McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Feb 1941, p. 4

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;??fPFp : i K , « / • : -$•> Ttft Four mmm i- ;>';=*>»• 7: w ^ ;^T*. irinnmsimALwtt • ». <,%-: ; ' : • • . ; . ; . • % < V - . - V V ' A m rifM Thursday, Fi IKE MUEHRY PLAMDEALER ' PoUiilwd every Thursday *lt Me» henry, 111., by Charles P. Renich. A. H. MOSSIER Editor and Manager •'•'• Entered as second-class matter at |^e postoffice at McHenry, 111., under " _ 12^00 ...Z *1.00 act of May 8, 1879. §ne Year ... Six Months 4r * j?vi$6djXlftiaJl (hlociafi/M. M2 SUSTAINING Lucky Pebble * George Bernard Shaw has a goodluck pebble set in platinum for his watch chain. NEW EMPIRE MrHKNRY, ILLINOIS FRIDAY -- SATURDAY Cary Grant - Martha Scott '•THE HOWARDS OF VIRGINIA" SUNDAY -- MONDAY February 25 - 24 Nenaa Sheerer Robert Teylor "ESCAPE" -- Special Attraction -- -Cavalcade of Academy Awards" Also -- Cartoon and News Saiulay MMinee -- 2 :45 Continuous TUESDAY , ^ Admission -- Ik - 26c f|jn Holt - Virginia Gihaore (1) "LADDIE" ' • Grawfflc Owen - Mona Ray (2) "LI'L ABNER" WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY Thomas Mitchell - John Wayne 'LONG VOYAGE HOME" ELECTRIC GIRDLE Aa anti-magnetic mine belt is shown fitted on the new S. S. America, largest commercial vessel eves built In the U. & She device was installed purely as a precautionary measure. y-- M nil 'Ml i>niiiijKHM •» !&•*>;, FOR SALE FOR SALE--200 bu. seed wheat, extra fine, test 16%. Also 40T No. 1 timothy hay. C. H. Carr, Ringwood, 111. Phone Richmond 647. *89-2 FOR SALE--Dining table, buffet and chairs. Electric Conlon mangle; also ice box. Toddy Englen, Fox Street. 40 CHOICE BUILDING LOTS--66x132 ft., in McHenry. City water, sewer, sidewalks, gas and electricity. Priced at less than cost of improvements. Howard Wattles, Phone 320. *40-3 FOR RENT WQOOSTOCK MILLER Tlieatre Woodstejtf FRIDAY -- SATURDAY February 21-22 Continuous Saturday from 2:80 BIG DOUBLE BILL! "THE LETTER" -- with -- Bette Davis - Herbert Marshall -- P L U S -- "THE FARGO KID" with Tim Hok SUNDAY -- MONDAY February 23-24 Continuous Sunday from 2:M 2 -- BIG FEATURES -- 2 "KITTY FOYLE" -- w i t h -- GINGER ROGTRS DENNIS MORGAN PLUS CO - FEATURE -- "SAINT IN PALM SPRINGS" with George Sanders TUESDAY -- February 25 15e - Bargain Night - 15c "SKY MURDER" with Walter Pidgeon WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY February 26-27 "BITTERSWEET" -- with -- JEANETTE McDONALD NELSON EDDY FOR RENT -- Rooms above Hettermann Service Station, Johnsburg, suitable for office, beauty parlor or light housekeeping. Furnished heat, hot and cold water. Apply Hettermann Service Station. 81-tf WANTED Use 'Rairibeto9 Type Bridge aX Niagara 960-Foot, $3,500,000 Arch Is of Rare Design^* NIAGARA FALLS.--The 960-foot span of the new $3,500,000 bridge being built across the Niagara river gorge besides being one of the longest of its type also must be literally self-supporting. Unlike bridges built over shallow water, where engineers can set up false work or pillars to support the arch, the "Rainbow" bridge will span water whose depth is undetermined, but known to be at least 160 feet. Hence, when installation of the steelwork begins, the contractors will resort to the seldom-used tieback device. The entire bridge, replacing the so-called "Honeymoon" bridge destroyed by ice in January, 1938, will have to be "tied back" with heavy steel cables--480 feet of steel, weighing approximately 3,750 tons, being anchored on each side of the river marking the boundary between the United States and Canada. The first step will be the erection at the end of each approach of a 140-foot tower. "Dead men," or anchorages, will be sunk in the ground 250 feet behind the towers. The anchorages will be 30 feet below the surface and cemented in solid rock. The cables will be strong enough to carry three or four times the actual weight of the bridge. The arch girders, 12 feet high, are being made in the Bethlehem Steel corporation's Pennsylvania mills, but must be split in half to fit into a railfoad car for transportation. They will be spliced at the center of the bridge, where Canadian and United States laborers, working at their respective ends of the span with materials manufactured in their respective countries, will join forces •for the final job. Woman *Sees' Ghost* And Summons Polica ANNISTON, ALA. -- Anniston police have a new one. On receipt of an urgent call they rushed to a residence in this north Alabama industrial center, to find a frantic woman screaming for help. She reported that the house was "full of ghosts." A thorough. search disclosed nothing, not even mice. River Sailors Owe Safely to Woman 'Miss Annie' Likes Her Job On the'Mississippi. WANTED TO RENT--5 to 8 room house. State terms and if long lease is available. Write to Box "E," care Plaindealer. 38-tf MISCELLANEOUS FARMERS, ATTENTION--Exchange your wheat for Quaker Flour at the Farmers Mill. Phone 29. McHenry. 12-tf DEAD 0ft ALIVE ANIMALS $1.00 to $15.00 Gash Cows - Horses - Hogs No help needed for loading! Prompt and Sanitary Service Day and Night, Sundays and Holidays Phone Wheeling 102--Reverse Charges Indian 'Sacrifice Rock* Found in Pennsylvania FINLEYVILLE, PA.--An Indian "sacrifice rock," pocked with holes apparently used as containers for blood, has been discovered near Saltsburg, along the Kiskiminetas river, by Chief George S. Fisher, of Union Valley, member of the Pennsylvania Indian research. Chief Fisher said the rock measured eight feet across by 12 inches in thickness and has 76 holes, each of them capable of holding about a quart of blood. He reported also finding in the same vicinity ahuge mortar weighing about 60 pounds. The Pennsylvania Indian research has planned a pilgrimage to the site of the find -and will take s cast of the rock. GARBAGE COLLECTING--Let us dispose of your garbage each week, or oftener if desired. Reasonable rates. Regular year round route, formerly George Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone 365 or 681-M-l. 2-tf FINANCE YOUR NEXT CAR THRU the Chicago Motor Club. Reasonable rates, no red tape, quick service. Call Crystal Lake 177. L. M. Prince, Asst. Dist. Mgr. *89-2 - The Beautiful HI TOVAIJ Mi CRYSTAL LAKE. ILL. McHenry Co'*. Leading Theatre FRIDAY -- SATURDAY February 21-21 -- Double Feature! -- Granville Owen - Martha O'Driseoil "LI'L ABNER" Your favorite comic strip character! -- P L U S - Ha Hoit and Ray Whitlfegr -- in -- --•--1~ "THE FARGO KID" SUNDAY -- MONDAY February 23-24 Sun. Cent, from 2:45 p. m. 25c to 6 p.M.; 30c after. Children, Mc. GINGER ROGERS - " K I T T Y P O Y L E ' -- with -- Dennis Morgan - Janes Craig The thrilling, dramatic story of fiction's most colorful character! Ale© -- Disney Cartoon and News TUESDAY lie - Special - 15c Lucille Ball - Desi Aroaz in "TOO MANY GIRLS" -- with -- Frances Langford - R. Carlson A gay, glittermg musical loaded with gags and girls! ! ! WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY February 26 - 27 JEANOTTE MacDONALD and NELSON EDDY in " B I T T E R S W E E T ' . -- with -- Ian Hunter • George Sanders The outstanding musical treat of the year! Coming -- SUNDAY! "Philadelphia Story" NOTICE--The Fox Valley Dairy will not be responsible for any debts contracted by Ivan Stratton, as he is no longer connected with this company. J also will not be responsible for any debts contracted by anyone except myself. HENRY W. GLICK. *40-2 Librarian's Red Barrel Restocks Shelves Quickly WEST HARTFORD, CONN.--Library officials felt that many persons neglected to return over-due books because they were embarrassed in having kept them so long. So, they placed a little red barrel on the library steps and announced <that delinquents could return the books at night, without being seen, without paying a fine, and no questions asked. In two weeks $120 worth of books, some of them taken out more than eight years ago, were dropped into the barrel. One book was "borrowed" in 1919. VICKSBURG, MISS.--A .38 ber pistol and a sense of humor are all that Mrs. Annie Lineback needs to work in harmony with "Ol' Man River." "Miss Annie," as the river folk call her, has had charge of two blinker lights and seven brass oilburners belonging to the United States lighthouse service for seven years. And she likes the job. She lives in a neat, trim little houseboat at the foot of the levee near Vicksburg. She keeps a small garden and cans her own vegetables and preserves. At 4 a. m. she's up and about getting ready to make the run either above or below Vicksburg. It's a 12- mile strip of mean Mississippi river that she travels in her motorboat, Sweetheart. Usually her dog, Tweet Tweet, goes along for company. The blinker lights are powered by batteries, which have to be replaced. They mark the entrance to the canal connecting the Mississippi and .Yazoo rivers. The other lights are bank lights, big brass oil^burners. "Miss Annie" keeps them shined, their wicks trimmed and their tanks full of oil. She keeps surrounding weeds cut, too. Except for a few incidents, "Miss Annie" says her life or) tlmfbig river has been uneventful. Those few incidents, include the time she routed a band of bushwhackers with her pistol. Then there was the time the ferryboat plying between Vicksburg and Delta Point almost ran her down. Another close one was the time a bank caved in on her, burying her waist deep. No Tentacles The devil fish, or Menta ray, has no tentacles. He is a tremendous bat-like creature. He is called the sea bat, because of his great wings. The wings of this creature grow to as much as 25 feet from tip to tip, and with them he can trpvel through the water at enormous speeds. He sometimes weighs several tons, and when he opens his mouth two men can be swept in without difficulty. One movement of his* whip-shaped tall will cut a man in two. The devil fish does not kill intentionally. He becomes a murderer only when he* gets frightened. Artist, a Refugee From Europe, in Guard Unit EL PASO.--A 24-year-old sculptor who saw Hitler's troops appropriate Czechoslovakia, the land of his forefathers, is training with the 202d Coast Artillery regiment of the Illinois National Guard at Fort Bliss. He is Corp. Joseph Martinek, Battery D, whose sculptures have been exhibited at the Chicago Art institute and other galleries. Member of a well-to-do Cleveland family, young Martinek studied at the Prague School of Applied Arts from 1934 to 1939. He left six weeks after the Nazis moved in. Platinum Bolt Repairs Dancer's Injured Knee PITTSBURGH.--A small platinum bolt, hinging a broken kneecap, makes possible the continuation of the dancing career of Berenice Holmes. Here to attend sessions of the Dancing Masters fifty-seventh annual convention, Miss Holmes described her comeback after a fall eight years sfgo in Chicago. "Everyone, doctors included, told me my dancing career was over," she said. 1 But a Chicago sturgeon designed a platinum bolt which was fitted into her kneecap, and, after three years of practice, she regained her former skill. Miss Holmes began her dancing career at the age of five. • She has danced before the late Queen Marie of Rumania, has been prima ballerina of the Adolph Bolm ballet and a member of the Chicago Opera ballet. Demand for greater Than Supply One chinchilla weighs scarcely a half pound and is literally worth more than its weight in gold. It is about the size of a gray squirrel, which it resembles in coloring. It has a shorter tail than the squirrel and longer ears, and prefers the grouitd to the trees, being a poor climber. Nor does the chinchilla burrow, so raisers do not have much of an escape problem to cope with. However, once in the open they can run and jump at lightning speed. The animals preferable are monogamous, although they will accept other mates after a time. They mate within five or eight months after birth, having as many as three litters a year, each consisting of one to four young. Virtually no pelting is done in this country, because the National Chinchilla Breeders of America, which has control of the industry, is endeavoring to build it up It will be several years before pelting will be done to any extent. Only one coat has been made thus far from American furs, according to furriers. This carried a $35,000 price tag. Furriers say the pelts of the chinchillas raised in thin country arc superior to those of the South American breed, Garments made of the fur have been in such great demand that there has not been enough fur to supply it. Trapped extensively in South America, the animals faced extinction and a bar was placed on their exportation. Furriers say that a short cost costs from $30,000 up and a good full-length garment might cost as much as $100,000. It has been estimated that there are only 25 fulllength coats in the world. The upkeep in chinchilla coatfc is high. Usually they are insured, the rate being around $500 a year. When not being worn, the coat must be left with the furrier, because it must be kept in cold storage to preserve the hide and because the fur is susceptible to the oil of human skin, even the tiny bit exuded by the hands. Each time before the owner wears it, the furrier must treat the fur with a special powder as protection against this oil* THE BRID6E AUDITORIUM McHenry Friday Evening, Feb. 21 ft *'J B " ROTNOUR Players Ten players on the stage! The play IN THE WRONG BED" Vod'vil between acts -- AH special scenery, PRICES - Children, lie. Adults, *0c, inrlading tax. -- Doors open 7:30 -- Curtain at &:15 sharp -- The Truth Hurts, but It's the Only Way Out TULSA, OKLA.--An attorney was presented this problem: "I'm 53 years old," a woman told him, "but I'm married to a man who thinks I'm only 39. I've got a son 36 years old, but to make my story stick, we dropped some years off his age. "Now, my son has to register for the draft unless he tells his correct age. If he does that I'll have to claim he was born when I was three years old. What shall I do? The attorney suggested « family truth session. Perfect Bridegroom Is Utterly Astonished MEMPHIS, TENN.--The perfect bridegroom has appeared. His handsomely engraved wedding announcements boldly proclaimed. "Frederick Harold Green announces his utter astonishment at being accepted in holy matrimony by the most incomparable Evelyn Estes." Supposed Pauper Dies, Aged 78; Leaves $25,810 NEWARK, N. J.--Detective Benjamin Birch was just looking for clews to possible survivors when he visited the $2-a-week room of an apparently penniless man who was found dead of heart attack on a bench in Military park. He found the clews and discovered that the dead man had $25,810 in five sayings banks. The man was Edward Murphy, 78 years old, who had lived for four years in a room at 162 Plane street, where the landlady knew him as "a quiet but friendly man who always paid his bills." Elevated Highway May Solve Traffic Problem Widening surface highways itt urban areas is not the answer to the traffic problem of today, Dr. Miller McClintock, director of the bureau for street traffic research of Yale university, told delegates to the Michigan State-Wide Safety conference recently. "We should cease frittering away our money on such old-fashioned makeshifts as wider avenues and begin to build intelligently for the future," he~said. "When we build an elevated highway, we do not need to condemn property to make way for widening. We do not need to cut off the fronts of valuable buildings, or move buildings back. "We increase the traffic hazard when we widen a surface highway. The pedestrian has a larger area in which to get confused and when a pedestrian gets confused in traffic he usually lands either in the hospital or the morgue. "Elevated or depressed highways would prove of tremendous economic value. When we provide safe highways of any kind for high speed travel, the volume of traffic increases tremendously. This has been demonstrated every time an elevated motor highway has been opened in the East. Doubling of traffic is common on these roadways. Film Maslr In the sound films today every picture, no matter how cheaply made or unimportant, must have music--prelude music, incidental and background music. In most pictures of normal running time there is as much actual musical material as there - would be in a symphony--and yet the movie audience is very rarely aware of any music at all. They write against time, arranging, cutting, revising, using anybody's music not protected by copyright, they produce endlessly, with amazing ingenuity and dexterity. W* M. Carroll State's Attorney- Woodatock, Illinois ' v State of Illinois, County of McHenry, as. In the Circuit Court of McHenry County. The People of the 8tate y„j of Illinois, , • 1 - , ' -w .Cfc *• , S v James Leehtey,^.A.'.^ci^i;._, Mae M. Leehefjj^if '••-V: Edward Leahy* . ;r'^ ^ Defendants. Gen. No. 292*7. Public notice is hereby given that in pursuance of a decree made and entered in the above entitled cause by the Circuit Court of McHenry County, Illinois, on the 3rd day of February, A. D. 1941, I, C. Frank Daly, County Collector of McHenry County, Illinois, will on the 15th day of March, A. D. 1941, at the hour of ten o'clock, A. M., in the forenoon of said day, at the East front door of the Court House in the City of Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois, offer for sale and sell at public vendue to the highest and best bidder the following described real estate, to-wit: All of Lot Number Seven (7) in Block Number Twenty-seven (27) of the Original Town (now City) of Harvard, excepting* and reserving therefrom the following: Commencing at the most Southerly corner of said Lot Number Seven (7) and running thence Northeasterly along the Southeasterly line of said lot, twenty-five and one-half (25ft) feet; thence Northwesterly on a line parallel with the Southwesterly line of said lot, one hundred three and three-quarters (103%) • feet; thence Southwesterly on a line parallel with the Southeasterly line of said lot, twenty-five and one-half (25%) feet to said Southwesterly line; thence Southeasterly along said Southwesterly line, one hundred three and threequarters (103%) feet to the place of beginning. All situated in the City of Harvard, County of McHenry and State of Illinois. Terms of Sale: Cash at time of sale at which time Certificate of Purchase will issue to the purchaser. Dat^d this 18th day of February, A.B. 1941. C, FRANK DALY, -- County Collector, McHenry County, Illinois. "(Pub. February 20 - 27 - March 6) Peace Treaty The Versailles treaty, signed ftihe 28, 1919, officially concluded the* war between Germany and the Allies. The treaty of St. Germain, signed September 10, concluded peace between Austria and the Allies; of Neuilly, November 27, between Bulgaria and the Allies; of Grand Trianon, June 4, 1920, between Hungary and the Allies; and of Sevres, August 10, 1920, between Turkey and the Allies. The United States did not officially conclude peace treaties with Germany, Austria and Hungary until 1921. AUCTION CHAS. LE90NARD, Auctioneer Farm known as the DeClerque farm on Wicker St., just north of the city limits, Woodstock, 111., at 12:30 p. np^. Vm MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24 > the following described property, t<^ , wit: h : ; 76 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK ^ 36 Cows--Holsteins and Guernsey^* . a number fresh, some close springk / 14 ers. An exceptionally good herd cows, large in siae, young and in flesh. 2 bay horses, 1500 lbs., one maiii ' ' and one gelding (7 yrs.) 2 sorrel, horses, 1500 lbs. (mares, 6 and 7 yrs.)i 2 colts, 10 mos. old. ^ ; 5 heifers with calves, 6 l-yr.-oMt ^ heifers, bull, 19 mos. old, bull, 1 yt. old, 2 Aberdeen Angus bufis, .l yf. old. • , ; T 20 head hogs, 2 sows. "• Hay, Grain; and Machinery 150 bu. wheat; 250 bu. barley; bu. oats; 6 ton baled hay; tractfl# . (all rubber); disc; 3-bottom plovT; walking plow; drag; corn planter; . corn binder; grain binder: rake; % cultivators; manure spreader; S wagons; silo filler; cultipacker; moW- - er; 11 milk cans; milking machine DeLaval; Skoll gas siovs for house; 2 hog waterers; tractor beli» 75-ft. rubber; 4 set harness; V-8 milk. <. truck; numerous small tools; a nun*# ber of articles, new. TERMS:--All sums of $25.00 and under, cash. Over that amount || credit of six months' time will lie given on good bankable notes satis* factory to the clerk bearing'7% intw est. No property to be moved until settle for with clerks. Those desiring credit make arrangements piior to purchase. H. HUGHES ; INhte Bank of Woodstock, Clerk ' A' A-*1 . Wj 0- One Way To Look At It "A bachelor is a selfish individual® who never gave a deserving lady a chance to collect alimony."--Emington Joker. 1 "MY FIVE CHILDREN and J use ADLERIKA when needed; have kept it on hand for 20 years." (C.C.-Mass.) ADLERIKA with its t laxative and 5 carminative ingredients is just right for gas and lazy bowe^ Get ADLERIKA today. THOMAS BOLGER, Druggist. Order your Rubber Plaindealer. at The RNBEU CHIOS •. S^IUIMIS JVPRMEB Httcfead fraa Ha «os laH fcr viuaia-M Bcmmi. VIM Chick Salsleg Insireedoefc CORN BELT KATCIHIIS, Its. Woodstock - Lihertyville AUCTION Johnson and Swants, Aucta. Located 2 miles Soutfe East of Woodstock on Highway 14, on SATURDAY, FEB. 22 * 12 O'CLOCK NOON SHARP 53 HEAD OF LIVE STOCK FULL LINE OF FARM MACHINERY Including 2 TRACTORS SO tons HAY, 500 bu. OATS CORN -- FURNITURE USUAL TERMS Hulubowicz arid ZoiMnaU Owners Interstate Auction Agency Managers Has Her Own Son Booked By Police--For Sentiment BOSTON.--Robert Hadden Jr.'s fingerprints were taken by the Boston police although he hadn't doqe anything wrong. It was at his mother's request. His footprints were taken, too, and they were placed on file--in his baby book. Mrs. Hadden brought her 11-weekold son to headquarters and asked Patrolman Arthur M. Lawrence ifhe would make the record for Robert's book. Lawrence complied, while other policemen flocked to the fingerprint department to watch. "m Rival To wears Reach Wreck Together---Wow! BAN FRANCISCO. -- The police have an answer to the question, what happens when rival tow-car drivers reach an automobile wreck simultaneously. One driver went to a hospital for repair of a split scalp, and the other went to jail on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. The police reported the drivers got into a fight over which one would haul the damaged car away. The Right of Chelae "The American people are almost 100 per cent opposed to the planned destruction of any business -- they treasure their right to buy from whom they please and to sell to whom they pleaae. Tuat right must be preeerved."-- Bue Island Sun-Standard. { one Compensation MIf yo*r life is a grind, be thankful for the opportunity to sharpen your wits on --Clayton Enterprise. Cbnnjft WAN ADS Wallpaper Is Decorative Wallpaper's primary use is covering for walls, but there are many other functions this paper may serve. Manufacturers produce the use Of wjtupaper as a editing' covering on the ground that it substitutes decofatlve interest for bare white nothingness Rooms gain in unity and effectiveness, they say, by the use of an appropriate ceiling paper blending into the walla. The interior of cupboards offers opportunity for effective wallpaper use. Modern paper designs also form excellent backgrounds for china. Jfojxredeg pin ftn&reqo 'jfoppROliiA P*1* punaij f i joj SttpivfoAZ <moh '0X9WJ-1VIV J0dtig •gsjiowwooy pirn sjftnj ygdg ^ Liken Channel «• Sleeve •'The Sleeve" is what the French call the 350-miie-kmg English channel, an old fashioned two-puff sleeve with its tight wrist at the Straight of Dover, the puffs caught in at Cherbourg, and the shoulder at its western entrance to the Atlantic, says a National.Geographic bulletin. The constriction at Cherbourg leaves a mere St miles intervening between the British pert of Portsmouth and a narrower 10 mites between AWerney, the northernmost channel island, and-the npawiel point of the English coast. Dent Just Knock on W«od "When we talk about decreased accident tolls, let's not just knock on wood, let's knock on our own heads until we pound home the idea that it's not luck that keeps the toll down, it's only continued co-operation and observation of traffic rules that police have laid down for our own protection."-- Glen Ellyn News. Paradox "A good many big city officials L e R o y J o u r B U . 1 . 01 ST qzZT »-OI ; » T I ,0*6 S wit * 80 OflZIi sj.vmaoo'Li-- . OTXOQ'9 P** W9 9t*00'9 SPWfi pu* Pi** 95*9 61*00*9 Pa* QZ/t Hi son <18 my*** 91*009 91*009 SMOIdKYHO *ax« sajia man Mew paaud *01 Xrpraoyresuds Aoq pespd -ni« eq HJM nojt sea?) moJL tasd"s iq en idf pro m amoo dn pin grft r" xm IB <n saua|?eg auoisaxu snourej aip AAvq a>JA s s i n a ijl v a i k o i s x v i i no 9[«8 Xjunonpoavq {MireMOHB poo* « e^vni irm 'AKftttq pwe seji* pp moi nj «p«i£ "CfOiui 20 sjro joj sasjs jp 'pnjf pw Jtovg joj - * S3ULL dlMO ONftOHO gjK>A ypfl jmqfyfrmrifl '8<OT«IS-IH 'SKOIdWVHO Mddia PUlO SH0WVJ UHX 0NI39 '<3T3R> XVHX SZKO £29 CINY JnS J.VHJL SSTHIl CTTD 5T50HX HI IQTHiL HOA SSITJUl 00J. 'Sfl AYW jioa cm* xMoa aareaa si a* sihj. jaohol im

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