ice, and any general 197 fangs meer pier Ub Tee Oe oie and fire protection, considerable in-| ployes’ day, and Red Cross flags willl refugee station. In caring for them| Washington, Dec. 17.—Representa-| that date no trace of him had been|search at this time would be impos.| | WY. SUC‘ the stand as the With the| be hoisted over the city hall, public the Red Cross is doing a noble work,| tive Royal ©. Johnson, of Aberdeen, found until last evenirg when A. W. With the spring break-up sible. ‘state's first witness against Secretary return of seasonable temperature: library and municipal auditorium. which should be encoura: i 3 ‘ ” vi d th )b- * ged by alt|S. D., enlisted today as a private in| Nordholm, while searching for wood would come high water, an e prob- | this week, the damage is being repair-| Nate ade os women’s day.| american women at home. Instead ot| the regular army and was assigned to| just north of the Ncrthern Pacific |ability that Hovey’s body, if it is in of State fate Ries ea ed and provision made against anoth-| and special tribute will be paid to the} one such station there is need for| Camp Meade. He has not resigned| bridge, on the Mandin side, ran|the river, would be carried many and_repeated the story <= miles down stream. (Continued on page’ four), er freere-up. (Continued on Page Three) scores. his seat in the house. across this heap of clothing, partially