Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 10 Oct 1912, p. 1

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% 8,7, Offsonnd | 57 he § Tri ah, SERCO, 40. idepge, Queen 8t,, Po HE niles pm. * Telephone in-office and house, open. night. and day over the lines sonthy conpected with the residencs of G. Lc pon, V8.5: ' (ANGLIOAN) & R RRVAG! 8.6: TYNER, L Th.) ec and Evenings. pil] at Holy Compmeivn, eb Buodey L ann id andl 44h Hand, Tho ma Weakly Fvourong, Wedntutays ar § ron: Morning Peayer--Iat. 3rd and 8h Scitday each month PORT PERRY BRANCH H. G. HUTCHESON, Manager. b=] pT 4M waa 840% pan WEA nai iby Sigal peas RIGHT 0 3 (rsa er vies UR/MISTAKES." *[Treus : ---$1 Pern ANwum IN ADVANCE SDAY, OCT. 10, 1912 a WIIOLE No. 7410 "on | Loder canght quite right," he sald quickly. apart." Eve was silent, still averting bet faee. | I paused, 'but agnin . | the fireplace gave him ho Kelp. | ee fooxriyuEn.} | IT moye Rmoothiy In the lock a momen- ena-df the story? he asked d volce. d! Oh, usun} end, of course. Branches also at Blackstock (R. H. Coulron, M Prooklin, Cl Held Port Porry, Nov, 15, 1894, © R. 0. CHURCH. B Nestlaton Station, (R. 1H, Coulson, Manager i a] I Oe, sedi) Ll | bub "Andfthe end of the wife?" ghkes a mess of things and the of the wife?" Lillian broke tary revolt agalust Lis own judgment, Lis own censorship, ewung him sharply toward reaction. But it ls only the blind who can waik without a tremor | *mve" de excivlved" suddenly, "if you only knew, If you only suessed what ['m trying to say"-- The perplex- ity, the whole harussed suffering of his mind showed in the words. Loder, the | strong, the rexonrceful, the self con- talped, was palpably, palpfully at a loss. There was almost a mote of ap- at the words. "You'ro "You're | quite right," The thing Is possible. I've | proved ft. I kmow a man so like mo | that youn, even yom, could not tell us In dire difficulty be labored on. H "Eve," he begin once more, "such a {|| likeness fs d serious' thing--a terrible pv ont... Tho alibi Gzure bY py, OVErsniuoVed evely vonsiieiwiden Lb the world. i "Eve," he sald, "tell me your first shock snd the surpeise--when you res membered me." There was a freeb pause, but one. of very short duration; thee Eve mek Bis glance fearlessly aud frankly, TH same pride and dignity, 4. describable tenderness : Rondad to . flowt ap Iy first though ; Incas," she said simply. "A thask. | fulness thar you---that ne man--could' ever understand." : rad | Ld CHAPTER XXXIL 8 sho finished speaking Eve did not lower Ler eyes. To ber there was no suggestion of shame in her thoughts or her words, but to Loder, watching and lis- the jm tax that had" re on the edge of an nhy=s, and there was Dt He rt peal in the vibration of his voice. RBRY --. RICHARDSON. Third Sunday at 10 30 a. m, WM. 1. HARRIS BA. LLB, | ™=* | | "The | in, witli a little laugh. "Why, the ena | [he reaction flared up like a strip of lighted paper; then, Hke a strip of lighted paper, it dropped back to ashes. (~¢ And Eve, standing by the fireplace, | beard and understood. In that moment of comprehension all that had beld hor tening, theve was a perilous meaning coutalned to both. 1 "Thankfulness?" he repeated slowly, From his newly stirred sense of re- BARRISTER, &e,, Bugcesdor to a offices of the a, EF. M. Port Perty, Ont. Yarnol MONEY TO LOAN. Privare Funds at § per cent. b 1901 Jno. W. Crozier, Bar ®R. SOLICITOR, Office at vesidenoe, Money TO Loan. occupant of 1d. CONVEYANCER, 6th Con. Reach (one mile west of Port Perry,)-- JOS. BATRD Sou So UGHONER for the ; ty of Outario. Sale Regist the Opswrver Office Putri soliuited. Manchester, Fin 19, Tang, iol neg fend gh: © KE. FAREWELL, K.C, LL.B., County 9) , Crown Attorney, Barrister, County Sol r, &o,, Notaty Pulilic and Con reyasicss, hitby, 8 Dftice--South wing Court Iouse, V Dillon Hinge-Stay Fence Manufactured b ! ed by the Cwen Sou Wire Fence (Co. Ltd., and W. A GANGSTER, DENTAL SURGEON. Office Hours--9 to 12 a.m, 200 pin. Also open Saturday evenings. Bridge and Crown ed Air. DR. R. L. GRAHAM | Buceessor ro Dr. FD. MoGrarrax DENTIST PORT PERKY, ET ONT. | ng com Propaied to supply this whol ommunity with; the ve JES' iy wit e very BEST EL FENCE produced on this ontinent and at prices that vot fail 10 satisfy purchasers The Ditton Fexce is without & pe It is the BEST because it i exible; it i sq it is a i i Its a square mesh ; itis a li nige-stay' fence, therefore i % impossible to bend the stays in fact tis the best fence made in this or any other country. can Before purchasing a \Vire Fene don't fail to inspect tlie : Fence. Dicror IH Brown. *MrLE _An eb oa A Murray, DENTIST, Ofjue over the Post Office. PORT PERRY. branches of Dentstay, Crown and Bridge Work succesafully practiced. Artifical Teeth on Gold, Silver, Aluminun or Rubber Plates. Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement Paioless extraction when required: £7 Prices to suit the tijpes® includioy © MENTS AND MACHINERY. SEAGRAVI April 6, 1905. HARNESS North Ontario Observer A Weekly Political, Agricultural ano kaily Newspaper iS PUBLISHED AT PORT PERRY, ONT. EVERY THURSDAY MORNING BY H. PARSONS TERMS. --§1 per annum, If paid in advance : will be uharged. No subscription .taken then six months; snd no paper iso until arrears ure psd ap. LETTERS containing money, when addressed Lo Office, prepaid and registered will be ab out VERTISEMENTS measured hy Noupare!, A ak anpwrding Lo the ro Thin ows. ADVERTISEMENTS. received for cific ipstructious, will for und clintged accordingly. ment wilt by taken ont intl for. not $1.50 for less nlinued publication; with. inserted unl No advertise: harkess 1) N returning thanks to the public for t patronage extended to me for over © years, I wnuid reepectiull intimate tha am, as usual, now ready for busincss, anc have a Large & Assorted Stock OF DOUBLE AND SINGLE HARNES 1s | which T am detefined to sell very CHEA® Aw an iuducenient to Cann purchasers 4 Doom of 10 gor conde will be allowed on all Sales from now uti Jan, Ist next, All work being nd Bankers and Brokers. = a Ei Le MONEY TO LOAN (4 per ent upwards--DBritish Capital) INSURANCE REALESTATE Xaryi ¢ Eicenses, ag §F Agents CP. KR. Se. DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS, Marry? SECRETS OF HOME LIFE 3 £3 No Names or Testimonials used without written consent _ 4 CONSTITUTIONAL BLOOD D. ; \ gone from my legs and arms and I fecl good mow. I mm very grateful to you and shall never forget the favor your medicines have done for me. You can use my name in recommending it to any sufferer. I am gdIng to get mar- rled soon. Thanking you once more, 3 ow everal years. en--pimples ronthy' wer X, dulged in immoral habits Varicose Veins on both K My varicose V My = toly appeared for quite a wh d It eaems 1 Ik harder and feel loss no desire for that habit it 1 eiay like tid ; very reazon to believe I wiil Patient No. 18765. Age 23. nkivg you for your klad attention," Indulged in fmmoral halts 4 years posit in urine and drains at Varicose Veins on both sides, pain back, weak sexually. He write received your letter of recent d in reply I am taking two mon! consider myself completely cured, have seen no signs of them coming back (one year). THE WOBLD SCEMS DIFFERENT. Patient No. 15028. *I have not had a regular Emission I don't know when and am feeling fine. The world seems altogether: different to me end I thank God for directing me to you. You have been an honest doctor with me." CURES GUARARTEZD OR NO PAY We treat end cure VARICOSE VEINS. NERVOUS DEBILITY, .BLOOD AND URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES and all Discases to men, INSULTA' for Home Treatment. NOTIC All lettors from Canada must be addressed to our Cane adion Correspondence Department as follows © SS DRS, KENNEDY & KENNEDY, WINDSOR, ONT. Drs. KENNEDY & KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. month's treatment he lows:--"I am feeling very well gained 14 pounds In one month, so that T will higvo to congratulate you Tater § reporti--+'I am beginning to feel moro like a man. I gotting better every week." His last re- = Dear Doctors--As T fecl this ia atment that I will ght et one tima 1 ed but I put con- the start and you i Statements made by patients taking the New Method Treatment. They know it Cures & which feel my condition is FREE. BOOKS FREE. If unable to call write for a Question § | "Outline the stury for him, Lennle," she l said. golig thréugh life with a lot of delight- Hvoree coprt!" They all Jnughed bolsterously. Then laughter ftory and denouement were aeons In a tumultuops--and the lear Che oreliestrsm wet. CHAPTER XXXL FEW meinutes before the cur tain fell on the second uct of "Other Men's Shoes" Loder oc from hls seat and made his apologies to Lillian. At any other moinent be might have pondercd over Lier manner of accept- ing then the caxy indifference with sl him go. But vastly were cluiming his atten- se results were wide and black. 'He left the theater and, refusing the bvertures of cubmen, set birmself to walk to CO! vs house. His face iid ecwotlonless as he hur- ried forv Lut the chaos in bis mind found expression iu the unevenness of his 'pace. To u stroug man the con- frouting of diliicuities {3 never alarm- ing and Is often fraught with insplra- tion, but this appl'gs essentially to the difffeditics evolved through the weak- ness; the folly or the force of another; when the, arlee from within the wat- ter Js of suother character. It is In presence of his own soul, and in that presence uloue, that a man may truly measure blinself. Ag Loder walked onward, treading the! whole familiar length of traffic filled treet he realized for the first time that he wus standing before that golemp trbuaal--thet the hour had | J | instant that his eyes, of all gtapld people who, Instead of | animute objects, rested on thelr owner | couiln 0 | that the true force of his position, the ! huisan stumbles, cone just one | enormity of the task before him made ropper. She naturally ends in the | Itself plain. t | | | summing of his cualitles that then in. | | ( | | unbearable, Eve spol | "las unyuing b | consideration | | silent. 'll the confileting motives tbat sponsibility pity and sympathy were He pushed tl | pushéd the door open and slowly had forbidden speech, melted away bo- Sradurily rising. He had never seem | crossed the kall ! the Index to un man's stato of mind. As Loder ascended the stairs of Clilcote's house bis shomilders lucked tbeir stiff- ness, his bead was no longer erect. He , moved as though lvis feet were welght- ed. He bad ceased to be the man of | achievement whose smallest opinion | ols consideration. In the privacy of solitude he was the mere humau flot- gain to which he had once compared htmseif--the flotsam that, dreaming it has found a harbor, wakes to find itself | the prey of the Incoming tide. Heo paused at the head of the stairs to | J rally his resolutions. Then, still walk- | to realization | ng beavily, he passed down the corrl- | pewted blankly | dor to Eve's room. It was suggestive 5" thing singularly soft amd tender. she sald sliply, "because I know." Intlons come free from any excitement, neas of self all her thought for the mana s suffering. "You know?" "You know 7" Without answe | tore the unconscious demand for bel TL : i p. he mounting of a staircase Is often | Quietly ond yet quickly she turned, hor whole face transtigured by a light that seemed to shine from within--some- "There's no ueed to say anything,' It came quictly, as most great reve Her velce was low and her face beantiful fn {ts complete umesnscious- In that supreme moment | her sympathy, was To Loder there was a space of In- | credulity; then his brain slowly swung be re ing, she walked to a | of his character that, having made his | cabinet that stood in the window, un- decision, lie did not dally over its per- mnuce. Without waiting to knock, ned the hoodle and walked into the room \ It looked precisely as It always look- ed. but to Loder the rich, subdued col- | oring of books and flowers--the whole alr of culture and repose that the place } conveyed--seemed to hold a deeper meaning than before, and it wus on the locked a sheets of fil In places writing. them back awer aod drew out severa and Wit! cloacly eovered 1 Leld them out. He took the in silence, them, then looked up. In a long, worth met. It was as If cach leoked speech. crossing the fn- | passions, the contradictions, the short both | together than Reallzatlon cape to him | threugh a t with vivid, overwhelming force, and It | was no askl they ent have words. could of 1 scanned a3 pauso their eyes lessly inte the other's heart, seeing the | 5, that went to the making of In that silemice they drew closer dons There of forgiveness, no eclab- niust Le accounted to his credit In the | orate confession, on either side. In the dann toda lan Astrupp nothing present Hseid | Eve wis stauding by the mantel plece. Je wore a beautiful gown, & yong string of dam mds was twisted about ber peck. aud her soft, black Dair was celled high after a foreign | afters fashion and beld in place by a large | room until 1 saw that you, diamond comb, As he entered she tum- | lieved, had fallen ed Lastly, alpost nervously, and look- what I respected to ed at him with the rapid, searching {hat 1 knew how human [ really wes glance be had lewrnod to expect from | As T watched them lang! hor, Then almost directly her expres- | felt suddenly that 1 was alooe glon changed to one of quick concern. | territdy alene. II tb With a faint exclamation of alarm she | Wns jealous in that mement stepped forward. | hesitated. "yWhat bas bappened?" sald. | "DBve!" he exclaimed. "You look like a ghost." | But she broke In qui kly Loder ade no answer. Moving foto | word. "I felt different In that wo the room, he prused by the ouk table | 1 didn't care about ! {hat stood between the fireplace and | boenor. After they the door. to me that I had mw They made an unconscious tableau reading have that teleg semed f trou ie than the thought that I | follow Ler exampls. It was not unt! d--not until--Le ¢ could buek she net Oh feel something that they as they stood there--he with his hard, | YOU don't know what a romnn set fuce, she with her heightened col- | when she [3 jeulous!" Again or, her inexplicably bright eyes. They | paused. "Tt was then that the tele stood completely sllout for a spuce-- | gram and the thenght of a space that for Loder held no sugges: amused smile as sae Lad tion of time. Thou, finding the tension | to my mtod. agaln, pened 7" she ask- ed. "Is any 1g wrong? | ; engrossed the in- tensity of cern might have struck him, but lu a mind so harassed | us his there was only room for oue | the consideration of | bhmself. The sense of her question | | renched him, but its significance left ° | and picked It up. In onc | draw back. Oh, it may have been dis | | PLE Soule y." Eve sald at last, "and saw LIk- | m ane Into the and talk I the ent. | 1 3 she Lilliun's read it came Feeling as 1 did--acting | on what I felt--1 crossed to the bureau 4 ond IT had seen emough te make It {mpossible to | homerable, It may have been mesn, but Eye as he saw was all the cle: livion. With a pa passion and of Ler youll wer now, acd his vision for the long ob- nant sense of com- remorse, the knowledge came to Lim--{be youftif that some women preserve in the, midst of the world when clreum- stances have permitted to 808, much, but to experie tle. ' "Thankfulness?' he sald again ime credulous!y. d slight smile touched her lips she auswored softly--*thank- that my trost had been rightly, » slaply and confidently, but 3 k Loder more sharply, than any accusation. With a heavy seuss cf bitterness and renunciation he moved slowly formrard. "Ev he sald very gently, the msy white paper, crumpled don't know what with ut a word she carried centered thy of personal doubt easiness showed iu her faca she sald. "II don't understand." Ter u woment Le answered nothing. Ile bad fou { explanation over- whelining it scemed to hire that his pr {Qicnlty was more fmpossible to st tonight to tall yeu someting." Ls be= ga st last, "but so far 1 have only sald hslf -- + 4 RY ty HIF "fhen, conscious of the need for nation, lo plunged Into rapid mine," he said, "has 1. one justtfcation--a shake thad oilve power 2 (he audacity m nlght. 1 made the tslling eazler, nothtngz." , vafsed her head, but he went 1 on. "Tonight." my owu life, "1 have seen into own mind, andj y roughly shak-| he said into t piy ideas have b cu Into new 0 colossal a mis- when we imaglue that we knows Months take 8s ourselves. husband first , 1 wa ception, a solitary by fate, who, wit! leading a 7 at the very outs | set, 1 dece! I wus simply, | & man who shat himself up because he; cherished a gr against life and | who livel hos ly because he bad & constitutional distaste for vice. Myt firet feeling when [ saw your husband] one of self ghteeus contempt, | that has bes attitude alk 1 have often marveled at thei floed of jee that has rushed! over lue at 8 { of him--the violent ive was and along wy {nt tuto thougbt--your first thought dfter the pi ardor come hie must angwer to himself | Llin untouched. Sa for. him The longer and deeper an | "Is anything wrong?' wires the more painful the awaken- | for the second time. ing! For mouths the soug of self bad By un edort he raised his eyes. No Luilsh 'beaten about his ears, deadening all | man, be thought, since the beginning | i f Z fl | "I know now what the fealing meant, jer sounds; now abruptly that song | of the world was ever set a task so Pp A | The knowledge came to me toulght. 1€ gepscd, not conslderately. not lio- | cruel as his. Painfully and stewly his : ( HN meant that 1 twmed away (rom his| fv. but with a suddeuucss that | Ips parted. 2 ) + weakness because deep within myself | desire that bas possessed rg: to look | away from his weakness and banish the knowledge of it--but now 1 under-! | gr MADE BY HANDEJ | | stand. and no factory work kept in stook, th super arity of my gooda will at onoe becom« apparent, ? atending parchasers will find that br giving me a call before looking elsewher they can he suited in quality and price, m) long expérience in the trade being an indis putavle guarantee that perfect satisfagtion A LIBEKAL discount atfewsd to wh advartiss by ube sear or half y THESE torms will to sll casos fie atribtly adhered to JOB DEPARTMENT, Hand Hila, Pestera n Dodgers Ti Hoeds, | Uhosks © Letter ends, Wedding: Invitations, Reoelpt Books Business Cards Ozone and Air Sewage. she reiterated Ozone is n particularly active or con. ceutrated form of oxygen. One mole qule of oxygen contains two atoms; & molecule of osone contains three atoms. As only two atoms of oxygen balance harmoniously in a molecule when there enteal Livery PORT PERRY. EAKTILY thanking the public for the H ved during the ition of It. Bleunk Forms © Bovks Ciroulars, Assembly Cards, Visiting Cards, ke, \ ' 0 le apd color 4 we wilt be given by any article purchased. Everthing in my line of constantly on hand promptly attended. to. . JOHN ROLPH. Port Petry, Deo, T. t HE d Ries Ff 850 ATEN 45 | | business kept and repairs neatly and liberal patos recel nany years I have kept a Livery Establish ment in Port suneuncing that I have removea 'MY LIVERY! Perry, I have much pleasure in are three of them together in a mole- culo the third atom will cut loose and | scek a anion elsewhere. The oxygen | atom has n remarkable affinity for car | bon, of which decaying organic mattes is a common form, and as the greatee |; made (Le succeeding sllence very ter- "Everything in the world Is wrong," > | be sald In a slow, hard voice. jo walied onward, keeplog his di- | Eve sald nothing, but her color sud- wnsealngly. Ie wes passing, deuly deepened. . (be fire ns surely as though | Again Loder was unobservant, but flames rose about lis feet, and | with the dogged resolution that mark: ed Lim he forced himself to his task. : ve Burs for Dress and" Mantle M: to my former place of business part of the 0 fc matter in the air fF > RS 7 ? if t (eX ; process of decay the third atom . a PE 'attacks and oxidizes it, burn ; ym about; to. 1; : i ) . i a on ee 1t up.--Cassler's Magazine. better scoomuiodated. with safe and dusir- able 3 ® ul EC is at Chis RIGS AT MODERATE CHARGES Mails Close. "dan 40 C0 R.OVANSICKLER, Por Porryi June 21, 1000. Office Port Perry aw follows : Going North-- 9.00 a, m. Going South--11.20 a. m. Goiug North-- 5.15 p. m. Going South--10 pom. The mails are despatched from the Pos Miss Harrison, 5 ay apas AL - Dress and Mantlg- Maker (7ISHES to inform the ladies \/ that she has 'moved rooms « formerly occupied by. over Mr. Fliot's Drug Store w/ spre] ) eX | GEO. JAUKSON, OF CARTWRIGHT, a 'mannet unsurpassed lgix ing Effect. hime t with foul ys Licensed Anctioneer; Valuator, &c. FOR THE COUNTY OF ONTARIG AND TOWNNEL man who emerged from the or- I ased to be. the orchcstra had ceal fvhad filled his mind. place. oss his faculty . In the quarte, if st star! ly 'end persevering! WANE? lafes or the result, whatever the fiber | Te: Jon Leder who Lad hewn orgh the past weeks would | ma The triumphant egotist, | man who by his own | exagger kept his eyes upon one sing to see In other direc gh it was, his realization in his life had come with | tic slowness. When Lilllan given ler dictum, when , tn risen on the second act "nothing but a scnse' of followed the rise of thie fur- ng at: the stage, jing, hearing nothing. filled jormity of the void that suds founded him. Then from titutional tendency, ne "thread nod then &n- le of his thoughts, th 'and' difficulty the Se th 0 Ara Lim totmrd the ot "You despise lies," he said at last. "Tell me what you would think of a man whose whole life was one elab- orated lie" The words were slightly ated, but thelr utterance, thelr + polnfully brusque sincerity, precluded | all suggestion of effect. TResolutely | bolding her guze, he repeated his ques- | tion. "Tell me! know." Eve's attitude was dificult to read. She stood twisting the string of dia- monds between Ler fingers. "Tell me!" be sald again. Answer ms! TI want to 1h 10 | | ghe continued to look at him for a rer , the great song was sl- any portentous episode, | yijes moved ber, she turned away incident that could DAN@.groth niin toward the fire. to Its end, but, with, the of life's Irony, by 8 trivia} In the first sen: had | moment; then, as If some fresh im- «I 'enpdot?' she sald. "We--T1--1 | could 'mot 'set myself fo Judge--any voner" ak : Loder hold bimselt rigidly in hand. Eve," he sald quietly, "1 was at dhe Arcadian 'tonights The play was "Other Men's Shoes.' 1 suppose you've read. the book 'Other Men's Sboes? , She was leaning on the wnd ber face was invisible to him. #¥es, L:bave read it." she sald without ooking round. _"It is the story of Iikepess between two men. Meve such think gach a thing, A A Si an extraordinary Do you be- "Yes," | "wen, 1 do believe It. Such Ease wr - 1. Do you | | | "There's no need to 8G anything," she sald simple I wonder if any woman in the world would bave dene otherwise! I crum- pled up the papers just as they were and carried then to my Owm room." From the first to the last word of Eve's story Loder's eyes never left her face. lunstantly she had finished his volce broke forth in irrepressible ques- tion. Iu that wonderful space of time he had learned many things. All his deductions, all his apprehensions, bad been scattered and disproved. He bad seen the true meaning of Lillian Astrupp's amused indifference--the in- difference of a variable, flippant na- ture that, robbed of &ny real weapon for mischief, soon tires of a game that promises to be too arduous. Ile saw all tiis aod understeed it with a rapldity born of the moment; never theless, when Eve ceased to speak the question that broke from bin was not connected | something stirred la rece | Humanity 1s really much | we like to think, and hua tmpulses | have an extraordiuary fundamental! | connection. Weakness is egoliso 3 | so Is strength. Chilcote Las er his vice; 1 have followed my urabition.] It will take a higher Judguent than: yours or mine to say which of us has: Deen the more selfish man." [He pauss ed and looked ot bor - 4 «¢, 1ro ex cosTINUED.] A chip's Speed. A ship's speed 13 reckoned by knots, a knot belug a geographical mile oF one-sixtieth of a degree. Bix geograpli- jcal miles are about equal to seven statute miles, and a ship that sails twelve knots therefore is really moving | at the rate of fourteenstatute wiles an | hour. 1t should be remembered that it {3 incorrect to say so many "koots an' hour," simply so many Knots. for & knot means "one mile an bour.* ei. od Lots to Learn, "] have Just been taking to / youth | who claims to nave done everything." "Has he cver wrapped. a motorcar around a telegraph pole at 8 o'clock to the morning?" . "] i1biok wot" wIben he has a great deal to learn. = Birmlugham Age Herald. -- bia. Life's Mysterigs, 3 Stick to the ideal und bug the nneXe platued. The people who pave sofved the riddle of the univeyse.atififteen are: bowled oter by the enigma of theté work at 8ty. 3 Yum relgus over you; when it vou retgm over it.--Aruble

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