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Port Perry Star (1907-), 3 Aug 1933, p. 3

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v ig oY _---- 1 = "A Woman's Place 1 : ' : Fruit Punch SR ® re. Two lbs. sugar, 2 qts; water, 2 gts, "Re oh * pineral water, 2 cups sliced strawber- pas 2 oo, 3 sliced bananas, 1 large pine- pple, shredded, 6 oranges (juice), 4 Jemons « (juice), 1 cup raspberry or 3 ther fruit syrup, ice. Boll sugar and i 3 , _ ~water together to form.a syrup. Chill; 3 : 3dd mineral water, fruit and ice with { : tore-water if punch {is too strong. Berre very cold. Serves 20. Mother's Beverage Twelve oranges, 4 lemons, 1 cup "juice (eanned) pineapple, 2 cups water, sugar, 2 quarts ice water or gin- es yi er ale, % cup maraschino cherries, 2 | " ewngns sliced. | nT Squeeze oranges and four ,of the jeixons, Add pineapple juice. Cut orange and lemon rinds into" strips; add water and sweeten to taste, Boll #ill tender; add 2 quarts water or gin- ger ale to fruit juices, Pour over blocks of ice, garnish with cherries and sliced lemon and serve in large dunch bowl. Serves 12. \ Ss Ts Lime Punch EE ~~ Eight large subes sugar," 2° oranges, HS * '2 limes, 1% cups water, cracked ice, - EN slico of pineapple, 2 crystallized cher- k- Tles. 5 - : Rub cubes of sugar over rind of 8 . oranges and limes. Then put sugar in a bowl and pout juice of limes and oranges over it. -Add water and serve when sugar is melted, chilling with Plenty of cracked ice. Put-in pineap- Dle and cherries at moment of serv- Ang. Serves four, Circus Punch PA One cup sugar, 1 cup water, 2 lem- LT ; ons (juice), 14 cup apricot juice, 1% if ' «cup cherry juica, 1, cup orange juice, « £3 -" © .2 quarts ginger ale, : r Bo!l sugar and water almost ten imi, ates, Cool and add fruit juice and ; % «chill. When ready to serve, add gin- ; : ger ale. 'When serving, use colored HLA ice es. and cherries in glasses. i Serves 12, ; - Grape Lemonade To make two qfarts of this drink _use juice of 4 limes, 3 cups . grape : Juice, 6 drops of peppermint, 4 cups i _-tarbonated water and plenty of ice. Sweeten with syrup made with sugal and water, Add mint to the syrup and ix with grape juice and limes. Add ' ce and water and serve. Lemon Recipes Frostily speaking, there is no com- parion for a hot 'summer afternoon r eyening that surpasses an old-fas- B - hiox 24 lemonade. Use plenty of lem- 2 juice, sugar as preferred, and be gure there's. ice and ice." There are _yariations, too, that you will like. ; 1 lemon, juice; 1 cup cold water; 1 fo 3 tablespoons sugar; crushel-iee? Add lemon juice to water, chill and weeten to taste. Serve in a large - . glass and don't forget the lemon slice garnish over the rim of the glass. Polorsd sippers add a pleasing note nd are an aid to the lazy in the mat- ter of rapid consumption, 2 Honey Lemonade: Use honey for gn. pugar in lemonade, Lemon Fizz: Use carbonated water| _ for rlain water. Lemon Frost: Top lemonade with -- he spoonful of stifily beaten egg white, Phen has been sweetened, and flav- red with a dash of lemon juiee, » Mint Lemonade: Squeeze the lemon uice over 6 mint leaves, which have een washed and bruised. Let stand or several minutes before adding the ugar and water, Picnic Menus There is a long list of foods which re- synonymous with picnics, Salads, LAN andwiches, cookies and cakes are : our of them, But, if you intend to erve many meals in the open air, our raenus should vary. A whole ummer of cold salads, meats and gandwiches just won't do for a family ith growing children. Thermos ottles, casseroles which are air-tight nd stay hot, and fireless cookers will o valuable investments if you take {enicking seriously. Ot chiurse, if you are packing a pic- ic basket and actually intend going to the country, cold dishes, sand- Iches and things easy to pack are our host bet. { : p) p adequate equip- 4 Wy By MAIR M. moraAN EP || : 19 In the Home* gi hi ment. A supply of paper plates, tin cups, 'siverware .which won't tarnish and large sheets of oiled paper are a few things you need. It you broil steaks on your plciiic; get a wire broil. er which sets up over the open fire. Prepare as many things as'you can the day before you plan to go. Pota- toes 'for salad may be 'bolled the day before. Then, a couple of hours.be- fore you are ready to leave, all you'll have to do is to dice them, add the other ingredients, wrap the bowl in oiled paper and pack in the basket, Mixed Vegetable Salad A mixed vegetable salad is a devia- tion from the traditional. potato salad always found at plcuics, Here's the way to make it: : To one cup each of cooked green peas, carrots .and string beans, add three tablespoons each of chopped cucumber and tomato, Mix them light- ly with mayonnaise to which has been added a dash of fresh.lemon juice. Ar- range the salad on a bed of hearts of lettuce in a deep bowl, cover the top 'with clled paper, tle it on securely and pack in the basket. ) A- Light Soup 'A good soup and a salad make a nourishing summer meal which is an easy one to get. Use your imagina- tion--plus-what you have in your ice box--and you can get a wide variety of soups, : . Potato Soup.--Boil two potatoes; put them through the sieve. Then brown one onion in butter. Add one can of soup to tlfese ingredients and season with just salt and pepper and you have a delicious potato soup, i Cream of Mushroom.--Brown a few 'mushrooms in butter. and thicken a little bit of flour, Add a can of mush- room soup and you have cream of mushroom. - Delicious! Veal Rolls Cut some thin slices of veal cutlet into pieces about four inches square, and on each lay a thin slice of lean bacon or ham. Sprinkle with a little minced onion, some chopped tomato, salt, pepper, celery salt, and 'just a pinch of herbs. Roll them up. and tic them with cotton. ha Melt some butter or dripping in a frying-pan, and brown the rolls all over. Let them them 'stew in the but- ter for about twenty minutes, when you must add a little boiling stock or water, 'Put on the lid and let them simmer slowly for half an hour. The gravy should be thickened when they are cooked, and they may be served with spinach. Warming Over Meat - Ir-warming over game or any kind of meat in gravy, don't let it hot! Boiling toughens it. Get the gravy to the boiling point, then turn-off your burner and put the meat in just long enough to get it steaming hot from the gravy. : ' Chicken Pudding There comes a time when the family need a change of pudding or pie for 'the substantial course of a meal. Here is a good dish to set before them. It is called Chicken Pudding. The pudding is made in the usual way in a basin lined with suet crust. The pie in a pie-dish which when filled is covered with puff pastry brushed over with egg and baked in the oven. To fill both pudding and pie peel some mushrooms, cut them roughly in pieces about ona inch square, put them in first in a layer, then a deep layer of chicken meat, floured and sea- soned with pepper and salt, .and a little chopped parsley; top up with a layer of pickled pork or bacon cut in strips. Pour in some good chicken stock, cover, and either boil or bake accord- ing to whether you are making a pud- ding or pie. In any case boil the pud- ding for 2% hours at least, and bake the pie for 1 to 14 hours. "Oven Temperatures Crisp cookies should be baked in a hot oven. Molassés cookies, which 'burn, easily, require a cool oven of not more than 350 degrees. Baking pow- der biscuits should be put into a mod- erate oven and the heat should not be increased until they are almost done. Pastry requires a hot oven and thor- ough baking to make it flaky and di- = SR - onions, radishes, celery, green pepper, | Meets" Every Demand - _ By HELEN WILLIAMS Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fur- nished With Every Pattern °n, Here's a pretty dress that is print- ed for town or for the country. The sleeves, tiniest vest and narrow bow tie of white crepe silk, lend fresh smartness to this lovely printed crepe silk mocel. Carried out in chiffon white voile --print with plain toning voile, it is ex- qusitely cool and danty for summer, sleeves omitted as in back view. inches bust. . ] Size 36 requires 3% yards 39-inch HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number. and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 16¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it" carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilsom Pattern gestible. Reduce the heat of the oven when the. pastry itself is cooked and you are ready to bake the filling. All egg mixtures, custard, souflles and puddings, should be baked with the oven at a low temperature. If the heat rises above 350 degrees you will not have good luck with any concoe- tion containing eggs. Charcoal in the Summer During hot weather a little powdered charcoal placed in a muslin bag and suspended in the larder will help to keep the contents fresh. This also prevents foodstuffs which have a pro- nounced flavour from tainting other foods. A pinch of charcoal added to thie water -in- which cut flowers are kept will help to preserve the blooms. Laundry Hints When pressing white silk goods, use an iron of medium heat. An over-hot irdn turns the silk yellow, makes it stiff and may cause it to crack, Some housewives experience diffi- culty in ironing men's soft collars. They should be ironed first on the right side, then on the wrong. To obviate wrinkles on the corners, begin on the outside edge and work towards the band. » Add -a little gum arabic to the water used for damping pleatéd dresses be- fore ironing. It will then be found that the pleats will stay In botter after ironing. . It ironing a garment with buttons on it, place first on a thickly-folded towel, The buttons will sink into this soft surface and the spaces belween them can be ironed more easily and smoothly. *| possessions 4 It can also be made of pique, linen' and washing silks for sports with the Style No. 2600 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 3G, 38, 40 and 42 with 1% yards 39-inch contrasting. Hebrew law. , Service, 73 West Adelaide st. Toronto. x } Sunday School ' Lesson © J ee Lesson VI. August 6, . Ruth.--The Book fo Ruth.--Ruth 1:6-10, 14-19a, other: for love is >f God.~1 John 4:7, 4 TF TIME---Naomi flees the Moab about B.C, 1181, Boaz marries Ruth about B.C, 1173. PLACE--Moab, Bethleheni. 'Sorrow in the Land of Moab. "Then she arose with her daughters- in-law, that she might return from the country of Moab." The heart of the Hebrew widow yearned towards that lovely land from which she had been s0 long a willing exile for her hus- band's and children's sake..' "For she had heard in the country of Moab how that Jehovah had visited his people in giving them bread." Tha Lord blesses the fields with abundance, Men must do their part, but all their toil is as nothing compared with what is accomplished by the sun and rain aud the chemical forces of nature. "And she went forth out of the place where she was." Migrations were easy in, those simple days. A bundle easily contained all Naomi's and she was strong enough still to make the journey on foot. 'And her two daughters-in-law with her," Ruth and Orpah, as was the custom of the times, accompanied their mother-in-law a part f her way home, thotigh expecting to return to Moab. "And they went on the way to return unto the land of Judah." The region assigned to Judas, the son of Jacob, in which Bethlehem was situ- ated. . "And Naomi said unto her two | deughters-in-law, Go, return each of "you to her pother's house... She bade them go-back, Shewvas an ld woman and penniless; they were young and strong and could support her. But she was_not thinking of herself, she was thinking of them. "Jehovah deal kindly with you, as ye have dealt with the dead,rand with me." That prayer is always ansv-ered, and for all kind people. The Lord is kind, and loves those that are kind. "Jehovah grant you that we may find rest." A resting place, an asylum as a married woman's home was call- ed. "Each of you in the house of her husband.". The times were rude and wild. A woman could be safe and respected only under .the protection of a ..usband. "Then she kissed them, and they lifted up their voice, and wept." They felt that it was the final parting with the good womai who had been a second mother to them, the mother. of their dead husbands. "And they said unto her, Nay, we will return with thee unto thy people.' And now Naomi hus the delicate, diffi- cult task of breaking to them, as gent- ly as she may, the sad secret that, if they go with her, {hay will find no welcome from her people, no kindness from any but herself. In marrying them her sons had sinned against the "Ruth Is True to Naomi. Orpah Goes Back to Her People. "And they lifted up their voice, and wept again. Naomi's words had shown them more clearly than they had before realized the nccessity of parting from her, or of giving up all hope of second marriages: "And Orpah kissed her mother-in-law." It was the kiss of farewell. "Bul Ruth clave unto her." -- ) "And she said, Behold, thy .ister- in-law is gone back unto her people, and unto her god." Naomi indicates "| that Orpah had been led to the God of Israel by association with her hus- band and his family, but that she ex- pects her to fall back under the temp- tations of idolatry as soon as these influences are removad. She also makes it clear that she expects Ruth, if she goes along with her, to be a follower of Jehcvah. "Return thou after thy sister-in-law." Or "ah is a sweet and attractive creature, clinging with daughterly affection to the mother of her husband, and clinging with an even greater "affection to the land of her birth. : "And Ruth said." Ruth's words here are among the most famous in the Bible. "Entreat me not to leave thee, and to return from following after thee." The words have a lyrical swing and the entire passage is truly poct- ical, "For whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge." The quality of decision is one of the most important a character can possess. "Thy people shall be my people." Ruth, who had always lived among the Moabites and loved them ad we love our people, proposed to ex- patriate herself for the sake of Naomi. "And thy God my God." This was probably the hardest thing of all for Ruth to say. The natural man clings with the utmost tenacity to his reli- ion. 5 "Where thou diest will T die, and there will I be buried." According to ancient thought union in life meant Golden Text--Let us love one" an-| 'brother. Coast - to - Coast Drive At One Hundred Miles An Hour i es Is Vision of Engineers Who Are Planning Super Ex press Transcontinental Highway in United <2 States New York.--Two days from New York to California sounds like air- plane speed, but it fs only- the rate that ordinary motorists will travel it the plans of a group of higltway .en- gineers materialize, For two years they have been working out specifica- tions and scientific details of a coast- to-voast super-express highway which would permit 100-mile-an-hour speeds with less danger, actually, 'than now is encountered at half that rate. The project would involve a four- lane artery without a single crossing or perceptible curve. Cities and towns either would be skirted entire- ly, or the express lanes would be carried overhead or underground in vehicular tunnels. The road "would be as skid-proof as engineering skill could make it, and so resilient that automobiles scarcely would need springs. Motorists - would uot use their headlights at night. Indeed, they would be forbidden to do so, for the highway would have, its own non- glare and fog-penetrating illumina- tion, Vibration Problem. A number of outstanding authorit- ies are co-operating in planning the enterprise. Among them are IE. Sut- cliffe,. of the Warren Brothers road laborities of Boston, who recently completed the 700-mile Carretera Cen- tral, a Cuban highway, at. a cost of $100,000,000; I. Andrew Reinhard and Harry Hofmeister, associate archit- ects of the $250,000,000 Rockefeller Centre, in New York; .Captain Mal- colm Campbell, holder. of the world's automobile speed record of 272 miles per hour; J. E, Pennypacker, former chief of liconomics of the 'U.S. Bureau of Public Roads; Foster Gunnison, il- luminating engineer. The chief problem, the expérts found, was -th® development of the hour travel, "We understand," sald faeturers can reduce the inherent vi; bration of a car to a very low figure: But what good is a vibrationless car on a; rough road? Even the best highway of today, though it may look smooth as glass to the 40-nile-an-hour driver, would ruin his car at a 100- mile average speed." Need of Rigid Cars. Sir Malcolm Campbell declares that the modern high-speed motorist must build his car almost rigid and depend on the rohd--as Campbell did at Day- tona Beach--for the necessary resili: ency. To meet such a need, technici- fans have developed a new surfacing, 'black in color and unaffected by sun, snow, ice or rain. This would be laid over a rock hase. Such high speeds as are anticipated would large- ly solve the problem of overcrowd- ing, so the planners expect to have only four lanes, two of them express and two for slower trafic, ~ There would be no direct entry two centre lanes of fast traflic, Sut- cliffe explained. Entry and egress would De accomplished by slanting roads, 600 feet in length, between the outer and inner incoming cars, Service stations may be built at intervals, where corps of mechanics would give each car stopping for fuel a quick inspection, Flood Lights. Night travel would be as safe as the higfiway itself were f{lluminated and motorists were to drive without lights. To this end thoy propose parapet walls two feet high and made of opal glass bricks, to flank the black highway, . Imbedded in the walls and spaced perhaps 20 feet apart would he tubu- lar electrig lamps shining out on the lanes in tlie direction of trafllc. Such a scheme would eliminate the dangers of -overhead illumination on rainy nights. Another safety factor would be central guide strips of white cor- rugated glass, imbedded in the as- road-bed itself to permit 100-mile-an-phalt. union in death and in the grave; the members of a family had a common burying-place, Gen. 4: 30; 49: 29, "Jehovah do so to me, and more also." Moffatt translates this common form of ithprecation, "May the Eternal kill me and worse." "If aught but death partthee and me." Death is the great separation of lovers and friends, but Ruth evidently thought of it as only a temporary separation. . "And when she (Naomi) saw that she was stedfastly minded to go with her, she left off speaking unto her." She ceased trying to persuade Ruth to return, "So they two went until they came to Beth-lehem." : Ruth's Reward, Ruth 1: 19b--4: 22, Here again Ruth's character 'shone forth in its loveliness. She stooped to the service of a menial in order to support her mother. With common hirelings she entered the fields as a gleaner. As Naomi had doubtless to Boaz ( a near kinsman of the dead Elimelech, a man of wéalth and of religion. As he camé to inspect the work of the reapers, he said to them gravely, "Jehovah be with you"; and they replied, "Jehovah bless thee." Ruth and Boaz. Boaz soon spied Ruth among the gleaners. He learned that she was the same young woman whose loyalty to Naomi was comment- ed upon so favorably throughout Beth- lehem, At meal time he bade her join the reapers in their repast and passed the word along that not only should she be allowed to glean among the standing sheaves and not'merely where the sheaves had been taken up, but also that the young men should pur- 'posely leave out handfuls of the grain here and there for her to collect. The Uprightness of Boaz. Whon Ruth told in what field she had béen gleaning, Naomi was delighted, and at once planned to take advantage of the Hebrew law requiring a man to marry the childless widow of his dead To Ruth's frank statement that as her near kinsman, Boaz should marry her, he at once consented, if, as he added, a nearer kinsman who lived in the village did not claim her. IMirst Boaz asked the nearer kinsman if he would buy a plot of land which had belonged to Elimelech, and the kins- man promptly said that he would. "But," 'added Boaz, "if you buy the land, thus fulfilling part of the duty of the nearest of kin, you must also complete your duty by marrying Ruth the Boabitess.," To this the kinsman at.once demurred, and transferred to Boaz all his rights in the matter by the quaint old custom of taking off his shoe and handing it to Boaz, thus hoped, Ruth's choice of a field in] which to glean: fell on one belongings) -- handing to Boaz the land on which the shoe might Lave trodden, and Ruth with the land. So the law was punc- tiliously fulfilled. . Ruth's Descendants, In due course a son was born to the happy pair, and Naomi's heart was rejoiced in know- ing that Eliimelech's family would thus be continued. So 'his beautiful love story closes with the genealogy of the family carried down to Jesse, the fa- ther of David; and the first chapter of Matthew continues it to Jesus Christ." P : ' ppd Britain Cuts Jobless 508,000 in Half Year London. --In the first 'half of 1933 unemployment "in Britain decreased 508,000, according to the latest gov- arnment statistics. Added signifl- cance attaches to the figures because the increased employment at the end of June was recorded when the time for seasonal increase of jobs hau passed, In June 135,000 additional men found oceuations. The announcement of the Ministry of Labor says improvement is most marked in fron and sleel manufac ture, engineering, shipbuilding and <hip repairing, metal goods, toxtila| industries, distributive trades, and the hotel boarding-house, road trans- port, shipping, dock and harbor ser-| vices, Increases of 10,000 in eral engineering and of 11,000 in tho cotton textile industry are regarded as promising signs, . ee --_-- Americans Barred ] From Entering Russia Stockholm, Sweden. --Mr. Mare Connelly, American playwrite, Pulitzer prize winner, and author of "The Green Pastures," has heen barred from entering Russia by the Soviet author- ities for a reason. that has not heen explained. Four other Americans, making a northern cruise on the liner Jungs- holm with Mr. Connelly, also were barred, but they have continued to- ward Leningrad in the hope that the ruling will be changed, Pa : Such is the nature of man that labor may be said to bo its own re- ward.--Dr. Johnson, SLIT, NE -- A householder hit a burglar with a wireless set. Iiverything has its use. --Ottawa Journal. ------ & iy is well to have MUTT AND JEFF-- By BUD FISHER . | opr pr prepa . THIS 19 A SOFT Job = AND YET |: MPORTANT: I GoTTA WAVE THIS - €D FLAG TO WARN PEOPLE OF THE DANGER, THEY'RE ABOUT. BLAST Now: READY TO DOUBLE -CROSS ME LAST NIGHT : uLTZ, . x " THERE'S MUTT « THE BIG + STIFF, THAT WAS A DIRTY HANDED That's Gettnig Even With Mutt =a Nou CHUMP} You WA RIGHT (NTO (Te DIDN'Y You SEe& LKED [I 1933's Student More Sericis | "Than 1929's Pennypacker, "that automobile maou: | from any connecting highway to the! in' daytime, the englncess believe, it gon. | ly it thero aro whilo his business is giving divorces, Six White Men re Declaress Robert C. Angell, Associate Professor of Socialogy "serious and possesses more mature. standards of value than the under. graduate of 1929 The differencu eas be almost wholly attributed to the im flugnce of the depression. Such are the findings pf a small but {Atensive investigation made on the University campus by a group of my students,' l-writes Professor C, Angel, of the { University of Michigan. | The objective of the study was the comparison of undergraduate attitudes iof the two years. We drew our con clusions from (1) carefully consider ed opinions of senior students, pro fessors, dormitory heads and univer sity offlicials regarding student atti tudes and interests, and (2) tae facts regarding costless student activities, such as reading of library books, use of athletics facilities aud attendance at university lecture. No cornelusiona regarding attitudes were drawn Irom trends in activities that entall expense because here a deciine in participa tion may not mean a lessening of de sire, Our findings. indicate that students are taking their academic work more seriously than they formerly d'd. They do their assignments more conscien: tiously, they are more frequently sup plementing the required work on thei | own volition and they are hetter mo tivated because they are realizing moire than in 1929 the relation be tween a sound cultural background and success in life, More maturity is shown in a va riety of ways, Interest in the tra ditional types of extra-curricular ac tivities seems to be waning; quali ities such as intelligence and good character are much, more in. mind when picking friends thai they were four years ago, whereas clever repar- tee and good dancing are of less im: portance, Selfsupporting students and "independents" or "barbs" find much less social snobbery; and the general level of conversation is on a higher plane. . It is perhaps odd that there i no definite evidence of an increased interest in religion. Various clues seom to point to a greater con- cern over a philosophy of life and greater worry as to the fulure, bul there is only a slightly increased par- ticipation in church activities. : o> -- llinois Allows Alimony to Men Wrecks Divorce Racket -- Women Will Think Twice Says Judge Chicago.--What it is hoped will dovelop into an effective "brake" on tha alimony abuse has been found in Illinois --a law which makes it just as possible for a man to obtain | an alimony award -as a woman, Al though the law does not TEC arly agume that mgny ~ men pill fake advantage of its provisions, [t is bazed on the idea that if women know they are just as liable to have to pay alimony as they are likely tn obtain it, they will not he so anxious to get a divorcee. ' "Thus," sald Judge Joseph Sa. hath, who handles most of Chicago's divorce cases, "it will have a strong moral effect if nothing else. No real man is coming®in here to get all mony unless he is down and out, and haz no other alternative except charity after perhaps working year to support a wife, who has taken all he had and then dropped him, Thera are the kind of men we want ta protect." Iandling hetween 40,000 and 50, 000 divorce cases during the last 12 years, Judge Sabath knéw some thing about#hae alimony business when ae! out to get such a law passeds Tho few law fits in. with Judge Sabath's general attitude in doing everything in his power to keep hus. bands and wives together, especial children. In fact, his hobby lig effecting reconciliations, Hoe has sent 2500 couples away from hig private chamber with a- desire ta try It again Instead of to scparate, and about 70 per cent of them hava "made a go of it" after taking his advice. z o> Live As Primitives Living on the little tropical island of Vanilkoro, southeast, of the Solo mons, six white men are enjoyipg lif¢ with thio primitive natives, according to C. I. Dawn, manager of a timber company, who has just reached Syd fioy, N.S.W., after visiting the island Tho six men, he said, live id house above the water. The only communi cation thoy have with the outsid( world is through their radio station They have three mails a year. The island 14 infested with crocodiles which prbvent the keeping of dog and act as a great check to the mul tiplication of the wild pigs, which alse flourish there, The water teems wit fish and the six whites spend thel spare time hooking many lars var etles, : | "The undergraduate of 194% is mor( 8 3

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