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| | | seein Rerald-Review. By C. E. KILEY. GRAND RAPIDS, - MINNESOTA. NEWS OF WEEK SUMMARIZED Digest of the News Worth Telling Con: densed for the Busy Reader. Personal. C. Arthur Williams, associate editor of the Washington (D. C.) Herald, died at El Paso, Tex., of tuberculosis. Emperor William has conferred the Order of the Crown of Prussia upon Charles Reick of the New York Times. Miss Pauline Leroy French, sister of Mrs. Alfred G. Vanderbilt,’ was mar- ried at St. John’s church at Newport to Samuel G. Wagstaff. Former Congressman Martin L. yer was stricken with apoplexy at home at Wooster, Ohio, and died before physicians arrived. Dewitt C. Gallup, a veteran of the Civil war and a member of the Walker filibuster expeditions to Cuba and Nic- araguain the ’50s, died at Hutchinson, Kan. Dr. David Coulter Gamble, clinical professor of diseases of the ear at Washington university, and one of the best known practitioners in St. Louis, is dead, ; Maj. Pino Guarra, commander-in- chief of the Cuban army, has arrived in New York. He will visit the United States army posts, schools and arsenals. George W. Gale, sixty-five years old, late chairman of the Southwestern traffic bureau, died in St. Louis. Mr. Gale was at one time freight traffic manager of the Frisco system. Augustus Birrell, assistant secre- tary for Ireland, announces that the resignation of Sir Anthony McDonnell, under secretary to the lord lieutenant of Ireland, will take effect in July. With impressive ceremonies, Mgr. Dennis John F. Connel, rector of the University of Washington, D. C., was consecrated titular bishop of Sabatte at Baltimore. Many high Catholic personages were present. At a special meeting of the vestry of Trinity church, New York, Rev. Dr. W. T. Mannig; assistant rector of Trinity and vicar of St. Agnes’ chapel, was elected rector of Trinity, to suc- ceed the late Dr, Morgan Dix. Mrs. Hetty Green has moved from the flat in Washington street, Hobo- ken, for which she paid $15 a month for several years, and now lives at the Plaza, where her rent is thirty times as much as it was in Hoboken. President Benjamin Ide Wheeler of the University of California has been nominated by the trustees of Colum- bia university and appointed by the Pri ministry of education as Theodore Roosevelt professor in Ber- lin for the year 1909 and 1910. Charles Bottineau, one of the lead- ing members of the Turtle Mountain band of Indians of North Dakota, died in Washington at the age of eighty- two. He had been prosecuting the In- dian claims before congress for sever- al years past, living with a nephew in Washington. Negotiations have been entered into with Siegfrid Wagner, son of the fa- mous composer, Richard Wagner, for a tour of the principal cities of the United es, beginning in October. Herr Wagner, for his American en- gagement, will conduct the Philhar- monic orchestra of Berlin. Sins and Sinners. Ed Callihan was fatally wounded by brother-in-law, John Spicer, and Spicer was in turn shot and killed by Callihan’s seventeen-year-old son, as a result of a quarrel at Jackson, Ky. After standing for a moment with bared head and uplifted hands, as though in prayer, an unidentified and well dressed man committed suicide by jumping into the Mississippi river at the foot of Tyler street, St. Louis. Morgan Delancey Magee, president of the First National bnak at Manas- quan, N. J., killed himself by firing a bullet into his head. When the death of President Magee became known the bank closed its doors by order of the stockholders and directors of the in- stitution, pending an examination. typsies trimmed the town of Jesup, Iowa, to the tune of $100. The High & Hore butcher shop was robbed of $15 and a man who had his fortune told lost $13 and many others report losses. The gypsies frightened a woman .at a farm house into giving them food and grain. The authorities are in pursuit of the band. Enraged because his long journey. across the seas to New York had end- ed in the refusal of his proposal of marriage, William Sekansky, a young Polander, shot and_ killed Annie Keckoow, a twenty-year-old Polish girl, and then shot Michael Kirsani, who sought -to intercept him in his flight. Kirsani died later in a hospi- tal. Making the last rounds of his watch, Charles M. Beck, a policeman of Den- yer, was shot through the heart and instantly killed in a store into which he had crawled in pursuit of a burglar. Beck had found a window pried from its fastenings and evidently followed through the opening into darkness and death. No arrests have been made. In a fight between Daniel White and James B. Fugate at the former’s farm in Breathitt county, Ky., Fugate was killed amd White wounded. The men, had been on unfriendly terms for some | time The Clearwater branch of the Na- tional Lead company in Brooklyn has been destroyed by fire. Loss, 000. W. E. Loucke, his wife and their baby were instantly killed when an automobile in which they were riding was struck by a train at Reedley, Cal. Prof, Carl Busch, a graduate of the University of Leipsic, was struck by a train and killed near Sterling, IIl., while walking on the railroad tracks. One man was killed and five others | were seriously injured in an explosion and fire which caused the destruction of the Chicago Reduction company’s plant at Chicago. While playing “Wild West” with several boys in New York, Frank Green, eight years old, was shot over the right eye with an air rifle and died shortly afterward. R. E. Clowry, cashier of the Bank of Seymour, was instantly killed at Ot- tumwa, Iowa, in a storm, when the team he was driving crashed through the railing of a bridge and fell into the swollen creek below. Max Crockett, Jr., fifteen months old, died at Lewisburg, Tenn., from wounds inflicted by a large rooster. The child fell in the yard and the rooster attacked him, sinking his spurs repeatedly into the child’s head. Bert Murray, driver for a Rapid River livery stable, while coming from Escanaba to Gladstone, Mich., fell off a bridge into a deep ravine. He was so badly injured that he died on the way to a hospital. His horse was killed. A tornado which struck Springfield, Mo., last week, wrecked the Spring- field Wagon company’s warehouse, blew down steeples, uprooted trees and interrupted wire service. Many horses and cattle were killed. Damage is reported at Pierce City, Monett, Ozark, Strafford and Holman. No lives were lost so far as is known. From Abroad. A serious conflict occurred at Loja, capital of the province of Loja, in the southwest of Ecuador, between sol- diers and the police. Several were wounded on both sides. The assault episode of April 6 at the American consulate at Mukden has been closed. The American staff has been exonerated and three Japanese officials have been punished. There have been forty-eight cases of bubonic plague in Guayaquil since April 22, During the months of April there were 130 deaths from bubonic plague and sixteen from yellow fever. The defeat of Durand, the revolu: tionary leader at Cerro de Pasca, Peru, and his subsequent flight have been confirmed. This means that the revolutionary movement has col- lapsed. Official denial is given at St. Peters- burg of the report that agents of John D. Rockefeller are at present in that city, negotiating for the construction of the Afnun railroad, or that they will have anything to do with the building, Baron Hayashi, the Japanese minis- ter to China, has handed in another communication from the government to the Chinese foreign board, protest- ing against the continuance of the Chinese boycott on Japanese goods arising from the Tatsu Maru incident. The Danish folkething has adopted the customs tariff reform bill, which is a compromise between free trade and protection. In addition to aboli- ishing or considerably reducing the duties on raw materials, it reduces all protective duties by from. 15 to 20 per cent, The widowed duchess de Chaulnes, who was Miss Theodora Shonts of New York, will not return to America with her father, Theodore P. Shonts, who went to Paris on learning of the death of his son-in-law, April 23. A posthumous child is expected and it is not considered safe for the duchess to make the long journey to New York. . Otherwise. It is given out at North Platte, Neb., that the retrenchment of expenses on the Union Pacific is at an end, and that considerable improvements for all departments will be made. Complete interior restoration of the city hall in New York, to conform with the original architectural plans of more than 100 years ago, is prom- ised. Mrs. Russell Sage is contemplat- ing giving money to the city for that purpose, Before sailing from New York for England, Alfred Mosley, the English educator, said that arrangements have been perfected for the visit of 500 school teachers from the United States, and such a number from Can- ada to England next winter. The view that a railroad employe riding on a pass is entitled to damages if injured has been upheld in the su- preme court at White Plains, N. Y. Damages of $17,500 were awarded to James A, Halley, formerly a conductor in‘the employ of the New York Cen- tral railroad, who was injured in the Brewster express wreck on Feb. 16, 1907. Sir William J. Lyne, minister of trade and customs of Australia, who is treasurer. of the fund for the recep- tion of the American fleet, says that the bulk of the expenditures will be on the sailors. “We are determined,” he said, “that they must leave with a good impression.” Six express companies doing busi- ness in Indiana brought suit in the district court in Indianapolis against the members of the railroad commis- sion of Indiana, to enjoin them from taking steps to reduce express rates in the state from 10 to 12 per cent. $100,- ‘ Svidence Accumulates That Many More Lives Were Taken by Laporte Fiend. ONE MORE BODY IS FOUND Evidence of at Least Nine More Victims. —Six Men, a Woman a Girl and an Infant. A multi-murder mystery rivaling in horror the bloody crimes of Holmes in Chicago and the Bender family in Kansas was brought to light last week at Laporte, Ind. The discovery of the wholesale murders was brought about by A. K. Helgelein of Aberdeen, S. D., who appeared in Laporte in search of his brother, Andrew Helgelein. He had information that his brother went to Laporte to marry Mrs. Belle Guin- ness and that he had turned over his money to her, and he became con- vinced that Andrew had been the vic- tim of foul play. Mrs. Guinness and her three chil- dren were recently burned to death in the destruction of their home, and Ray Lamphere, who formerly worked on the Guinness farm, was arrested on suspicion of having set fire to the house. Following A. G. Helgelein’s investi- gation into the disappearance of his brother, excavations were made on the Guinness farm, and the remains of five bodies were found on Tuesday, one of which was identified as that of Andrew Hegelein. The excavations were continued on Wednesday, and the remains of four more bodies were discovered. Thursday heavy rain pre- vented further search and the author- ities put in the time collecting evi- dence against Lamphere, who is sus- pected of having been an accomplice of the woman. Evidence was secured that showed almost conclusively that the bodies had been shipped in from Chicago. The authorities are convinced that the victims were lured to their death by fake matrimonial advertisements. Another Body Found. Laporte, Ind., May 10.—One more body was added to the death roll of the Guinness farm yesterday, the grewsome relics now numbering ten. Developments in the case came thick and fast last evening, each -"- ditional circumstance brought to 1igat. being of a nature to strengthen the charges against Ray Lamphere, who is accused of first-degree murder be- cause of the death of Mrs. Belle Guin- ness and her three children. Lam- phere yesterday sent a request to his; attorney, H. F. Worden, asking the latter to send to the farm of John Wheatbrook for the trunk which Lam- phere left there when he was arrest- ed, April 28. i Trunk Is Confiscated. But before this word had reached the attorney the trunk had been con-' fiscated by the local authorities. It contained a number of letters written by Mrs. Guinness to Lamphere after’ the latter had taken employment at the farm of John Wheatbrook, near’ Springville. The’ woman wrote Lam: phere urging him to return to her farm and “to bring your sweethearti with you if she has money enongh.” The identity of the woman is a mys- tery. Establishes a Motive. Other important developments ot the .day included the following: Peter Colson, a new witness in the case, told R. N. Smith, the prosecut- ing attorney, that Ray Lamphere had, acknowledged attempts to blackmail Mrs. Guinness. This is considered definitely establishing a motive for a disagreement between Lamphere and the woman which resulted later in the burning of the farm house. Mrs. Leo Grening said that her son Emil, who formerly worked on the no-: torious farm, saw two strangers at the place the night that Jennie Olsen: disappeared, in November, 1906. Emil Grening is now in Oklahoma City, and; the sheriff’s office will try to commu- nicate with him in the hope of estab- lishing the fact’ that Mrs. Guinness’ had accomplices in the murders at her place. Draws Curiosity Seekers. The resumption of excavation at the Guinness farm again drew an im- mMense crowd of spectators. A prema- ture announcement by Coroner Mack that two bodies had been discovered only served to increase the rush of curiosity seekers. The scraps of hu- manity were found in the barn yard. The body was by far the least pre- served of any of the ten grewsome relics. FOOT SAWED OFF. Workman in Sawmill Kicks Piece ot Wood From Saw. Chippewa Falls, Wis. May 12. — Fred Draper, twenty-four years old, got his foot cut off while working at sawmill at Springbrook. The crew was sawing a log that was not very sound and some of the rotten part of the log stuck to the saw. Draper at tempted to kick it off and the saw caught his shoe, throwing his leg over the saw and cutting it off just above the ankle, t bs Hotel That Is Now Heap of Debris—No Loss of Life. Atlanta, Ga., May 10. — One million and a quarter dollarsis the loss, con- servatively estimated, of a fire which started at 3:30 o’clock yesterday morning and which swept two blocks of Atlanta business property. The Terminal hotel, one of the largest in the city, isa mass of brick. It had on its register 200 guests when the fire started, a block away. Every one escaped. Near by were several small hotels, and in these also there was no loss of life. The fire started in the Schlessinger- Meyer Baking company, Madison and Nelson streets. The water pressure was poor and the firemen could not get a stream that would carry above the second floor. Meanwhile high-power trolley and electric light wires were falling every- where, parts of walls were dropping out, and with the high wind prevail- ing the flames shot across the street to the Terminal hotel. Floor after floor of the Terminal hotel were soon ablaze. The firemen were fought back until they were in the rear of the Ter- minal hotel, where lack of water again retarded any effort to check the fire. More Hotels Burn. Within half an hour the walls and roof of the hotel had fallen in. The fire ate its way into the Liquid Carbonic structure, a five-story build- ing to the east, and within a short space of time there were two terrific explosions which seemed to carry down all remaining walls. Next to the Carbonic company’s building was the Inman block. This building con- tained nine or ten business concerns. East of the Terminal hotel, on Mitchell, was the Marion hotel annex and Childs hotel. The fire stopped after ruining the latter hotel. Across the street, Postoffice B station, the Southern Suspender company and the Southern Handkerchief Manufactur- company, the Georgia Vehicle compa- ny, the Piedmont Hat company and McClure’s Ten-cent store all fell away like so many cigar boxes. REVIEW OF MAMMOTH FLEET. Metcalf Reviews. Greatest Assemblage of American Warships. San Francisco, May 10.—The com- bined Atlantic and Pacific fleets of battleships, armored cruisers, torpedo boat destroyers and auxiliaries, aggre- gating in weight of displacement the enormous total of more than 400,000 tone—the greatest assemblage of ar- mor-clads thus far to mark the prog- gress of the American navy to second rank among the floating forces of the world—were reviewed in picturesque San Francisco harbor yesterday by Secretary of the Navy Metcalf. The forty-four yessels of the two fleets lay at anchor in four long columns, and proceeding from the Oakland shore the secretary, on board the little gun- boat Yorktown, proceeded through the lines formed by the warships. Evans’ Flag Comes Down. Rear Admiral Evans, who had hoped to end his active naval career by participating in yesterday’s official ceremonies, was not permitted by his attending physician to go aboard the Connecticut. Rear Admiral Charles M. Thomas was again the senior offi- cer. To-day is the time set for Admi- ral Evans finally to relinquish com- mand. Although he will not be aboard ship, his flag will officially be lowered from the truck of the Connecticut as the sharp speaking rifles on the after- bridge boom out their parting salute of thirteen guns, which will mark the assumption of command by a new chief, Admiral Thomas. Thomas in Command. Admiral Evans will leave to-day for his home in Washington, where he will remain awaiting orders until the date of retirement on his sixty-second birthday, Aug. 18. Admiral Thomas will be in command of the Atlantic fleet until May 15, when he, too, hauls down his flag for all time, to return home on waiting orders until his re- tirement in the fall. Rear Admiral Charles M. Sherry will assume com- mand with the departure of Admiral Thomas. Evans Bids Farewell. Rear Admiral Evans bade a _per- sonal farewell to the officers of his command at the banquet given last night in honor of the visit of the At- lantic fleet by the city of San Fran- cisco.. He was wheeled into the room and in a_ fifteen-minute address de- clared that what is needed to pre- serve the peace of the world is more battleships and: fewer statesmen. New Phone Line Started. Miles City, Mont., May 10. — Con- struction of the Miles City-Forsyth telephone line has commenced. It will be forty-four miles in length. A syndicate with Pierre Wibaux, the banker, at the head, has been formed to build the new postoffice here. When the building is completed Miles City will have free delivery. Five Men Drowned. East Liverpool, Ohio, ‘May 10. — A gasoline launch on the Ohio river near here, occupied by nine young men, be- came disabled yesterday morning and was carried under @ fleet of empty coal barges. Five of the men were drowned. Embankment Lets Go. Natchez, Miss., May 10.— Abreak in the Texas & Pacific embankment at Bougere, La., occurred last night. A thousand acres in Concordia parish ‘will be flooded. Two Hundred Guests Flee From Big )THED OVER BY SECRETARY TAFT Conferences With Panama Offi- cials Result in Patching Up Difficulties. ALL NOW SERENE. AT PANAMA Tentative Accord Is Reached on Prac+ tically All the Questions in Dispute. Panama, May 12.—Ever since his arrival here Secretary Taft has been busy holding conferences with Presi- dent Amador, Foreign Secretary Ari- as, Senor Arnago, the Panaman minis- ter to the United States; Mr. Squires, the American minister to Panama, and William Nelson Cromwell, the le- gal advisor of the Panama Canal com- pany. The conferences were conclud- ed yesterday. They covered numer- ous topics relating to the treaties which it is desired to negotiate be- tween Colombia, the United States and Panama. Agreement Is Reached. It is stated that a tentaive accord has been reached upon important poipts and that decision with refer- ence to the others only awaits special inquiries now in progress. The result of the conferences, it is announced, is satisfactory to all parties concerned. Colombia’s recent seizure of the town of Juarado, on the frontier, in- volved in the general boundary ques- tion between the two countries, has been fully considered. The Panaman government has agreed to the sugges- tion made by Mr. Taft to withhold all action until the secretary of war has had an opportunity personally to con- fer with President Roosevelt and Sec- retary of State Root. Solve Land Problem. One of the most important ques- tions affecting the canal zone has been to determine the titles of indi- vidual occupants of lands in the zone and the valuation of lands appropri- ated for canal uses. Until now ad- justment had been impossible, but a solution has been reached by which an arbitration tribunal will be consti- tuted under the existing treaty. This tribunal will have the power to deter- mine all questions as_ to valuations and legal titles. It will be composed of two citizens of the United States and two citizens of Panama, with Gov. Magoon of Cuba as umpire. WRECKERS’ PLOT FAILS. | Obstruction on Track Was Intended for Flyer on the Panhandle. Washington, Pa, May 12. — The passing of a shifting engine which the would-be train wreckers had not counted upon. undoubtedly averted se- rious disaster to the east-bound flyer from St, Louis to Pittsburg between here and McDonald late last night. An obstruction was placed on the tracks in such a manner, experienced railroad men say, that nothing could have saved the fast train had it not been discovered. The switching en- gine ran into the obstruction and was ditched. FIVE TOTS BURNED TO DEATH. — Father Alleged to Have Locked Chil- dren in House and Set It on Fire. Montgomery, Ala., May 12. — Five children of James Kennedy, colored, of this city, were burned to death last night and two others so badly burned that they are not expected to live. Ken- nedy’s wife alleges that her husband locked the children in the house and then set it on fire. The man and woman have been living apart, and the question of the possession of the children was being foughé out in the courts, TEACHER KILLS HIMSELF. Commits Suicide While Sunday Schooi Class Is Awaiting Banquet. Boyne City, Mich., May 12.—Walter C. Slater, aged twenty years, princi- pal of the Boyne Falls high school, shot himself through the heart Satur- day night his bedroom, just after ex- cusing himself for a few minutes from his Sunday school class of boys who had arranged a banquet in his honor and were anxiously awaiting the arri- val of Mr. Slater as 2 signal for the banquet to begin, ARMY VETERANS UNITE. Over 60,000 Now Enrolled in Spanish War Organization. Washington, May 12. — Amalgama- tion of the Veteran Army of the Phil-]' ippines with the United Spanish War Veterans was effected Saturday. The amalgamation adds 1,300 members to the Spanish veterans’ organization, making a total membership of up- wards of 60,000. HURRY IS FATAL. Young Husband of Few Months Is Struck and Killed by Train, Marquette, Mich., May 12.—Hurry- ing to catch a train for his home at Garnet, Mich., Matthew Templeton, aged twenty-five years, was caught by the cylinder of the locomotive at Rexton, on the Soo line, in Mackinac county, and was dragged under the SIGHTSEERS Make Merry on Scene Where Most Gruesome Tragedies in Decade Had Taken Place. Laporte, Ind., May 12.—While no more bodies of skeletons have been unearthed at the “Port of Missing Men,” as the Guinness farm has come to be called, evidence accumulated that the death of at least nine more victims—six men, a woman, a girl and an infant— must be laid at the door of the woman, who, whether dead or alive, must be regarded as the arch- criminal of her time. All Roads Lead to Farm. All roads in Laporte county led to the Guinness farm yesterday, upwards of 15,000 sightseers visiting the place of death before sunset. Several of the out-of-town visitors, however, were seeking information concerning missing friends or relatives, and some further information regarding the pos- sibility of identifying some of the un- known vetims of the farm resulted from their inquiries. There was noth- ing in the attitude of the crowd to in- dicate that they were visiting a place where the most grewsome tragedies of a decade had taken place. Make Merry on Farm. Jokes and laughing comment on the antecedents of the farm were heard on every side and exclamations of joy’ from successful relic hunters were. numerous. Family picnic parties: grouped themselves on _ the sloping, lawn under the pines and cedars’ which dot the dooryard, or found rest~ ing places beneath the flowering ap- ple and plum trees of the orchard. Sheriff Smutzer will continue his. investigations at the Guinness farm’ to-day. The report to the coroner of; the physicians who made the autop- sies on the bodies found in the cellar is not expected for a day or two. May Search Former Home. Chicago, May 12. — A conference will be held to-day between ‘Assistant Chief of Police Schuettler and Coro- ner Hoffman to decide whether to dig’ up the yard and cellar of the resi- dence in Austin formerly occupied by Mrs. Guinness in search of remains of. possible victims. As to the possibili- ty of the woman being still alive the! police officials said last nght that in: the past three days they had received twenty-six letters from persons who; declare they are positive they have seen Mrs. Guinness since her reported death. Is Not Mrs. Guinness. Syracuse, N. Y., May 12.—Mrs. Cora Belle Herron, widow of Frederick B. Herron, former vice president of the Sethness Chemical company of Chica- go, who was arrested by Syracuse de- tectives in a Pullman sleeper Satur- day morning on suspicion of being Mrs. Belle Guinness, the Laporte mur- deress, was quickly able to prove her identity and proceeded to New York Saturday afternoon. CANADA GETS GRAIN HIGHWAY. Line Will Be Built From Great Lakes to the Seaboard. Ottawa, May 12.—In order to divert the Western grain traffic which now flows through American outlets to the seaboard, a great grain highway from the Great Lakes to the sea is being established by the Canadian Pa- cific railway. To aid in this project the Canadian government will prepare Victoria harbor, on the Georgian bay, for the position of that railway’s chief grain port. At Victoria harbor the shore plans of the railway company are of great magnitude. These pro- vide for an elevator of a capacity of 10,000,000 bushels to be constructed in five units of 2,000,000 bushels per unit. The handling capacity of the pro- jected plant will be about 50,000 bush- els an hour, or the exact amount of one train load over the new railway which the company will have com- pleted to the waters of Georgian bay. The line, which is now in course of construction, will run from Montreal through Smith’s Falls and Peterboro to Victoria harbor, making a distance of 359 miles in almost an air line. PULPIT A JOKE. Dr. Aked Says Ministers Have Be come Laughing Stock. New York, May 12.—Dr. Charles F. Aked, pastor of the Fifth Avenue Bap- tist church declared in a sermon yes- terday that the pulpit was out of touch with the times and that minis- ters have become a laughing stock. He pointed out that church attend- ance was decreasing and that when money was needed to advance the cause of Christianity commercialism stood in the way, SEND BACK THE BODY. Joseph Leicht of Winona, Who Died on Shipboard. Cherbourg, May 12. — The body of ‘Joseph Leicht of Winona, Minn., a first cabin passenger on board the North German Lloyd steamship Lut- izow, who died during the voyage, was jtaken ashore and will be shipped to New York on Wednesday. President Returns to Capital. Washington, May 12. — President ooseve't and John Burroughs, who lave been spending several days at }Pine Knot, Mrs. Roosevelt’s country tplace near Charlottesville, Va., return ed to Washington last night. Cleveland Is Better. Lakewood, N. J., May 12.—Reports ‘from the Lakewood hotel last night wheels of the engine. He was instant.|/were that Former President Grover ‘ly killed. His body was mangle +. | Cleveland had passed a comfortable ‘horrible manner. A bride of a few ‘months survives. lewenty-four hours and that his condi- ‘tion continues to improve. FLOCK TO FARM (—-4 moma