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THE SAN FRAI‘}CISCO CATL _ MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1906, IRISH HOME RULE BILL IS Duke of Devonshire Deals a Heavy to Balfour’s Election Tactics. SIDE ISSUE Blow DEALT A HE QUESTION VY BLOW TO A OF HOME RULE yvernment ri; aifc accep! protectionists he the is avowedly hand says festo contends that ation has large- the protectic orgar wred by on of the e period m either power or i Duke ares in conclusion that it i t of Unionist free traders to take = as will prove that the Ur st party as a whole, whe 'S REMEDI Are You Tired, Nervous and Sleepless ? Nervousness and sleeplessness nze us- uelly due to the fact that the nerves are | | Discussing the relative advantages of | not fed on properly nourishing blood: they are starved nerves. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery makes pure, blood, and thereby the nerves are nourished and all the organs of are run at smoothly as machin- ery which ru n ofl. In this way you feel clean, strong and strenuous—you are toned up and invigorated, and you are good for a whole lot of physical or mental work. Best of all, the strength and in- eresse in vitality and health are lasting. The trouble with most tonics and med- fcines wh have a large, booming sale for a short time, is that they are largely composed of alcohol holding the drugs in solution. This alcohol shrinks up the red bilood corpuscles, and in the Jong run greatily injures the system. One may feel exhi ed and better for the time being, yet in the end weakened and with vitality decreased. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery contains no aleohol. Every bottle of it bears upon its wrapper The Badge of Honesty. a full list of all its several ingredients. offer good s to insult your intelligence. Every ingredient enteri world-famed "Golden Medical Discovery ” #has the unanimous approval and endorse- ment of the leading medical anthorities of all the several schools of practice. No other medicine sold through druggists for like purposes has any such endorsement. The “Golden Medical Discovery” only produces all the ¢wod effocts to obtained from the use of Golden Scal root, in all stomach, liver- and bowel wroubles, as in dyspepsia, biliousness, con- stipation, ulceration of stomach and bowels and kindred allments, but the Golden Seal root used in it§ compound- ing is greatly enhanced in it curative ac- tion by other ingredients such as Stone root, Black Cherrybark, Bloodroot, Man- drake root and chemically pure triple- refined &yeefine. “The Common Sense Mzlical Adviser,” §s sent free in paper covess on receipt of 21 oue-cent stamps to pay the cost of maii- " For 31 stamps the cloth-bound N el o sont. Address Dr. E. V. a nflu.Bu N.Y.‘ . Plerce’s Pellets cure con- siipation, and headache. | Inerease o the | For the druggist to | ou something ke claims 18 "just as | into the | | commi | by whe is still un- a retrograde fiscal policy, er it may be proposed. in opposition, ;.l APAN WANTS HARBOR | TO RIVAL SHANGHAI €1 f Island Empire’s I'rade Cause Demand for Facilities. | WASHINGTON, Dec. ‘That the Jap- are a far is shown by he way they build for the future. Con- sul Sharp of Kobe has sent to the Depart- anese seeing race ment of Commerce and Labor a clipping from the Chronicle, a Japanese paper glish, which deals with the determination of the Japan harbor that will rival Shanghai, kong, or even large Western citl Mr. Takugaro, a leading citizen of Osak: s it is time for Japan to move fd He points to the work in the past uropeans and Americans in building rade on the Atlantic, and contends the me thing possible on the Pacific. America, China, Japan, India and Aus- tralia are the lands visibly Interested in | xlhv era opening in the Orient and on.the ac The country or countries favorably situ- | ated for trade, he says, are sure to be | benefited by every movement forward. | Japan is already doing business with the principal countries on the Pacific, and is eagerly looking forward to the time when it will be able to extend its trade into all parts of the world. To do this it will need facilities for handling, forwarding, re- ceiving and transporting goods. Panama, Mr. Nakahashi thinks, is to be the lead- ing port on the Pacific, followed in Im- | portance by San Francisco, Seattle, Van | couver and Portland. No important por is possible on the Sout. American coast, for geographical conditions will not per- mit it. .In Asia Hongkong, Shanghai, Osaka, Manila and -Dalny are to be the ports, and important in the order indi- cated. All of these are capable of being improved and doubtless will be as trade increases. ward | E the several principal commercial ports of the East, Mr. Nakahashi says: “Manila will not, despite the desires and efforts of Americans, develop into a first-class tradal port owing to the fact that, apart from the torrid climate, it has neither factories of importance nor a large field for inland trade, while, as an intermediate port for China, Japan, or | Korea, the distance is too great and fuel 100 dear. The same may be said 6f Dalny to a certain extent, with the only excep- tion fn its fayor that as a terminus of a 5k-mile railway malls and a certain class of travelers will pass through the place. But so long as raflway freight | can not successfully compete with steam- | snips, anu Eastern Siberia and Northern | Manchuria remain more densely. pop- | populated than Southern Manchuria, Dalny will remain a second-class tradal | port. It s therefore only - Hongkong, | Shanghai and Osaka which possess qulifications that will enable them 0 de- important velop into | poriums in East As MEXICAN MINISTER TIRES OF SERVICE | Republic’s Representative in | England Will Close Long Career. CITY OF MEXICO, Dec. 3i.—General Pedro Rincon Gallardo, Mexican Minister to England, is sald to contemplate retir- ing to ‘private life. He has been long in the diplomatic service, having occupled the place of Minister to Russia and also to Germany before going to London. i Rumor names as his successor at the court of St. James Governor Landa of the federal district, and Felix Diaz, now Chief of Police, 2s Landa’s successor as Governor of the federal district. commercial ¢m- , | they had trouble and were divorced. RICH WINER (UTS THROAT A HOTEL Frank Phiscator, One of the Lucky Crowd That Stam- peded From Forty-Mile to Klondike, Fnds His Life EXCESSIVE DRINK CAUSES DESPONDENCY Former Wife’s Visit Pre- cedes Rash Act, Which| Was Culmination of Re-| cent- Threats of Suicide| —_— | Frank Phiscator, a millionaire Alaskan | | miner, énded his life yesterday in his |apartments in the second floor of the | Grand Hotel by cutting his throat with a razor. He had been drinking for some | | weeks and is supposed to have brooded |over a former wife from whom ‘he had | been divorced. Phiscator had been'living at the hotel for severa! months and frequently con- | | fided to Iriends there that he had mar- | | ried a beautiful young woman, but that Yesterday Mrs. Edna V. Phiscator, | once his wife, called at the hotel short- | ;iy before noon and inguired whether | | Phiscator was there. The attendants of the hotel say she went to his room and { knocked at his door, having been there {twice before during the day. There | was no. response. The woman suspected that something had gone wrong within and sheé notified | the head porter, James Oliphant, of her fears. The door of the room was locked | {and it was n ssary for him to gain entrance by climbing through the tran- som. A | Lying on the bed was Phiscator with blood flowing from a wound in the throat. | Beside him was a razor with which he | had done the act. The woman appeared | to be greatly excited and to realize what | caused him to take his life. Dr. Long and two trained nurs { | vere | | summoned to the hotel and every possible | medical assistance was given the sufferer { They worked over him unceasingly for nearly ten hours, when he succumbed last | night about 9:30. i The hotel people notified Halstead's un- | dertaking establishment, who cailed for | | the body. When they found that it was | a case of suiclde they informed the | Morgue. The police were calied in and | they will make an investigation. | The woman stood beside Phiscator while the doctor was working over him, and | she said her first name was Edna and ad- | mitted he was her former husband. She left the hotel immediately. | It was learned later in the evening that | the unfortunate vietim of his own razor | telegraphed to his former wife on Thursday, who was in Port-| land, asking her to come to this | city. She arrived Saturday and remained at the Grand, occupying her own apart- Jnents. She then went to another hotel, but returned to the Grand at 9 o'clock | yesterday morning, then at 10. Phiscator | told her he was not yet up, so she re-| turned later and tried to enter the room. | | It was then that the man killed himself. | A friend of Phiscator, named McGi | livray. is said to have prevented Phisi | tor from shooting himself last week. The | miner was then despondent from drink, and threatened to shoot himself, but his | friend took away his revolver. | Phiscator was one of the pioneers of | | the Klondike and was at Forty Mile at | e to have a | | the time of the great discoveries. He | was associated with Clarence Berry and had rich claims on Bonanza Creek. | selection of the best representatives. | do police duty. | revolutionaries, and the troops were or- PEREL YIELDS 70 THE REBELS Governor of Puerta Plata Surrenders to the Revolu- tionists in Monte Christi TURKS ISLAND, British Wegt Indles, Dec. 3L.—Mail advices from Mg Géchristl, | Santo Domingo, say that General Perez, | Governor of Puerto Plata, has sur- | rendered to the revolutionists in Monte- christi. They also say that the Do- minican cruiser Independencia, loaded with ammunition, has been given up to General Deschamps, who with Generals Demetrio and Rodriguez has left for Puerto Plata with 250 men on board. General Barbar with 200 men is in Al- timira, a village fifteen miles from Puerto Plata. b, S e a0 CLASH IS PROBABLE. Authorities im Washington Expeet Trouble in San Domingo. WASHINGTON, Dec, 31.—The latest advices received at the State and Navy departments from San Domingo are mainly corroborative of the press dis- patches from the isiand and show that while conditlons are unsettled, all is quiet. As viewed In official circies here, the situation is serious and the belief is expressed.that a clash of the con- tending interests is probable. From the tone of the dispatches it is evident that both sides are anxious there shall be no interference with American in- terests and that their property and other rights shall not be jeopardized as a re- sult of internal troubles. They also show that telegrams from various por- tions of the island are being subjected to censorship. TIDAL WAVE DROWNS CAPTAIN AND MATE Roller in Vineyard Sound Overwhelms Vessel Sweep- ing Men to Death. ‘WOODSHOLE, Mass., Dec..31.—A great wave reaching almost tidal proportions rolled up Vineyard Sound last night and, overtaking the big five-masted schooner Henry O. Barrett, tumbled over the stern and swept overboard to their death Cap- tain Joshua Norton of , Me., commander of the vessel, and his mate, James Conley, of St. John, N. B. The wave carried away the deckhouse and did mueh -other damage to the ship. ———— |LIBERAL LEADER SAYS| WITTE MUST GO. Attacks the Policy of the Premier of Russia. e AssertsHonestyand Less D:xterity Is Needed. Continued from Page 1, Column 4. supplementary lists of those entitled to vote by the law of December 2th were published to-day. The fact that in the cities the electoral districts coincide with the police districts gives rise to the out- cry that when the country is “tranquil- ized” it is the purpose of the Govern- meut to control the elections. The Slovo warns the people to quit talking of revolution and to begin seri- ously the campaign for the douma by the Foreseeing the probability that it will be impossible to hold elections in the Bal- tic provinces, the Caucasus and other disturbed districts, the Government has | provided that when the certificates of | half the members elected are received, ! the dowma will be convened immediately. FAVOR TERRORIST PLAN. At a meeting of the Council of Work- men last night some delegates, pending ' the organization of an armed revolution, advocated a recourse to the old terrorist plan of instituting a tribunal to try and condemn officials guilty “of tyranny, to publish the reasons for such condemna- | tion and then to execute the verdict of | the tribunal. This, the delegates said, would be pref- erable to the indiscriminate killing of police and Cossacks who might be inno- cent. Not satisfied with the protection given by the secret police to Count Witte, whose life is in constant danger, officers of the Prebrajensky Guard Regiment were_detalled to guard the Premier, but riday they declined to do further /ice in this connection, saying it was beneath the dignity of guard officers to With the crushing of the revolt at Mos- cow interest is now transferred to other places where there are armed uprisings, especially to South Russia. Practically the entire Black Sea Littoral is under martial lJaw. Ekaterinoslav and the rail- road to the Crimea are in the hands of dered to-day to retake them at any cost. The situation is extremely bad at Bach- mut, n White Russla, where the coal fields are located. Berdicheff, the Jewish center of Dvinsk, Kherson, the whole dis- trict of Odessa, Kremenschug, Alexan- drovsky, and the territory along the rail- road between Moscow and Nizshni-Nov- gorod, were placed under martial law to- day. The revolt at Samara has been sup- pressed with much bloodshed, i BBy ISSUE_A MANIFESTO. Roman Deputies Declare Massacres Have Greatly Harmed Russia. ROME, Dec. 31.—Seventeen Senators and thirty-eight members of the Cham- ber of Deputies who formed themselves into a committee to organize a mani- festation against the massacres in Rus- sia to-day published a manifesto in which it is pointed out that the slaugh- ter in Russia had done greater damage to that nation than she had suffered by her military reverses in the Far East. The protest is without religious, politi- cal or soclal distinction. ey £ Succumbs to His Wounds. LONDON, Jan. 1.—A despatch. to a news agency from St. Petersburg says that General Bogdanovitch, Vice Governor General of Tamboff, Central Russia, who was wounded three times with revolver shots on December 28, has died of his wounds. TROUBLE BREWS N KENTUCKY Political Sky Overshadowed by Senatorial Deadlock and Beckham Is Wanted —_— FRANKFORT, Ky.,, Dec. 3L—With the Democratic Senate and House caucuses only twenty-four hours away Governor J. C. W. Beckham is being frequentiy mentioned as the man whose nomination would settle what promises to be one of the most memorable and stubborn Sen- atorial deadlocks In the history of Ken- tucky. During the past twenty-four hours the situation has changed but lit- tle, there being no perceptible variation in the strength of United States Senator J. C. 8. Blackburn and Thos. H. Paynter, the leaders, nor of W. B. Haldeman, the man who, with the smallest number of votes, apparently holds the key to the situation. The Haldeman men are appar- ently standing firm. ! quarrels, number 5111. Both sides are still claiming sufficient strength to nominate the Speaker of ths House, but as the Blackburn and Halde- man forces have apparently combined to organize the House, the poll of their an- nounced supporters seems numerically the stronger. However, the Speakership Is complicated by the fact that some of the legislators are not following the lines of division which prevail in the Senatorial fight. Lieutenant Governor Thorne has an- nounced that in case Governor Beckham should be put forward as a candidate he will resign, thus allowing the president of the Senate pro tem. to become Gov- ernor. The Licuteant Governor's an- nouncement was made, following pub- lished declarations that the leaders of the Democratic party would oppose any movement whereby he would succeed the Governorship. 'This opposition, it was said, was based on_alleged abuse of the pardoning power by Thorne while acting Governor, during the absence of Gov- ernor Beckham from’the State. Governor Beckham has several times declared that he is not a candidate, and has, as far as he could consistently do so, supported Judge Paynter. The Gov- ernor declared there would be a stam- pede to him in case Paynter should find it necessary to withdraw. g il GIVES SUPPORT TO BLACKBURN. Kentucky’'s Junior Senntor Comes Out for Colleague in the Contest. FRANKFORT, Ky., Dec. 31.—Senator James B. McCreary, Senator Black- burn’s junior colleague, arrived to-day and to-night gave out a statement that Senator Blackburn would have his hearty support during the coming con- test. Half a dozen Congressmen are also in Frankfort watching the situa- tion. 5 Congressman Ollie H. James may be | yoted on as a e, he used. 3 TAKING OF LIFE 15 ON INCREASE Statistics Show Number of Murders and Suicides Has Gained With Population CHICAGO, Dec. 81.—Unofficial statistics of the closing year show that the num- ber of murders and suicides in this courn- try has greatly increased and that there has been a decrease in number of legal | executions compared with the number of homicides. The homicides and deaths by violence total 8212, 4s compared with 8432 last year. The starlting feature of record is the increase in murders committed by high- waymen, being 582 against 484 during 1904. Four years ago the ,iumber was only 103. Jealousy liquor 642. provoked 519 murders and Homicides, growing out of The record of self- destruction Is one of the most deplorable of the year, the humber of prominent men_ being much larger than hitherto. The total is 9982, an increase of 542 over the Iist of the preceding year. The steadi- ness of the increase is indicated in the followingsitable: In 1889, 5340; in 1900, 6773; in 1901, ; in 1902, 8597; in 1904, 9240; in 1905, 9982. The proportion of suicides between men and women remains about the same, nearly twice as many men as women tak- ing their own lives. WRECK OF THE PASS OF MELFORT FOUND Settlers at Vancouver Island Locate the I11-Fated Vessel. VICTORIA, B. C., Dec. 31.—The steam- ship Queen City, from the west coast of Vancouver Island, reports that the set- tlers at Ucluelet have located the wreck of the bark Pass of Melfort, which went ashore on the night of December 26 near Amphitrite Point and was lost, with thir- ty-five men. The hull bumped over the reef fifty yards from shore and lies submerged, Wwith two stumps of masts showing al- most against the high rocks. Several bodies were seen by the settlers in the surf, but nene of them was recovered up to Saturday night. Wreckage from the ‘bark is now scattered, and some is coming ashore more to the westward, mostly in Wreck Bay and along the beach between Ucluelet and Clayoquot. It is expected that more bodies will come ashore. VANCOUVER LOGS WILL GIVE SAN DIEGO FUEL Portland Man Will Tow Rafts s From Canadian Saw- mills. WASHINGTON, Dec. 31.—Consul Dudley, of Vancouver, has reported to the Department of Commerce and La- bor that Captain C. H. Robertson, of Portland, Or., proposes to purchase fir loge which the sawmills of British Co- lumbia will not use, build them into enormous rafts, and tow them to San | Diego, to be there cut into firewood and sold. The consul writes: “The provincial law requires all logs cut upon provincial lands to be manu- factured within the province. Captain Robertson hopes some way may be found to modify the law so as to allow the export of the inferior quality, which is as good as any for his pur- pose. If allowed to raft the logs, Cap- tain Robertson said he would make considerable purchases of lumber from the local ‘mills, placing the same upon the top of his rafts for truasportation. The captain expressed the belief that he could tow mammoth rafts to San Diego at a cost not exceeding $2 per 1000 feet, while cord wood can be sold there for $12 per cord. “The rafts, which Captain Robertson has demonstrated can be safely towed on this coast, frequently attain a draft of twenty-five feet. They are bullt from the ground up, as it were, and are put together with as much care as the ribs and planking of a ship. Great chain cables hold the gigantic rafts together, and everything is made fast before they put to sea in tow of power- ful tugs. ‘Captain Robertson that he would use a site on the Fraser River, near its moath, for the making up of his rafts. The reason for build- ing them on the Fraser River is that in fresh water the logs would not be eaten into by the teredo. The‘loeal lum- bermen are likely to assist in this ef- fort to induce the Government to amend t e law in favor of the enterprise.” —_————————— ‘When Henry Fielding Dickens, the well- known K. C.., was 12 years old he wrote and published, single-handed, a maga- zine entitled Gad's Hill Gazette, which | chronicled the movements of his famous father’s household. | company with five other men, Cane went } on Alamitos Bay. states | The New Year finds us prepared to call your attention to Hood’s Sarsaparilla with renewed vig&r. inspired by the con~ stantly increasing evidence of the good this medicine is doing. In merit, sales and cures, Hood’s Sarsaparilla has far passed all other medicines, and the cess has but just begun. The abiding confidence of the sur- indicationts are that its great suc- ‘. people in s Sarsaparilla is the strongest proof of its unequaled merit as a Frcfn blood-purify=~ / ing medicine. * After being before the public its wonderful power to cure and the confidence merit are demonstrated by the fact that in th ceived more testimonials than in tory—over 40,000. No other medicine has held so icine world for so long a time. rter of a century, e people in.its ast“;wo years it re- © yeurs of its his- more than a qu; any other prominent & position'in the med- No other medicine possesses so great/ merit nor effests such marvelous cures. No other medicine has been so gen standard blood purifier, and stomach, liv No other medicine has ever reached of diseases and ailments to which flesh i No other medicine will do you so much satisfaction as Hood’s Sarsaparilia. v recoguized- as: the and kidney .remedy: nd eured so wide a range heir. uch good and give-you so b Grateful for your past patronage ‘Pnd soliciting a eontinunance thereof with your commendation of Hood's Sarsaparifla- to your friends, we are, | . Very truly yours, HO®F: CO., Lowell, Mass. STENERIL | THNELS ALONE Little Swedish Girl Ji ourne_v-s Unaccompanied for More| Than Eight Thousand Miles GALVESTON, Tex., Dec. 31.—Elsie Eng- strom, a little Swedish girl, 7 years of age, to-day landed from the North Ger- man Lloyd steamer Breslau and started on the last stage of a journey of 45| miles to meet her uncle in San Francisco, with whom she will make her home. She made the long journey from Southern | Germany to Bremen, at which port she boarded the Breslau and came to Galves- ton. This morning she started, and was placed aboard the Southern Pacific train for her overland trip to the Pacific Coast. A letter was given to the conductor con- taining instructions, «nd this will be passed frcm one conductor to the "’4{"' at division points, and no trouble is A¥- ticipated in getting the unattended gir! Jo her destination. She is a bright-app2ar- ing child, and although traveling alone seems to be enjoying the situation and Is intensely interested in the new sighty that greet her. / ‘While on board the ship she was a great favorite and was much petted, ever by those who could not talk her language. According to instructions, expense money was furnished her at the North Geyman Lioyd office in this city. HUNTER IS FATALLY HURT BY DEAD DUCK Thrown Into His Boat It Strikes Gun and Dis- charges It. Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, Dec. 3L—Lyirg on a cot at the Woodside Hospital in this eity, Miles Cane, a tenant of the Fred Bixby ranch, near Long Beach, ~ hovers betweefi~ life and death, the - Vic- tim of a peculiar shooting accident.. In out early this morning to shodt ducks There were tWo boats in use. Cane was alone in one of these. Each of the two parties secured a string of ducks, and finally ope of the men shot an unusually fine duck. which fell near the boat. He paddled/over to it and determined to give it to Cane in the other boat. Pulling it out of fthe water, he threw it over 'to Cane. As it fell into the boat it struck a gun lying the seat. The gun was discharged and the entire charge struck Cane in the breast, tear- ing a fearful hole close to the heart. He cannot live. —_———— The Roman courts have 4fcided that there is no copyright in sna t photo- graphs. Board of Health on the A feiign 1o 1.0180 10532 above is an exact copy of the report “A HAPPY NEW |, YEAR TO ALL” Y::ershoilddfinkthistomwitbn Cascade Beer is an absolutely pure Chenmist in his of beer sold in this city has conceded ! CASCADE BEER BSOLUTELY PURE The following analysis shows and proves its wonderful pusity : 6.41 is fact whea buying beer and always ask for Cascade. DEGIDES STATE NKING POLICY Yew York’s Syscem ix Matter of Failures Criticised by Superintendent of Banks ALBANY, N. Y., Dee. 31.—Criticisms of the policy of the State Banking Depart- ment, especially in connection with the fallure of certain banking institutions of the State during the past year, form an impertant part of the annual report of Frederick D. Kilburn, Superintendent of Banks, to the Legisiature, made public to-night. Mr. Kilburn also had some In- teresting things to say of the swindling of immigrants. ‘“‘After a bank fails,” says Mr. Kilburn, “and disclosures of dishonesty are made,. it is wondered why such things could Sor on undiscovered so long. It must be ry membered that these frauds and deg tigrg are in most instaaces _ggifi nm on by men of unusual abilit stand very high among their neighbors, not only in business but alse in seefal, religious and political matters. Almost invariably they deceive the whole com- munity, their business associgtes, thefr friends and even their families. It Is fre- quently an astonishing revelation to all of these that the banker who has falled. defaulted and perhaps absconded or kifled himself, is not a man of wealth, as weil as the ideal of homor and business im- tegrity.” He recommends that the banking de- partment should have authority over rail- road and steamship ticket seiling agencies, which in conjunction with their business, recetve deposits of money foe transmission to foreign countries. It is charged, Mr. Kilburn says, that through some of these agencies “Immigrants ars swindled out of more than one million dollars every year—a part by flight of tho ‘bankers’ after thev have ac deposits of from five thousand to fifty thousand dollars, but mere by their ac~ cepting funds from newly arrived immi- grants for the purchase of steamship tickets, with agreement to transmit them to friends or relatives of the immigrants in Europe.” These funds or tickets, he says, are often times not transmitted, and when complaint is made to the banker the jm- migrant is tricked or frightened Inte. not carrying the matter further. Of the general condition of the banks of the State the Superinténdent says that the increase for the year in the aggre- gate resources has been 354,000,000 and for two years $140,000,000, representing “a total never before equaled. Of savings banks the report says that the growth of deposifs from July 1. 1904, to July 1, 1905, was $86,836,555, an amount larger by about $15,000,000 than was ever reported before for any one year. —_———— LONDON, Dec. 31.—Mrs. Fanny Field Andrews, daughter of the late Cyrus W. Field, djed at Richmond yesterday. report tO the | Total 1 Densit 0o, e (Prowcs) per b - oo %on per liter by volume not included Normal 1.0161 6.11 2176 0271 547 0 Cascade 2044 516 0 Steam The Gity Chemt's analyss on e at the City b {