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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 12, 1897)
WON HALF A MILLION BELL'S REM ARK ABLE SPECULA TION IN WALL STREET. Old Thnrrn Marvel «t HI* Fearing 11»• Kntrrrd the stork Cvcliangr a* I lie lutiridtor of a Smatl t-ortoii*' Modest anil Krilriiig. (New York Letter.) N the cttlnilnatlon of a (I a ring coup on the stock exchange the other day Mr. Ixnils V. Hell, a 1 comparativ ely young man, eonsid ered by many to In. the leader of a new generation of spec nlators on Wall street, realized a | stint estimated at ltalf a million dol lars. Mr. Louis V. Hell Is a stocky mart with a strong face. His express ion of countenance might lead :t easna observer to believe him a comedian o! merit. lie has shrewd eyes and a genial, hearty manner. There Is no more popular man on the Exchange He Is a genius. The enormous fortune Mr. Hell cleared up in one day was not gained by chance. It was the result ot shrewd figuring. The hulk of It was realized on the drop in stock of the Manhattan Elevated railroad. Six <l iy.i before Mr. Hell began to sell Manhat tan, He is a hold operator, and when j; lie goes In to sell It Is not long before the market feels it, In six days he sold 20,1)00 to 25,000 shares. Then, when t lit stock was dropping down and down, and circumstances were iin|X’lllng ev erybody owning the stock to unload. f ^ Mr. Hell started In to buy. He bought right and left. Block that was worth from 100 to 104 when he wild It he bought in at about SO. Before the army of speculators realized It, he h id cleared hundreds of thousands of dollars. The Block exchange history of Mr Louis V. Hell is Interesting. He comei LOl lS V. BELL. of an old New York family. Mis failier Mr. Isaac Bell, was a well-known citi mi. For generations there has been an Isaac Bell in the Bell family, and , there is an Isaac Bell In it today, a brother of the new leader in Wall street speculation. Mr. Bell lias blue blood in his veins. He was horn in the pur ple. His lineage shows the effect of cul ture. In 1875, when a young man of 21 Mr. Louis V. Bell was admitted to the floor of the Stock exchange. He was mild and gentle in his way. and was soon a great favorite with the younger set. The old men looked at him ask ance. They gathered together and prophesied disaster fdr him. He was young, a man of family and fortune lie was a college man, with a meagre business training. According to all precedents—with a few exceptions he was due to lose his fortune and be come an incubus on the street. Today he is a millionaire and his deal of a day or two ago has set the speculative world agog- Many of the old men who pro plicated disaster for the smooth-vlsageo collegian lie In unknown grave*. Louis V. Bell spent fifteen years on the Stock exchange before he beiian to go into the market to the extent that plungers do. It was not until 1MM that he did anythin* to create particular re mark. This year, in conjunction with other bear*, numerous and Influential, he began to pound the market along In the spring. Mr. Bell was the leader in this movement. He figured that the enormous floating debt* of many of the railroads were slowly but surely fore Y ing ihem Into the hand* of reeelvers. and lhat he was right »«» shown In 1*93, when nothing but the enormous . run* saved them By the end of July ihe market wee hud, and the bear eyn dlraie was In I he way to make u lot of money Karlv «n August Mr Hell and Washington K Conner began lo hoy. They started the great boll market tu tuaust and realised a great famine tu the advance in sloths, It so then that Mr Bell showed for the Bret time the wuelltiee lhat make bun remarkable ae a speculator Itieteed of binging to the hear aide It wea dle<o»*r*d that he bed gone user M the bull*, and waa *urking juat a* hard for tile advance of aiwrbe ae be had gsevlaualy ant bed to keutmrr them down When McKinley was nominated |g fH Unit mere wa* a (liasi hull mureiw.nl lu Wall street The Bret man to veil the market Sm Mi Belt Other bulla tu! loved hie head and they aotd ail the way down the Mae Item H iw aa potnta Hut he hnev when to lei go About a three weeks before the el#. Him ho he gau to buy in The other bulla ore. .laved They uero m*t sure mat d. Winlei uoe lo ha elected but Mr Beil van euro enough tu tab* a raetn e tl« uao M both ardea of the USOtMl at oneo. and uhea he bel«need up bta ae iveatr he found himself |/keeue tu the g.md Thta In the new leader ut Wall street Men Him I mute Bell end Mow tl«v Worms?: who asede e Iw»h« In power lees euntrno et.» tall < Ike places of the old-time lenders like Art d run Canimaek. Hell nnd Wornisrr Kir** considered the leaders of a new re gime. Tlielr method.* are similar, but it is thought Hell lit the holder spec ulator. and the wiser. EARLY THEOLOGICAL ZOOLOCY Tlir M#4|Ih*vmI IniMKimitifHi ritty***! I nri «»u«ly wil li III** r* Ili-tin. Of marine animals the early Chris tian philosophers knew little, but nat urally they heard of the whale and found important meanings In hirn. says Appleton’s Monthly. One of the lessons taught by the whale Is given hk follows: "When he Is hungry he opfyiK wide his mouth seaward and a pleasant odor Issues from his maw. so that other fishes are deceived and swim eagerly towards the place whence this sweet odor comes. In headless shoals they enter Into his extended Jaws: then suddenly the grim guilts close and crush their prey. Thus the devil al lures men to their destruction aid closes upon them the barred gates* of hell." The mediaeval Imagination played eurlousl> about the pelican. A tvie of tli*. atonement was found In the sttp pored fact that the pelican tears open its breast and feeds Its young with its own blood. New value was given to the pelican by that great think* r. Si. Augustine. Writing upon the passage In the One hundred and second I’salm “1 am become like a pelican lit the wilderness" he says: “The males of these birds are wont to kill tholr young by blows of their beaks and then to be wail their death for the space of three .11 I 'I I fx, I ||, llUWf » >1 , III?" I'limr inflicts u severe wound on herself and. letting the blood How over lint dead ones, brings them to life again.'' PLIGHT OF TWO SOCIETY MEN. llri'SN In a ItaggMgc ( nr hut Arc on Time hi a Ihmre. Two young society men who left town rut mi af ernoon express train to attend a dance at Ismux had a most amusing experience not long ago, says the New York Mall and Express. The train loti considerable time ami a eure fttl estimate, gf the time required to dress and rca'li the dance on their ar rival showed these young men that they would lie very late Indeed. A way out of the difficulty was found by one of the young men, who made the suggestion that they dress in the bag gage car and then they could proceed to the dance Immediately upon the ar rival of the train. They went to ih‘ car, found their dress suit cases and proceeded to change their attire. Clothes of all kinds were scattered aboil! the car. when the door opened suddenly and the conductor came In. He took in tlic situation at a glance and laughed heartily at the plight of the young tncn. Although one of them landed at the station with dress clothes, no tie and yellow shoes, he quickly n medieil these defects and drove at once to the house where the entertain ment was bring given. These young men had their dance anil were not very late, owing to their acrobatic perform ance on a train going over a very rough road at forty miles an hour and fifty minutes late at that. PIONEER PENSION ATTORNEY. I>cat li of » VIaii Who W orkeil /.cMlmmly for flrnnit Army Vli-n. (Washington letter.) Capt. George K. Lemon, the pioneer pension attorney, whose death occurred the other day in California, was known to nearly every Grand Army man In the I’nlred States cither personally or by reputation as the publisher of the soldiers’, organ, the National Tribune Captain Lemon's business career was remarkably successful. It was while settling up his own account as an army officer aud those of a few comrades at the war department after the close of the rebellion that the idea of acting as a prosecutor of pension claims oc curred to him, and he at once opened an office at Washington. Ills business grew rapidly, and in a few years he had THK I.VTB OKORtlK K about inn, mm . hmi* and rmplo»ita moiw than a huntlrad tlrrk* llr t«o»h thr land in framing pritalon IrglaloUtitt and lot! far hi* aral In Ikla dlrrvltuH mam of thr prualon ntraatirrt that wa grran *n.»> 1*4 into Ian * aottUI not Halt bran |m»**4 Thr l*»* Hard b> cot giro* for a motion allot to*> a are- rig Idlt ndhrrrd la k) t'lfttalM IruwiH agrn> < ''ap'aio U«biii a a* a band autur man of llttr ptitatynr an>l aol dtrrl) hrarlng llr »a« adahl. g> ntol grnrnota and bad an tint of ft trod* llr »>«n Mt*rv|v4 ami Ihr ••«!* n**at rrlailtr •*» <o»r h*«ohr> a •irrgtman traiding in HoRala \ V Hon of to daoot«*tn«tog fkt HtoohHn *at*h>’«ar root par"* haring amadama rd a n«a fmtott ba« Man #r* trd l*M «hn» atratMMM dgtbm Thr rid >*»'« art bring gtoHrl do an and 11 <**t *4 rm »*•«•.» na>r barn at noth minging Ihr boot at»4 diggtwr ihr dtfl not •»* Ihr rink* Thr a wag ing* nnd 4l»* hatr tw.n t*u *4 oak amaltrt a and «->M tank n a* It hat bahn tar »m«4 IT IS FITTING GAME FOR THE BEST SPORTSMEN IN THE WORLD. ICxrltlng l:i|tfrlni<’r with a MwrUhor .Maddened from rain. I lie Frenzied Hall MiuikM the Follower, Wlio Mys teriously l)lMM|t|ieared. (Special f/'tter.) *K 7T ,l- J- S STONE, /\/\ late deputy IllSper / ^ \ tor-general of Po- : l / t* He** In the western j circle of the north- j west provinces of India, writes enter- i talnlngly of a hunt- j lug trip In a region <?f the Himalaya j ' ' ' mountains. T h e country he visited Is Kashmir, and its game in chief com prises the markhor, ibex, wild sheep, brown or snow bear, and musk deer all worthy the rifle of the best sports man In existence. The markhor is a beast that innsi lie further explained that ill** accompanying Illustration may serve Its purpose. Conspicuous t and noble are the horns of ibis speci men of the goat family, which are large and fat, first branching out wide ly, and then going up nearly straight until -Instances arc known a length Is attained along the curve of over 00 Inches. The height of this animal Is between 10 and 11 hands, He Is un gainly lo see, of shaggy coat anil long hair, hut he Is wonderfully active among rocks and precipices, and dwells In the most inaccessible ground. In summer he retreats before the village flocks that seek fresh grass near the TEACHES LANGUAGE UY MAIL.!' tw to WIil 'Ii p I nift uir II.;s l*ut the rtio'iovrapli. By means of a novel application of the phonograph, New York has become the center of a cew industry for the study of languages. Phonographs load ed sllli a variety of foreign tongues are now sen: out from New York to all parts of the country. The man who has adapted the phonograph to this profession b It. It Cortina, and he lias been so successful that already he lias sent out over .Vio machines, all loaded with his instruction and primed with Ills voice. Ills method Is simple, With each phonograph there is sent his text book, twenty loaded cylinders and twenty blank ones. Each lesson In the book Is arranged in the form of ques tIons and answers. The pupil, ready lo begin, puis Die cylinder of the first lesson in the machine, the tubes In his ears and starts the phonograph. Keeping Ills eyes on the hook, he hears the words and phrases repeated, with their proper accent, just as If the professor stood at his side. There .s an additional advantage that the les son can lie repeated twenty or a hun dred times if necessary, until every sound Is familiar to the pupil. Then, having thoroughly learned these sen tences, he puts one of Ills unused cyl inders In the machine anti repeats the lesson. In a little paper box the cyl inder comes back lo New York, and at his earliest opportunity Mr. Cortina pops It Into his own machine. At his side Is I he stenographer. As he lie tens to the lesson repeated back, now stopping the phonograph, now starling It going again, lie dictates his criticism, where the pronunciation is wrong, what is right, what the mistakes are, and where they have been made. The letttjr and the cylinder go hack to the TUB MARKHOR. snow line, and so reaches the open slopes near th“ top of the ranges, where he may he seen near the ibex, another member of the goat family, more plen tiful anil more easily shot, than (he markhor. Markhor ami ibex shooting is no slaughter. Mr. Stone spent 31 days in one expedition, with servants, undergoing much rottRh and hard work, and bagged hut two markhor and three Ibex. One markhor he shot while leaning over a precipice, his servant bolding his belt. The distance was 3.V) yards. AH the game in this sort of hunting Is reconnoitered with the telescope. Mr. Slone notes that in the Valley of llupsha in Thibet, be tween 14.000 and 15,000 feet high, the water frees*** every night of the year, and that the 500 people In the 4.000 square miles of the tract live In Yakut' goat*’ hair lenta the year around. With a wild yak the sportsman bad an ex citing exiierlenre. He opened Are at the beast at ISO varda with u Winches ter. as the bull climb*d a hill lu from of him. Then he began work with a double barreled express rllle, rrlpp.'itit tHe bull. Then the Infuriated bull, act ing one of tho author's followers charg ed The man Aril beneath a risk, a* huts In the lllustration, and tbs bull was posited Tbs tableau was Inter#*’ itia, hut crltb-a'. fh# bull meant but' upm do ib# hunter put an express hul |*i in bt» rhsst and down thundered the enraged beast A ballet in the .h’oildet Ani*h#tl Idm These espr#** bullets tear a victim isrrthly Ikon Una* sf ’b> tab nr re tom. and ths . h#*t tlui* w«nl through the body. |M ** m 9 UIM4P lM>nv«t | »l4t III ill ih# 9#»t 'toUaitlUHl «f »9» fir9 lu >'iui9 • hirli 94* I'tilillr M rrt-mitf t 49 KhiI m * ffcr j**'i * 9#9* Ui fill* «4t M 1 t trill *» 9 ’'I* * %* III .fill) bl*9 t*‘9 1 • 19 % 9*9«* 4 ni)Hf ’HiiTAtitiiM i#w ‘Nil 4»f <4?i« ! i9«l h ill 9 i9M» 9 91 *9# Ml* III ♦ % fc.i 1 11 >414 |ti 4|*4t4* I tl * * 4 IHiWa ! 9a49 Will 99f« 19 1 I - *| d»4 i*9 | f t * 494'9494g »tHf 1 Mv«*itvtlM4«t . (91994 (414 it l4«l ' V#9 V. it 1 99# % Iftfutlllll *N II I dll fe § 4 |9f| | 4 i«| 1**1 ft4 • «M pupil, who reads and listens to his own voice reproduced. Then, taking up the original cylinder once more, he U able to tell just where the difference lies. S«r|txc*rlMii<r« Dr. Adolphe Deucher, who was re cently elected to the position of presi dent of the Swiss Confederation, was born at Stcekborn. Canton of Thurgau, in 1831, and received a medical educa tion in the ('Diversities of Hcidelburg. Zurich. 1‘rague and Vienna, lie was elected a member of the I’pper house of the Thurgau council in ISati. and, after holding the office of president of that body for three consecutive terms, he became a member of the National PHItXIl’KNT liKl'CHKN **NM» nfcrfa hr .M»r«| f»» •<«*«in ; »*•!• Un INI In |V* Ml • J« 4 *#»* II* # i.tnWva 4 «!«••« t IwMi l hat* i* a Mi*« *M • in »« Imh ‘Utahu KuaHai* i«*MH*iaih 4««*« »* t|w««a KIImMIIi » Pm hai l‘«t*i |; im • at • t»**M » Itli i»4 |li(«*llll hi |M I till |< Mill |t| U kwh K>t#a!» ih lUMINili Imii N * )<M*a an*l *•»••• a.»»»«ai*«i ntth a*. *»»«• In ha- t*H#' In lha nmtt.m H»',lt*>4 «i « kl«4 «»* mia • *f ttM at Mat* S k«a | _ _ - — I MIGUEL VEJAR SAID TO BE 130 YEARS OF AGE. I«* I* si llal f - Itri’nl Indian Him I.ivci t In ftouttirrn 4 allfnrnla Horn »ii North ern 'l»alco Nona of lilt t .•lldren >m» 1.1% IIIif. * I.on Angeles Letter.) HE oldest pe ' living in the Ui State* Is a breed Indian, .Mi guel Vejar, who live* In the valley of the San Jacinto, In Riverside coun ty. He lit i:m years _ old. In 1891, Chief - “ Crba/.a died on the tribal reservation near San Diego, aged 127 year*. Miguel Vejar wa* horn In Northern Mexico at tbout 176(5. Ilia wonderful age Is veri fied by the record* I bat were carefully kept until 1811 by the priest* In the I'YunelHcHti Missions of Southern Cali fornia. In 1811 they were transferred to the cathedral of San Luis Key', In I lie City of Mexico. Among the San Diego record* of the Indian* I* the statement, dated Aug. !», 1788. that "Mi guel Vejar, a Mexican Indian, rather Intelligent, of good habit* and very induKtt'ioii*. aged 22,” wa* a vaquero of the iiiIknIoh herd*. In March, 171*1, there I* an entry of the birth of a fe ll.ale child lo Miguel Vejar, aged 25, and hi* wife I.ugardo, aged 21. The record of the San Habrlel inis .Ion, now In the cathedral In the City of Mexico, show* that Miguel Vejar, "non of Mexican and Indian parentage, and aged :il year*.” was baptized In the mission by Father Komcro. Faster Sun day, March. 17!*f*. The late Don Pico, who wa* the last Spanish governor In California, said a few years ago that he remembered Miguel Vejar In 1844. and that the man wa* then upward of 80 year* of age. Many people femem ber when Miguel passed lit* one hun dredth birthday. When President Har rison wa* In California In 18U1 old Ml MIG ( El- VEJAR, aged 1J0 years. gitel wag brought from Ills miserable old bouse In San Jacinto valley, and presented to General Harrison as the oldest man In the United States. At that lime the old fellow was able to speak a little broken English, and told a few facts In the story of Ills life. Since then his memory of English words has completely failed, and when lie now speaks at all il is in a mixture of Spanish ami Cohllla Indian dialect. Miguel Vejar has been married twice. His first wife was killed in an earth quake In 1 SOli. He married a young squaw a year later. She died In IK7<>. He haH been the father of thirteen chil dren. none of whom now lives. His last child died, aged 90, in San Juan. He has a dozen more grandchildren scat tered among the half-breed Indian tribes in Southern California and Mexico, but he knows none of them, and no recollection of their names. There can be no doubt he has over 100 great-grandchildren, whom he never knew, and a large number of great Kteat-grandchildren. (iniiMlfur of mii One of the Ice scenes which Dr. Nan sen bus described Includes an enor mous berg, of which he writes as fol lows: "From Its Hp rose two points like slender church spires, high Into the air. Fur up on lls dlff-llke side was u huge hole, passing like a tunnel out through the whole mass of Ice, and down below the *e» had hollowed out grottoes so laigc that u small ship could readily have ridden within their shelter. Ill llliw cavltle.1 there wrere i«tArvolmitt rffiM Im uilti Itntu of hint* tanging to the .leepcat Ultramarttt«- In their In moot rci-ewea, The whole form* nl a iloatlUK fairy palaee, hulll of e.ipphtrra. about the ante* of which brook# ran anil raa.aile# fell, while the Mitiml of 'trapping water m hoeit unreal logly Itoai the catertia at Ita linw When n»e come# a.. .unM. • brig# of thl* Itiml. which h«p|M-ttk now amt again, a wraith of bmuij i# foomi In famaattr torn*# ami play nf color which abaurb* (wr'a whole Hoagiii#ttun ami eurrtca ore hark to lb* w.imicra ami my Merle* i f th« fairy laml of chlWhoml “ I UonaTer Mwelltug ll>«M. Ilogi of ">• bug# town* |n Krauc# ibtttalM Win harm* towUel 4 welling. m l.mmeni horme*, *buh have keep tilg mh l with the on '•Iie-Iiu. appelM'ion of hanaik* toil mm* ml thee* bam «t aim.I to the lotiMoal prwuucllauo ol th. I'|> thin# ' #lt<Mte at 4 a Mew „ nk of Vienna Thl# fcolMlng ho# 14 rail »a«A» ami ar.iMumcMoira in; | . .*««« he longing t» all rhtaawa el u i*t V ttn» poniman u> ■#*• tally aivw.tt. ■ il it# 4*11*01! letter* in the inmate* whore .o'.•*!»• *o4*hi* ha.* to hi car* .1 lo put no «h* corer hm to*relv ik t hrtaitau hum* amt ih* mi > we ate nf tfe* *4>lteae#e hoi the number ef the »«i4 the nrlmw, emt 'h« In if that » am the let let tv lew* it* .Je*..g. KING JAMES ON TOBACCO. Mr Wulicr ll;i!«*l»li Knew Hume Shitme* ful *»ri'n*t \bnat Him. The work published by King James best known to the generality of read era in his famous '‘(‘ounterblaste to Tobacco,” says the Westminster Re view, Tile first also it was which he Issued after succeeding to the throne of Kiighind. His reason for entering the lists against the new and popular haldt of smoking was, as he Informs us in the early pages of the treatise, because It was a habit sinful In tho sight of (>od and foolish in the eatitna ^oii of the world. But these reasons \lng scarcely considered sufficient he goes-on to ridicule the practice, com menting on the folly of Imitating "tho barbarous and beastllkc manners of the wild, godlesse and slavish Indians.” Then he turns to the Injury In their temporal affairs sustained by hi. peo ple owing to their excessive devotion to the weed. "Now, how you are by this custom disabled in your goods,” lie remarks, "lei the gentry of this) land hear wltnessc, some of them he stowing nob. some £400 n yeare upon litis prescioiis stlnke, which I am sure mlghi lie bestowed upon many farie better tine*." The literature upon to bacco. whether considered as a weed to smoke or as a medicine In the pharma copoeia, Is mo large that only the barest mention must suffice here. When James published Ids "Counterblaste” society was divided over the merits of tlic plant, one party lauding It as a panacea for all diseases, on the au thority of the French physicians Mon aides and Kstlenne, as well as by the testimony of Nicot, French ambassa dor to Portugal, who had Introduced it Into France: the other sneering at It as u useless shrub whose virtues were aN mythical as the famous elixir »»» jw'mii, iin* 111 ini u nt'ii Hint i imi Raleigh had anything to do with (lie Introduction of tobacco into England the honor of this undoubtedly resting with Matter Ralph lame, who was In charge of the second expedition which went out to Raleigh's colony In Vir ginia may have had something to do with the antipathy James conceived toward the weed. The balance of evi dence all go ‘H to nhow that Raleigh was In possession of some shameful secret relating 10 the monarch whose vicious proclivities are matter of his tory for the latter never rested until tie secured the execution of one of the greatest of Englishmen. HETTY CREEN, PHILOSOPHER. Tlx- ItlclM'sl Woman tn America Would Itrform Thing*. (New York Letter.) After a life of nearly 60 years de voted to protecting Her millions and adding to them, Mrs. Hetty Green, the richest woman of America, has con cluded from rare experience In observ ing social and political conditions, that there are two great problems In life to lie solved. One. she thinks, Is the curb ing of the new woman, the other the cijlldrig of trusts. These two Important (inestions of public Interest Mrs. Green discussed in New York the other day lii a conversation which showed that, while the public has been picturing her us merely a money-hoarder, she has been making a study of weighty subjects that might land her In con gress were this an era of universal suffrage. ‘•The new woman Is all right,” sne said, "but we haven’t got the right kind of a new woman. My Idea of the new woman is the one that stays at home and make* home happy. Good food Is the basis of happiness; there fore, the wife, to make home happy, should stop going to pink teas and look after her cooking. I don’t care how many girls a woman has in her kitch en. she ought to be there herself oc casionally to look after things. She should lay down her diamonds and knead dough ouee in a while. Her husband's digestion will be better for it l hat ts. if she learned how to cook as site should have done before marry I" If MRii iiktty uhkkn iThU l*i»tur* of lb* Hit beat Woman tB Vmrrliu la front a Iterant l*lni;o*raph.t Ilia a nil be Bill «tav al home tilahu. in iimiI of lulni iu lb* »lub." ' iimiiiHN t oninBi Matoi*. IMkuir*. IU* «»>briH4 lompnaar. aaa a aim* l» l»a I in gar loo a bablta that of muitai bla M«laa», and that uf aalbia* Haarral* had ha aattiad ia a lira h»t*tn* than hr hagali la Rad fault alth R. aad tr about tiauhtna fur a Bulba. Kitty day aRor diaaor, what aiar «h* oaathar. rata atad bait or •aaa ha ahold **t uo< uo foot and tab* a luaa aatl faiiaoia* nalh I a dead ft man hat* haaa hi* parol tat habit* »ht h t»H-aaah»a*4 hi* fi«|iMi • haaa»-« of abadr Ha •«* load of haiblaa tad oaw^d >ptaah I hr aatai unit th* aatt ta«* of th* ttmwta bate* am* aaahad aad fail Wh»a touapaotua ha woo'd boat aud B>uaa ia *>• do* mat a ataoar that ultra Ih* |* atih la th«' miw haa» i*u*M*ai of Ma aaia foihed la thtah in* ha aaa III Ha oaad to a* about 4i«*«od ta aa aid a oat otih aRppota t.oddaa to*a at tba hand*