Daily British Whig (1850), 29 Jul 1910, p. 5

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ORE orders are enier- M ed than ed and hills vender- there are letters written. Hence there is even greater necessity of havisg in your office an Underwood Billing Types writer, Ne UNITED TYPEWRITER CO. LID. NORBS, KINGSTON, 48 O t Live en THE LIVE COALS {In the Mercantile Baseball League by Some of the Old id-Timers are Making The CLs. the 11 to S---lrishmen and Play To-morrow---Dodging Tag Men, The {one Railroaders handed out a hot! to the Live Coals, yesterday af- iterncon, when they defeated them by la score of 11 to B. The game sll | through was the best exhibition of baseball seen in the Mercantile League this season. The Railroaders got their {lead on errors made by the Live Coals, getting three men in on a hit over first base. This seemed to encourage them apd they continued to pile up the runs until the score stood 11 to 5. 'Jack"™ Stansbury's men showed up J weil due, no doubt; to the hard-work- {ing management. At the end of the Howrth innings it looked as though it would 'be a close game, as the Rail- ironders had four runs and the live Yoals three. The freight handlers {broke away and in the fifth scored seven, | Railroaders--Allaire, ¢.; Driver, i. Driver, 1b.; Rutherford, 2b; tan, .; Millan, 3b.: Dickson, Hanley, ef; Attwood, LI. Coals--~J. Stansbury, ¢.; Ray, Ip; Sowards, hg O'Neil, 2h; Faxne, [Bel Dicky 3b; "Gravelle, rf; Ratty B. Stansbury, LI. "Jummie'"" Phithps tmpired Score by Innings pei Larat- rf: Railvonders .., ... 0.31007 x11 Live Conls 20002. 5 Irishmen vs, CLL.C's, 's and Irishmen mest on the field, Saturday alternoc should be an exciting game, CE ferie a { This 3 {the Irishmen are improving wonderful ily. fit 1HC.L.C's | oe without delay, & die! COMMON SENSE is a paste, containing no poison dangerous to human beings or domestic he animals; yet it quickiy kills rats and mice. They cat 1t with sagerness, and it net only kis Sheth but dries them wp without ciferse. It never 150 25¢, §0c and $1, at a 1 Sense ! Rat Killer. Two Kinds 2. Bedbass and s AN dealers and COMMON SENSE MFG. CO. 381 Queen St, West, Toronto, Ont. se tries sl it Take Care of That Bald Spot. The time to take care of your hair| is when you have it, SALVIA will stop the hair from falling out by making the roots strong. Cures Dandruff germ. Grows halr abundantly by feeding the roots. A money back proposition falls. For sale and guaranteed, a large bottle by killing the it it 50 cents| w - THE WORK COUNTS. It's the quality in our work in dyeing and cleaning lace cur- tains that gives so good a busi- ness 40 these lines, | R. PARKER & CO., Dyers and Cleaners, 0 Princess St, Kingston, Ont, Yoon] aption moves ments wonld Le. peed Tens If everyone anders stood that REGAL Sagar beaefitn hut does not Intaxiente, it aquenches thirst delight- folly, makes the appe- tite healthy, and alds digestion. Good at meals, H PARKS &SON, Florists | Pay TEs Sh. gos kinds of cut Flowers and Plants Weddin -- Pk Our Give Brand Of Standard Granulated Sugar is un- expelled for preserving or table use, ANDREW MACLEAN'S, Ontario Street. Funeral De- 10 all parts. fdollars, If they keep up to the form shown | Saturday, they should five th | a hard game. Dodging the Tags. ! Evidently the baseball sports dodging the men with the tags. The feolleetion at last Saturday's City League game reached only thirty-one If Kingston people want base mux the Sports don't objeet to paying half a to see an hockey and should not edge around to keep out of the af the money box for the sake of saving a dime a quarter, are ball they gupport tenms dollar game way or Wear a Blue Tag. Those who help the city league bage ball teams to-morrow afternoon by contributing a little bit = of coin, will be known by the blue tag thes wear, The tag reads: 'Help gogd Sport." J Baseball Gossip, I'he fat men of Kingston are trying to arrange a baseball game with the fat men of Watertown. If it can be secured the game will afford a great deal of amusement. Everyone remem- | bers when the fat men of Watertown] played here, about six or seven years ago. | At a meeting of the executive of the | Sunday School Baseball League, held, last night, in the Y.M.C.A, rooms, it was decided. td play "the final game be- tween Cooke's and the Princess street combination on Monday evening, at the cricket field, at 6.30 o'clock. A five innings game will be played, re gardless of darkness. It bx understood Gillespie or Crawford, of the Victorias, will umpire the game. ' The barbers have organized a team and will play the tailors one week from Monday evening. Frank Robbs, "" George Lennox and 'Jim lee, two "more old timers, will show some of their old spirit. George Willia will be the mascot, All Kinds of Sport. New Westminster papers roast Mon- treal lacrosse players for unsports- manlikggiighnvior on and off the field. The between Lajoie and ( 'obh for batting honors in the American League grows closer. Figures show La BAILROADERS DEFEAT: p | BEING nnd was {pretty i Hé calls the balls the {If you consider what may come an-old time pitcher, will twirl for the! 'shavers, and Hagermau will be behind {the bat. PONE BY THE LOCAL MARKSMEN THIS SEASON. Good Scoves--First of Civilian: i. League Matches Takes Place at the Butts on Saturday. "U Kingston bad been favored with! the present rifle ranges five vears ago, there city men on the Bisley team," rifleman to-day. The ith Regiment and the civilian marksmen have heen tremendously handicapped by the lack of a rifle range. Now that they have a good ohe, the interest in rifle shoot- ing is steadily inereasing, and good srores are made by and civilian shooters. William Swaine, the old Bisley representative from Kingston, is again shooting up to his old standard, and last Monday made 101 out of 105 in the Kingston As- gociation's open match. That is pret- ty good shooting. Mr. Swaine was on the Bisley, team in 1901, He would snid a tip has had no range for years, mm sev the loeal erack shots like Swaine aud White had to practise. Other old-timers who are shooting well | this season are W. M. Baillie, the chief of police, who was a crack shot with the old rifle years Prof. A. K. | Kirkpatrick and. Thomas M. Asselstine. To-morrow afternoon, the Kingston title Association will fire the first of four mistehes for a silver satver offered by the Dominion Rifle the ng grognte of six men in the Four matrhes to count. The. shobting mast he t duly Sth, Angust ed, oth. no chance ago; 1 eague, done ih and GLh STONE CUTTERS STILL OFF. Masons Will Lay Stone Even if Cut in the Prison. the stone cutter the stones ma mithdings in a very i | luck of material, The eutterg | allow the masons to cut the coarser ad shoddy materials, claw ing that all cattin® should he done by them. The masons thelr eonstitu tion permits them to do the coarsers 'J secws that the recent strike wad an, the ma intimated that the trouble would probably arise, that they walild whom it | cut, even if done by prison labor. wold indicate that there strong feeling vetween the two | It is purely a disagreement be | two unions, but unless it ean soon be settled, building operations | here will again suffer, <a far only but have | { ong will | quit work, forced off for to ho Ww dary refuse ny when Ons present and told contractors set stone no matter hy This iv bodies. tween et i---------------- | The Baseball Umpire. The umpire stands Lehind the Conspicuously in view: The way that fellow toys with fate Just keeps me in a stew! > plate i hatter swats I And those he doesn't touch. It's wonderful the way he spots Loft handed twists and such! An umpire cares not what he gives, | Strike three or just ball four; | Jt sets us guessing how he lives i When all the team -is sore. Five dollars seems a fragile sum For umpiring, 1 say. To him some cruel day. Calls for Reverential Attention. "Je it ignorance or disloyalty" re marked a Britisher at the park, last night; "that causes people to shampede the moment "God save the King i offered by the hand," The same thought has found expression before. We al- trivute it to thoughtlessnes. the national anthem is a paver and should be so received, with reverential attention and respect, and with un: covered head. Such an attitude hy Canadiars woud go Im impr foreigners and mmm of our nlood with Canadian alleziance to the sovercign, and which we know is as genuine among any of hie sw reets, LE) 8 as Lake Ontario Park Vaudeville, joie's average to be 876 and S74. "Jack-' Joisnson, champion pugilist of the world, has been sec retly match- ed to meet 'Sam' Langlord in Knog- land and will sail for the other side irra -sirort time. PIE is the informa tion given out by Johnson's brother. The officials of the Minto lacrosse! cup series aflivm to win. the eup the castern teams will have to devise new system" of tacties to defeat West minsters nt their own fashion of play. Unly five big league players of long experience have, put in, all ther time with one elul, Uhanee, Evans, 'and Kling have always been with the Chi éafto Cubs, Lee Tanuehill's entire car: wor has been with the White Sox, and Eddie Plank began with the Philadel phia Athletics. Expressing a desire to round out for ty vemrs of professional baseball playing, Jades H. O'Rourke, sr, of Bridgeport, lawyer, former owner of of the Bridgeport league team, and one of the oldest, if not. the oldest, profession] player in the couniry, | will prol eateh one game for New Haven dusing the Brest season, "Jofivies w ly tramed," says 'Bob' SRS ompety "He should have had three or four real fights be- fore tackling Johoson, and then wonld have been ready. His lack of thoxing practice was a fatal weakness, He didu't know how to fight the ne "seemed to forget everything the first three or four {rounds were over. He wasn't the Jef | frien that beat me twice, and he sur: I saw him put his_hands. Rickard shoald have aiid. Jeff the moment his se- got. into the ri The all fuund meet of the AAU, whith # ta be hold at onal {hall field, », Aug. 43th, pro- mises 10 te more of a contest than any similar event ince 1900, when it - Tom Kiel 1reland. Colsh's | he The attendance at Lake Ontario Park last evening was an evidence. of the] } popularity of = this favorite sammer | resort. An elaborate vaudeville pro i gramins = was presented. The pictures! wore good, especially. Scenes. Along | the "Canadian Pacific Railway,' and "Twixt Love and Duty," Ernie Yale sang ay More Attention to Me, Sam," and gave as a recitation "The fan Jehind the Pie His hay pub hing was original. Fletcher and Campbell, the sensational comedy 'artists, gave an excellent representa- "tion of their work. "Their jumping jand tumbling was deservedly apple and- ed. Miss Ada Rosevear sang in fine voice "Lovelight" and "A Ring I Around Rosie." A Delightful Band Concert. Thé Roval Canadian Horse Artillery band gave the most delightful concert of the season in Macdonald Park, last evening, before n crowd of over 3,000 people. The evening was pleasant, and the concert was enjovable on both and aud water, Bandmaster Light . {presented a programme that pleased everybody, and the band: played with splendid effect. It was after ten o'clock when "0 Canada' resounded over the park and the water, and the crowd seemed 10 melt away when the ul struck up "God Save the King." bani ap -------- Mr. Lake's Explanations. KR. H. Lake, Ottawa, in wu letter to | the Whig regarding his accident on the 'civie holiday, says: "1 did not hit the mare with the whip. 1 did not admit to anyone that it was wy plat The mare did not need a whip and I can hawnle a horse as well as most men." ; L Mak Tore oe Arm. ¥ - would be some more Limestone both the military | i were very jof getting and doing msiness? | {Young THE SPORT "REVIEW FINE RIFLE SHOOTING DEATHS IN "CNGSTON LIVING LSC E THE BEGINNING OF THIS i 5 YEAR WERE 223. i Caused From Many Chicf Diseases That Them -- Fourteen gWere Tubercutar Troubles--Too i- Anacmic Girls. There has been registered in the city clerk's up till yesterday 223 deaths in Kinsston since the first of this year. A good many of these were people from outside places who had died in the hospitals, all the a- bove number pot being residents of Kingston, but the following analysis is noue the less interesting, because the cases enumerated ave very largely belonging to this city. : Of the 223 deaths, twenty-seven were from various diseases of the heart, and twenty were from pneumonia of various kinds. The next largest num ber was from various forms of tuber culosis, and this number was four teen, or 6.72 per cent. There were ol- even deaths from apoplexy; fourfrom cancer, three from = menin rit; three office innings have been on since that, but Kings- frm {hold fe wer, one from diphthor- from measles and from Bright's disease. The deaths from contagious diseases, climinuting ty- phoid fever, were only three, While tu- berculosis is perhaps not on the in- crease, it is still present to a consid- erable extent. Tt still stalks the streets 'of the city of Kingston. A visiting New York doctor the other day remarked upon the fact that there -- were two many anaemic took ing girls, in Kingston. He any prised at this in such a healthy city as Kiggston. There was no reason for it here. One would not be sur prised to see anaemic people in the big cities. He thought that the girls careless of their health. THE DAY. a, one one WAS INCIDENTS OF THE {| Newsy Paragraphs Picked Up By porters on heir Rounds. Abernethy's advertisement. Hamer is putting in a, fifty ton scale at the Belmore mine. roken stone is still being spread on the roads where most needed. United States nominations, Whiz office. The year 1910 is likely to pass with- out being made in the tion of a new hotel in Kingston. Everybody in Kingston anxious to have the G.T.K. strike ended. It ix detrimental the country's in terests, : The board from its Head John small de at the postage, may be in obtained a start eres is to of works is still resting permanent pavement wrest- ling bouts. When it recovers, it will get into the game again. Kingston is not in as bad owing to the G.T.R. strike other .places. We have various a way are ways With as the outside. F. Trimble, secreiary "A, will leave ake Couchiching, where the summesy jinstitute, under the auspises of the Mens Christian Association of Ontario and Quebec, which meets from July 30th to August 13ih, will be held. Mr. Trimble is doing excellent work here especidlly as" regards im- migrants, He keeps constantly in touch with young men, assisting them in finding positions and cheering them on with timely letters. As a re sult of his work a conference will be held on October 27th for the purpose of taking up the question. Y. for of the MC to-morrow IL The Late Richard Sheldon. Death claimed a well-known resident of Leeds county, Monday, in the person of Richard Sheldon, Portland, jie had not been feeling very well for a few days past, but there was thought of anything serious in condition, On Sunday he was seized with' a sudden sinking and quickly passed away. He was a man of very gentle, kindly temperament, esteemed and respected by the whole country side. He Was a large and successful farmer and amassed considerable wealth as the reward of his labors. A few years ago he married as his se cond wile Miss Foster, Smith's Falls, and "since then he has been a good deal in that town. Last winter he took a house and lived there. He was a devoted member of ihe "Methodist church and was always tive in pro moting its interests. The funeral took place al Portland Wednesday af TOrnoOOn: no his "STAND BY THE Fi. AG" Dedicated to the Lith POW Or Rifles Faith in thosetheee inspiring planyes Eh emblem of one corps, oked with the motto on our shield I a th, we'll ever wield When duiy calls 5, in her name We'll raise our corps to honored fame - the glorious (lag we claim Chorus flag, boys, our nation's Stand by the strife enemi boys, and our and ever ~giand by the flag, Stand by e, keep flying. Our. nation's pri ° Stand by our great protection boys, Tne guardian of our joys Rringer of peace to every land Witch. 'neath its rule doth stand. Atl dui, as one In danger 8 flour Chorus To Practise in. Saskatchewan. Dr. 4. B. Hulton, formerly of the general hospital staf, this city, and | son of J. 0. Hutton, of the Canada | Life Insurance company, has been suc cessful in passing the Medical Council of Saskatchewan, at Regina. He has entered into partnership with Dr, Eaglesham, who has a large practice in the fast-growing and flourishing town of Weyburn, the big wheat cen- tre of that province. 5 i -------- Killing the Goose Again. Everybody's Magazine. The old family physician being away on a much vacation, his prae- {tice was entrusted to his son. a recent medical graduate. When the old man returned, the. youngster told him, among other things, that he had cured Joe B Horner have | - Jute rupramacy of time and ag ge seg hard work on a hot ontreal lieved The Seviofe meeting' of the King: Miss Ferghson, an aged and wealthy { spinster, of / ad chronic indigestion. "My boy," said the old doctor, m proud of you' but Miss Fergu- x is what put you "one college." Financial Meeting. erhiodise district" is cutled -- for next inoPPenk sireet Metho- sloh Muesday dist Lwhat less than BUT WAGES ARE ALSO wh LESS THAN ON THIS SIDE, { The American Workman is Retier Taxes Are High and Schools Not! Up to Ours--General Conditions of Other Side. Oswego Palladium Belleville, Ont., You hear a great much clieaper you can live in Capa than m the United States. It is that sucn is the case providing yo huve plenty of money and foreed to work fora Living. A w man is not any etter off here at end of the year than he sin the ed States, for, while prices are some | what lower, wages are also less. The laborer here gets $1.25 a day for | ion hours, Al skilled mechapies york eight hours here. Carpenters get $2. masons and bricklavers,. $3.27. wal chinists, $2.10; tool makers, $2.75. vo | licomen here get 835 a wonth., Clarks in stores and offices are m pro portiom to the above, Belleville, like all (apclian cities a large market. Tie market days me Tuesday, Thursday and Sat wday of each week. The farmers for a radius of twenty to thirty miles drive in with their produce, |oultry, and meat and sell them on this m ket. After noon they peddle whatever produce they may left the butcher shops and grocories strange sirht side of _the all classes baskets om July 26.--(Special}. deal about how | trae that BO wr the {nit nad sup oorts rons have to It is a from our people of with their to 4 person boundary to see | 12 to market | heir arms to! buy their provisions. The rea! wealthy drive up in their carriages. but ich and poor alike patronize the market, Herve is a list of the prices which pre vailed upon the market on Saturday last : Oats, live hogs, ter; 26 to ewes, 19 to wheat, to 60 cents a gol new, 40 to 43 cents a bushel: $9; hay, new, $58 to $9; but- 25 cents pound; = fresh dozen; Fall 95 cents a bushel; barley, 55 bushel: rve, 63 cents a bushel; peas, 70 to 75 cents a bushel; huckwie at, i e his bushel; timothy; 2,73 to $3 a bushel; clover, red, $9 to to Spring wheat, us we to $1 a bughel:: dressed hous, $12 to $12.25 per ewt.; dressed beef, fore, D0 to 88: dress ed Beef, hind, $9 to $10; Spring lant, 5 £9 15¢ a pound; mutton, 8 to 1} cents un pound; veal hides, 10 cents a pound; lamb skins, 80 cents; ducks, 31.25 to $1.5 per pair; chickens, ¥1 to $1.50 per pair; $ 3 1 81.- 50 each; turkeys, #2 to $3.50 each wool, washed, 20 cents a pound; new pota 40 cents a peck; Spring chicken, 60 cents to $1 per pair, From the above it is easy that the necessities of life in Oswego, butter, poultry and meats, here are as low. Houses which would rent for $25 and $30 a month in Os wego can he hdd bere for $15 to $18 a month. And nearly every house is of brick, and the most of them have mo- dern improvements. Property is about one-half of what it in Oswego. A tenroom brick house with a foot front lot, located in the principal residential portion of the city, which would cost from $4,000 to $6,000 in Oswego, can be bought bere for $2, 500 fo $3,000. " The tax rute here ix very high. The rate is $2.70 on 2100 for city purpos- os alone, "hut the. city not have to pay any part of the administration of the county affairs, except a por tion of the maintenance of the prison. ers sent from the city to the county jails. Howewer, for this high rate the city maintains all the streets, builds sewers, pays sixty per of the costs of all side-walks pays all other obligations. . Belleville is having the same trouble over its schools as Oswego. They old and unsanitary. The best school building, called the Victoria high school, has been condemned. The local authorities took action and clos ed the school in the middle of the term. A propdsition to raise $55,000 to build three new schools was turned down five to one, the wealthy, retired farmers, and Belleville is full of them, voting solidly against * the proposi tion. St. Mary's Catholic church maintaing a very large and handsome parochial school. It built of lime and was opened about a year apo. His the only the place, Bottexille 10,006 lconsed a 20 cents a geese toes, to see cast some especially eggs, Rents sixty does cent, and are Queen stone modern school in a population of be 12.000, There drinking places license and are There onl has and Li tween seventeen They pay $50 a vear loeatesl in the business i= not an hotel or skirts. A the Canadian here, as other cities on this side where 1 have been all are ers. Their lager and ale here is good, but the whiskey is better and cheaper than the greater part of that sold in the States, The fishing over here is the best. Bay of Quinte is filled with pike, the big yellow kind, called pickerel here: the little lakes about thirty miles hack are teeming with black bass, and the brooks are alive with speckled te} The people here think nothing of a twenty-five or thirty-mile drive mn | order to enjoy a dav"s fishing. I had hedrd a great deal about how strictly the Sunday law was enforced | on this side. An "Old Home Week i on here. Saturday night and yester day the hotels and barroom: were wide open, the streets were filled with drunken, shouting, fighting men, and they certainly were "enjoying" them- selves immensely. The excise inspector was conveniently taken sick and un- able to make his rounds. All bars are supposed to close at eleven o'clock at night on week days and at seveh o'clock Saturday nights, but don't, section saloon on the gold mine for in Kingston and | of the border | good drink license is a they Tired Nature's Sweet Restorer. Everybody's Magazine. The late Bishop Fosse once visited a Philadelphia physician for = some tril: ling ailment. "Po vou, sic," the doctor asked, in the course of his examination, "talk in your sleep go "No, sir," answered the bishop. talk in other people's." The sativist ean talk about the! "average man" with fmpunite, tes cause every man considers himself above the average. | "1 | «Eat and Be Merry!" Stop starving yourseli--stop suffering the pangs of indigestica----sicp worrying about what you dare and dare not eat. Eat hearty meals of wholesome food, take Off Than His Canadian Cousin--| ¢ tomach heartburn -- all weld quickly to ) digested food ne, and soon and you'll feel Like a new pe occasional restores y € a, regal: ; requires ho S0¢ 50¢. and we w NATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA LiNITED, your stomach J your druggist has not stocked them yet send ail them, MONTREAL. SATURDAY The Last Day of the July Clearance Sale. : Offers some of the Biggest Savings of the Summer. AAAS NE NNN SN 475 Regular Yards 40-inch Sheer oven weave. price, 25e yard. 8 On Sale Saturday, 15¢. Yd : 180 Pair Pillow Cases, made of a fine English Cotton, wide hem sizes 40, 42 and 44. Regular price, 305¢c and 40¢ pair On Sale Saturday, 23c. Pr Sik and Lisle price, Lawn, extra fine quailty, \ 150 Sample Pair Ladies' all the latest shades Regular On Sale, 35¢. Regular' 75c. On Sale, 45c. A Special Lot of 15 broidery fronts, tucked different patterns Summer Stockings, in all-over em~ back, many or Lawn Hla buttoned $1.75 0 Ladies' Shes back and sles Regular $1.50 and On Sale Salurday, 69¢ " Umbrellas. Gloria Silk 8 and fancy handles, in ito $3.59 1868, Ves, £5 Ladi fra $2 Tops, with close Tolling Para 1y different designs. Regular On Sale Saturday. $1.75 fine Lisle Thread, ribbed ve with lace at neck and arms gon price, ma 259 Ladies' and whhont price, 2 with Regular On Sale Saturday, 2 for 25¢ 30. Swiss Embroidered Odd patiérns by the Summer Vests, , trimmed is, sleeves Pillow "2 They are somewhat soiled customs officer. Shams in many different and damaged by a small cut a ranging from &8¢ to H0c each 3b : On Sale Satur day, 60 Men's Suits, a valud worth price, On Sale Saturday, $6.98 $11.00, $12.00 and $13.50 200 Pair Men's Fine Lisle Thread Regular price, made of Regular investigating, guaranteed Sox, all different colors. On Sale Saturday, 15¢. Pr om TO-MORROW IS A SENSATIONAL FINISH TO OUR RIG JULY CLEARANCE SALE WITH PRICES ALL OVER THE STORE THAT YOU WILL SURELYSAPPRECIATE. DO NOT LET THIS OPPORTUNITY PASS HY YOU. COME EARLY. NAL, A, 7 AO AANA The Montreal Stock Co., 180--PRINCESS ST.--180 REID & CHARLES ROYAL SHOES i% MEN Hand-in-hand with style goes wearing quality This, together with the choicest leather and superb workmanship, places these goods in front rank of shoe perfection. SOLD ONLY AT REID & CHARLES SHOE POLISH For Ladies Too' Won't rull off on frilly things, or stain the skirts. Waterproof, Seutuing ne Turpentine, Avis sr ether injuricus IEEE. . Preserves the leathor. ALL DEALERS, 100. THE F. P. DALLEY CO., LIMITED, Mamiiten, Ont. and Buffale, N.Y. EE -------- i ------ An Honorable Beginning. paid better salaries when Mr. Angus Hamilton Herald. was 8 youth than they do mow. . It is andounced that President An- re-- 3 gus, of the Bank of Moptreal, began] Many a man who thinks he 6 a 90° kis business career as a bank deck ut [Palit might have made good as an $00 a year. The backs must have auctioneer -- &

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