Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Nov 1910, p. 12

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Pac / = THAT TIRED WHEEL In all chanical and scie lrun Is while it a Lita mm one must mechanical and setting mpl AME 406 PRINCESS STREET, HEAL OF QUEEN STREET. "Highest Education al Lowest Cost" Tw Aging Algust coir Eri pH Cagis with corporations in Can Hed # a e--_-- OR KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE tion © iE TWEL VE, y natural and me- . working cking #1 is hot. stands good alter of setting tires, as every- adwiil that the must naturalj { 1 Way { ages tt il Every Few Days ge tine | "At the time I began taking sul next! Dr, Miles' Heart Remedy 1 was ds get our best] | having sinking spells every few days. My hands and feet would get cold; 1 could: scarcely breathe, and could feel myself | gradually sinking away until I would be unconscious. Those about me could not tell there was life in me. After these spells I would be very weak and nervous, sleepless and without appetite; had neuralgia in my head and' heart. After taking the remedy a short time all this disappeared and in a few weeks all the heart trouble was gone." MRS. LIZZIE PAINTER 80375 3d Ave. Evansville, Ind. For twenty years we have been constantly receiving' just by reatl wh is hy tires n ® or ires Carria yr Carriage attention Balance f our Btock eff LATURNEY | fhe Carriage Maker, (LIMITED enty-Sizth year. Fall Term 39th, Courses in keeping, | Shorthand, Talo: vil hour gradustes wulti tions "Within no over gixt eu es adh. Enter any one of t Call or write for fuforma F METCALVE, Princ "I Tog is Kiowa I Is A 0 is known by its good burn- P. WALSH, 55-57 Barrack St. # Sm-- such letters as these. There is scarcely a locality in the United States where there is not some one who can testify to the merits of this remarkably suc- cessful Heart Remedy. Price $1.00 at your druggist. He should supply you. If he does not, send price to us, we forward prepald. OR. MILES MEDICAL CO. Toronto Frit" ND ei VR COAL ing qualities. anxious al ie occupied by fence man on tin / N the kitchen--in the 5¢ laundry--in the bath- room--in every room in the house--there's a need for Taylor's Borax Soap. It disolves dirt whether on clothes, pans, dishes, furniture, woodwork or bath-tubs. It freshens and brightens everything, and the borax makes the water soft. Whea you are jad ue app poor---your wh a try a glass of Looacs . Ale and Stout eases the palate, refreshes the , agrees with the weakest at TA A truly wholesome bever- that really nourishes. For a milder drink try Labatt's London Lager Eau to the finest German brews. 5 Has ,e a smack 0; t, palatable, satiaiying. Look for the lavender Comet Beer (LAGER STYLE) looks like TBoice os. Bos jnd ing ET spirit. Quenches Order some ey appetite. ' (ALE STYLE) {The newest non-intoxicant, mild Sad deliciom, with a he real flavor BE ale. Complies sold pein tt product from yor direct from EA LABATT, LOKDOR, CANADA J Ask, For | onsequent iy { i 3 { } 1 | I ---------- I wi ! splendor, TAR DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY. XOYEMBER 10, 1910, MRE HER, SAYS OLD SUPERSTITION. | The Coronation--Lioyd's Demanding | ind, hewv, v High Rates for Insurance Against! nausea, or the sharp pains that often Losses, Now. 18. ~The Marquise writing in the New Yor New York, de Fonte fribune, save Fyervone will recall the strange prehension which prevailed after the | {death of Queen. Vietoria, to the effect | | that something would occur to prevent the coronation of Edward VIii--an ap prehension. which he himself is known | to have shared, and which was in a measure realized when he became so dangerously ill two days beiore the date first appointed for bis coronation that the ceremony had to be post. poned for several months, and was shorn of much of its Fears of the same sort are | already being expressed about the coronation of King George. Indeed, | they are even still more widespread and deep rooted than those of the pre vious reign, and © arise from- the fact that an old English saying, which has been current among the people for many centuries, predicts misfortunes for. England whenever Good Friday falls on Lady day--that is to say, on March 25th. That is what happens this vear, and the last occasion on which it occurred was in 1561, the vear, of the death of (Queen Victoria's hus- band, the Prince Consort, The saying 18 as follows : If our Lord falls on our England shall have a great mishap Never has this proverb failed come true and that is why a feeling of considerable uneasiness prevails, espe cially among all those who are in any Way inclined to be superstitions, and why Lloyds and other similar concerns ich 'insure persons agminst monetary losses in connection with the postpone abandonment of great public | Lady's lap. to! ment or pageants, f adres wly de manding than in the late Tog. bigger premiums Value of f Politeness. Hay, Virginia, politeness always Representative of tells a story that pays in the country. The hero of the tale is Benjamin Davis, the man f de deated President Madison for the Virginia House of alec- ! tion to Dele- gates after Madison had left the White | I | House. Old Davis, who seldom wore a coat, was sitting on a rail fence on the roadside in (ireene.eounty one morning when a voung man, dressed in dapper and evidently from the city passed by "Good morning." said Davis, with tie proverbinl Virginia politeness. Yo this the stranger paid no atten- In a few minutes, however, he to a fork in the roads and was evidently in doubt which way he should go. He retraced his steps to where Davis still sat on the fence and asked him with great politeness if could tell him which way led to Stan- dardsville Pavis made no Joply. "Will you Please tell me, hee man repeated, "which road I take get to. Standardsville 7" . "You can," said "take any ded road vou please." j fashion ' tion. came 'Suny to A Legal Wonder. and Comment There was a prosecuting atiormey in Texas whose methods were so drama- tic and uniformly successful that he not euly became the terror of evildo- -ers, but an object. of admiration, espe cially among the negroes. Upon retire- ment from office he wus at once much sought after + by those charged with crime. The first two cases which "he defended resulted in conviction, much to his chagrin, An old negre Case interest when he conducted the de- accosted him just after his de fent, and said : 'Mars Earle, you sho' is # wonder. No matter which side vouw's on, they go to the pep just the fence, same Certainly, MeWade, the Duluth wiil- said at an open-air luncheon at his farm near. Diwabik : "The last time 1 had my house fill- od with slum urchins it rained cats wd dogs for a week, It was a dread- ful disappointment for my visitors. "One rainy morning I heard 4 little Jerome S. liohaire, hap say hig nose ont disconsolately green country side : OL don't ever it, May ** 'In course, hump ! ' the where all wa against the pane and looked at the drenched rain in heaven, does kittle 'That's ain't does, ye replied. from, it girl a~vomin' it Only Ome Charge. A Yorkshite man was standing nest to a vepresentative of the Red Kose oh the second day of the Plackpool fying meeting, when be remarked 1 "I under stiind that justice is meted out very quickly in time parts." "Ouickly 17" éxelnined the Lanecas- tris, 'I should think it Why, mate, only yesterday un air man fell out of his aeroplane, and he was tried and sentenced to six months in juil before he hit the ground." "You don't say so! What was the charge !"' "VTagrancy, of course. visible means of support." Both Scored. Puluth Banner. Senator La Follette was talking about two corporations that had been attacking one another in the press. "They both seored," he said. "They | made me think of two prisoners in At- lanta, one of whom had been convicted of stealing a watch, the other of steal ing 'n cow. These two prisoners hated each other and as they passed one morving in the exercise yard the cow stealer said with a sneer : 'What time is it YY Milking dae, ir answered." Mra. Michael radi, Brockville, | aged seventy-theve years, died, on Thursday, uiter a prolonged illness. she is survived by her husband, sobs and two daughters. is. He bad no EYL Hillman, Tharsduy. from ALARM IN ENGLAND MISFORTUNE NE THREATENS ap- | such as the coronation, are , whe | he | who | | had watched his prosecution in admir: | ing wonder 'and looked on with equal | an extreme kind, in parents had to his sister, as he flattened ; the woteh steal culnes, pd died. on He was al CURIN Sufferer From Indigestion Tells How She Was Cared. trouble is n general name indigestion, whether eating, belching of stomach Stomach for all forme of great pain after feeling in the think you have heart trou two things noticeable in indigestion. One is that doctors ul- [ways find jadigestion a {symptom is a bloohless state. The other, that sufferers usual Hy find relief when a tonic is taken make you ble. There are {that restores the general health. With- : out a doubt stomach trouble is simply {stomach weakness, and the cure is to Imake the stomach digest food without trouble. Any oth- {er treatment is patchwork and cannot cure. feuntrolled by the biood and nerves, the stomach that is too weak to di gest food needs a tonic to give it strength, Apd in all is no better tonic than Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They anetually make new, rich blood, tone the nerves and so strerigtheén the stomach and all the hodily functions. We submit the fol lowing as proof that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills will core even the most obstinate cases of stomach trouble. Mrs. John Graf, Fort Saskatchewan, Alta., says: "For years 1 suffered great torture from indigestion. I took | many different medicines, but instead | of benefitting me I was growing worse | all the time, till my stomach got so pad 1 could neither eat nor drink with- jout pain. Even cold water would cause me suffering. Norodid 1 get any {relief when the stomach was empty, as 1 still suffered from a horrid burn ing pain. I went to { consulted one of the best doctors | there, but he told me that he could do nothing for me, that all 1 could do was to diet. For some time I. took 'only hot water and a small piece brown bread for my meals, but that did not help me aml I got weak and run down that T despaired of ever being well again. I bought « | so-called electric belt and wore it six months, but it was simply money | Susted, Then one day friend asked me why I did not try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I did not know they were intended to cure indigestion, but being assured that they wee, decided to try , them. I soon found the Pills helping ! me, but my condition was #0 bad when I began using them that 1 continued | taking the Pills for about five months before I felt that 1 was completely cured. Then I could eat any kind of food, dud although more than two vears have passed since my eure, | have not since had the least siggy of the trouble. I can most heartily ye commend Dr, Williams' Pink Pills to anyone suffering from this terrible trouble." | Sold hy all of "ven 80 medicine dealers of by mail at 30¢. a box or six boxes 22.50 from The Dr. Williams' Co., Broekville, Ont. Little, But Enough. + Lo ndon Chronicle | Sir James Crichton-Brown a capital speaker, especinlly after dinner. As' a post-prandial orator, he is one of the few who ' still cultivate "old-fash- is David solidly, igned" sloguence, and are careful of the literary side of their addresses. In this | respect his manner harmonizes with his appearance, for he treasures an enor !mous pair of whiskers of the Dun dregry pattern: I Although an eout-and-out Scotsman, he is not afraid of telling a against his race. He says that, dur ing a visit to Jamuie a, feeling a little lonely, he asked a coloved official : "Are there mony Scotsmen in these paris "Not many," was the reply, few--but quite enough." i -- nas "Just Alcoholism and Offspriog. London Times, Bir James Crichton-Browne, in the cotirse of a discussion at the Sanitary Conference, on Wednesday speak one of Inspectors' said he agreed with one of the ers that intemperance was only the multiplicity of causes of disease He referred to the recent observations and statisties of Prof. Karl Pearson, who, he said, had absolutely demon strated that alcoholism, sometimes of no (effect whatever upon the mentality, the "intelligence, or the physical health of children at school age. DRUNKENNESS CAN BE CURED. Old Fallacy That Drunkenness Cane not Be Cured Exploded, Many men drink who desire to stop the habit. Whiskey, however, has un- dermined the constitution and created a craving that is not to be denied, jand the man must have whiskey or {something that will vemove the erav. ing and build up the system and re- store the nerves. | Samaria Prescription stops the crav- ing, steadies the nerves, builds up the general health, and makes drink actu ally distasteful and nauseous. It is tasteless and odorless, awd can be given with or without the patient's knowledge, in tea, coffer or food. Tt Lis used regularly by physicians and hospitals. It has cured thowsands in Canada, and restored happiness to hundreds of homes. | Rejad what Mes. 6G, of Hall, 'says of it and what it did for her: "It is four months to-day since I started to use your Remedy, [I follow. cs the directions. and had the hest of resulta. One week after] Bedi using your Hewedy ot drank 8 gies drink. ng en has not drunk a a gna of of Hquor i since, oy my 1 heartfelt Poke' Hoping God will {lens your Remedy Hoping tried. I re- ain, ghame withheld: by Toa Nae Now, if there is anyone in your town who needs this Remedy, tell them of it. Practical philanthropy can take no better form. HM vou have a hus band, father, friend who drinks, hud Write TRiaL PACKAGE of Sa- Bookle PA i ncaria, with jee, will be sent jparkage ta o i paper. C _fidential. The eS Write toda {rant i story 1 | dee G STOMACH TROUBLE. | prominent | run-down strong enough to | As the provesses of digestion are | the world there | Edmonton wad | | getting into the reserves, E niney-one for} { and distant from the first strip four {| rods, i the plowed strips is disc-harrowed in | tion, several miles of guard being con- | | | i for | Medicine { construct roads through the reserves. SAVING THC ACITAVES. i Sp---------- | How the Forestry Officials Care ort Canada's Timber. The greawst problem of Canadian | rest "is the protection of the | { forestry to-day forests from fire, and it is one that the Ferestry Brauch of the Depart | ment of the Interior is trying hard to | solve. i This protection has naturally been ! freedom more fully provided for on the forest Imember the name. " reserves than on the immense areas Dommvon SALT CO. of forest which are still unreserved. Mencinciazen S nine On these reserves there is a force of Stop it! Salis for by " Re Groce: LIMITED from adulters | rangers, permanently employed, who | keep up a constant and careful patrol | of the beat assigned them. Like the | | other fire rangers, these post up no- tives (printed on a patented sort of | cloth, practically indestructible) cau- tioning against the setting of fire, warn | settlars in the neighborhood of re- | serves against carelessness in setling fires to clear land, or for other pur- | poses, and "keep tab" on campers and sportsmen going into the reserves and impress on them the need of cau- tion in the mapagement of camp-fires, matches, ete. But in addition to this special mea- | sures have been put in practice on the reserves for the prevention of fires. In a word these measures com- prise the burning and plowing of fire- | ny harn abaakite oh pes Secunia, Oat. of ! "Laundry S au Drop {me a card and I will call romp piiy Toe {your laundry. 158 WELLINGTON 8B | between Brock and Clarence Sts dJ.E Hutcheson AUCTIONEER and AFPRAMSKER. Wah Lon Firat. cluse wor A card sent Po $e an order left at H 8. Henderson's srompt dersond Storm Hast references THOMAS COPLEY, wivan. ve ~ HONE 987, Drop a card 10 18 Pine Strest when wanting anything done in the i'inds [ter line. Hstimates given on Ya yg of repairs and new wo | Hardwood Floors of all kin as. | orders will recel prompt tention 0 Queen Sirest I shop, nto any part of your system, by taking [ {1 "NA- DRU-CO" Headache Wafers x wa NATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA LimiTep, MONTREAL. 27 guards, the making of roads, the sup- ervision of settlers in the making of their slashings and the disposal of 4 ! the resulting brush and the supervis. ion of the spark-arresters placed in locomotives which pass througn due reserves. | In the early priug, when the snow | has gone from the open country, but while it is still lying in the forest, the rangers burn the grass along the boun daries of the reserves, so as to prevent fires from coming from outside and A total of miles of such fire-guard was made on various Dominion forest reserves during 1908. The rangers also supervise the burning by the railways of grass and brush along their rights of-way. Plowed fire-guards are also made where possible, not only along the boundaries of the reserves but also)in FREE Shell Ring set with pARLS-W ful wy = We Thislittlegint ny dune of our dsome dolls and carriages. komplct ETOVELY CARRIAGE WE GIVE YOU hae peal steed wheels aid a3 ice, starsat « nity CIREN-IT you want this b HANDSOME DOLL and lovely Doi! Carriage and this beautiful solid Gold ; B THY TIArge. bahdsame Sparkling Jewels. : ARSOLITELY svely doll Carrs ' ant to g ¥ . hike 1 - ASARD TAL tylie 11m famey drow, andor fren kt To Le mw wrkling § fil doll and « atin fae arvinge, und he . anv nd agree i Jiated Jewellery $0 give well Whe Bot onkies. «and wo will promptly xaokly AS PepreSERied wt Barges on thse Im. 1 write ab onde, we will give you at extra prossul mn. Adidre THE PoE PERFUME €0. Dept. § the reserves themselves. In making these guards a strip eight furrows wide is plowed, and on the danger side another strip, four furrows wide THis AND also Tm omylete is plowed. The strip between | MAGNI spring and fall. During last year the I Cypress Hills reserve, in Alberta, was | surrounded by a guard of this deserip- also structed. The railways have lines plowed guards along their where these cross the reserves, As opportunity coffers, the rangers These are found of the greatest use- fulness in case a fire breaks out. Not only can men and supplies be convey ed to the various parts of the reserve | reaclied by the road with despatch, | but the roads themselves often stop a fire, provided it has not attained largo size, Where the fire has reached large proportions, the road can be us- | ed to back-fire from. Along the roads too, the rangers can more efficiently | patrol the areas under their charge. | Puring 1909 almost two hundred miles | i { of road were cut along the boundaries ol the reserves, at an average cost for | a road nine feet wide of $12.73, Elev- | en. miles of sixteen-foot roadway-was | also made into the interior of the | Moose Mountain reserve in Saskatche- | wan, and 72 miles of road cleared in | the Porcupine reserve ! By these and other measures the management of the reserves is striv- | ing to do away with the constant men- of fire. Further information on these and other points may be obtain- ed in the annual report of the Buper- intendent of Forestry (especially in the report of the Inspector of Forest Reserves) whic hh forms part of the an- | nual report of the Department of the | Interior, lately i Hudson's Bay Survey, Party Hudson's Bay R tailroad | the Pa: 5 Ro. hi fing Lake--have tak- en off their tall boots for the season. Fngineer Clifford and gang have beey out in the swamps and muskegs now | for twelv¢ months. They report pro- | grezs, and their verdict as to condi- | tions for construction on the Arctic line is being awaited with a great d of interest at Ottawa. Bogineer Clif ford says that except for a en- counters with blowing winds, which | occasionally churned the water about | his canoe a bit, his job in the north | was best ever. Heo claims to know | all the ups and downs of one-half the ! rond from the Pas Nelson River He says it will be smooth going; "in | fact, there are but few points on the whole section on which we covered where it will be at all necessary to make unreasonable curves in the line in erder to secure solid foundation." He adds also that $200,000 in bridge construction can be saved as a result | of his investigation. There is pew: | for the farmer and the suramer tour- ist in Mr. Clifford's resume 4f his sur vey experiences. He tells of hundreds | of acres of clay soil along the route | FE RE E Handsome Magnificent V We are prepared to give away ABSOLUT Swiss $50.00 appearing waiches, ladies' or few ficent Phonographs of Talking Machines and stem set, of ginss a8 is Only seen {11 the yory finest watch orgunmieial. THE LADIES' WATCHES » face plain gold finish or gun meial for engrav You have your choles. that will xing son toll funny stories ar home. Itis the beautiful new "Lym" shapes YOU CAN GET BOTH THE WATCH AND if you will help u Ip your spare time to sdver address and we I vou postage paid, only Tonic and Nerve for I tion, constipation, n i fp They Are easy to se from us & handson $3.00, and we will @raph You can gel absolutely without sel extend onr business by sho wing your wateh to y agents and sell our goods THIS OFFER. the to 418 10 sell Ss at on TY OUSE ak every ou proud owner of both Watch and Phonograph Address HANDSOME Watch and Phonograph gentle Our GENTLEMANS WATCHES are siem wind uuine lever npovement, thin model and with the works enclosed in an funer cass OUR PHONOGRAPH in not & toy d be a or my we will give away these magnificent watches and phonographes wo will do so. MISS SUCH A WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY, Write to-day snd you will soon be the THE OR, BURDIOK MEDIOINE CO., FICENT DOLL'S HOUSE IMPORTED DOLL sets of beautiful furniture for the house Sui IOVS VGAId Sw tie8 teh rH bite rout dull he he a pw J ¥ AlL, with | 18 quaint gothic ef with two Phimgners, fins hh, Jevely vemndaly Toad hundrome front 5. Tha outside of the wo ia Seished In red brik and the Inside is brasetifully pepe fed curtains, EF 8 FE Ah the loyal at Hu a {ne Pa ve i, »E ENE. am You you Wd tn. 3 v t down, torn her head 2 be retred. with fine TARE Sates, MocKiugs, ehe., te from bas to shoes a BROLYT ints, Tu Mast So Menre A VIELY FREE tn i hotise, Jove oil, Hie bw Bout, gn avery window has Ninth «o om rE go ep } a i ol Lr 42.50, and we will prom ily send you Pr 3 hang. i po Sane presente comilly posked, ax Wo arrange to sand Barmant of ft ny a » petmnts Sght § Bor bia. on Can Yo tun rite us boday, and in 8 To Asve I Rageiireut Bouss and All th beaut lint presents tddrew THE MUTUAL CREDIT Dept 2% Toronto, Ont, co. TE -------- : FREE yy. bus 3 genuine. modern. up io-dute Talking Machine READ OUR WONDERFUL OFFER ELY FREE 1000 of those magaifieent imporied many' tize and an equal number of these magni 8, your cholee of either magnificent! sliver nickel re the beantiinl small size models in either open ing, or richly engraved gald laid hyuting ease bat a genuine talking machine yustant sonree of amiseme nd pleasure in the d takes a regular eylinder recon TALKING MACHINE ABSOLUTELY FREE tise our business, Just send us your same and 2 boxes of br, Burdick "s famous New Life Blood per box They are & grand remedy for indiges re blood and a wonderful tonic and life builder hobuys a box of medicine from yon is entitled to receive When solid send us the money, only Wateoh, and the Phone ling any more goods, bul just by helping us our friends and getting six of them to net as our nke or ving YOU CAN RELY ON THE ABSOLUTE HONESTY OF We are spending thousands of dollars to advertise our business, and when we DON'T Dept, 50 TORONTO, ONT, which will put dollars inte the pocket | © of the chap who is looking for a clean- wp in real estate. Sturgeon, whitefish, | atul salmon are plentiful. } The Bad Translator Again. What would have happened if Sir Wilfrid Laurier's addr on his recent | visit to Montreal had n published as a Liberal paper of ity receiv- ed it, is a speculation whic 1 somehow didn't seem altpgether pleasant to the editorial management of that paper For the. oceasion, a French translator bind been engaged, and as the Pre visor spoke lor upwards of an hou: Cand & Pair, be was Kept pretty busy. Concluding his assertions on the | naval policy, Sir Wilirid declared: "1i Great Britain should ever go to war, | which God forbid, etc." It was truly an eloquent appeal. But the transla tion was not. "If Great Britain should | gree go to war," it read, "well go wi a open to The Thoughtful Ostrich. The Atab has a curious belief that | the ostrich lays twenty-four eggs, but | i eventually only hatches twenty-three . of them, the extra egg being kept by » the old bird for the purpose of feeding y her young ones ca. welldnonn Canalins city : YoATOP A wedldurin Vem subic AREP A popular Tr Na emmiopen wry of vriatlon of THe Maple oom U1 Tk folks Thor's Went Pan Sew il iad we Rr WL he i i i § i Charles Munn, charged with wienling a pair of boots from a fellow boarder in the Tye boasding-Botre, Smith's § Falls, was sent. to jail for a month i A. A. Seovil, for illegal fiskang, in Ridean Lake, with ete, was Timed | apd costa. un iw i sh Wo dt tn Wo 4 n our Iagt distribution of prize money deo afl. It does not cost you one Sent to ontor this maznincent ¥ Sarvet Piano ang Seautiful carved Stool to match. 28 PRIZES, $1.00 Total Sash Prizes, - $100.00 AWE SEW LE mE nEny cu epi. 30 MAGNIFICENT PIANO * ni ANI ee $100.00 IN CASH GIVEN AWAY Absolutely Free FOR CORRECT ANSWERS IN THIS PUZZLE CONTEST Co ---- ool gd os aS " on a ave aways nif. . cant Piano and $1 In Cash. (Names of wines furnished on application.) Com one. to try contest # the Grandsst Prise rvey aftornd piped ba The petals Whose suewer 5 PRIZES, $5.00 each in Cash " - - pedis Ths name of 8 well-kBown Ths thd Syeie the ontie a well-inows frit the Be fetter | Par the devi Soo fra tor Sires prise wor wo wii diye B00 oi ceil WE Te @TVIDSE Steg y da n benperly areas 15 Give awny pS ge of A wr, wo eky we Wi give avey The meagniiioest « BLY prem Jey to uf soptuychof Sua fm vomwer oly ond plilndy so 8 ent + sod usd writs cont Te a: go wll wl permed to enter, 4 QR A 0 WY IRGHTR Fok Se seaactin with this Fores i og #0 cre ling wen ISL is Carved wild Intoraing you of Tg . + TORGATS, ONT, : ¥ Living we WR --

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