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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1900. SPLENDID NEW BATTLESHIPS 2 PEACE NEGOTIATIONS ARE BEGUN IN PEKING \ I ALL BIG GUNS b 4 Proposals Under Discussion Include All the‘ Demands That Have Been Made Upon China. Special Dispatch to The Call. CALL TEL, WASHINGT( tions for the permanent BUREAU Oct settlement of ges- In all the provinces and ters F3 TO BE BUILT FOR UNCLE SAM FOR BATTLESHIPS - WILL BE by |Admiral ONeill Presents | His Annual Report to 3 the Department. ——— | 2 betw th wor ref ures chapels have been opened and our | Much Prom" Made and an Ine questions in dispute bétween the POWers | peopic are deceived, ripped open and disembow- | &nd China are believed to have begun in | cled. while the foreigners grow fat on the reve- | creased Supply of Excellent Am- Peking. These megot ot bave been maes of China, Insulting our ufficlale ad mer- | | | munition Has Been Received Ching and. Li BUNE | The Emperor is indulgent and permits this. | | and Distri Ng represe ina,and by the Min- | Who can foretell th m of the forelgn | | Distributed. ers res representing the Day by da act more and more | i with the usly. ‘When we observe the present | Governmen sed with WASHINGTO t t nited States through Min- g wolf through- | | 3 hita hese andth pther powets e ol | | progress has been made 1 rk that , the plan of he Boxers took the Am \ Pres-| | | |ail of the gun will be ready for the ships rs to Peking | byterian mission buildings, b’ ave not | | | | now building when they are complete. An was abando desiroyed them &) | | increased supply of all kinds R e The spreading along East | | | | tion has b accumu redited to China : s | v & River River, in the provincs quantities ezce representatives + . |of Kwangsi. It is supposed to be aimed | | Next yea ckhill, spectal commissioner t the ov hrow of the Mancau dynasty, ne 1 totes in China, will act are so contradictory tha{ numt « Proposals wh sible to form a lucid Promising 1ud the Chinese offi- | | « with an eig urrection so light- breech plug guiity partie s g et Ry ooy o é . leve it will be very Eontiittaus aved ¥ represcn Oct The Nippon Yusen | Kinshiu Maru arrived from | . Je by Mir Conger ax with Rev. and Mrs. V. Rel- | ) epresentatives of other powers, but up d and Mrs.' 8. Bergstrom and | 5 i | 1S 0! % | u ‘the interior when. the riots - ~ yre r by | o n 3 escape down the b J ng, wiil ' }L he powers. ks s ! DESIGN OF NEW SISTER BATTLESHIPS VIRGINIA AND RHODE [SLAND. o the eroos armcy Rsited 'a_ permar FRENCH EXPEDITION BACK | 2 < : : 5 ches in thickness. the . 1."”‘/"'_;'%‘, - FROM SAHARA DESERT ! From the Navy Department Print. Reproduced for the First Time on This Coast. { "A{é:.“,"&‘.{i;fi\i% ” l{];» dr]b | Representatives of President Loubet | s g ¥, ated under ordinary Paku, to whic powers have not tions he wa | Th ck in th s believed her Peking if the Emperor tat s & few days ago by Germany. The REBELS BURN VILLAGES. v hin district were attacked by rebels at na- tes for governments, | Thousands Reported Killed in a Q5 ol A ey priva S:ries of Battles. | ! HONGKONC The Governor of | | | Hongkong formed that 400) | | | villagers in the Samtochuok-Kiwa | | etly wi gun in e kok. The villagers were defeated a - 2000 of them killed. The rebels, who Ic - - 4% killed. burned two villages containing i a wit 1 ' 3300 horses. A force of 2000 troops went to 1 A 1. gox 2 the assistance of the villagers and gaged 1 ober 22. No details ASirn) (I R have L General Ho, witn R . N s ot 2000 tr 2 to igkong, fle th s_orig- having burned the villages of Schanchau- | 1 & tin and Malantau. 1 Missionary Refugees Arrive. and General Andre, Minister, the Ville de Pernambuco, after ac: cmplishing for the first time in French onfal history a journey across the Sa- from Algotia to the French Congo. fved the members of the expedition, de- livered addres: and distributed decora- | tions. DAMAGE AT INDIAN HEAD | | be 100 tons less displacement, | these ships, armament place them ahead of any bat- | since the first three | veyized armor of the Indiana is reduced | The size of | to 11 inches Krupp steel in the new ships, | their speed, protection and | and 12-inch high-powered rifles and quick- | firing guns of 6-inch caliber take the place | were planned ten| 900 tons of coal on the normal draught. | HREE of the five h‘a\llplhlps to | years ago are certainly very remarkable | With 1900 tons in the bunkers and a full | be 6 inches; the large turrets and bar- bettes 10 inches and lh? smaller turrets 6 inches. The main battery consists of four matic guns. ! { As compared with the six ships of the Receive the Explorers. be contracted for before the year | and searcely generally recognized. The |supply of stores and ammunition the | Formidable class building in England, th. BORDEAUX., Oct. 2%.—An immense closes will be of the Virginia type, | Speed, beginni with a demand for 15| displacement will exceed 16.200 tons on a | Virginia has about 160 tons more displace= | s | crowd gave an enthusiastic welcome to- Wood sheathed and coppered, and | KnOts. has advanced uninterruptedly, until | draught of about 2 feet. The water-line | ment on 2 feet 9 inches less draught than | tao early as » ay much in rega h occupation, | 92Y to the officers and a number of the iy S P ot | NOW nothing less than 19 knots will satisfy | belt, about 192 feet in length, is to be 11 | the Formidable and is calculated to have | the practical utility for war purposes of ase of men of the Foureau-Lamy expedition, | will have a displacement of 15,000 | the naval authorities. The 16}4-inch Har- | inches to 8 inches thick and the casement | 300 more horsepower and one knot great- | boats of this type. Undoubtedly the the qui returned from West Africa on | tons on a draught of 24 feet. They will | armor protecting the broadside guns is to moral effect of their known or suspected | er speed than the British battleship. The | Formidable’s main battery comprises four | | 12-inch and twelve 6-inch quick-firers and | the armor belt is of Harvey steel, 2 inches proximity will be considerable, but more intimate knowledge of their qualities will | be mecessary before & correct estimate of | their mm!urg value can be made. A . n has achieved much valuable | tleship in other navies and relegate the | of 13-inch turret guns and slow-firing 6- | 12-inch, eight S-inch and twelve 6-inch |less maximum thickness. It thus appears| One of t appendic to Admiral s | hitherto huge ships of Italy to a place | inch brecch loader: | quick-fires, and the secondary battery in- | as if the Virginia Is an all around better | O Nelll's report is made by Lieutenant of President Loubet | well down in the list. The Virginia class will be 435 feet in | cludes tweive 3-pounders, eight 1-pounde hip than the Formidable, and this is as | Sorauss: In command at the proving B4 Ceneral Aundre, Minlster of WAL, be- 1. "\ ements in our battleships | length, 76 feet 2% inches beam and carry | and twelve other machine, field and auto- | it should be, for nothing less would sat. | SLoUnds at Indian Head. where an explo- r hes completed the pre- | cel he {mprovements attleships ngth, 76 feet 2% inches beam an y n , fiel E % g less would sat- | sjon occurred last night. His remarks on il.‘f,\' this country. " the? question of the stability of smokeless powder are timely in view of one theory REVELATIONS OF HORRIFYING REMAINS 0F JOHN SHERMAN SENSATIONAL CHARGE AGAINST that the explosion resulted from spontan+ eous combustion of such powder. He says in his repert: “In a new explosive the question of stas bility is one that occupies the first place, A sample of five-inch powder ‘that had been In a magazine of the sMarblehead for | two years was recently tested in the prov- ing grounds. It does not show the least deterioration in ballistic qualities, nor STRIKERS N~ SHARP CONFLICT 1d return tc e success of does it give any evidence of having al- negotiations wi b - Through the ! tered chemically. Another sample kept in B h Embass; Hay has re- | a magazine here for one year shows equal- the text nglo-German | 1y good resul eement communi the United | ha 0T EXTENSIVE Loss Due to the Explosion Will Not Aggregate IEPRAITY Young Woman Fastens Other Crimes on Pat- NOW AT REST Body of the Illustrious Man Is Consigned to the - GERMAN OFFICIAL Count Posadowsky-Wehner. Accused of Accepting a BROKER ARRESTED ON A CHARGE OF EMBEZZLEMENT Allegations Made That C. D. Snapp of Chicago Robbed Cotton Brokers of $32,000. CHICAGO, Oct. %5.—C. D. Snapp, confl- WITH ML Two Soldiers and One Work- man May Die as Result | i ! GENER. = L ‘ | i i i dential agent for Caldwell & Smith, cot- AL GASELEE REPORTS.| More Than $15,000. ] erson Prisoners. Tomb. Big Bribe. of Wounds. o & S ot Tells of the Capture and Release of | | JEER SR 5 e e —_— | rested here to-day and charged with the " : | o — t Chinese Imperial Troops. | & : NEW YORK, Oct. %.—Awful depths of | MANSFIELD, Ohlo, Oct. %.—In a ple-| BERLIN, Oot. %.—A great sensation| MONTREAL, Oct. %.—Advices Trom | fmbezzlement of $82.000, Snapp ls sald 1o LONDON, « o e folic H)\{f\fi”‘cm:“&\{ m,“{';‘r'dnmm 4imiral | egradation have been exposed to the | turesque littie cemetery, where genera- | has been caused by the allegatien that | Valley Field received here to-night state | gutside. enterprises, and 1o ales said & ¢ P = ¥ | ment. Teceived 5 telephonic messng\,"(ms public gaze through the investigation of | tions of Mansfield's builders sleep, lie to- Count von Posadowsky-Wehner, Secre-|that a conflict has occurred there De- | have lost heavily on the races. y o &~ Bhderiy gt f” i+ | morning from the proving ground at In. | the murder of Jennie Bosschieter. The | night the remains of John Sherman, Ohio's | tary of State for the Interior, had been | tween strikers and the mil Eight sol — -——— o of Btate | an Head, 1o the effect that at about 1 | horrid orgie that began on Thursday night | Senator and the nation’s statesman. There | bribed with 12,000 marks for his work in | diers and fifteen strikers were injured, | THIRTEEN KILLED AT who escaped October 16, to the een is in the hospital. Mr d are well lowing from Horne- ut an producin | plosions occurred in one of o'clock last night a fire and several ex- the filling and magazines, The cause of the ion is unknown at present, but an igation is in progress. No other nage was done and no one was injured. This message was received from Lieuten- ant Fullinwider, who is second in com- mand at Indian Head. At the time he hous: exple inv sent it Lieutenant Strauss, commandant | at tre proving ground, was on his way to Washington on the dispatch boat Santa Barbara, to make his report on the occur- rence directly to headquarters here. As soon as it became known officially that no one had been injured great relief was expressed. of last week in Christopher Saal's saloon in Paterson, N. J., and that culminated in the pretty mill girl's death on a lonely country road had had many predecessors alike in_all but sequel. The four men now in Passaic County Jail charged with a crime punishable by death are said to have openly boasted of their conduct until one of their victims succumbed. | One young woman has come forward to | denounce two of thce prisoners, while | other girls well known in the community | have told their stories in confidence, | shrinking from publicity. Reputable residents of Paterson have been shocked by the revelations and the entire community is profoundly stirred. A great mass-meeting is proposed to discuss the conditions and to denounce the open tolerance of vice. Several promi- all that is mortal of the former Secretary of State was laid to rest to-day with cere- monies that were impressive and eloquent- ly simple. All Ohio contributed laurels to the f{llustrious dead, and representing the nation were President McKinley, Sec- retary of War Root and other Washington officials. The city was draped in mourn- ing. Every business housé closed at 2 o'clock and all the schools were dismissed that the pupils might attend the services at Grace Episcopal Church, where a half- century ago John Sherman first wor- shiped and where for years he was vestry- man. From the funeral train, which arrived at | 10:16 4. m., the remains were escorted to connection with the penal servitude bill of 1898 The allegation is contained In a letter which is going the rounds of the German | ress. The writer asserts that Herr rupp subscribed 5000 marks to the fund constituting the alleged bribe. The National Zeitung says it expects that Count von Posadowsky-Wehner will resign and nearly all the papers condemn him_severely. All the evening papers comment upon the officlal administration. The entire Liberal press now demands the resigna- tion of Count Posadowsky-Wehner and Director von Woedtke, the assumption | being that the latter doubtless acted at | the suggestion of the former. The Ber-| liner Tageblatt says: | ““The sele consequence of the official | two soldlers and one striker probably tatally. About a hundred militiamen were called out to-day to preserve order at toe Valley Field cotton mills, where there has been an intermittent strike due to varl ous causes all the year. When to-nigh news was received another detachment of A WEDDING CEREMONY Floor Collapses During the Merry- making and the Festivities Are Sadly Interrupted. CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. %5.—During a wedding ceremony last Sunday at Arg: | rokastro, in Epirus, the floor collapsed, with the result that thirteen persons wers killed and forty others injured e e Papeete the Beautiful. Those Who are fond of traveling (and who i3 not) will hatl with delight the news of a direct steamship route to Tahitl. This charmi has until now been accessible only 200 militia left Montreal for Valley l-'leld.f Saved by His Dogs. RIVERSIDE, Oct. 2%.—Jerry Sanders, a well-known rancher residing &t Armada, this county, was attacked by a vicious bull qn last Tuesday evening and received injuries that_for a time were thought to be serious. Mr. Sanders, who s 74 years of age, went into a pen to feed the buil, renderd, b & proofs that they had | he building where the first explosion | joni"men have taken great Interest it the | (he church. through streets 'that were ..t nol PORneRuitcr doy, & When it attacked him. The old man's | salling vessels, but on November Ist the popu- sent by Li Hung Chang tc ¢ | occurred is techmically known as *‘Cart- | & | thronged with citizens and thousands who g et % t d the attention of his| }ar steamship Australia will sail direct, mak- . Pt e i the | dges " being a place where the brass | Suggestion that there should be such a | PRGN CL G0 n iner places. The | A similar demand fs made by the Vos- | loud cries attracte o . — - MISSION PROPERTY IN DANGER. In a Proclamation Boxers Protest| gainst Acts of “Forei, 1s. | Within a hundred feet on one side and | Prove that persons who are now circulat- ol eisioor Bowan in pending legislation for the purpose of Av s A_ gn Devils. | about 300 feet o - 3 s '+ | ing In the city trying to palliate the crima | the procession began. o influencing the nation against such legis- HONGKONG. Oct Advices from | RDOUL 3% feet on the other, are two other | (& ' The TUN ITYINE 19 peiliage the crim! In the line of march were two compa- & 8! Lienchau, on North River, say that Amer- ican mission property there is threatened with destruction by Boxers, who have posted the following proclamation: We have organized to protect our country and our homes and we rely upon one another t. support the order to drive out the forelgn de The Hub (CHAS. KEILUS & C0.) STEIN-BLOCH CO.’8 CELEBRATED GOOD- CLOTHES. NEW FALL STYLES READY-TO-PUT-ON. Exclusive High-Grade Clothiers sheils which are used in the small caliber rapid-fire guns are filled with powder. It is ~distant about half a mile from the wharf where the boats land and from the point where the armor plate test oceurs, buildings, one designated ‘on the officlal ' ard the other marked These buildings are used for powder storage, and it i not yet positive- ly known whether they have all de- stroyed or mot. 1f they have, the loss, as far as buildings are concerned, is slight. They were constructed lightly with a to avoiding confinement of the powder contents, in case of fire. Within the three buildings were stored about fifteen tons of brown powgder and ten tons of smoke- less powder. The latter, when not close- Iy confined under pressure, is not explos- ive, but creates a vast flame, and Admiral O'Neill sald it was the fire blazing from the smokeless powder which gave rise to the Bg.“d that a great accident had oc- curr Near the powder houses stand the resi- dences of half a dozen employes qrgn proving ground, and their familjes. at no one was injured is accounted for by the prudence which lbcated thé magazines in ravines, mordmfi the protection of the enco: sing hills to the residences in the wcinity. The big powder factory, represeniting a large expenditure of Gov- ernment money, was never in danger from the fire and explogion. It is between two ’nd three miles distant in a straight line rom the scene of the disaster, with hills I¥ing between. It is always difficult to fix the responsi~ bility in such cases. The admiral thought that some workman in the vicinity yes- terday may have been careless and left a burning cigarette or match, which sturted a fire that smoldered until night- fall, when it communicated with some {)owder. On the other hand there always s a possibility, which naval officers do not like to recognize, of some chemical change having taken place in the powder, which resulted in spontaneous combustion. The loss in money represented by the powder is comparatively small, for if all meeting, as they are eager for an oppor- tunity to express their views upon the girl's murder and the conditions that led up to it. The main object of the meeting will be to voice public sentiment and to that no effort will be spared to save the accused men, whose families are very wealthy and influential, and prelimin- ary attempts are already apparent. NUGGET OF GOLD THAT IS VALUED AT : $154,000 Received From a Mining Company in British Columbia and Con- to New York. NEW YORK, Oct. %.—The biggest nug- get of W%Jl olz‘::edndrd:t the Assay Office, in o according to Super- intendent , arrived to-day from a mining company in British Columbia, It was consigned to the New York agents of the Bank of Montreal. The nnset con- tained a fraction over 753 pounds of the solid yellow metal and is valued at $154,000. It came in a solid cone and stood about two feet high. This cone was wrapped in canvass and fitted with an oblong box made of two-inch planks and heavily bound with iron. The gold was firmly held in the box by two wooden wedges driven in from the top. Two heavy iron rings were set in the sides of the rough box and through these were fitted wooden bars bv which the box was lifted. It re- quired four men to remove it from the truck in the Assay Office to the scales. G++ 4444444444444 44440 $ INTERSTATE POLO TOURNEY GAMES | GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colo., route was marked in the early morning with many political banners eulogistic of national am? State candidates of the va- rious parties, but as a mark of respect to the dead all these were removed before nies of the Eighth Ohio Volunteers, who served in the Spanish war, while flanking the hearse was a squad of forty-two sur- vivors of the famous Sherman brigade, all ray and bent with age, but stepping with rm tread. the attendants at the services uise W. R. Dc{klfiymn T. Herriok, Mrs. J. I. McCallum, elson A. and Mrs. Miles, rs. Colgate Hoyt of New York, e Sherman, a son of General Sherman; Miss Lizzle Sherman, a duu%hter of General Sherman; Mrs. Rachel Thorndyke 6f Bos- ton, daughter of General Sherman; Alvey A 'Adee, Assistant Secretary of State: Governor, Nash, ex-Governor Bushnell and Benator Foraker. Mayor Brown and a committee of clti- zens greeted President McKinley at the lltldoll-n. Senator Hanna arrived an hour ater from Chicago, President McXKinley and his immediate party did not tarry et the church, where the remains were left in state, but went at once to the residence of Congress] Kerr, where luncheon was served and where they remained until 2:30 p. m., the time for the farmal funeral services. The honorary pallbearers were: General Nelson A. Miles, Colgate Hoyt, P. T. Sher- man, Frank B. Wiborg, John Sherman Hoyt, Willlam McCord, Alfred W. Boyle and Charles A, Sherman. These escorted the remains into the church, which was then thrown open to the public, and for hours thousands of men, women and chil- dren filed past the tagket. When the time arrived for the formal services the church and grounds were crowded. The officiatin priest was Rev. A. B. Putnam, rector o the church, who used the ritual exclusive- ly, preaching no funeral sermon. Follow- ing the rendition of the funeral march by tite organist Dr. Putnam read selections Amon; were J eneral r. and P. T. M sische Zeitung, which remarks: “It is an unheard of proceeding that a Government department should request and receive large sums from one small section of a population directly interested lation.” ‘The only papers which attempt to de- fend the Secretary of State for the In- terior are the Berliner Post, the Kreuz Zeitung and the Berliner Nachrichten, whose justification of his course in the matter is weakly apolcgetle. BARK LITCHFIELD SAILS wrrx_x:mmmvs GOLD British War Office Announces That Lord Roberts Will Sail for Home About November 1. LONDON, Oct. 26.—A dispatch to the Daily Mall from Lourenzo Marques an- announces the salling yesterday from that rt of the American bark Fred P. Litch- eld, which, it is believed at Lourenzo ues, carries a large quantity of Transvaal gold hidden under her ballast. The War Office announces that Lord Roberts hopes to leave South Africa for home about November 15 and that Gen- eral Lord Wolseley has consented to con- tinue to perform the duties of the com- mander in chief of the army until the end ol‘%uvember. ALGIERS, Oct. 25.—It is asserted here that the Netherlands Government has notified the Dutch Consul in Algiers that the Dutch cruiser Golderland, on which Mr. Kruger is being brought from Lou- renzo Marques, will land him here and that he will .only proceed to l“fl.ncefifler a stay in Algiera, the length of which has not been decided. ey Marlborough as Lord Lieutenant. DUBLIN, Oct. 25.—The Evening Herald revives the report, which it asserts is well founded, that the Duke of Marlborough will succeed Earl Cadogan as Lord Lieu- They jumped into the pen and | ing the trip in 1034 days. A reduced rou r trip rate has been made for the first trip. at 643 Market street for salling lst. six dogs. succeeded in driving the beast away, thus saving Sanders from death. “Faultless Day Shirts.” Men have slept in “Faultless” nightshirts all over the United the same company that made 0w a “Day Shirt.” Here is too. The material is is_first-class in every on of art in shirt- States for many years past. these shirts are making what they call the picture of it. and a swell shirt it is. very wearable, and\the making necessarily is_ vparticular. In fact. it represents the perfecti y he surpliced _choir s i 800 i vith combination stripe {h powder contained in the buildings was t. 2.—The much talked of pol thng 't pracessional; - “Lead, - Kindly | tenant of Ireland. making. They come in white bodies, Wil t T e oss ‘;:'..‘{;’,‘.ffl,fi"fivadgfi;fow‘mi ?ocurnsmemebetween T :':’5.3 fi:)gnt,'!htie ran * m,.fitmflge," and the 444+ 4444444444 444440 down the center of the bosom and oln "::d :;is;; dofb ‘!:x:e kcufll. the HACKE!T. CARHART & C0.3| % 5(ueen, S0 and $loom and powder |+ Sen Franclsco, Glenwood Springs 4| (SO coHUGE moved on Main street 3 e e A A B o thow windows at the entrance NEW YORK'S {nd ammunition. The Joss to the bulld- and Colorado Springs has been ar- £0 the cemetery 'a mile distant. At Cen- THE CONTRACT + ee shirts in our vestibule R e e e d GI++ 4441444444444 4444404444 4 This is the first time that these shirts have + 3 —_— ranged. for. The San Francisco tral Park the procession under an | 4+ + on Market street. ; g‘a‘:;‘%%u Secretary Gag team will be represented by players + | immense arch of mourning, on which was | 4 ARMY SURGEONS + been shown on this coast. Price # FALL FASHIONS Speaks. from the Burlingame Polo Club. emblazoned in gilr. letters “The Nation's | 4 S + 50 READY-THE-MOMENT- Sorinin B e p sdpedimy of | 4 The oo Piokegingbing Ayl o TRBL TR ths it as i Manationd o g LI R MM 5 $1. each e x - 5 n was crowded to the 4 Novem . after which the Cali- , Oct. 25.—In .the P T e doors_to-pight. by people who came here| 4 fornteand Glenwood Springs play- + | Jt henieh thon the Bighth Onis Volun. | 4 case of W. H. Block and seventeen + Out-of-town orders filled—write us. ON SALE ONLY HERE, R AT i g’%‘:‘&ifilq";.:nh% ers will go to Colorado Springs. feers, In a carrlage near that occupied | 4 other :cfings assistant Sitkeons of 4 3 o4 full detalls of the tournament President McKinley were three men the United States army the Com ST e e e o Sl | I b Sl 2| S ety T ot | $ e, ST SO £ . dent of Columbla College, alfo 'spoke, The California players will be P. 4 | (hat ever nominated Jonn Spepmap fOF| & that a contract surgeon is neither 4 | e e Was most | 4 D.'Martin, Carolan, Hobart and To- 4 | Nelson Ozler and Jacob Hade, all of this [ 4 an officer nor an enlisted man, and + ; % bin. Mounts for all the players wiil city. 4 is not entitled to the 10 per cent in- 4 . KEARNY ST be furnished trom the stables of the 4 | Af the cemetery the servides were brief. | 4 crease in pay under the act of May + ’ ' 718 Market Street. . Stops the Cough Glenwood Polo Club. consisting of ritualistic dings and & | L 2 1900, >4 THURLOW BLOCK. Ahd works Off the cold, Laxative T - 2 c}untd :;ul’dl(& Shefl'n;lll wl?lv’:‘l;ozf:; + 3 4 * a ace 'side 10se O s 3 g Dy VPR s depa mone day. No Uit | @0 0 44 sttt b it brebetO hnr o G++++ 444 4444444444440 . S % {