West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 10 Mar 1927, p. 4

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I think. in fact. I'll makn inquiries About uie‘mies to Rumos AM The winter's hardâ€"‘twould be the H» is a wry dull who bare! His head m torrid Bnenos A)? I could accept W} A month or two 11 thought {1! writing w: day. May m- not subm day. May m- not submit them About Hu‘ lwat in Btwnos Ayn‘ A sunstrnko' In own an. ls tht‘.‘ of 1 Bumws Ayn H \\ o 9P0 IN part hmmi'ahl'y and well. YOU! 9311 m Hm sm'ial life of this section has [mun much upprvrmhm by us all, and \mu' [mm as 1105!. am; ll'utess has 1mm sun-h us to make us crave ine dulgvnrv. and as a some-thing by which )0” MN mvr give us a piacé in your momnry. wu now ask you to .' ")0! By the Way. flow the Devil Do You Pronounce It? .\l Hlo- HM “(filo-“kill homeEtead Mrs. J. Smith before he left. Mr. .lm- Sh-wnmm leased the drml urn-s across the side-rum! lu-r. .‘l .\l $00“ MP \Vcslvy Andrews moved last \ka In Hw farm ho leasml from Mr. Hmu'gn Pollock and this Tuesday nagnt Hu- )‘ulmg vapln am giving him a revvption into their neigh- kmrhmul by way of a dancv. Mr. Luruo Allan leased gore AA, and Corner Concerns {mtâ€"’13:“; (Uur Own Correspondent) 3this na Mr. Farr Lawn-nee is in Huvlphfg..nm_q._. this ww-k in attendance at the pr-i [inns m ungo- mow-ting. ‘ ‘and L \l:'. and .\Ir. .lus. 3103'tu Hf Traa Fo'allwr \o‘l'stnn \Isllml Saturday with thu- DiSCll lam-3N hruthm'. Mr. Jas. Marshall. I...” PAGE I. H, year, 31.25 for six month's,'65 cents for three months. Foreign sub- scription rates on application. Member Canadian Weekly News- papers Association. Whosoever is afraid of submit- ting any question, civil or religious, to the test of free discussion, is more in love with his own opinion than with the truth. -â€"WATSON. at the oflice, Garafraxa Street, Durham, Ontario, by Frank Irwin, Editor and Proprietor. The Chron- icle is mailed to any address in Canada at the rate of $2.00 per AA A year, 81.00 for six months; 50 cehts for three months, 25 cents for one month. To any address in the Uniteq ASEgtgs of _Americ_a, $2.50 per Pnbfished gyery Thursday morning DURHAM CHRONICLE \\ \\ n' nwnmry. \Vp ept this chair Lu'y valuv but. a: Illnl P! to yox t'lll ll .\l '\ 3.. Thursday, larch 10, 1927 .\l uslon we With the 1r clinic.) of prom: case under considvr Hie nnboarahlc‘ h». N. concerning wine writing \‘t‘fit‘s ye; II ll H ’M’" II hornoch llm’t M I as do the fairies for Buenos Ayn-es. n \w trust that \"le1 the neighborhoéd to going mu) b6 as cor- aw been m this. and \‘Iclo-nm- will 1m gen- both here and here- “I“ get who no Buenos AV “H uuld b» all n languagv: wle to 31v 9 of prom: \\ Bin 93 now ask yuu ll', not for Its as a mvro mark Bunnos Ayces ll spondent 3‘\ m HOS .llh'll ll an l-Lugllsn- hc‘ allowmi guagvs. hm. to give the sum ll H‘Ol n 'I‘Oront funcml ( away a (him ll shytm'ian ' meeting udanc 0. went. the '0 rax .\yros Swv 0n tar l' 2 ('9 rm. IV nuaâ€" at mu l: I“ ll “'0. Km H’ from and hun- from) h n. lflm‘kâ€"eMt‘Kechnci‘éLâ€"That the fol-1m gllowim: amounts he paid: \Villard 03 Wit-on. slump killod by dogs. 8l7.: S. 3" e H. “Tight. inapnctinu Same $1.50: 0“ Mn. Xvi! Livingxlunv: hmms nu 20m“ -fl"0d$ “we fence- at lot, 8. Con. 13, 81“ PG. ' N H )lc‘valmieâ€"Blackahat the \\'a- an M 2m paid for man and team he emwa ‘ lwr day of 10 hours and 32.25 for men U" - fur Hun your “Blâ€"Carried. 'm? z" MCKo‘L'hnie -- “'hitmorn -~ That 88} withww ao-vmmh 1w paid: John 310- “'1 -; [mm]. \mrk nll rnanl at. his 33:. 35. 36 an n, “ 17cm. '3. SIN!" W llnln's. $2.00: Clerk 1-"? - ‘ an ‘fllalI‘V. $30.!‘l\.-Carrivd. ' I un :a have pressed against the radiator at the Mid of hi9 seat. and some mat- vlms in his pocket igniting. explains th.- demonstration that was going on in one of the pews while the preach- ..r was exhorting against the fire. in the hereafter. Seldom does the pulpit and the pew co-operate in so efl‘icient a manner as on this oc- casionâ€"Paisley Advocate. \\'h:;.- Rev. R. G. McKay was staying Will! the old doctrine and preaching a tire and brimstone ser- mon at Knox Presbyterian church here on Sunday morning last. the clothes of one of the elders who was attentively listening in. started to smoke. and a lady. with her child who was sitting near by. and wit.- nessed what looked like a promis- ing contlagration. and remember- ing the tragedy which resulted when someone shouted "Fire" in a Mon- treal theatre on a recent Sunday re- tained herself and thus prevented a possible panic at Knox on the Sab- bath. She. however. hastily no-‘ titled the elder that he was in the act of becoming a burnt entering. and seeing that her words were only too true. he. lost no time in extinguismng the blaze. It being a cold morning. he seems :a have pressed against the radiator ELDER APIRB rum! su;un'nm‘ndvnt for the year 19°27 at a salary of $3.50 pm' day and that By-law No. 690 be filled up aux-um:nglyâ€"-(‘.arried. lix’lam' No). 690 I'unfil'ming this ap- pnintmont was then passed. Council qgjgprpfd 3Q 111er April: MN V Laughlan. lllaim from William \Vilsl sheep killed by dogs. BluckeMcKechn itLâ€"That ll lowing zwvmmls he? paid: \‘ t “No greater calamity could befall this nation than that its business 1' ' gvniusvs shuuld resign their [.msi- '- : linns tn direct sympathy orchestras and Little Theatres," asserts Mr. Mot in Hm I'mx nship Hall on Satâ€" III'IIaV. \IarI II 5th. 1927. Minutva of F-nlIIiIIII‘} metting \wrv l‘fi‘id and (”Illillllo'ol Mr. “('1 Minn. Mt. Fm‘ost H‘II W n Ming: "Ilhv Canada Ingnt [Ion L10. of Ullé‘llIll. waited on Council 1'"- ' 'l'lw Willy nl' saVing time. is als- smlo-d. and it is Mr. Feather's (30n- to-ntiun that. "movies. automobihng gm-nt'wssinnal spurts. mlml'vts. gin ,‘grzu'tio-s. gulf. lu'illgv. crossword puz- ‘xlo's. philantln-opic and rvfm'm organ- 4 mu inns. :unusvmnnt parks. worthless Imagamlws. and lunchmvn Hubs haw Whitn Also there arr rhapters regarding mm In Kurnlw. and how to trawl m-mwmicaHyman iteresting chapter t’m' many, Discussing his own clan, Mr. F03“- tlmr wnturos the following two as- sertions: "Tho enterprises of the rountry arr being managed by pri- \illo' so't'l'c'lal'ic's and underpaid as- sistants." "Tht' American business man. no-\\' stylr. no longer works. Ho is n luat'vr without. Parallel in all tlu- world.” In support, or those con- te-ntions. tho tllmvlnml business man points to tho popularity 01' golf, the rrmwls ut. lmsvhall gamvs. noonday lunclwun movtings. tho attendance at. rnm'vntions amt summvr resorts. .‘IPKN m Having been a newspapennan, publicity agent for the National Cash Register 00., the Near East Heâ€" lief Fund. a pacifist organization, assistant editor of a single tax pub- lication and finally in business for himself Mr. Feather apparently lakes delight in debunking DUSi- ness. He discloses frankly some of the fundamentals of economics, trac- ing the genealogy of 100 per cent Americanism, Babbittry. and kin- dred phenomena, all of which ap- pear to date back to the Sales Man- ual of John H. Paterson, founder Dayton. Ohio's favorite home-grown industry. "I am in business for the purpose of making profits. I have never lost sight of that." is the almost brutal statement of William Feather, own- er of prosperous printing concern in Cleveland, in “The Ideals and Follies of Business." That's the luv Style American Bus- iness Man, Says William Father. WORST [MFR Ln} hniw-Blackw'l‘hat the wa- fnr man and team be $3.00 If 10 hours and 32.25 for men Vc'tll’ l$.".’7.â€"-l‘.al'ried. Gl=:-nelg Council rmm: sam W h i t mow r i ntendeim )H AT BRIMSTONB SERMON H: H S30 Mo Kechnivm'l‘hat m lmurs. :1 filmâ€"Carr} Marl” LVN.“ r.â€"-â€"tlm'ri< \\'h “mm '0' [Dalofiz IN THE WORLD mu an. p0! [1111] lnts 3-3. 35. 36 5. $2.00: Clerk sl‘l‘iml. minâ€"That 4-590. ”11‘ vount lm hold 110! 11:91- informa- the -t'.arriod. I In V 0H! It l'hat H It Thos. township the war pm‘ day - fillml up . Galvani. [itl‘Oft‘SSOl‘ of the l'nivcr- sity of Bologna. and a man learned Iand famed in several departments :0! medical science. was one. day dis- isecting a frog. He placed it on a 'table near one of those electrical ;t‘ricti0n machines then so commonly iseen. While the machine was being ‘turned an assistant of Galvani's ac- cidentally touched the nerve of the ’dead frog. Instantly the nerve leap- ed. The dead body was thrown into convulsions nuthough it was not touching the machine. Here was a mystery to be solved. and Galvani twas the man to solve it. He took .years to arrive at his final conclu- sions. which were embodied in a 'h‘arned book which startled scien- ititlc Bumpe. Electricity was embod- ‘ied in the nerves of the dead frog. Therefore it was in the legs of live tfrogs also. There was an intimate lrelation between electricity and or» :ganic life. In other. words. animal ,electricity! In one of his exyeri- (188‘ n1. nts he exposed his (moiite frogs‘ 1025 to Lie atmosphmo to find “hot, "fleet lightning would haxe on them. As he lifted the hook on “hich "1th \\ ere hung from the balcony, the iron of the railing and the copper of th 0 hook accidentallv touched the moist muscles. Again there was the convulsion. He made an arc of notable feats were performed before the world heard of Galvani uf Volta. In one of them a shock “as d15- eluuge d through 180 "nardsmen \\ 11.. m1.» mule. tu leap simultaneouslx. The Carthusian monks of Paris 5111‘- paased this “hen the\ fox med 3 line 900 feet long and experienced a shock as the hands of the [no end men were joined. e In the. Eighteenth Century scienti- 5’ tie and Fashionable people [150“ to u amuse themselves with trifling with 5. experiments in elertricity and spee- g ulations as to the possible uses of 1 this entertaining toy. At that. time 1- there was only one way of gener- ating it and that was by means of - t'rirtion. Fashionahte ladies amt - genitlemen wouht stand on cakes of ; wax. ruhglass rods tOgether and '1 then give each other an elertrir kiss. whirh ititt'ereift from other . kisses in that an electric spark was ; lgenerated. There was also one other tiniere of elertrir apparatus. names I ly, the Leyc’ten Jar. now known as ai plt'Ofltflt‘lls‘t'l'. an invention of Dean Vonl .flx'leist of tianiin. Germany. in ”475.1 .lThe ,iar w: ,v a true storage hattery.i and if one held it. In one hand amt, with the ether lttllt'llml a t'rirtiou' imarbine. one rereiveil a delightful shm'k. That “as all Europe and the! l l llrest of the. srientitir world knew {about electricity Uttltl HalVani ap- fneared on the seene. Perhaps an- leXrepliun shouhl he made in faVHr ol'l lb‘ranklin. whose exiwriment with a! ykito proved the identity of t'lW'll‘l-i grity and lightning. There wewi t l ' inn-my other ex;wrimenters. hut sinee IllUSl. Of llltfil) were on ”W “Tang; ,ltrark. they have lieeu l‘urgottim. EVen ' ltiithttlll. hailed as the greatest au-t {thority in l'lurope. was en the wrong. itrnrk in the must important. ctectur-i {lieu of his whole career. i. ELECTRICITY MADE SERVANT OF MAN Famous Australian explorer, who claims there is a continent twice the size of North America beneath the vast ice floes of the Antarctic Ocean. which he believes to contain fabulous mineral wealth. SIR DOUGLAS MAWSON Early Experiments Galvani's frogs THE DU‘RI'IA'M CHRONICLE Mixed Grain, Hay ....... \ou ll go W ith tolerance for all who dwell be- low. The faults of others then will dwarf and shrinkâ€" When you. with “he“ as substitute for “I”. Haw,- stood aside and watched yourâ€" Anal thenâ€"“ith eyes unveiled to “hat you loatheâ€"- To sins that “ith sweet charih mm d clotheâ€"â€" Back to your selfâ€"walled tenement . of men! Desnise your cowardice; condemn whate'er You note the faolseness in you any- where. . Defend not one defect that shames your eyeâ€" Just stand aside and watch yourself so by. You looked on one “11059 aims. you did not. know. Let undisguisod contempt surge} through you when You Sm“ you shrink, O commonest The bag-knm-cl trousers and the seed\ coat; Pick flaws. find faults. {org ct. the man is van. and tn to maku yum- 1.41111311- 1111;; tmo. Confxmn murswlf and look you in the eyeâ€"- Just. stand aside and \\ atch \0111's« ”I: soby 1mm ‘ \mong.1 thOs‘u VVh11 read his book VVith illtOIISP int11111st was Al11ss1u11h11 ., \',Olta 111‘0t11ss011 11f 0x111111im1111t1111 .. 11l1Vsi11s in ”111. I'nivorsity of Pavia. H11 too, knew something about. 1111111- ‘ t11i11itV and had indeed invented a 111111pl11 11f 11s11t11l inst1111m11nts for measuring the electricitV discharg- 111l 1'111n1 I.11V11l11111 J111's. H11 dismissed as 110ns11ns11 tl111 tl1111111V' 11f animal 11]â€" 1121t11i11it.V though. as a scientist. he did not doubt VV'.l111t (ialV'nni had VV111tt11n H11 m11111lV' doubted the in- l'111111111111 h11 had 1haVV 11 1111 11111111n111 111'111Vi11C111l that ”111 Contact, 01' tVVu dissin1il111'm11tals VV 11s 11n1111gh t11p111â€" 11111111 11l1111t11i11itV.11n1l 111111 1l11V in 1800 i'tho 1l11si1.111 11! an i11st111m11nt. flashwl1 f1.ll111111gl1 his n1i111l.l111V'1111ishlV I111 [.1111 111 VV'111k. piling silV1111 and zinc; 1lis11s 111‘ 1111 111111111 siz11 upon 111111l1 !1 {l1 1. “with a 11111isl cloth bulwvmil ll111111. 'll11111 ll111 1111111111e1l111l the 11p- l 1111111 and l11VV111-1lis11s l1V 111111111111 0f 11' 1VV1111. H11 g11t.1111l a shuck. 1111? 11. lst11111lV 11111r1111t. tl111 ii11st,_11s “1111111- {1111111 IV1111n1ptl'1111l s11Vs in “111 .\'11VV \111l1'lin111s 11111111111111” l1ist011V l His11VV'11 11111s11l11s tVVit11l1111l lik11tl111s11;l 1111‘ H111 11111,» Applying tl111 11111ls 1111 .tl111 VV11111 t11 his tongue he got “1111 |11l111111111t111isti11 111 M t11st11 11f 11l1111lii-' reitV. SVVilth' l111 1l11V'iS111J 13tl11111 111-! 1' 111,111in11111ts. H11 111111l11 a thin VV'1i111 in-l 11111111l11s111111t. H11 1l111111n1p11s111l VV'11t1111. i \ ili'pi gl'zissl1111_11.111‘ was nia1l11. 1..11mp 'l‘h11 l1111h11s 111' 1111111l 11111n1111- in}, 11-1.“! ll1111\\11 into lil11-lik11 111111- 1\ 1_1lsi0ns. Just stand aside and watch yourself .90 b\: . ' Think Hf Mmmvlf .N ‘lue' mate-ad 0f Watch clusely as in otlwr men you 01' course. he. too, wrote a book. and once moie tho \wrld “as as- tonishc-d. l’aiticulmh \\;1sGal\ani astonished, but refused to admit that; olectiicitx does not animate livingi 1111151113.To his dving dav ho main-f tainvd it. and the discussion bctch 11' the hub Italian piofvssors has tw- vonw historic. ln tlm mountiinv-I Volta's expoi'imvnts were being 1-w- peatool all owr Europe. and to this (lax Fronchnu 11 in honor of thnse- viioch- making discs «all a di’\ ”1' not (“H a pili- l g WATCHING YOURSELF GO BY bout the quality of electxicih IPSM- mg in Hm trngs. m- the Singing, Miss 19%}; Redford was the avcompamst. fl‘he mwtmg was closed with Hm Singing 01' um National Antlwm and Um bonodic- lion. The meeting opened with Mrs. J. A. Graham in the chair, the first num- ber being the singing of the hymn. "All People. That. On Earth D0 Dwell" The features of the meeting were hymns, scripture readings and pray- ers by the women assembled. These latter illcludm’l prayers for Canada, China. Japan. lm'lia, the Moslem world. the league of Nations. Inter- national Rif‘l'aliionship and for all eiher tiehls 0f the. church. DURHAM MARKET Corrected larch 10, 1927 101,30 oooooooooooooooooooooooo self go by. There was a good attendance .. of ladies at the International Day of Prayer, held last Friday afternoon in the Baptist church. The local day was planned by the executive of the Women’s Missionary Society, and was in conjunction with the an- nual day of prayer held all over the world at this date, and which has been indulged in for a number of years past. Good Attendance Last Prlda, though unh- Made Electricity Manageable Church. per all your motix Then Came Volta per It murnatiohii_â€"hay of floating in the Baptist cwt. . just "III I! ull‘. III' The funeral “as hold yestmdax u-s mun}.'_vd l afternoon from the familx homo. tiwiclass and size 0f wars. An (”SUHMIDIP woman in «may way. slu- will hr missed grem- ly in he'l' home. as \wll as by nmnv of lwr acquaintanvv «rum :23 UN HM- vr rc-sidvms \Vlm hvlz' hvr in Hm Tho late Mrs Simpson, 11110311 maiden name was Jane S1111hourne'. 1111.1 110111 111 ;\'m1 Hamburg Ontario. on the 19th ot'A111'il, 1829. S1111 1111s of Initmi F1111 1i11» L111alist st111k.111‘ which she 11116 intvnsely 11101111. Sim 1135 111111111~1t about the 1031' 1850 to M11. J11hi1 S111111s1111.11h11 mm a 1mm- 1111 111‘ 11111111 ago. 11111:! 121110111 187“ “1111' 1-:1n111 tn B1111ti111'k. \1‘hr'1'e the family haw 511110 1114111111 T11 “mm 111111 11111 1111.1 1111111. Ii'1i11a11i. 1111111111111 f11ur 111111~ 111.111 and it 1111.1 11ith “111 mm 111111 his 111111111 that. the civ- 1‘1‘115011 hact H1111! for ”111 111M. numhm' Mrs. (Rm-2T» Smith spent over the wwk-vnd with her daughter, Miss Bessie Smith. Owen Sound, attending svlmnl in that. city. Mrs: J. B. Dufl‘ield 59W“. a few days m 0an Sound yisntmg her mother and other relauws. DIED MONDAY IN Mr. (iemge Constable) of Toronto is visiting (on a few daxs with M1. and MI' 8. lg A. AMI 0d. Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy and son Marshall. of Sholburne. visited over the wka 0nd with Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Aldred. Mi. John R. pdlk of Detroit is \is- iting with Mr. Jamns Park in Ben- tinck. and with other friends and relatixos in the \icinity. It is three years since Mr. Park was last here. Miss 'Ellen Hay spent. over the Wgek-end in Milverton, the guest of M {8; 1mm Heughgn. Mrs. Merritt Cochrane of Fort William is visiting friends and reâ€" latives in Durham and vicinity for a feyLdays. Mrs. (Dr.) Lorne Robertson of Stratford, spent a couple of days in tow . visiting her mother, Mrs. Mg 0, _a_nd sisteters. M. Knighg SOCIAL AND PERSONAL Mr. and, Mrs. William D. Mills, St. Catharinos, Ontario, announce the ongagomont of tllbir only daugh- ter, Mary Ruby, to Mr. Arthur Mnlne Inglis. son of Mrs. Inglis and the late Robert Inglis, Toronto; the mor- ngge to lake p_lace eat_'Iy_ in_ April.‘ (Continued 1mm page I) NINBTY-EIGHTH YEAR m We have no information II~ what went on other than Mr. \V; ter looked up the records in tlw it. isti‘v office and Iollect ml (‘Hlt lIlI ablé other data to be “501‘ in I idepaitmont in the dl’a\\illt-' or ' ”Ila”: tIII tho. no“ building. J It. is I'I‘asnnabl} ('Pllail1.ll“\\ that tho building \\ ill itt‘ I UllllllI l!‘ fond tinished this sIImnII-I' illlvi * hIIt'oII llt‘Xt \\'llllt‘l".~‘ siltt\\8 aro- ', ius “lt‘ tomI “ill lII- t'lljt)}lli..' I IIIIiIilogr of getting tlII-ir IIIIIII {:1 a first-class gowmmvnt- U\\llI It I . ofl'ico building with ”In (unwri- PPS ctljmvd bv IIllII'i tovm, II. While in town Mr. WiIIII-I' ”.0 \thNi the Maynr, Roma» and nII, town officials. and aim. l’nsIuwt Smith, regarding tlw building I}: “l“ in all probability lw, ., home this summer. I‘."‘ Last Friday, Mr. J. \Vinh-r at“ 2.3. Public Works Department. at mmu 's was in town looking over Hm snu 1. the new governmc-nt pus! m ‘ which is to be eroctml lm-n '1. summer. INSPECTED SITE OF NEW POST OFFICE Public Works Ofilclll in Town La~t Week Securing Data for the Ex. ection of Durham's New Govern- ment Building This Summer. 'Vl’u v. â€" 'v-v â€"â€" ' Some eight hundred dullan .." back taxvs that are llllmbllmtuhm and which were on the 'l'rvasmw‘ ‘ books, were wiped 011‘ and mum. I struck off the hooks. "r”--- _ so, and piid for by tlin town. \Vm, tho increasing number of raw. tuberculosis in cattle it Wm M: that there should be sonw l‘vgul;,,. tion as to the kind of mvat sum ,. Durham. This will all'm't «mm-”,1” Oll'el'ing meat for sale, \Vhlfthl‘l‘ ill-1H shops or ll}: tlie_quarter. the inspection of all moat utrm-m. 3.; sale in the town, the same 1., H. specth by pgmeppelqualiliml 1.. 4. TOWN aouucu. nn oom- anwon wasnu W". -vwâ€"v ducted by the deceased’s paslm. Im- Rev. Mr. gchnlllnm of the 1mm... . Presbyterian church. " Besndes Mrs. E. Simpson and .m,‘ fly it} Bentinck, the late Mrs. sum. son 13 mourned in Durham h; xi. Harry Simpson and Mrs. B. H. \\m h both grandchildren, to all of “11..., The Chronicle extends S}'Hl§)|1.h\_ ' rim. inch 10. my (Continued from page i WI vu ' .lL mug being mn- ”swim- at, by th Of ”I H Jr. IH 8r H Quin" ’ H t; -, ‘3 . Sr. l Jr. l DI" Ec'khm Per! SUN“ Em" 31 M Jr. 1 \\ Mr: M m .113. L0” h Lmd .lmn Sr. M Jr. l\' Trall‘um Sr. Ill GilliVm: Jim Pan's \M'u “ARON. \\ :H'. can, Huxwea ”0'0“ 1‘3» B)” l‘ (Brim 1‘1”va SCHOOL HONOR FOR PAS Horns l‘ !. Sr. Ill. H Elan SP. IV. Hm: Pas» Hum (bell Jump. “it... VO‘I a Bola“ In. - Irlma Im. “NIH“ 3' Au'mcr .h Ml Jr. Sr. H \la "In“ II \I: (in-u \\ [Olsu‘m Pu Mu Thurudiy. Marv» “H Senior 30

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