Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 56, Number 12, Jasper, Dubois County, 9 January 1914 — Page 6
WEEKLY COURIER IN 10. DGANI, Publisher. JASPER INDIANA
A lull fellow can seldom carry bin point It In in order to publish recipes for mock omeh'ta Gambling In food producta U m proper paatlmn Horn n m are llvtng etarapla, others are living excuses. The modern young man serenades his beat girl with an auto horn. Honw people's Idea of modesty Is to make It aa conspicuous as jossible When a dictator cannot dictate, he might aa well buy his ticket to Paris. Politicians ought to make good tango dancers- they are expert side stepIondon military women are studying Jiu-Jitsu und a merry time la expected. 'I to Chinese republic must be sailing along smoothly. No word to the contrary. Cold-storage Is a necessity and so la chloroform Yt each lends itself readily to abuse France has one saloon to every 82 people, but then drinking In France is a ceremony. The man who has something to say doesn't have to take much pains with his literary style. That fellow who tried to swindle a lawyer out of money should be seat to an asylum, not to jail. The fact that a woman was shot while cooking pancakes Is no argument against pancakes. The people who have set out to beat the egg trust to a custard will not fail !f good wishes help any. "What is worse than a drunken chauffeur?" asks an exchange. Oh, two drunken chauffeurs. A passion for bungalows keeps the real estate men active and the furniture dealers on the alert. One reason why a flat Is bad for family life Is that there is nothing for a man to dr but wipe the dishes. Now comes a crazy teacher and says people can catch old by kissing. Who minds a little thing like a cold? Don't blame that man for asking for a divorce because his wife wouldn't cook his meals. She gave him a raw deal. An Oklahoma cow has swallowed $2K0. Which raises the question: How big must a roll of bills be to choke a cow? A western professor advises people to pickle eggs and thus save them Where are we going to get the eggs to pickle? What a good time the children will have, after passing through the ordeal of being taucht by civic organizations how U play! Tt wis an Irish philosopher who observed that somctlums the man who digs a pit for another 1 hoist by his own petard. The eautlotis man who always carries his umbrella ma- no! get ratntd n hut he misses n whole lot f Inter csting ami healthful excitement A self sacrificing wife h:is divorced her husband in order that he mn m t r on. he Invce; but Isn't that a bit bard n tin ther Irl nut skirts are said to be going out of stvle and farsight d hmlr i It Urn ate thinking f lo king up Unit antra tmimeis In ufe ilepnatl vaults I h. furtum. I '.nd.m '. i i-h ho elslttiN that men igrum hriitt ' girls mis! nae gone tin. .ugh ft Bereist m h. ;.i ng 'lands by herself I AfiS' I (i n railed In n doc tr t.. I . itl i i tu hu nT n t reu hie and hwfore ha departed WffOWM a doth.t from ft l it i ljul K em i l itt A slml nt say time paiona ahtaeat st tin i iah ' l"H d u I atippnat that scientist ever hung u i i i Wash Ingtou Halting fir a ! i al appoint in tit The Nobel priM for Mt.rature gnet to a lllmiii nan. d Hehttidratuttu I s Ml and lmHt m - on will ngree I .1 m t with din h a nam wh an still thliiU hi Miesy i!ctvs well In (alirutilrt wnnum wl.i itr must t. It h Me 1 1 i n a . mm 1 I. Ml hi mt but the horrid men have not an set arranged It so that the holie win t.ste lo state how mail) children they t I A woman In Men Hants a dhrce ft. in hi i In l n il I . . iMMi she was he Is t. m n h of a 1 ! man f.i her slid sh needs brutallt for h r control With such a sl( made Ulag liosls Of h l Nu Alle (Might to get f'i, medicine liirli tu i raves In liberal loses. If the law did not forbid It
75 KILLED IN PANIC
MAN'S CRY AT CHRISTMAS CELEBRATION CAUSES MAD RUSH AT CALUMET. MICH. STEPS BLOCKED BY BODIES Men. Women and Children Are Victims of Fiend' Act Hundreds Rush Down Narro.. Stairway Trying to Escape Front "Flames." Calumet. Mich. Doc. 25 Re vent yflve peraous ram, worn 1 and children, eonm babes In nrms were trumph'd and euffocatcd to death here in a ;uad panic to escape from what they thought was a burning building. What they really fled from was an Insane man's cry of "Klro!" V h-n he let out his fateful cry several hundred persons were gathered round a great Christmas tree ar raugi for the starving children of the striking miners. It was the first touch of joy they have known in months. A moment later a human avalancln was iK)uring madly down a narrow flight stairs the onl egress from the building to the street. Stairway Blocked by Victims. In five minutes It was all over. The stairway was packed und jammed to the ceiling with dead bodies. Seventy-two were taken to undertaking rooms and it Is not known how many more were torn from the heap by grief-crazed parents and carried off home. The bodies of five men, 13 women, 21 hoys and 38 girls lio in a temporary morgue established in the town hall. Policemen, firemen and citizens pressed into service are visiting the homes of families known to have at- j tended the celebration to see just howhigh the awful toll will be Man Who Started Panic Sought. Detectives are seeking the scatter-brained or, perhaps, worfe person whose shout started the rush to death. The miners, already desperate from months of fruitless struggle for better conditions and higher wages, are muttering threats against j the Calumet & liecla properties. Many think the cry of alarm was uttered by some one agent or employe, perhaps not in sympathy with the strike. Investigation later showed there wasn't a vestige of flro in the building nothing a blaze could have started from. There wasn't even a candle on the Christmas tree the .eople who gave the celebration wc e too poor to buy candles. For that reason they gave the celebration in the daytime. First Cry Came From Door. There is some dispute among thoso who saw the man whose act is responsible for the loss of so many lives as to whether he was in the hall during the exercises. Two women who wre near the door when the rush started, but pressed back against the wall and escaped being caught in the maelstrom of death, say the first cry CftJM from the stairway. "Fire!" shouted the man Fire!" The crowd turned toward th stairs, but they saw no fire nor any one -U ing "FlTf!" The next moment he appeared in the doorway, while all the crowd gaed at him spell-hound. "Fire ' " ho ren amed A low murmur ran through the Cltrwd and It shifted uneasily. Fire' Fire1" h repeat -1 lie waved his arms and dasind down the stairway, with death in his wake The rt moment the crowd hw.pt lo the top of the stairs and began Its maddened fight lo reach Ihe stret. WOflMNB with babes In their arms were hurled over the sfairwav on top of tlndi own and their DtlghbOft' hll Iren The frenzied shouts and streams of the living Singled with Uli gasps and groans f thf dini: In a hon IM' tumult. Man f Ihr franlle nun and a on 1 fought lO gel lo the windows. 40 feet from the ground Home ld llnif a dozen bodies, all f adults crushed novum! re oc.nlt luti, were picked tip beneath tin- v IndnWN Mut t hfl f. in tin h II v lui kepi lh h In ads Html I Mopped I he nil Ii fU t he ItldoW I and winn rescuing nurlic arrivgd those left alive In Ihn hall were t haiiafod fnun their effoi in odles Piled st Door, Men rushed lo open the doors The did not th u know the et, ut of (he horror and ir some time tiled to press the ilmiiH Inward This was tin possible Finally a W0N hionght und lln I I'M W i I - Ili'l ed itff he hinges Then I he VM in I n t hi iiillih'lnl t In lr rejtl tionhle The hotl Wle piled to the celling ami It was Impossible eti I ale t hem The fforls fron below tlnalh was abandoned and It s.is IteeessaiV to begin at Ihe lop f i In- Mi i and w ork dow n w aid thioiu !i the tnass Mong1itn . it pledged $1.211 1 IN ib relief .r the r i iiui n ,r th panic victims ami appointed a com mitten " lr..le other out tlhut ions Ahnt ar t spec ted in he Igfge RnMi llttlons Were ndipted cleiidlng svm I I I lt. p. I . J l hi - fl III" li a tneetg p ill pi h Id lak.- up . in f nioimiii'ii At rstigeuonts wl l be made ft a com peS lUSpelishUl of woik dutliig (l)ti ! ineial Indiana Reek Is First. Washington, Dec ;i I he Marlon National hunk f Mainn has fhe ti the it. i of being the first national hank In Indiana to apply to the necre tary of the tieanury for rtdmtssion Uli tsr the nuw Mnil reserve system
PRESIPENT OF MONGOLIA
Outer Mongolia, having been declared autonomous, has elected the Manchu Prince Nan-Shan-Surun, ita first president. He has been recently in Russia paying homage to the czar. JUDGE APPROVES FILING SUITS AGAINST FRISCO Will Attempt to Recover Profits Made by Officials of Alleged Illegal Syndicate. St. Louis, Dec. 27. United States Circuit Judge W. N. Sanborn has authorized the filing of suits against Krico railroad officials to recover profits made by the officials when they, as members of syndicates, built and sold "Feeders" railroad lines to the Prince system. In rendering his decision Tudge Sanborn acted on two requests, one was filed by the receivers, and asked whether they as receivers, should bring suit against the officials after a demand that they sue, made on the reeivers by Miss Bridget Duffy, a St. Louis stockholder of the Frisco. Another request before Judge Sanborn was from ,W. D Niles, a Wall street lawr of the Frisco holder. Niles asked that he be allowed to bring suit to compel the Frisco officials to make restitution. hi his petition to be allowed to bring suit, Niles named B. F. Yoakum, chairman of the Frisco board; Thomas M. West, a St. Louis banker, director of the Frisco, and formerly one of its receivers; W. K. Bixby, a former director, and James Campbell, Frisco vice-president. The profits Niles ref erred to chiefly were those made in tho celebrated Brownsville deal. 20 LUMBER FIRMS OUSTED Supreme Court of Missouri Also Assesses Big Fines Conspiracy Is Charged. Jefferson City, Mo., Dec :: The supreme court assessed $436,000 in fiiu's and ousted L'O lumber corporations and revoked the licenses to do business in this state of five foreign lumber corporations in the case of the state ex nd Attorney (iVncrnl vs. th Arkansas Lunibr company. Th. opinion was handed down by Judge Faris. The respondents are found guilty as charg (l of I conspiracy to limit the output or amount of yellow jjlne to be mnnttfftOHmd in Missouri and fixing the prices to bo charged In Missouri. Tin court suspended Its decrees of uiMcr against th twenty companies llpOfl OOndltion they pn Ihn fines Imposed and I - fe ift. i ediey tho antl 1 1 ust laws f the state The court gave the compaulea only thirty duys In which to pay llnir fine If they full tn pa up Ihe orders f ouster vs ill I e innre .i hi nlute RAMPOLLA WILL STOLEN? Valet of tats Cardinal sne Nephew May Be Arrested PHnosis Claim. Interest Knti.e i i he scandal start ,-,! hs the dttOOVtl I IfcK th will of thl late CnNlftnl llanipolla, Pope Leo n mi cm tary of tute, Is inlying, continue to grow MllnUonal de ve)o wen 1 1 s - i,,,r d ti m i of the scandal Is Ihe nephew .r tho ii dftnali the iiuiu- ..f OMspobnllOi who was dUiltherMcl fom w.w ago w hi n 'ardln il Matni i II found Hist checks bearing his nanu, hut blofa he did t i iiitH were In in ul ition In th. i itenl of 110,000 The dnko Is it heiieth mi under the old will of III mode which was msdf In sn I t tu Ml Utltl I Ihn dul''s w ife. whu Is leg it II separated from him und Is the guardian of ihelr two children, has Instructed her lawyrr tq Inmltuta hcai proreding siuhiMt Cardloil Rnntnoltn! Sister, the mofhn .r he: hutinnd esenflBMBMeweflesnnBnBaeMievneaeessjeBBes MRS. YOUNG IS RE-ELECTED Former Hesd of Publlo Schools In Chiesgo II Agsln Choitn duperlntendent hicngo he U Hupnorli ri of Mi.- I 1 I ' IKS Youiik liiUkt red n huiHiiti of ibi i" ird iduetKoa f r en tore her ss head of the pvMtfl ichnoli it 0 floious meeting nf ihe lOifd Mrs Young was i I . . ,1 hu perlntendont of schools by a vote of 13 to 7.
NINE PERISH IN GALE
TERRIFIC STORM SWEEPS NEW JERSEY COAST AND EASTERN CITIES. MEN SWEPT FROM VESSELS Stranded Ships Are Engulfed by High Wavee and Crewe Die With Rescuers Nesr Dsmage to Shore Property Reported Heavy. Heabrlfht, N. J, Pe. 27. Nine men wto M-pl to death und dainriK' estl muted at fully $500,000 was caused by a Knie that ewept alonje the New JerB' c'aht at a rat of nlndy mile nu hour, hurling the sea upon the land like a tidal wave. This city felt the full effect of the Htonn. IIoukch wer1 blow: or washed nway. The city's lighting plant wait put out of commission. Three bundr'l pcrsonn were forcid to flee front tln lr homes. Ocean Tragedy Is Enacted. While the stonn was battering this city an ocian tragedy was being enacted on the coast oft Seaside, N. J. There two boats were driven ashore. To the mast of one of the vessels thr e men wre clinging. The Forked Klver lile-saving crew tried desperately to reach the men, but the force of the gale and the vas' waves drove them back. The men were seen to drop one by one into the boiling sea and disappear. While Capt. Martin McCarthy was leading the life savers in futile attempts to reach the shipwrecked men. word was flashed to Washington and the revenue cutter Seneca was ordered out from New York to attempt a rescue. The revenue cötter Itasca, which was then at Bea, was also orden'd to the scene. While the life savers were toiling in the terrible sea they prayed that the government vessels might come in time, but neither appeared eoon enough to render any assistance. Damage at Seabright Heavy. Though Seabright was the heaviest sufferer from the storm, heavy damate was caused in neighboring towns by the gale and flood. When all sections are heard from the damage may go over $1.000,000. Sewer systems have been wrecked and the shattering of telephone poles and the breaking of cablet have left many Jersey towns without light or power. Hundreds have been made homeless. Fishermen who depend upon their paraphernalia for their living have lost everything. Big Summer Hotel Collapses. Workmen are buny throughout the city trying to prevent the collapse of houses and other buildings that have been undermined. The Peninsula hotel, one of the largest summer resorts here, collapsed because of weakened foundations and immediately afterward the Karle house also toppled over. Storm Sweeps New York City. New York, Dec. 27. A terrible gale accompanied by a driving rain struck New York and caused widespread damage. Hundreds of plate glass windows were shattered and signs dismantled, causing danger to pedestrians in the streets. MANY STARVING IN MEXICO United States Consul Says Country Is Stripped Bare Japan Ambassador Proteste. Washington Dne. 17. Pttlful MorioR of Americans starving, conveyi-d In official dispatches, and the entry of Japan formally us a Protestant against Uli Intolerable conditions In Mexico, marked tin course of Mie Mexican troubh'a tit the Mate department. Huron fhltnla called the Attention f thi United States to the unproteel ed conditions of Jnpon's citizens. He dlmnttd ipncinJ attention to the tap annuo at .fuarv and Chihuahua IYfdi idnrh'H f iinar hv und utarva (Ion er met I air. ami )hers cnnie up from Moxh o 'on-.ul 'an id i m id a sweeplnr npoi f in w hieb he r aid I twtt lh I I in lu th.- w hole pro ln ' r Tntunulipan are h(IUS ' 1 I lUped bin ' ;,tit I hat all art h prevail! nutiie of TanploOi Mexico city, Dto. 27, Fighting was i aim d Imt e n i -lud and fettet ,il near M.ho CltN While with di iwIuk with eevett prisoners the fad eral wem overtaken by I ho main pari of rebel and i killed 'I he i lly f I ot rMii htm beti i lp I in id b Ilm ft I M I i.'. iirdlun to i . t4 1 r 1 M Mit it in govern nan ( olrelaa Hebel troop are concent rat Ins n I amplt 0 fOI n"il atUM i fPOm ihre Ih I Imir to t hi din,' to M-piirlS rtia In re I ln I tilth' t htlt in nf I hewm at Trph Im Itlll nmtnu The f. r iU (hu rat have th. ht ttt i . f t 1 , t n met ADMIRAL GEORGE DEWEY 76 aejejej Hero of Mentis Celebrstee Hie Dim, day st Dek Receive Many Mfisngti. Wawhlimton, Dee, 37 "Ye. I am n. ftnty I. but I i rtahily In mit f. t i Ii," nah) Admit al im way as he greeted callers at hl otth n imepitn the fa t that it vgl bi bin inlay annlvoreary Ihe hero of Manila wa wrly a( bli dek and looked over iiunmrou, i.icn entH ml tnemiasM that Sine to It l in tmm all part or 'h. l'nited Htate. If a iiitii Im mm old n he firln " nitt 'ihm. .1 I hc SdlUlt'Hl, I MIU At It-AMt A tire nf searM Numhh.-i than tie- n-ninl In ihe tdd famll; Mihi at Meiilptdler i sei ou( Altd WAlk In the air mm mm h nu poMMlble, ami that belpM Hon derfuliy lu kveplug me up "
MARIE AHNIGHIT0 PEARY
i hMhl sVl I eS f
Miss Peary, daughter of the discoverer of the North pole and who was born within the Arctic circle is one of the season's debutantes In Washington. WILSON ACTS AS FIRE CHIEF ON VISIT TO MISSISSIPPI President Sees House Ablaze in Pass Christian and Directs Volunteer Fire-Fighters. Glllf port, Miss., Dec. 27. President Wilson and his golfing party recruited into service as firemen whin a blaze broke out in one of the leading residtmces of the city, as his motor car passed by. When smoke issued from the home belonging to a "Qdona JinV Neville, a leading attornv of Clulfport, the president ordered his ear to stop and two secret service men and two chauffeurs were pressed into service in a bucket brigade while the president directed their efforts. The blaze was quickly checked and the president was bailed by an admiring crowd as the best fireman that ever came to di If port. President Wilson mapped out a program of recreation for his visit here. He will sleep at least ttiM hours a night, the quota be had hoped to got but often has missed. After breakfast he will go by automobile to the Mississippi Country club, thirt'n miles away, for a game of golf with his physician, Dr. Cary T. Grayson. I'. S. H. At noon he will dispose of what'r important letters or tele grama may come from Washington, and after luncheon wll tak an auto mobil rid with bis family, follow d perhaps by a long walk along ÜM bench roads. The president plans to spend the evenings reading With this proportion of rest ami ex reise, he hopes to get back to vigorous health again While he will do Hill" official work, therp an two things KippomOi In his mind the lOiOOllOH (if tnemh rs of the federal reserve board and the writing of n BpSOlaJ ad dr ih lo congress on the relations f Uli government to "big business' and in trusts. $300.000 FIRE AT DETROIT Old Mlchlgsn Centrel Depot Destroyed by Flsmss on Iva of Opening of New Building, Mrttnll. Nt toll . I'C 27 1 hu old Mb blgsii ('antra dtpol bull! :, ai i n Was dntin-.l h ff DftMft to proportj in! rooofds is 1 1 t . i nt I , The old if poi was d Mlro) nil on I Im M n of (he opetilna of the now $l mm, una Mn nu ,n, i !sntl "I (( pOl TIM Mil !rUChtri VMIh In h i v, hee, f.U 1 1 1 It 1 1 V Opellu I I It III I V I, hut I raliirt s ere i an Into It find I . rbanae wnn made Hh little) iBOOJ v.iileinn. Th- lOiMt' nf Ihe the i . t -lint been d lei mho d In I In hu hton Wh! Ihe Hl bld I S'ieinplnven, Slid K U SKli that evel oe nf I limn S'd uit nf t he pho There wem nuiliN nu nf pei.j.U I . n liui i d on Ihn third Hou where tin flf stinted, hut thee could Hill he e M ,1 Tolmon to Quit for Psrdon. New York, lee I'T That Kliner I: Tolniai "mi und bimttosH nur hmoi imi.O'l H l .'linnn, m nuniey I nn t new mTNlua a l tu of nil UmtlthM I f mdv h II i t ndei w Itlmul i i'ni noteN amoiiiitlna ' $Mn unn, ,,1 g( nt f hUMltlenn. tn ehulu . pMidtm f,i hl rulhel, Im Ihn Mtaleltnnil tufld lo IteiijHUiItt ! Hpfdllitttli, rntineol fni I Im I iillll 1 11 M Slam tnvoy Holds Hseord WrnhinKt.n. Dog 27 -The Utr. litdoitialio list" UtUtd by tbe els' i p.ii t iiteitt dlsrloeiN the feet Unit th new minister from Htem ludd ih : ord of hnvllif the lonsewt loii itinnntf the diplomatic rorpi here II uauts Is l'bvi I'rabhakaxavouaa
HOOSIER NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD
Itloomtng'nn The t v , (.nr old da ighter of John Matth f i( N! fireman, obtained a box of liver when playing shout the house, at nltio of '!. i ill and dl-d In au hour. Kvansvtllc. (Vtlonlus Tahl. adteen years old, colored, wae found lying on tha floor of a local theatorl urn with a frsctured skull, when thw proprietor opened the houe-- H hud fallen from the balcony. Terre Hants. WUIIani F. Hummel, oil man of Caaey. Ill . was sentenci to from two to fourteen yearn In prison for bringing Inez Bond, aged thirteen, to Terre Haute and keeping her in a hotel two days Indianapolis. In the presence of their twelve year-old daughter. James T. Carney shot and killed hie wife and then committed suicide by putting a shotgun to the elde of hU neck and blowing off tho aide of his bead. Mrs. ('army is said to have remonstrated with her husband for drinking on Christmas day. Muncie. Over-exerting himself In handling ruh of mail in th last few days, Benjamin V. Harrold, a rural route carrier, uncle of Orville Harrold, famous grand opera singer, fell dead in the post office as H start ed out on his route with heavily laden sack of mail. South Hend. John Mazalin is in Kpworth hospital in a dangerous condition as a result of a vicious attack on him by Julius Phipps. who la alleged to have stabbed him in the lungs during a brawl nsulting fnm a pre-t'hristmas celebration. Phipps Is held without bond. Tipton. G. G. Campbell, postmaster, of Kempton, has completed an inventory of the property of the Kempton post office, which was visited by safe blowers, and finds the total loss was $1,203 89. Of this amount there was $474.17 in the postal savings fund which he had not had time to bank. Government operative made a complete investigation, but found no clue. Vincennes. Golbert Gillette, the Wabash county (Illinois) youth in jail on a charge of raising a $1 bill to $10, and passing it al a local ealoon, was arraigned beton l'nit ed States Commissioner James M. House, and on his plea of not guil was bound over to th May trm of the federal court in Indianapolis. His bond of $200 was not met and Qillatta was returned to Jail. Chief of Polle Thomas Robertson and Secret Service Agent Thomas C. Halls of Indianapolis were the principal witnesses against QUtottn, Durham. Lake Shore train No. 17". west-bound, with coaches filled with passengers, figured In what railroad men term a miraculous wreck here, when a tire on a smoking car Whan broke into pieces, derailing th coach while the train was running at a fair rate of speed, throwing ÜM passengers from their seats. The car was dragged along the rails a consid erable distance without hurling tho other coaches from the track. Traffic was blockaded several hours None of the passengers was seriously Injured Greenfield.--Thomas Tlinh r f Palmouth and Solomon J. Hodge of St. Louis, arrested in Indianapolis laat w"'k on a warrant charging tfean wWk obtaining money undr talse pret'iiHes, were released. James Wehl and others, on whose affidavltn the arrests ware made, had the charges dismissed. The nifMi were agents for a stock food company, and WVhh and oihra said notte offered for sah-, benring their signatures, were ob ned under falee pretenses. All of the notes were returned. Lafayette.- A bold burglar te lsre th" Inline nf thr- of lafay et!n ueithhhRf families on Past South street and took lite time lu ran sacking the placm At the residence of Mrs. Ih'i.ry Taylor and Arthur ur lis ha carried away soma jewelry and p.o Imgi I hol ei . Inlet ,,, , 0 be sent nit ae Christmas presents Nnt Radial It) aluablos at the home of Mr John P Gogen, he went to Hie Ion hoi lu the basement, took fiMdntuff, sat ibwn and had u "! nn al lh re have been man) nimilrtr robbnrtü " Lafayette In tha past two weeks and th' pollen ute utiabln to Mad any clew Lwlevllla,Alt' 1 1 iMshinan, twea tv ynara old killed and hu Knthai I idward I Uabmun, wua set truly in in i . .i I., i. a iravd pit on t hU M llniwn faun, nrtli nf here. in.ni in i iiHbman anil i.!. tittn were working In ihe pit wltlunit coin pMtllOliH Mini Hie hide fSj In Sftth im warning of any kind Itayiimnd Hold halt, a farmer eorklug In a in urbr Held heard the hier HlahinMh n I an be was caught and. after calling srwiel nth' i men. rushed In ihe pit I dward IMnhtnan ass tint eniirel) 'ml b) the gravel ll was not uti (oiiaclous, and. altlmugh hurt Internal ly and In gr at pain. lu ted the wn u f Putin. g bis son The )nuiu- man died a he wan being i k u nut. Hammond Kim destroyed ibe AudHotiunt in In liana M ' Um Urgent building there I In ht wtil ranch llabonu Heversl fumiii. Ing lu apartments on tbn upper mair escaped in tl nlr night lotbea Tne (our children of Mrs Harm s Cohen rn sernnuh ill y.it' np.nure Tn lower floor was occupbd b lurrett s am M Mi. e mi.niing at matches In Ihe stole iiHiiu in ihe baunen' 4r' be' lievel to ba- I tart. il the to. j he hre department if Hamnmnd Will! Ing ami Kant CM cagn ll eilt ed be destruction of ihn ilt, aa the Audilot turn was situated lu Ita heart.
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