CMPLD Local History Collection

Lake County Register (1922), 23 May 1928, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

_ PROBLEMS DELAY -- NEW ALLOCATION they are serving a public interest, must be closed down. The facts re-- mains that no stations will be closed down unless the attorney general O. K.'s it, for the minute one of them is taken off the air the government is in for a law suit. The point that the commission will seek advice upon is: Does the law re-- quire equality of cleared channels. One or two of the commissioners be-- lMeve they have some latitude in this respect. The claim the law does not say anything at all about dividing cleared channels. Authors' Opinion. On the other hand, Representative Wallace White Jr.. Representtive Ewin L Davis and Senator C. C. Dill, the authors of the radio law, all agree that the commission is required to make the same division of cleared channels as of any other kind. ' 'lhdflenltythatdistmbedsome{ members of congress," says Represen-- tative White, "was the inequality of distribution of stations. It was felt Mmeseeuomdidnothaveavafl-l able those things which are essential to broadcast service. 'rhedesineml to take into consideration not only the ability to hear but the right to transmit. There has been an exces-- sive concentratior of stations in cer-- tain states and communities and we; found it hard to justify that. So we auplhdthemndpleo!equalmocn-' tion among the zones and states. '1 "There may be a chance for argu--> -am.boutthehmaeoft.hehw.i But let us consider it. Each of the zones is entitled to equality. And thlnvelotmt.osaywhatshallc«m-1 stitute this equality--maintaining an equal number of station licenses, and? "Tll bet we'll have to pass a new law and get a new commission before we can get accomplished the things which congress desired," says he. equality of power. Those things should be considered in meting out radio service. That's my idea of what congress had in mind in passing this law." Representative Davis is a little more emphatic on the subject. MATHER, Pa., ~'*ay °* -- Hoping that some life still might exist within the debris of the Mather mine of the Mather Collieries company, hundreds of rescue workers sought today to learn the fate of at least 150 victims ber of station licenses. Then the law refers to wave lengths Each one shall have an equal number of wave lengths. There must be equality of time operation. Then there must be RESCUE CREWS _ ARE BAFFLED 200 miners trapped in the pits , were of Saturday's explosions of mines, said 210 men originally were trapped by the blast. It was reported that the dead in-- ecluded four firemen and five police-- men, who aided Reichswehr troops in fighting with ammonia guns to dis-- sipate the great gas cloud hanging over the city or to drive it into less thickly populated areas. The gas resisted all attempts to disperse it, although soldiers succeed-- ed in driving most of it across the Hofe canal, it still lay close to the ground.. The 200,000 inhabitants in the Wilhelmsburg district were afraid to stay in their homes for fear of be-- ing overcame beyond reach of help. Bo far the amount of the gas re-- leased has not been revealed. Fourteen men have been rescued alive and 39 bodies have been brought to the surface> and placed in tem-- md by the State. enrollment of Five colleges for the higher ed-- ucation of colored people are main-- tained in South Carolina. Four of these institutions are under deno-- minational control and one is sup-- md by the State. They have a enrollment of 4,112 students m.n The fin lleg'sof foigg co own Tioiiee en on t are held by three of the institutions. Of 204 public schools in Detroit, Mich., 97 have libraries. The depart-- ment of school libraries is an integ-- ral part of the city school system and library work is under the di-- The thing that is bothering the commission is that if 50 cleared chan-- nels are decided upon, a lot of good stations, which are able to prove that Announcement of the, plan, how-- ever, brought forth a torrent of pro-- tests from members of congress. The broadcasters and manufacturers also opposed its adoption, claiming it was too drastic. Adoption of the plan would have reduced the number of stations from 700 to 340, with in-- creases in that number through divi-- sion of time and exclusive daytime "Will it be necessary to observe the equality requirement in making cleared --channel assignments or states?" In the forepart of April the com-- mission compueted its structure for the new allocation and invited the leading radio engineers of the coun-- try to come to Washington and in-- spect it. . Engineers Sanction Plan,. The engineers unanimously agreed that the plan, calling for 50 cleared, 36 semi--cleared and four lecal chan-- nels, would provide the maximum ra-- dio service to the public under the present engineering laws. "What constitutes public service?" "What does the law mean when it says equality of service?" The most recent explanation of the commission's delay in making the new allocation is that an interpreta-- tion of several points in the law will be necessary before action can be taken. Among the things about which the advice of lawyers will be Washington as to what the radio commission expected to do; confer= ence after conference has been held but nothing definite can yet be pub-- It has been two months now since congress took action on the radio sit-- uation, made an amendment to the existing law and confirmed the presi-- dential appointees. Since that time PAGE STX of a stzte secretary A correspondent for Photoplay Magazine ventured near enough this lean and sinewy walking arsenal the other day to elicit a few facts about one of the most colorful and least exploited careers in the cinema col-- "Slim" he found, is old enough to| have begun blowing up things in a,' small way 35 years ago--foundation jobs, railroad cuts and prosaic mis--| cellany like that. He'd been playmgl with dynamite for several years when| the San Francisco quake came along and gave him a chance at bigger, things. "Slim" wallowed around in | that maw of filames and tottering walls for day, literally blowing out the conflagration with dynamite. And then he got into the movies. "Gloria and Walthall Courageous" ! He uses a dynamite cap for a toothpick and his vocabularly is as explosive as the stuff he deals with --it has to be, he explains, to 'keep away those simple--minded souls who invariably gather around when an explosion is due. But "Slim" is an artist in his way. He can blow up a 50--foot square area without cracking a tea cup placed six inches beyond the edge. He has perfected a chem-- ical concoction that will make an.en-- tire building seem a roaring inferno without so much as scorching the wallpaper. Mle can supervise the mining of an entire' make--believe battlefield, then sit back at his com-- plex switchboard and play a crescen-- do of destruction that--so far as the eye can see--should dismember every living thing for miles around, but he has never caused a casualty. . Henry Walthall, according -- to "Slim," possesses more sheer nerve than any actor in the business. Once a Walthall script called for the actor to be buried in the devris of an ex-- plosion. Walthall walked in without His name is "Slim" Hoffman -- christened Walter--and his purpose in life is to blow up things. Oh, it doesn't matter what! He'll blow up the kitchen lamp or a square mile otf movie battlefield with the same blase gesture. switch and, wham! It took ten men six minutes to dig Walthall out from twelve feet of dirt, but he didn't sut-- ier anything more than loss of breath. Gloria Swanson is "Slim's" choice for courage among the women. "No doubles for that gal; she'd eat a doz-- en sticks of dynamite to make a the Phcotoplay interview scene more realistic," he declares in the Photoplay interview. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., May 18.--This: _ "Proper training is to introduce "the hardest boiled third grade should guy in Hollywood." 3 | and as serious as tr: No, you're wrongs It's not Lon ing the tenth or tw Chaney, not Tom Mix, not even Bull should be equally w Montana. Bull Montana is a May-- P@ss childhood thru pole dancer compared with this baby !ty of instruction in who goes prowling around the studio| Place those who su lots with his pockets full of dyna-- real teachers only ; mite, dangling a roll of high explos--| blunder that explai ive fuse where Tom Mix dangles| dire results noticeabl nothing more dangerous than a rope. than we dare acknov They are evidently getting teac-- hers with less education than the teachers in the high schools; for authentic reports of a year ago showed that onl{ 43 per cent of our elementaary school teachers had two or more years of education be-- yond hifih school. * In twelve coun-- ties in lllinois, less than 5 per cent of the elementary school teachers met this standard; in 84 counties, from 5 to 54 per cent met it; and in only 6 counties did 55 per cent or more of the elementary school teac-- kers meet this reasonable standard. The twelve counties in the lowest school -'.-. alv-r es wvn, 471 ette, -- Greene, Hamilton, H DYNAMITE IS HIS MAIN TOY teachers and what they really Ii-AlBemShlotd.offlw&..lnb'-Mub most athletic girl on the Thiel college campus at Greenville, Pa. © In addition to starring at basketball and hockey she has taken fourth place in a national women's swimming meet. ; | t and Mrs. LeRoy Kane, Mr. and Mrs. NAMED FOR ATHLETIC PROWESS . (Robet Rowe iA m Nt many | _ Eighteen membe i Thursday at the I 'ing held at the ho A new order of i ceived. Anyone wi | purchase -- from _ M Very attractive ini lkins may also be 0 Robert Rouse. -- |__"If the status of all teachers, up-- _per and lower, u and> rural, is |to be approximately the same in an !honestli equipped \school -- system, | what shall that status be? The | standards of preparation cannot well 'be lower in amount than those now demanded for _ superior . secondardy | instruction. Four rs of. well--di-- rected training su uent to a high , school education is | sufficient, with | selected material, to lay the founda-- _ tions of 'a superior teacher. Ex-- | perience, skilled practical guidance, and further specialized study, at-- tended.--always by discriminating sel-- | ection, should result in a group hav-- ing relatively high mental and socia" power and fit to serve anY commun-- ity as leaders. For to lead youth éeffectively implies, by any accepted .definition, the power and resources to lead community also." This standard of four years of education beyond the high school is far beyond the two |years that over half the Illinois elementary school | teachers-- fail to meet. Therefore, our educational s ards for begin-- ning teachers in the _ elementary school grades certainly ought to 'be Johnson, Pope, Ric !Scott and Wayne. highest group were | Kane, Lake, Macon: Dora Rouse, Bes Ray and Jerry T election Board ~Tu lein. Fred Krog and family have mov-- ed to the Brockman house. Mrs. Dougherty entertained Mrs. Harriett King at dinner Monday ev-- ening. :: :0 Anna Novak is the Foulds Macaro Libertyville. ~= _ Mrs. LeRoy Ka;j bert Rouse 'motor Monday. ; y A'lfreéh_}loé.fling day in icago. .{irs. Lewis Mills Mrs. Emma Mills -- day with Mrs. Cla of Lake Zurich. The McLaughling ed Sunday aftemo' Lubkemann home. Wm. -- Woaodin attended the conce in# at Lon# Grove ~Mr. and Mrs.. Le L.ibertvville visited ing with Mr. and son. | Mr. and Mrs, / visited Srndav-- wif Ed. Umbdenstock c Mrs. -- Domv~bertv Marvy, Mr. Ed. Se sited Sunday with ter, Miss Mary H This standard of education beyond th far beyond the two half the Illinois ele teachers fail to m our educational stan ning teachers in t school grades certai raised. Two new cottages are being built in V?ich's subdivision west of Dia-- mond Lake: | es f Miss Marvel of Sunday School Bo: nesday at various create an interest tion Bible School. Mrs. Robert Sou!t prize at a Bunco in Chicago Monda: Mrs. Jennie Haye afternoon "in Wauk Mr. and Mrs. Gordor Wednesday in Chicago. than we dare acknowledge. "Proper training for teaching the third grade should as prolonged and as serious as training for teach-- ing the tenth or twelfth grade, and should be equally well rewarded. To pass childhood thru a graded qual-- ity of instruction in order finally to place those who survive in charge of real teachers only at the top is a blunder that explains more of the dire results noticeable in our schools In this connectio from Bulletin No negie Foundation, 1 est. It says: Mr. and Mrs. DIAMON] spent Saturday egan.. -- i k'd Wm. Cavbert Thursday even-- Rov Knigge of Thursdav: even-- rs. Cassius Ma-- ordon Ray spent *eorse Heinsohn h --Mr. --rnd Mrs. f Gilmer. s and _ dauohter. ler: and 'son, vi-- the former's sis-- awley of Chica-- ewis Mills. Mr. horn won s Club party of Chicago call-- n at the Fred and chi'dren and visited Wednes-- rence Snetsinger ie Kane, Matie wner served on sday . at Munde-- ow --employed at ia : Company. at rd > and Mrs--Ro-- 1 to Waukegan spent Wednes -- a~-- quotation 14 of the Car-- 20, is of inter-- hland, lgchupler, The six in the or . secondardy ears of. well--di-- quent to a high sufficient, with lay the founda-- ipuintatoch. Apsrdiart--dro:, -- xd d and Winnebago. Cook( DePage s trying Daily Va second v _ held ng-- to Vaca-- There's no fool like an old fool unless it is a middle--aged fool and that was demonstrated a few days ago when an lowa man married af-- ter completing a pen: sentence for bigamy. : It is also getting around to the time. when the saturation point in one--piece bathing suits will again ~Despite its comparative shortness the > > H:Fmobile Century -- Eight crankshaft is one of the heaviest known in the industry. _ It weighs 99 1--2 KQ'"'"S» or about 50 per cent more than the average crankshaft desig}:\ed tgr t}ui1 same work. l&; weight and. rigidity, wi its exceptionally fine mflm" engineers claim, are further aids to this engine's super smoothness. "The Hupmobile Century Eight L--head engin¢ in the shortest power plant ever devised in this type. Be-- cause of its compactness it edimi-- rates tendency to crankshaft distor-- tion and vibration and results in su-- perior performance and longer life." "The ayangement of cylinders in pairs," says Frank E. Watts, chief engineer of the Hupp Motor Car Corporation," permits the use of a much shorter crankshaft and makes a straight eight motor more com-- pact than Aany other Eight--in--line motor. This exceptional compactness, the engineers --explain, is made possible by a combination of 'several engi-- neering details, --prominent IIDO% which are a unique arrangement the eight cylinders and a special crankshaft design. hn Sfi N The Community Club will give a :c,gtrg party on Friday evening, May Smoothness -- of -- perfop €, .' & feattlx're generally reeamic as reaching its supreme ion in eight cylinder automoe:ife';";s as-- cribed by Hupp engineers in the case of their Century Eight cars in large degree to the compactness of the motor installed in this model. The Century Eight engine meas-- ures a fraction less than 31 inches overall, and is said to be the short-- est straight eight engine used in the industry. ---- / :---- 5 oo Ray Brothers are giving their c:eening dance -- Saturday evening ifhtman's orchestra of Grayslake will provide the music.-- _ > EIGHT'S _ SMOOTH PERFORMANCE TRACED TO MOTOR COMPACTNESS Memorial Sunday will be observ-- ed May 27th at the Ivanhoe Church. The Diamond Lake and Mundelein Churches will join :in the services. Rev. Scheuerman will deliver the address. The service will be held at 10:30 standard time. $ Mrs. Robert Southorn-- attended the Integrity Conclave of the True Kindred on Friday evening. This was Friends' Night and Mrs. South-- orn filled the station of Secretary. Leslie and Robert Southorn of Chicago visited Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert South-- the past six weeks. Harry Mason's name is on the honor roll at Deerfield--Shields high school as one having high gr:.zs The pupils of the eighth grade of the Diamond Lake School took their final exams Tuesday at Half Day. stal Lake. % Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clift ate Sunday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Dave Covert. Mr. and Mrs. LeRoI{oueKane and Mr. and Mrs. Harden attend-- ed the Genesee Theatre Saturday evening at Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. HmnMd Mrs. Harriett Ray --of Mu in ate Sun-- day dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Gor-- don Ray. THE LAKE COUNTY REGISTER. WEDNESDAY, MAY 2; a Jn'cnic dinner Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Rockenbach at Cry-- Ahe easiest steering car you have ever driven. Srz Then ez\t\siest W!THOUT leaving the showroom floor, you can tes the steering ease of the new Hupmobile Century Six or Eight. Grasp the wheel with thumb and forefinger of one hand--and turn. $ $ Note how the cam--and--lever gear actually assists both in making d turn and in bringing the front wheels back to a straight position. 4 4 You'll want one of the new Century Hupmobiles, first of all--for its beauty. # % But every day you drive it, you'll discover new fine qualities of performance, new features of luxury and comfort that more than ever stamp these cars as the century's greatest achievements in motor car value. REE MOTOR SALES dinner with Mr. and Mrs. overt. Lo and Mrs. LeRoy Kane and well | Mrs. Harden I{onse atw-l TY Genesee. Theatre Saturday Johr at Waukegan. | If °D C SOaandwdch"eq\dgpdmddlou different wheelbases--the Six of the C4 the Century Eight and the Ceontury 125 e -- Phone 8 _ Following the path of gioneers to-- ward the west, this --highway fur-- nishes the transcontinental motor-- ist a comprehensive picture of the county's development. From its eastern terminus at Atlantic City. it follows for 3,205 miles across fourteen states the course of the earliest settlers of the Ohio, Mis-- sissippi and Missouri valleys. 'It weaves through the gold fields of Colorado, through the country of Brigham Young founder of the Mor-- mon settlement in Utah, and brings the tourists to the land of the set-- hngmann----the Golden Gate. m Wilmington, Del., to--St. Mary's Kan., the highway is paved for the full distance of 1,234 miles. From Salt Lake City to San Fran-- cisco--890 -- miles--it is surfaced. Eighty--six per cent of the length is improved. Ultimate plans for the highway include the paving of all portions of the road with perman-- ent construction. 1 A condition survey over the en--| tire length of the highway, accord-' ing to information furnished by the Bureau of Public Roads, United| States Department of -- Agriculture, shows 1,550 miles of paving, 539 miles of gravel, 672 miles of earth, Before many years motorists will| be driving from Atlantic City to San Francisco over smooth durable pavement. Gag: of earth and gra-g vel roads together with highways of semi--permanent type will be filled | in with pavement capable of hand--| ling high--speed traffic. Such is the prediction for United States Route| 40. "Such an understanding involves some conception of where the child's life is pointing, an analysis of the things that will be for the child's best interest and guidance, arnd a desire to assist the child in realizing his lnhel'ests." a g Oftentimes, Dr. Morgan said, the child of an over--affectionate parent will develop a feelinzg of antipathy and hatred toward its mother which will persist all through life. PIONEER'S PATH TRACED BY ROAD "True affection does 'not mean an incresasing intimacy of the bonds which tie mother and child together," Dr. Morgan told the mothers' associ-- ation, "but it means that the mother has a better and better understand-- ing of the sort of child which is de-- veloping as the days go by. quipped models on three He will refuse to have all his deci-- slons made for him. He will want to live his own life. Then he'll make a lclean break and all the love which was selfishly lavished by the mother will be entirely lost." Furthermore, love which absorbs the entire personality of the child into the mother's self is merely an expression of the mother's love for herself, Dr. Morgan said. The un-- selfish mother realizes that her child has a right to live its own life anad she makes no attempt to bind it with affection. vionate parent smothers her child's ingividuality and prevents its natural growth. The result will be, in later years. that the child will resent the restraint and will fight for freedom That was the advice which Dr. John J. Morgan, associate professor of psychology at Northwestern uni-- versity, gave a group of North Shore mothers at the National Kindergart-- en school in Evanston Monday night. "The mother who devours her child with hugs and kisses and constant attention is doing a pernicious thing." Dr. Morgan said. "The over--affec-- HOLD BACK ON PETTING CHILD Love your child wisely, but not too $ M M0 ib cM,.--"8, -"*'3:;'::' t2% P Aueut e enye esn '#.- s and forgotten to deliver this cargo. Due to their ca a number of valuable specimens were left ex-- posed to termites, Lwhich ruined them. spite the difficulties; placed in his way by the unsettle*i 'conditions in that country. | According to a report received at the museum F. C. Englesing, the collector, working Hrgwgy right in the heart of the territory pecupied by the United Statfs marines in their operations against the Sandino forces, has secured a large collec-- tion of trees, shrubs, ferns, palms, plants and other bot@nical material, much of it rare, representative of Nicaragua. Mr. Engresing is a civil engineer in charge of the explora-- tion work of an American lumber company at Puerto Cabezas. Indifference of natives who must. be relied upon for assistance is another of the h caps reponetb' by Mr. Englesing. e writes that one load of specimensg which he was' shipping by cance down a river to seaport,: was brought back to him in the interior by the Indian crew several weeks later They -- had sto'rped to visit friends gotten drunk and forgotten to deliver this cargo. Comprehensive collections of the flora of Nicaragua are being ob-- tained for Field,hllnseum of Natural History by a collector who is going steadfastly on with the work de-- of the enture length of the highway is paved with this durable type. An interesting section of the route is the 24--mile stretch between Zanesville and Hebron, Ohio. Here the Office of Public Roads, now the Bureau of Public Roads of the Department of Agriculture, built an experimental section of concrete in 1915. At that time concrete road construction was in its infancy but the thoroughfare is still in good condition today. Federal Aij has played a large gart in the improvement of United tates route 40--over $18,000,000 has been contributed by the govern-- ment of _ this _ transcontinental thoroughfare. Federal aid projects on the route include 700 miles of pavement, | 725 miles . of surfaced road and more than four miles of bridges. : * 1 ea of concrete--or about 30 Eier ; of the entire length of the high graded and drained, and 444 miles unimproved, > . 3 via # Of the 1,550 miles of paved roads over 900 miles have been construct-- ed of concrete--or about 30 per cent CENERAL @ELEC--»PIC _ Refrigerator Not a belt, fah or drain pipe. Never needs oiling. Unusually ql_xin.bl. It'sportable--install it anywhere --move it u;ywherg. And do not overlook the strong, attractive cabinets--built for service. : Guaranteed by General Electric. TITUS BROTHERS + -- 501 N. Milwaukee Ave. Libertyville, Phone 64 +4# +4 trict for the purchase of books. The lan gives each school access to & fi:gernnmberofbooksthmeonld be obtained through individual pur-- chase, and care of the books in a central place eliminates the danger oflosgytheftdnfinzvmfim the payment to the county sugerin- tendent of $5 a year from each dis-- trict for the purchase of books. The : A cooperative library in Osborne County, Kansas, is --maintained by 40--42--44. That a tax sale of lands and lots were delinquent taxes for the years 1916 mad:qby the County Treasurer and County Clerk at the Court House in the court room in the City of Waukegan, County of Lake and State of Illinois, '?eord::gsto the laws of the State of Illlinois, on the lith day of Ang&A. D. 1926 and the time for the mption of same will expire on the 1l1ith day of Aug-- ust, A. D. 1928. also lot Twenty(20) Block Two (2), Lot Nineteen (19) Block Two (2) for Special Assessment Warrant No. 80, assessed in the name of Burchell. Lot Twenty (20) Block Two (2), Lot Nineteen (19), Block Two (2) Special Assessment Warrant No. 88, levied on the City of Highwood and Tax purchasers notice to|the un-- known owners and all ies in-- gnr?ted i]n the following ribed s or lots or portions.of same, TAKE NOTICE To Casper Santi and C. O. Armes and to Burchell, take notice that at a tax sale C. O. Armes purchased and assigned his certificate to me of the following: f es . e NOTICE Of sale of lands and lots for the state, county, city and general and special taxes, State of lllinois, County of Lake SS. Libertyville{Shoe Kaiser Building Peters' Good--W ear Charles Jordan Libertyville, . First Class Shoe i+ W. B. SMITH. 912 N. County St. Office in First National Bark Bldg. Hours: 1 to 8:80 and 7 to 8 p. m. Residence, Oakwood Terrace Luce Bldg. Scientific Examination of the Eyes GLASSES FITTED B. H. MILLER ATTORNEY--AT--LAW First National Bank Building Telephone 57 LIBERTYVIL DR. OTTO R. THOMPSON Libertyville Post No. 329 --REALTOR-- JUSTICE OF THE PE Office at Stewart and U:e?h Harry Madill BartJett points and docin"t bQu"m the skin _ up it complaining! S::fi-m "stitdm."a nl':'. moment you will forget that you ever had a weak back, because it won't hurt or be stiff or lame. Don't suffer! Get 3&-:}" trial botle of old, honest acobs Oil" from your druggist now and get this dasting relief. :i'd.' from o;mus, stiffness, ollows a J ith "St. Jatobs O~ ***** The average Libertyville : thinks o{:lpring only as a t get busy with the moth bails. REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE FJJICK MOTOR COMPANXNAY Dirssion of Ceneral Motors Corborai--on Ah! Backache Gone Rub Lumbago Away When you buy a used c know that it will perform as promised -- you know that MAIXN MOTOR SALEFS FairTreatment of USED CAR buyers .. your Buick Dealer's Policy His prices are fair--based on the actual resaie worth of the car in question. And he will tell you the true cond:won of any car he offers for sale. He is always careful to guard his high reputation in the com--, Rub Pain from back with emall trial bottle of old "St. Jacobs Oll." LYELL H. MORRIS The used car tnat serves you most satisfactorily -- that gives you the most transpor-- tation for your money-- naturally offers the greatest used car value. Go to the Buick dealer. He offers a wide selection of makes and models in his used Ah! Pain is gone! DK. J. L. TAYLOR ! FRED GRABBE LIBERTYVILLE, ILL. Waukegan, illincis Local Y and COUNSELOR Telephone 18 PEPONE 456 6 Almost K INnCLGCV § tative Phone 1798

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy