THE DUN Volume VII. . Dunn, North DEFER RAILROAD STOCK PAYMENTS UNTIL NEXT FALL And Salem burg Com pany Go Easy On Share Holders Will Not Issue Bonds Against Roads Assets Desire Project To Be Financed And Controlled Entirely By Local Capital — Dunn And Other Towns Will Be Asked To Help In Financing The Road. Payment on all note* due to Roa noke and Salemburg Railway Com pany for Uock wai deferred until Oc tober 16, 1921, when nearly five hun I dred of the atockboldcra met in ai nacial meeting at Shady Grove I School Taeaday morning to conaider the advisability of continuing the ef ion to construct ths road which is to connect Duna and Koscboro and carry rail transportation to the old town of Sslemburg in Sampson Coun ty. Thor* were few who wantad to ahandon thr project, but there were not many who considered it advinahle to begin building now in face of tbe serious money scarcity ami the di preasion that scarcity has brought to ths various communities in which stock has been sold. Will Nat Begin Before Fall This action obviates the possibility that construction on the road can b* Matted before neat fall, although H lb certain that much of thr needed malarial will he contracted for before that time. Surveys will probably be co®*P'Mad during the spring. bba been pointed out to-Jtkc stockholders that with the quantity of stock already subscribed and issu ed it was possible to issue bonds again* the prospective assets of ths company sad begin construction ear ly tn the spring. Captain G. M TO ghmsn, a stockholder and one of the principal advisers of the company, mas again* thin, however, explaining that bonds would be a mortgage again* the property and that it was extremely '.ihsljr Uist ths bondholders “ . CgygJBHBgV J. Jones, of the Ptului Bchool for Otrls and a director of the company, was chairman of lh« mooting. He, too, it an enthusiastic believer In the road's success. Centeln Tilghman and Mr. Wilton stated yesterday that there was no donht that the road would be built and that they were practically cer tain that construction would begin next fall. Some time before that time Dunn and the other towns along the route will bo asked to subscribe stock In the venture, which is te be owned and entirely controlled by lo cal capital. Condition* Of Stock Exchange Are Improved loading Issue* Recover Of Tues day’s E*«*n»i»e De cline* Now York, Dee. ZS —Conditions In the stock market today were more orderly. Leading issues recovered part of yesterday's extensive declines but speculative shares were in pro ems sf farther liquidations, with consequent new low records. A sidelight on the protracted re versal was furnished by the failure sf a prominent stock exchange, whose Immediate difficulties are traceable to the tense eredit situation, the hanks, according to reports, calling loans on depreciated collateral. Another feature of the unsettle ment sms the announcement that the stock exchange had been roquesaed by members to investigate the dura tions of several stocks recently under bear pressure. Among these ere Hous ton OU and Replogle. The former la* week made a precipitated break ef more than 10 points, whll* Replogle collapsed it points sms the chief fac tor In yesterday’s demoralised tmd Gains outnumbered losses at ths lmfutar (loos of today's market, bat the concensus of opinion in conser vative circles was that further read justment would Have to take pines before confidence could bo restored Solos approximated 1,400,000. th« bond market nbo roeerdtac a largt turnover at variable reactions. A mono the day a constructor# do votopmonts wort announcements pi extra dividends by several tadwMa and financial comoani**. notably th< American Bhlpbuitdln* Co»P»"T the Now York Title and Mort*»r Company. TOO CHBAP A Brooklyn undertaker, who *ol« groat quantities of Illicit liquor i< which the stain lneredient was woo< alcohol tad who thereby became rs mnnsibla for men than 100 doathi has boon sentenced to from throe t seven years at »«* Sin*. Three to seven yearn at Sine Bin for what amounts to the murder e men than 100 penoasY ft justice in leafue with the boo IMMjtMMM XXMM Hf ¥ VVY X XXXXX T TtXT • • • ■ • ▼ TTTTT I; STATE FACTS J I* - * • .. * ♦ Nttii of Nortli Caro^iiu Cm* ¥ !♦ ■“•utiM for Qvick « * Perusal By Busy Reader* * * * ****** ***+-.*+-/'** *4,*+*+ Certification of amendment to the charter of the Durham Hosiery Mills, whereby the corporation D now In corporated with *10.000.000 capital 4*fck, filed yesterday in the clerk of Superior court’s office, after be ing duly signed by J. Bryan Grimes, secretary of state, and by three fourths of the stockholders of the Incorporation who own a total of 10, 873 share*. Meeting of tho stockhol der* framing the amendment was held Dos ember 7. Twa Killed By Trai. Ollic Haithroek and hi* sister, Mrs Moyd Whit, were instantly killed and two others severely Injured Tuesday afternoon when a Southern paaaeo gor train, castbound, crashed into the automobile in which they were rtding at Buffalo Crossing, a few miles eart of Greensboro. While the names of the other occupant* of the car Were not learned, it is understood that they were also from Burlington. Train Kills Haw Riser Mss A freight train killed Bill William* of Haw River Tuesday. Williams had rturlrd home and wn* walking down the track, it is stated, not far east of the station when the train came around the sharp curve at that point Voundrymen and machinists of tha New Bern Don Works and Supply Co., have taken over thr plant. After paying the over head expenses they! will divide tho profit* among them selves. The plan war. proposed Satur day by the general manager, E. L. Willis when the workers rejected to * further cut of ten per cent Satur day. • Verdict of Gulity In '' Lippard Murder Caee Jmry Prauaun Vtrdht Of 5«m4 6«im Murdsr AgciuJ Dafaadaata Morgan ton. Dec. SI.—Guilty ' of murder in the second Jt-grer" was Via ri-rdict rendered by the Jury in the Ltppard an order ease at S;S0 tonight, ■iter deliberating lea than aa boar. ! When It was announced that the t wa^ reedy .a email cieef goth-, la the coart rodm to •*. Attorney WVtknar entered lor n?al mo.ion ftr new -trial, but wae »/enrulod. Judge Shaw announce 1 Get acntrr.ee would not he paesed anti) tomorrow morning. Mr. Wbitener consulted with the defendants Immediately following the yerdict and said they are still most emphatic io their protests of inno cence of the crime or any guilty knowledge of it. BILLY SUNDAY SPEAKS TO BIG CHA*LOTTE AUDIENCE Charlotte. Doc. 21.—Tonight Billy Sunday spoke to about four thousand people in the auditorium, the per sonnel representing every grade and class of people in the city. His sub ject war “Rome---The Need of Good Homes in the World Today, Good Mother* and Cood Fathers." "Blew the South.” he said. "It la freer from lama and achima than any section on God's green earth. I like 'V * I'Kl fc“Br reverence for God and the Sabbath Day. The people of th* Sooth are more loyal to the real downright principals of Christianity than the ncopls of any other section. I’ve heard everything about Charlotte that was good and I have always wanted to come here. I’ve only visit ed ona town so far in North Carolina, and lhat la- Raleigh.” KAHN URGES SALES TAX AS NECESSARY TO HELP BUSINESS New York Banker Dbciueu Tex Revision Before Ways and Means Committee Advocates Repeal Of Excess Profits Tax Tkinka Sales Tex Plan Would Act Aa Check To Profiteer ■Bf Which Has Resulted From Exoaea Profit* Text Tex Burden He* Alreedy Stopped Commercial Growth Washington. Dsc. II.—Establish mcnt of a salsa tax, rspssl of tbs tax on new profits, redaction of the higher rates on income surtaxes, up ward revision of the tariff and the levying of a flat tax on net profits or corporations were advanced before the House ways and means commit tee today by Otto II. Kahn New Yoik banker, in a comprehensive dierase,on of tax revision legislation. Hr. Kahn, oae of tbs few witnassss invited by the committee to appear before it, dwelt at length on the qaee tion of a sales tax, partly in response to indltmtioiLM in thl committee* «H*t thia sort of tax ia gaining iD favor. Chairman Fordney, Before Mr Kahn *»« called, aaid he and several other members believed some sort of sales tax would result, but wyrs Making methods by which the tax wosld not be multiplied and the consumer un justly taxed In the final purchase. Chech frafilwis. As a result of tha chairman’s state ment, Mr. Kahn discussed that phase of the problem advocating legislative provisions which would require the tax to be made known In each sale sad added to tha telling price as a separate Hern. Such an arrangement, he aaid, la hia opinion, weald check "the profiteering which has resulted'* from the excess profits tax. In hla discussion of the need for a revised taxation program, Mr. Kahn declared that Amsrioan business could not experience a healthy growth if tha government coatinood “oa a ro*d of excessive taxation and eon tinned to ahoorb Mm Ufa Mood of hnoiram through concentration of ttfiou Oft Incomes sad capital.” Bo oddod that “the tax harden" hud ah this tax plan U Its dtauatron remits It has forced every business house to run to hanks for credit to conduct business, but Anally tha bonks run out end the Federal 1 soiree Board had to cal] a halt. “After thJi came the cottapoe in markets. It hit the farmer* Ant, hut none have been spared and all busi ness ha* f*H the effects. The retailer has men* *-atvilal 4a Ska-1 >k.a I f*r he wilL You cu me from what anlem the principle it One of the meant suggested by Mr. Kahn for lifting the present tax bur den was a funding of the Victory notes and War Savings certificates He urges payment oat of taxes of the treasury certificates of indebtedness, however, saylag it appeared that this would be done without inconvenience before they fall due. Employment of a sales tax as one of thn means of raising the four bil lions of revenue needed annuhUy by the govomanant la being considered by tome members of the committee. Chairman Fordncy declared. Ha said other members ware in favor of so sea kind of a salsa tax. ■ “H suns a sensible tax/' mid Mr. . Fordney, "but wa do not wart a sales tax that will be multiplied and pyra mided into a burden on the consumer. We want to mvold a law which will cause to be passed on the consum er a levy which nets more profits to the merchant than tax to the govern ment- * „ • I Is There a Santa Claus ? i i My lHtlo boy ha. been told that there ien't a Santa Clan*. Ha i i U worried skeptical—filled with doubt- Thle skepticism ha. spread to hi* Wtlc sister. Both heve come to daddy far a renewal of faith in the grey little fellow of anowland. 1 Of court* there U a .ante Claus—pointed grey beard, fur- 1 trimmed red coat, reindeer, sleigh aad all. When we ware a little ] fellow tar fbith la the god ef Christmas wat shattered for a time j }! I by a more eynical elder brother who professed a tried am beyond 1 ' the trust of our child mind. This brother derived a keen pleasure ] from our “disillusioning". Re snojyed parading hit wilder*. We believed him and our Jay In Christina* seat wrecked for year*— for the llttl* god of Chrletmaa It a Jealous god and per mits little cheer to thoe* who desert him. At we new older lit tle nelcee and nephows brought old Santa back, and ho again liv ed in our heart juat a* really at he did when mother used to tack ■ the cavern about o«r car* end tell u* that Santa wat waiting far u* to go to sleep. Imter, eotsciow*** of 8nata Cleat broke upon the mind of oar own little boy. It «• ftfi that the brlghtrayod eld fel low wholly accepted at again- And since that time hit taaaal vla Iti have been at pleasurable to as at they arc to the kiddies 1 i > Santa Claus la at old at the Chretien religion. Yet be It at , ; ; young and froth aad wholeeomr aa the rase* that mine their dew | ; covered petals to the tpring atern lag's tun Be it at real at the tan that gives at host and light. At tech anniversary of the Mtfh *f the Babe of Betholeheet ha ettnta to spread good sheer among i , , the men and womea. hoys and girte of all the Christian world aad renew In the hearts ef all that faith in the gaodaoaa of Ood and . ; ; humanity without which the earth would bo a Meek and desolate ' gj< i piece Indeed i » h __ 9 A thief haa lata the bam daring I staah.g milk trtvea by owned by a Juhrwton Jersey. fane or near here determined to either catch or put an end to hi* ar night* ago tha cow «t d from her rrgnlar (tail mala wae placed ther the farm ar and hie i aroaeed by a racket ia of the bam. The planter ehot gun and ran to the b pins to cateb the thief, hat rd, leaving a battered arilk II stool and a cap la the mala. The visits of the tha barnyard have eeaeaa. Iw Isles Slat* rai n ef Ark ansae and .ordered yeeter day by tha Commerce Com mission to passenger rates and < charges te the level bow ; la Interetate commerce. on held that present cha two statae s moonted to a lination egeinst Interstate tnfl V_Ml_a Ceruui Bureau Gives Figures on Gainings Washington, Doc. SO.—Cotton, « elusive of Untars, ginned prior to De cember is amounted to 10478,(65 running boles, ineluding 188,164 round bales, whleh wore counted as half baleT-M-dlT balsa of American. Egyptian, and 1481 bake of ••• Is land. the Ceneos Bureau announced today. Ginnings last year to December IS snsoented to 84*8,648 bales, includ ing 108,662 round bales. 67,104 bale, of American-Egyptian end 6,28fl btlfi of Ma ItliM TV is year’s ginning* by states fol low : Alabama 606,98*; Artmma 88.7*4; Arkansas 888408. CaUfsmU 874*2; Florida 17,568; Ooorfia 1,321,7*2; Louisiana 364,768: Mississippi T76, 618; MirnauH 4*3*1; North Caro lina 680,064. Oklahoma 860,184; South Carolina 1464,460; Tenassooe *84,763; Texas 8461481; Virginia 11.178. and all other states 7.486 “Rainbow Girl” Dim At Lafayette Tuesday Strong Compear to Preeeat Good Cnj^h PayotWrilU "Tho Rainbow QM,” it tchodoled for to engages tot at the Leftyrtu Tbeetre, Fridey D*t. SI, rayetbrrfllo An uneaoa] degree of Intaroat li being menlfoatod la tho coming el tkia attraction. GUaaon and »'<*k the producer*, art making It* proa ant toar a notalp on* by T*aaon « tbc anarual atrongth of tko company It* magnitude la number*, and tb elaborate ehareat* af It* tcani* am eoetame eqolpandlrtrOlllo Meek b a the head of the otweaiaation and hi performaae* of: Mak Irena, “Th Bith" hat brought? delight and Jo; to tboatrogoan pf Ml claiaoa Katharine Shew wUI play tb* ral of Molly, “The Knlabow tWrl” aa •he la adding grmtly to the mcem •ho atrand* neofdo la tko matiei comedy Held. Jehad to Jordan, one i tko hoot (oabrottm of tko Saga ha tko roll of Jaae, and bar tpright! dancing la ana aa tka enjoyable tm to roe of the parfMtoaaaa. Prank Pa rlngtan, Joaoph Dtnlala, Jano Barb Margaret Mllilgp and Qoorgo L docker make ap S company tb might with aatlra popihty bo elaaa > aa na all Mar aaako / V HARD BATTLE OVER EMERGENCY TARIFF APPEARS PROBABLE Ferdpey Measure To Protect Farm Products to Came Up In House Today Proponents Declare Its Passage Certain Differences of Oyiaioa Among Southern Member* Regard inf Emergency Tariff, With Many Outspoken Against It; Advocate* Win In First Skir mish in The House. Washington, Dk. 11.—Th* Ferd ney emergency tariff emergency, de ■i vte is regarded a* *omewhet doubt- 1 fuL J In the first test veto today advo- 1 eatas of the special tariff legislation 1 won a signal victory by adopting. *0S < to 7d, a motion to suspend the bosi- ’ ness of calendar Wednesday os as 1 to being the bill to a vote tomorrow < before adjournment There will be no opportunity to include articles by amendment*. Madden Deweaocee Bill The Ml was denounced la the 1 Bonne today as “special legislation” 1 by Representative madden, Republi- • can, Illinois, who declared its “an- ' wisdom mutt be manifest to ovary- j body.” The purpose of the measure. 1 Mr. Madden said was to legislate OS ' a few articles and to eliminate from consideration many other articles in . the bands of thousands of dealers. * The only other reference fee it ea the floor was by Kepi aaoutattvs Long- j worth. Republican, Ohio, who said ' it was a coded to save important sgri- ' cultural Interests “frees stark and * certain ruin ” ■salhsruse* MMer 1 fort to fundi u irwMl to to iJP ' tion moo that tertian which places • tariff of soon rente a pen! oa long staple cotton While Mato atom beta arc af the ophtioa that tbo bCl would probably give teen potary ratlaf for long staple cotton producer*, they fear a Repabliean “trick** to put ' tbam on record as favoring a high ' tariff. Representative Dominick, Hi a 1 itatement declaring Us opposition to 1 the bill, stated: “I refuse to sacrifice I principle 1 for a so-called temporary relief mans- 1 ore” referring to the proposed tariff sn long staple cotton. **W« should to more interested now la getting for. rim markata for oar prod sets than in building a tariff wall around at." Would Net Delay Veto Senator Smith, Democrat, Georgia, doe 1*rad that if long staple cotton, peanuts, peanut oil, and cotton seed oil remain la toe bill the Democrat! of the Sonata did nat propose to de lay the measure when it gats to tho Senate, bat will lot It oems to a vote. Senator Smith added that if tboie commodities were eliminated the sltu alien would to different. Oovemor-eleot Hardwick, of Geor gia. who appeared before the House ways and means committee, which is condactlng bearing* on the Ferdacy measure, discerned the plan for a sale* tax. which is known to tore too support of several Republican mem ber* of too committee. Including Chairman Fordnoy. Mr. Hardwick, rapiaeenltng bottlers of carbonated beverages, told toe committee that in bis opinion a sales tax should not harden the consumer to the extant that an excots profits or a tariff levy would. Negro Attempt* Self Murder in City Jell Allan Ciait I, Charged With Tluonta Aftnlont iVW. WUOud U *«»m»d by Nbr« Beet am Policeman Nipper heard hi* groan* Alim Camha, a negro em ployed In road eonrtroetlon work i near town, wu fmrirated In an at tempt to WO hhaaalf by rtrnngola , Mon in the city fall Wedneeday af : temeea. The policeman dtmanrered ’ the man banging Primn tag* by two hefta joM la time ! to have hb life "I’d rather he dead thnb *" WV* I Comb* doolarod whoa naked why he ' kad attempted to hang htaeeH. “My » wife la oat yonder at caom offering ' and hero I am In Ja> and can’t go te ||| ff\id | Comb* wa* arretted Wednaaday . afternoon on o warrant men tot W ! T. W. Whitehead, who charged that I be bad corned, abuaed and ihreaten ' ad to ahoot him. Tha rifeoae to atl«g • ad to have boon committed Taoaday y afternoon. Combo ora* wearing two belt* whoa f- bo waa arrootad. By bacfcltag thorn f< together ke contrived a kangman ■ f- aooao After Pollcemaa Nlaper r» * Icmcd him from A. nemo wa* WUrnffod toprn*n» itMMft it Mu IMWIIMI. f DUNN STORIES * I Censusat — Local Ooowevsw ¥ I MiW I.IihII M Theso Who ¥ I bw Duo'. People ¥ 1 ¥ HMHh¥F¥f ¥¥>¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ This wmi kog-k tiling «Nk »• the lenry Turlington Du roc J rrocy hog ora. Monday one hour alone netted lenry 6*6 pounds of good must. Enough of otber* wore Idled to ring the total up to 1,7*7 pound*, nd If weather permit# next week ha rill add another 1,000 pounds to bo pour's kill. Mr. Turiimrto* teds og raising non profitable than any thor branch of hi* fan*. Of tesrw Is biggest profit comas from the rgistervd stock he soils to other far iere, but tt the same time ke finds tat there is profit In raising meat »r the market. Mr. Tnrlirpton raised only twelve ales of cotton on his farm this year -and Lille high-priced fertiliser was iscd in that. Cotton farming wan icroiy a side Issue with him. For bir reason ha It prepared to bold bo cotton a* long as bo likan. His rthor activities provide capital to arry on its eatarprlac. It sssms to is that every farmer in the Dunn iiotrict would find it profitable te tody bis methods. I Willie Carter, the Ci eaten who was tabbed by Winfield Boiler several t rocks ago, ban fatly recovered from , be effects of the wound and was a town yesterday to attend the trial I young Butler before Judge Smith! f the Recorder’s Court. The easel ras contiued to the first term in Jan-1 rwo Dunn Bojrs Make Good In Florida City m Frirnds of Perry Jemigan aad Braxton Baggett will road wtth pleas ure tha folia win* story taken from the Sanford (Fla.) Daily Btcotd: Among ths most progressiva liai In tbs city of any lias and especially In the auUmebOe line is tbs B. A 0. Garage, located on Park Avenue aad for many yean established at this stand. Daring the peat year or more the B. A O. has bom in tha careful chart* of Parry Jemigan aad Brag ton Baggett, two of the yaongset business moa of tho city and car-! lately two of the holiest and baft. They have bam turning things ever with thalr up to data Idoei ef net on ly idling ears hot operating a ma chine shop and go rag* and hare mads "service" mean wore tbaa old man Webster did whoa ho wade tho dic tionary. They carry the Lexington Una ef automobiles aad In the pact eight months have mid sight oar loads, aa average of a ear load a month, la tho past week when It asomsd that ths trad* ever th* United States was Issuing somewhere ths B. A O. boys sold another ear load Jnat to ohew them ‘It con b* defce." Beam might my that Lexligtona sell themselves and at that they ara -a Baa line of ears and alt that the B. A 0. claim for thorn but It takas good work to sell any Una and Messrs. Jemigan and Baggett dcaarsa credit for thalr II rvisas afforts to beset their busi es**. Aside from their aalHag agency they take grant pride in their ma chine Shop aad what prove* to be a "Jonah" to many garagaa I* a plea* art to Jemigan and &£ge« far teey holier* in first atom mechanics BrW clast sqalament and irf «*» *»• vlea to their patrons Thny have the reputation of being la a atom by Ihsmsstvse when it *• dotmg basissaa along busiisss linos and by their sonars daaUag and huaUtei proaMvWtoa have samad an envlabi* rijataMaa among tha bucinasa mat af th* city aad in tha ganaeal trade Satisfied customsrs era thalr grant eat asset aad the scat beat thtej •*cut tbam is teat they believe it printer's ink. COAL OPERATORS HELPED TO DRAFT RAILROAD ORDERS ' ■ : '• j Wltaaaa T.U. How National Coal AMBdiatia* Daalt With "Tt i .. ■ .A Figure* Collected On Production Of Fuel twcrwtery tTpmUm* WRm* Ki.pt lafirni mt AH fcn, AadiriaHo* Official State.; Coal SwU to War Dwpart mant at $11 JO Tod l**t WiiklutML Do*. It.—How the National Coal Amodatioji, aa organ lation of coal operator*, dealt with Jt« government aad coped with the ’ue! ihortage loot man were hold, a which a Senate invMttgmlng eom elttc* today apotit tea hoar*. J TT. A. Harm* * wtra ttt-a.liAaa» >? the orcanlaatlon told how the Mao lotion drafted order* far tha Tatar Hate Comm err* Commlnion to iaeoa >n tranapartatiou Butter*. paid the tx petite* of the United State* Geolo gical mu re» In collecting oOcial ires of coal production, kept Joseph P. Tomultv. tocrrtory to fiaUal Wilson, informed of aS rtepa. and lurcevfnUr fooght preooaal* to re Mtahlish a foal admlniatmtlao. al ■ Hooch real price* continued to ■anl ..mui D. W.Wenta. the saaoelatlan'o pres deat. tentlfled to aomhaaliig for tha War Department at the height of the durttoi IK.00# too* of cool, for abkh the gaaernaMBt paid Ill.M a ton. while soother corooratlon which be controlled wo* mining and nailing soot met east for (IK aad lilt a ion. Tha examination of tha too *dirl*l* if tha aaaoelation was *allemud turn time to than as lanatare prodoaad ;nrr**poadtoes taken from the or raniiatlon’* file* during an maaa ad Ha Am <0 Wash 'SbaeLsaLiziiuzm World War Killed 34,249 Americans m'rn - _M ..N ..M .. Final figure* of army casualties ia the world war are contained ia the annual report of Surgeon General Ireland, mad* public recently, show by t*44» used and St4,09* wwuad Th* proportion of killed to wound ed la snout the same ae ia the atoll war, although mortality from gua ihot waaada ia tha world war was only 9.14 per cent as coonarod with 14.4 par cant ia tha civil war. The report said this indicated that Un proved surgical and sanitary methods In the recent war hod eared the lire* of 1.14 per coot of all American en diem wounded. 1.409 men sent to Franco. 110 were admitted to k raiteli a* the resah of bottle casualties, the report *ay». and nearly eovoTmeo out of every 1,090 died ae the raealt of woonda. Infantry loeam were heav iest, 919.4 not of ovsey 1,000 man of that army being wounded and I • lt.TT killed. Tbs tigne! corps was j neat with IU> woaadod and 1.1| I killed per thousand I Don the from wound* totalled if T per carat war* reiornod to daty. the heme foe treatment or discbars* Shell wound* wore by far the mo* deadly, tha ru “I*, adding that no Amortoon •tidleg lost hath anew and both tog lost a part of ana ar mere into Mil ties. Slaty Wat the tight of both opooj t 44 tost the partial ifid* of both opoo i aid 144 toaToM *y* or tha tight of on# oya.