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Daily Times-Gazette, 26 Jan 1953, p. 3

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THOUSANDS OF Oshawa Branch of the Cana- | dian Legion is making an ap- | peal to Oshawa citizens to donate | 'all their spare coples of pocket- | size 'novels to be sent to the J AE, BOOKS FROM OSHAWA TO KOREA ture shows some thousands of the books received, ready to be sort- ed and packed. gn the picture, left to right, are William Beat- on, branch president; R. Ire- land, Frank Dawey, and Joseph Wilson, chairman of the "Books for Korea" campaign. Citizens having books to donate are ask- ed to send them' to the Legion Hall, Centre Street. Photo by Dutton--Times Studio troops in Korea. The above pic- | onor Retiring Army Officer Major F. W. McEwan, the outgoing commanding officer for the 28th Technical Squadron, Royal Canadian Electrical Mechanical Engineers, was given a farewell banquet Satur- day night, in the Genosha Hotel Blue Room, by members of the RCEME. The two incoming officers, Captain J. D. Brown will take over the squadron and Lieutenant G. F. Wilcox, immediately. Major McEwan, who was borne. - TRE T re in New Liskeard, was a graduate engineer of the University of To- ronto. He served in the Ontario Regiment from 1937-41 and was in active service September 3, 1939. During his service in England, the major specialized in engineering. Me also served in Italy and 'North- est Europe. NATIVE OF PORT ELGIN yThe incoming commanding of- ficer, Captain Brown, was born in Port Elgin. After graduating with an degree from the University of Toronto, he joined the Ontario Regiment. He was the first Oshawa Army Dade Sol» manding officer, prior ver- sity. Captain Brown attended high school in Oshawa. Perhaps the youngest , ( officer to take charge of Oshawa be is 26. . Lieutenant Wilcox, who was born Willowdale, served overseas 1942- . When he joined the reserve force, they transferred him to Osh- . Also a graduate engineer He University of Toronto, Lt. Wilcox lives in Oshawa and is em- ployed at Fibreglas Canada Limit- assistant, HEAD TABLE GUESTS Head table guests, Padre L. D. Begg; Mrs. McEwan; chairman, A. L. Hastings; Miss Flora Purdy and Miss Charmaine. Elliott, heard Major McEwan say he would be leaving Oshawa at the end of Jan- uary. He said the Oshawa corps of RCEME received much assist- ance in. its building up, by the work of all members. The Oshawa squadron, he added, is a nucleus that could expand and be ready in case of war. In a short talk, Captain Brown wished Major McEwan the best of success and said he hoped he could carry out his duties as well as the previous officer. Lieutenant Wilcox added his best wishes to the outgoing offiger. A cocktail set was presented td Major McEwan by Sgt. Major W. Evans. Mrs. McEwan received two gifts, gold brooch and ear-rings from Mrs.'C. Lang and the ladies' auxiliary presented her with a compact. Entertainment in the RCEME headquarters followed the _banquet. British Sunday Laws Under Labor MP's Attack _LONDON (AP)--The quiet Brit- ssh Sunday became a battleground today. Old and often confusing blue jaws that govern Sunday activities are under attack. Labor member John Parker in- troduced a private member's bill # Parliament to sort out some of the present anomalies and make # legal for Britons to watch |d trical performances and pro- ea sports on the Sabbath. . Defenders of the old statutes, in and out of Parliament, rallied to fight his proposals. The Lord's Day Observance society gathered 500,- 000 signatures to a petition de- the bill's rejection. Still a third group wants the not sure what the laws do and do not allow. Acts governing Sunday obser- vance date from 1625, 1627 and 17.80. These reflect a strong Prui- tan influence. . Interpretations placed on them through the years have led to these anomalies: ; A Briton is not supposed _to travel anywhere by boat on Sun. ay. It is illegal for him to move out of his own parish to watch or take part in a ball game. Many provisions are seldom en- forced. He may buy tooth paste but not a tooth brush. He may have his shoes repaired but may not buy a new pair of laces. It is whole subject studied by a com- mission. Most Britons today are illegal to sell sweet cream, but clotted cream can be sold. EXPERT AMATEUR MONTREAL (CP)--Thomas Cun- ningham was awarded membership in the "Century Club" of amateur radio operators who have made two-way short-wave radio contacts | with at least 100 countries. Some of his acknowledgments were from d-to-reach places like Iceland and New Guinea. FINE NEW SCHOOLS WINNIPEG (CP)--Two new ele- mentary schools just opened here cost a total of more than $300,000. row sehool cost $172,000, and the seven room: Kent Road school in Bast Elmwood cost $132,000. Bath scholos will have kindergartens addition to regular classes. GOOD RECORD HALIFAX (CP)--Mines Minister A, H. McKinnon reported Nova Scotia's coal production for 1952, despite several mine mishaps, was not far below the yearly average of 6,000,000 tons.- Gypsum output ws about 100,000 tons higher than in 1951, and salt tonnage also in- creased. The nine-room Crescentwood Har- Watch for DokLgg Day PENN They will identify the merchants participating | THURS, FRI. & SAT. Dollar Day Event this coming the colored ANTS in the great See Wednesday issue of The Times-Gazette / 9 | back to the Derby family in 1610, | pany. Royal Gift Of Clock Is Doubted Castletown's famcus one-finger- | ed clock could be a phoney, says a writer in The Isle of Man Exam- mer. Its great claim to fame, as ev- eryone knows, is that it is'a Royal | Clock -- that it was presented to Castle Rushen by the red-haired Virgin Queen Elizabeth the First. But was it? Experts on ancient clocks have lately cast consider- able doubt on Castle Rushen's proud boast. So much doubt in fact as to discredit completely that Queen Elizabeth ever had a hand in it at alll LATER MECHANISM The point is that the mechanism of the clock is of a type which was not invented until half a century |after the death of Good Queen | Bess. . Unless her Royal namesake, the present Queen, chooses to lend her name to the ancient timepiece, it logks as if Castle Rushen may no longer have a 'Queen KEliza- beth . Clock." : The Castle guide book will tell you that the clock was presented to the Castle by Queen Elizabeth in 1597, but antiquarians have a habit of turning established facts into myths. In this case they agree the clock is very-old and of great antiquarian interest. But, presented to Castle Rushen by Queen Bess --Never! The various experts who have examined the. clock include B. H. St. John O'Neill, chief inspector of ancient monuments for Great Britain, who knows -a thing or two about his subject. INVENTOR KNOWN He says it undoubtedly has a type of mechanism which was in< vented by a man named Hook about 1670. Further, it is most unlikely that this mechanism was added afterward, because the Vidie design of the clock depens on it. It cannot be older than 1670, and its probable date is between 1780 and 1790. There +s another piece of evi- dence -- there is a picture of'the Castle in the British Museum. The date of the picture is 1652, but there i€ no clock in the tower. How, then, did it come to be known as the Queen Elizabeth Clock? There is a story that a lawyer, returning from a good party, passed the Castle at mid- night and heard the bell toll the hour. He remarked, "there is Queen Elizabeth telling us to go to bed." This became a saying and the clock became known as the Eliza- beth clock. Could that be the ori- gin of the belief? MORE "MORE NAME ON BELL There is another way it ould have started. Queen Elizabeth took over the island during a dispute over the ownership in 1594 and held it until her death in 1603. In that period she is believed to have presented a clock to Dublin University, and it could be that people got ideas about the Castle Rushen clock from that. After the death of Queen Eliza- 2eth, King James I controlled the island for a few years, but it went The bell, incidentally, has a date on it. No one seems to be quite sure, as it rather inaccessible, but it is either 1729 or 1629, and Creative Gospel Address Theme M. G. Hofstetter was the speak- er at a meeting of the Oshawa Branch of the British Israel World Federation (Canada) on Sunday afternoon in the" Orange Temple. His subject "A Creative Gospel." The lesson was taken from 2 Tim- othy chapter 3, Why a creative gospel, there is| only one gospel. But in the twen-| tieth century we have had many | people peaching destructive - gos- pels as we have heard read in the | lesson for today. We are told in| this chapter there would be de-| ceivers preaching many gospels. Communism is a good example of this and there are many more. There are many who are preach- | ing destructive gospels and destroy- peoples' peace of mind. When ing | we speak of the gospel we refer not only to the four gospels telling | us. of our Lord's life on earth, but the whole Bible, the message | of God's Kingdom on earth is as/ a Golden Cord running through | the whole Bible. | In the past week we were con- scious of a great event, the in- auguration of a new president of the United States. In the morn- ing. before the inauguration took place General Eisenhower with his family attended a private service in the National Presbyterian Church, where prayers were Of- fered for him to be given strength and wisdom in the days ahead. His oath of office was taken on two Bibles one the historic book on which George Washington took his oath and the other a bible which his mother gave him. ' The Washington Bible was open at Psalm 127 verse 1. "Except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it except the Lord Keep the city the watchmen waketh but in vain." The personal | Bible was open at 2 Chronicles 7:14 "If my people, which are] called by my name, shall humble themselves and pray. and seek any face and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heav- en, and will forgive their sin and will heal their land." I felt it was significant that President Eisen- hower should choose these verses. We speak this verse from i Chron. 7:14 in connection with Na- tional repentance. I don't know if the President realized this. Bub it is very indicative and prophetic. The gospel of the Kingdom of God in the Bible tells or God's dealing with Israel and contains the revelation of God's will to peoples of the whole earth, This gospel has the power to remake. It has the power to change men and nations, it has remained un- changed through the years. An at- tempt has been made 'at various times to break it down but it has | withstood the test of time. Mr. Hofstetter spoke of the need of National regeneration and re- pentance. Of the conditions in England before the Wesley revival and the change that came -over the nation as a result of this re- turn to God. It is a creative gos- pel. A new nation will be created through the power of the gospel and a new man, * Vulcollan Tires Can Outlive Car A synthetic rubber that may make shoe soles outwear two pairs of uppers and tires outlive a car. Another chemically-brewed rub- ber that won't broil at 400 degrees above zero and won't freeze stiff at 80 below." ,These, Michael J. Saade writes in The Wall Street Journal, are only two of the longest strides taken recently at laboratories here and- elsewhere in the manufacture and use of man-made rubber. SUPER-ELASTIC The synthetic that promises to stretch. tire and shoe-sole life is a super-elastic, transparent mater- ial called Vulcollan. It's made from chemicals derived from coal tar and natural gas. It was developed | by the firm of Farbenfabrik Bayer | of Leverkusen, West Germany. A | few samples of it have just reach- | ed the U.S, rubber capital and have thrown Akron scientists into a dither. Vulcollan is so good, reports Dr. Waldo Semon, rubber chemist at B. F. Goodrich Company's labora- tory in nearby Brecksville, 'that it could revolutionize the entire syn- thetic rubber-making and con- suming industries." Another Akron chemist says: '"We don't have to look any further for a rub- ber that will outlast the normal life expectancy of an automobile." Tested in tires under the most gruelling conditions in Germany, 'the rubber stood up better than anything we have developed in this | it also bears: a name<James. In either case it could refer to the | Lord of the Island at the time. In 1629, James, "the Great Earl", was the lord; in 1729, James Earl of Derby. . It seems that the bell is a separ- of the clock, and in any- case is still after the time of Queen Eliza- beth I. Coronation year might be an ap- propriate time for Castle Rushen to acquire a real-Queen Elizabeth Clock. t PIONEER OPERATOR ate component from the "works"|Gr.g country," says an American wit- | ness of the tests. COST IS HIGH | The only catch is cost. The for- | eign material now' costs about 10 times the 23-cenis-a-pound price of two to three times that of The other big new advance in| the synthetic, the defier of tem- perature extremes, is an American product, It's called silicone rubber. Its principal raw materials are sand-and natural gas, Its ability to withstand heat and cold is about double that of other rubber. That FORT ERIE, Ont. (CP)--A hand- some tea service has been pre- sented to Fort Erie's oldest living telephone pioneer, Mrs. Olive Bauer, who retired last July after 40. years' service. Now 70, she was one of the first employees of the' Welland County Telephone Com- HEALTHY OLDSTER uITTLE POND, PEL. (CP)-- Jamgs Mills celebrated his 100th oirtMlay with the remark that he | ihad never had the doctor in is life. A non-smoker and teetotaller, | 2e believes in the old adage' of | early to bed and early to rise. makes it extra-useful in aircraft | hose, gaskets and other parts sub- jected to successive waves of ex- [treme engine heat and sub-zero {temperatures at high' altitudes. | These parts normally deteriorate ast and need frequent replace- ment. Most, big U.S. rubber manufac- turers have been trying to perfect silicone rubber for the past year. Unitl recently, it has shown low | resistance to breakage under stress | But one of Akron's top labs has! | found a way of boosting this | strength tenfold, to 1,500 pounds per square inch. LONDON (CP) -- A rush-hour train from Middlesex headed for |the financial district of London ran {out of fuei wae... suburbs. Passengers c |journey by bus. ompleied the | | COMING EVENTS RUMMAGE SALE, ON TUESDAY, JAN- uary 27, 2 o'clock, at Simcoe Street United - Church, by Northminster Group | One. (a) 2| Board, a member of the Christian THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazétte and Chronicle OSHAWA - VOL. 12--No. 21 OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1953 WHITBY PAGE THREE Honor Scottish Bard At Dinner Young People In Charge Of Service ELMA FARROW "Attending the sessions of On- tario Older Boys Parliament is an experience one never forgets," stat- ed Ted Phillips at the Northminster church service on Sunday evening, when the Young Reople's Union took charge of the service. . Hugh \ Harris, president of the YPU, and Mary Cornish, the Osh- awa representative to CGIT Lead- ership Training Camp last sum- mer, conducted the service. David Payne and Ross Hamilton were ushers. The choir anthem was "Teach | Me Thy Will", with Mrs, Cedric Russell singing the contralto solo art. | Ted Phillips gave a comprehen- | sive talk, generously spiced with| humor, about his personal reaction to the sessions of Older Boys Par- liament, held in Ontario Ladies' College during the Christmas holi- gy 3 swering some of the natural queries about the Parliament, Ted told that in localities where there is an active Ontario Boys Work youth of the district is duly elect- ed to go to Parliament. The pur- poses of this Parliament are: to challenge older boys to Christian living; to provide an experience in the art of democratic government as practiced in British Parliaments; and to develop in the boys, the art of public speaking. All these can be summed up in their scriptural purpose "And Jesus increased in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man." Ted told of the schedule of pro- ceedings which was packéd with interest for the boys, and spoke of the various offices held by the members of parliament, Speaking of the fellowship, he said that although there were 87 boys who had never before met each other, it took a very short time to be aware of the warm feel- ing of friendliness that permeated the group. He alse mentioned the musical talent embraced in the group, sing- o > 4 ers, a piano player extraordinary, a trumpet player, and even a bag- piper. He stated that unless one has experienced it, it is difficult to imagine awakening to the wail of bagpipes. . Speaking of the devotional part of the program, he told, of the dif- ficulty for him, at first, to enter into the spirit of personal devo- tions by himself, but as he saw other fellows' doing the same, he soon came to have a deep, rich ex- perience of worship. | With the sittings of parliament, where bills were debated d passed, to be forwarded to the On- tarlo Boys' Work Board, and the aforementioned devotional periods, recreational periods and bull ses- sions where informal groups dis- cussed all sorts of problems and topics, all these added up to 8 program full of vita] meaning for each boy. Ted closed by saying "My pres- ence at Parliament was a mile- stone in my life. I am now able to realize to whom" I am directing my worship and my prayers. I knew before, that there is a God and His Son Jesus died to redeem sins, but I didn't quite know what this meant to me--now I do". Special Meetings At Army Citadel For the next week, commencing with Wednesday night, and continu- ing through to Tuesday night, a total of seven nights, The Salva- tion Army will be holding a series of special services, The leaders for these meetings will be Major and Mrs. Oscar Agre, of Ann Arbor, Michigan. The Major has been a Salvation Army officer for 25 years, 20 years of which was spent as corps offi- cer, being stationed in such cities as Kansas City, St. Louis, Mo., Des Moines, Iowa: Lincoln, Nebraska; Detroit and Saginaw, Michigan, and other centres throughout the Middle West States. After a brief interim as Administrative Officer, he was appointed to the Chaplain Corps of the United States Army, and all through the last war, was chaplain on a Hospital Evacua- tion 'Ship, bringing wounded and incapacitated men from war Zones to their homeland. In this way, the Major has seen the world in all its four hemis- pheres. He speaks intimately of the canal, Japan as well as Europe and the Americas. He speaks dis- paragingly of the decorations be- stowed on him for his services, but nonetheless, he will speak with au- thority on world wide questions. A distinct platform personality, yet an old - fashioned evangelist, he will bring a living, virile mes- sage, applicable to the age we live in. Additional to all this, he is a fine musician. This is also true of Mrs. Agre, who while resident in Ann Arbor has participa to a very large degree in the musical life of the University of Michigan. The Major is at present studying at the School of Social Work, Uni- versity of Michigan, with a view to gaining his degree in that sub- ject, of which he has been an acknqwledged authority for some years. . The services will commence on Wednesday, January 28, and run through -to the following Tuesday night. The band and Songsters of {the local corps will assist at all services with their music, and the | visitors will be. supported on the platform by Major and Mrs. Dock- Far East, India, Burma, Malaya, Phillipines, New Guinea, Guada- eray, the local corps officers. Arctic Sanitoria Could Offset TB HAMILTON (CP)--Bishop Donald B. Marsh thinks sanatoria in the Arctic would help .in the fight against tuberculosis among the Es- kimos. The Anglican bishop of the Arc- tic, whose diocese covers 2,750,000 square miles, said in an interviewy such hospitals would make it un- necessary to bring Eskimos thous- ands of miles from their families and friends for treatment in hos- pitals in southern Canada. Three hundred of Canada's 8,646 Eskimos now are out of the north and undergoing treatment. Six are in the Hamilton sanatorium. "At the sanatorium I talked to a man in his native Eskimo after the nurses complained he refused to drink milk. Once assured in his own language, he gladly drank it down." The Eskimo is called Mark. His seven children are waiting for him to return to Port Harrison on Hudson Bay, RADIO LINK might be used to help Eskimos un- der. treatment to keep in touch with | their families. ° "These people are taken out to hospitals and they are away from their own: people for mont hsvee,n years. Their people can't under- stand where they've gone and they are sometimes given up for lost. If the department of transport would make available its radio net- work so that they might speak to one another, the separation would | not be such a difficult one." Bishop Marsh, who has served 27 years in the Arctic, is a mem- ber of a committee which will ad-- vise the federal government on Es- kimo affairs. He leaves late in January on his annual 40,000-mile tour of his missions, The bishop says the white man's | gifts, including the baby bonus and | the old age pension, rob the Es-| kimo of the spirit of independence which enabled him to survive amid the bleak wastes across the top of The bishop also thinks radio the continent. why IS YOUR 4 "TNE | 2nd Fl, 111/, SIMCOE ST., N. (Over Bank of Nova Scotia), OSHAWA Phone: 3-4687 « John P. Alexander, YES MANager OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL NOON Loans made to residents of all surrounding towns * Personal Finance Company of Canade LOANS $50 to $1200 Cash promptly to 4 out of 5. En- dorsers, bankable security, not re- quired. Loans your way . . . and fast, Phone for 1-visit loan, write, come in. Many Qualities Are Eulogized Describing Robert Burns, the national bard of Scotland, as "The golden poet of a golden age" Dr. Lois Scott-Thomas, of Toronto, gave a brilliant exposition of 'the talents and work of the poet as speaker to 'The Immortal Memory" at the annual Burns Night banqugt of the St. Andrew's Society of Oshawa in the Masonic Temple Auditorium on Saturday evening. Attended by 225 guests, the banquet program of story, Scottish music and song was of a high order, and made the event one of the most successful functions of its kind in the history of the society. Presided over by John Delvin, ¢ = president of the society, the pro- gram began with the traditional! piping in of the 'Haggis, with Pip- |ers Donald MacLellan, ,George Bell & land Bob Gowan, and Drummer | John McLaughlin doing the musical honors, Burns' "Address to a Hag- gis" was recited by Matthew Kerr of Whitby in stirring manner. The "Selkirk Grace" of Burns was of- fered by Rev. Dr.'George A. Tel-| ford. i After a sumptuous dinner, the program proceeded with the intro- duction of the guest speaker by Dr. Walter Bapty. SCOTRAND'S GOLDEN AGE Speaking of Robert Burns as the golden poet of a golden age, Dr.! Lois Scott-Thomas, a teacher at! Ryerson Institute of Technology, | said there were two great golden | ages in Scottish literature. One was | in the 15th century, following the Chaucerian tradition, when Scots poetry was among the best in Eu- | rope. Blind Harry, Gawain Doug- las and King James 1, along with Henryson and Dunbar, had been! and they were widely read by outstanding poets of that age, and they were widely read by Burns, The poets of that-age, however, had not had so great an influence on Burns as the poets of the second golden age, but he was familiar with their traditions, The second golden age came in the 18th century, after the union with England, which had caused much dissatisfaction and had brought the Jacobite rebellions. That age had produced literary giants like Hutgheson, Blair, Hume and Adam Smith. The intelli- gentsia of Edinburgh felt = that they, and not London, should ip- terpret Britain to Europe, and Ed- inburgh became the cultural centre of Europe. European thought was affected by Scottish scientists and philosophers, because Scotland has had a long connection with the con- tinent, especially France, and they wished to continue that connection. These Edinburgh Scots, however, followed the English tradition and wrote. in English rather than in the Scots vernacular. Ramsay, one of the poets of that day, however, wrote in the Scots' dialect, and Burns had studied his collections, | inclined to the bawdy type of verse | for which Burns had a genius. The influence of Ferguson on | Burns, however, was strong, and | | was to be seen most of all in "The Cottar's Saturday night", which the speaker 'criticized as being insin-| cere, full of false sentimentality | and not true to life. She compared | what she termed its artificiality | with the genuine sentimeént and ! pointed moralizing of 'Tam O'Shanter" in which the Scottish | dialect lent real flavor to the verse | and the humor was homely and | obvious. The speaker also found ! thgt in some of Burns' work the | English influence was good. TWO STRAINS IN BURNS "These two strains in Burns -- said Dr. Scott-Thomas, were joined by the pure unadulterated Bu strains -- the carefree, Cisilision. ed, satirical, bawdy peasant of Ayr. as well as those of Ferguson, who | HERE TONIGHT Commissioner William D. Dal ziel, territorial commander for Canada and Bermuda, who will conduct a public meeting at the Salvation Army Citadel, Simcoe ad Oak Streets, at 8 p.m, to- y. from Burns, the speaker paid trib- ute to the poet's native genius, his gift for satire, for fun-making, for love-making, for understanding the feelings of man and beast and mak- ing his readers enter inte them. QUALITY OF EMOTION "It is this quality of emotion that distinguishes Burns,' she said. '"His thoughts, are not high and elevated like those of Milton; they are homely and epigrammatic; they strike at the roots of our own simple experiences, They are down to' earth thoughts, some- times perhaps even below the ground level of polite society, but they are always manly and vigor- cus. In the Kilmarnock edition of his poetry, published in 1786, Burns made his reputation --although he did not live to savor the fact -- as a singler of international renown." SPEAKS TO THE HEART Reviewing verses of some of the best-known songs of Burns, the speaker said that the simple and moving appeal they made to the emotions wal one of the reasofs Z |why Burns was loved so much, '"He speaks to our hearts", she said, "He moves us by his simple and at times elemental appeal. There is nothing complicated or difficult in what he is saying. He is largely emotional -- a singing poet. His Jacobite 'songs have a rousing quality that is combined with a tender affection for the Stuarts which captures the imagination. "Such then, is Burns," said Dr, Scott-Thomas, "a poet who follow- ed a golden poetic tradition that was essentially - Scottish. True, he is, in a way, in the English transi- tignal current, with reason and embtion, thought and feeling, com- bined. He loves men and nature, but he makes fun of hypocritical men; he makes love with intensity, but he laughs at sex with indiscre- SCOTTISH BARD Reciting a number of selections! __ (Continued on Page 5) | BUEH 12 KING ST. EAST MEAT SPECIALS ON SALE TUES. - WED. ' LER! DIAL 3-3633 - 1 us Ly LB. 1 us PORK CHOPS RINDLESS BACON PORK LIVER - bY , 5 LBS: 'PORK HOCKS sCo | 1s mo. | 24 mo. | 20 mo. 154.19 529.59 | 756.56 Moray 1912 | $28 | $40 Above poyments cover everything! 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