West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 3 Apr 1919, p. 7

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LION IS JCHED PICXHES OF THE URALS the Wo LABLI Site of m3 ENOUSER ALTH 1J meta rt el. re m of cook rises to the dignity of "artist," and may rank with the chemist, if mot with the physician, 1 We live not by what â€"we eat, but by what we digest, and what one man digests another would die in atâ€" tempting. Rules on this subject are almost useless. Each man can soon learn the powers of his stomach, in health or disease. He has no more business to bring on indigestion than he has to get intoxicated or fall into debt. He who offends on these points deserves to forfeit stomach, head and his electcral franchise. Generally speaking, fat and spices resist the Cigestive power, and too much nuâ€" ‘ritious food is next evil to too little. Good cookery, by developing flavor, increases the nutritiousness of food which bad cookery would perhaps A.C.‘s, the tame rats, kittens, pigs, rats, ferrets and mongooses, parrots, foxes, rams, ibex and cage birds. A certain military policeman at Bouâ€" logne, engaged in the usual examinaâ€" tion of the kits of five men for conâ€" ,'ruband goods, had the time of his life. He broke open a carefullyâ€"wrapâ€" ped parcel and out fell three snakes. They had been captured by the Royal Engineers in Mormal Forest a few days before the Armistice. 1 What is to happen to the amazing menagerie of regimental mascots that have accompanied our troops throughâ€" out the varying fortunes of war? writes a British correspondent. There is a formidable list. The monkeys of the Signal Section, the hyena of the West Surreys, the goose of the W.A. bring the exâ€"Kaiser to book, together with other chief offenders. It may be said that the first drafts of at least two of the subâ€"committees were not by any means satisfactory as to the punishment of those chiefly responsible for the â€" war, which, it was suggested, would be satisfactorâ€" ily meted out if a parliament of the world were to pass a resolution deâ€" claring the German Emperor was not a jolly good fellow. Those drafts an‘ being reconsidered, and the British, at least, are doing their utmost to{ Heavy Punishment Urged. In the commission of responsibiliâ€" ties as a whole, more perhaps than in any other commission, differences of tendency are apparent. _ While some energetic people take common sense as the guiding star, there are others who are unable to get away from legal precedent, unable to see that war may even have rendered wut of date all the ideas of their sacred temple,. | Use of explosive and expanding bullets. Directions to give no quarter. IIl treatment of prisoners. Misuse of flags of truce. ; Poisoning of wells. Even this list, as the subâ€"commitâ€" tee takes pains to point out, does not exhaust the record of the enemy‘s crimes, and it recommends the apâ€" pointment of some standing body for the purpose of collecting and systemâ€" atizing further information with the view of laying before a triburtal or tribunals to be set up a comprehenâ€" sive list of charges and accused perâ€" sons. Breach of other rules relating to the Red Cross. , Use of deleterious and asphyxiatâ€" ing gases. Destruction of merchant ships and passenger vessels without warning. Destruction of fishing boats. Destruction of a relief ship. Bombardment of hospitals. Attack on and destruction of hosâ€" pital ships. Wanton destruction of charitable, educational â€" a buildings and monuments Debasement of currency and issue of spurious currency. Imposition of collective penalties. Wanton devastation and destrucâ€" tion of property. Bombardment of undefended places. Pillage. Confiscation of property. Exaction of illegitimate or exorhiâ€" tant contributions and requisitions. tory Forced labor of civilians in conâ€" nection with military operations. Enensy usurpation of sovereignty during military occupation. Subâ€"Committee Careful to Point Out That This List Does Not Exhaust Record of Enemy‘s Crimes. Here is the list of the thirtyâ€"one varieties of crime committed by the enemy countries during the war, as classified by the subâ€"committee on fact appointed by the commission on responsibilities for the war: Massacre of civilians. 1 Putting to death of hostages. ‘ Torture of civilians. Starvation of civilians. Violation of women. Abduction of girls and women for the purpose of enforced degradation. Deportation of civilians. | Internment of civilians under bm-‘ tal conditions. COMMISSION ON RESPONSIBILâ€" ITY FOR THE WAR OFFICIAL LIST OF ‘THE FLAG S HUNS WAR CRIMES 1 inha Army Mascots. of religious, and historic Here it is. The peace of the Church was during the first six centuries disâ€" turbed by nearly 100 heresies, most of them impugning the doctrine of the Trinity. These, doubtiess, assisted the rapid progress of the Mosliem faith, of which a belief in the "unity of God" _ Even the rectangular shape, now so universally given to flags, was reliâ€" glous in its origin. The orlflammg. the ancient royal standard of France â€"a red flag borne on a gilded lanceâ€" was no doubt suggested to the Cruâ€" saders by the waving banners of the Saracens. _ But here is the interestâ€" ing thing: ‘The banners of the soldier in the Bayeux tapestry and elsewhere depicted are threeâ€"pointed streamers, In the Agnus Dei (a figure of a lamb bearing a cross or a flag), as in all early representations of the descent of Christ into Sheol and the resurrecâ€" tion, the Saviour holds a threeâ€"pointed banner surmounted by a cross . Hence it is inferred that the banner of the: Crusaders had a religious origin andl an allusive religious symbolism. In this way the smith‘s crlmabaé& apron became the national flag of Perâ€" sia. It is asserted that the waving flag was first used in the East, and that it was red. Do you know the old Perâ€" sian legend of Shah Dahak, who reigned nearly 4,000 years ago*" He was a monster of disease and cruelty. FEach day of his wretched life he had slaughtered two men in order to apply their warm brains to his suffering body. This fate at length fell to the two sons of a smith named Kaoh. At the sight of his mangled boys he tore off his leather apron, dipped it in their blood and, making a standard of it, rallied the people and defeated Dahak. Have you ever wondered why red is in nearly all flags? It is there to tell the pathetic story of man‘s noble efâ€" fort to bring his life into harmony with the moral order of the universe. It speaks of his persistent sense of the need of superhuman power and of his heroic willingness in his unequal conâ€" flict with hostile elements and overâ€" whelming foes to pay any price to enâ€" list the intervention of the deity. In the wilderness the children of Israel were ordered to "pitch their tents, every man by his own standard, with the ensign of his father‘s house, round about the tabernacle of the conâ€" gregation." Presumably the Hebrew ensigns resembled _ the Egyptian, wooden or metal tablets set upon lances, for the Hebrew word for standâ€" ard means a thing which shines from afar. * dinfratiiistedt css smsmsedt k is But what interests us most is that the flag symbol grew out of the reâ€" ligious element in the human mind. The more civilized nations of anâ€" tiquity took their emblems of the state directly from the religion of the state. The standards under which the king marshaled his subjects and led them to battle were representations of the national deities or the symbols of their attributes. In the first place, a flag is a sign and as such is as old as human speech N Ne EVCIE 6R The religion of the flag! Who ever thinks that a flag is one of the most religious things he has seen? What is a flag anyway? How few know. Like most familiar things, a flag is taken for granted. It Epitomizes the Birth, the Growth and Ultimate Supremacy of the Highest Conceptions of Man. GREW oUuT oF THE RELIGIOUS ELEMENT IN THE MIND. wheat alone, sweet nutâ€"like flavor impos~â€" sible in a proâ€" s1IDie in a proâ€" duct niaci:e of Delicious Mixture of Wheat € Barley Torhealthvalue, sound nourish~ ment and a Banners of the Crusaders. In the Old Testament. time to time and you will pre the forming of worn lineg in It is estimated that 407 airplanes took part in the German raids on England. Fold tablecloths differently from arrows and doubleâ€"edged ewords. when they fought with bowg and When the Ministry of Munitions was considering the question of deâ€" signing an armored headdress for the British soldier, it consulted a gentleâ€" man who was a well known authority on mediaeval armor. He pointed out that the success of the noted makers of mailed armor in the past was in the design as much as in the subâ€" stance of the armor which theyl made. He pointed out that the art of making mailed armor was prac-! ticed in Japan up to a generation ago, and that it was not improbable,’ that in the kingdom of the Mikado: there might still survive some mas-l ter of this ancient craft who could| give a useful hint or two for the| making â€"of a shrapnelâ€"proof helmet| for the British soldier. { The British steel helmet is one of the successes of the war. Although we were late in the field with it, our "tin hat" is better than that of the French or German. It owes its sucâ€" cess largely to its shape, and around that hangs an interesting tale. | The War Office is said to contemplate decorating and adorning it so that it will be worthy of a soldier‘s fullâ€" dress review order uniform in times of peace when presumably he shall be back again to the scarlet tunic and the pipeâ€"clayed belt. One of the Successes of the War Was Made From Japanese Design. The steel helmet which was served out to the British soldier in 1916 is certain to find an aiding place in the kit and equipment of Tommy Atkins. ‘ We have not yet the rectangular | flag, but it is a short step to it. Out of |the Crusades grew chivalry, which was . | the last stage in the evolution of the | fullâ€"fledged flag of modern times. | When for any valiant exploit a knight | was advanced to the more honorable |rank of banneret or baronet, the king or his general, on the field of battle, caused the pointed ends to be cut from the knight‘s pennon, which thus became a square or rectangular flag. He was then called a knight of the square flag. After his advancement he did not throw away the three pointed ends, but cherished them as honorable badges proving his share in the danger and glogy of a crusade. Though removed from the banner unâ€" der which he had led his vassals in the field, he sewed them on the breast or sleeve of his tunic, or depicted them on his shield, making them one of the earliest "honorable ordinaries" of true heraldry. What the Flag Stands For. Hence when a flag is unfurled we behold more than a flimsy, fickle inâ€" strument, more than "a bit of red rag." It epitomized" in the most simâ€" ple and at the same time the most beautiful symbol the primitive birth and raceâ€"long growth and ultimate suâ€" premacy of the highest and most perâ€" sistent conceptions of man. It reâ€" minds us of a humanity, in the everâ€" increasing complexity of its relations and reactions, endeavoring to make articulate and practical its inchoate religious and social consciousness. It pays eloquent tribute to that great crimson stream of suffering and sacriâ€" fice which has flowed from the always ‘ « struggling and oftâ€"bleeding heart of | mankind, upon whose broad and irâ€" restible tide there is borne to the | farthest shores and the last generaâ€"|â€" tion the total of vicarious good and ‘1 cumulative racial ideals. A flag reâ€"| / asserts the bacic fact of the insoluble .’ 1 religious instinet. {1 | __The reason for this was that the Moslems held our Saviour in high reâ€" verence as the greatest of the inspired prophets before the time of Mohamâ€" med. They incorporated many of His ; benign yrecepts into the Koran. They ‘ were well acquainted with the everts of His !ife and the manner of His death. For these reasons the cross, the instrument of His matyrdom, would be a symbol much less obnoxâ€" ious and less defiant than other Chrisâ€" tian symbols. Those, like the threeâ€" pointed pennant, while asserting the doctrine of the Trinity. struck directâ€" ly at the very foundation of the Mosâ€" lem faith, and this was exactly what the Church intended. So it is quite clear that the tripleâ€"pointed pennon was adopted by the western warriors as a practical declaration of their reâ€" ligious creed. To oppose the doctrine of Mohamâ€" med, the Christian Church adopted numerous symbols and emblems, all bearing allusion to the Trinity. The cross was, indeed, the acknowledged emblem of Christianity. But in this conflict the cross was not distinctive enough. formed the cornerstone. and the sucâ€" cess of the Arab arms. which, between the seventh and tenth centuries, nearâ€" ly swept Christianity from Asia and Africa, threatening also its safety in BRITISH WAR HELMET Symbols of the Church. Minard‘c Linkinent Relieoves Neurair‘a _ Printers in Japan receive 67% cents a day. * Pigs farrowed early in the spring sometimes become badly chilled. One good way to revive a pig so chilled is to hold him for a minute or so in a pail of water at about blood heat. Then dry off thoroughly and put back with the sow. | Flew Over the Andes. Lieut. Dagoberto Godoy, of the Chilean army, crossed the Andes at their highest point in a Bristol biâ€" plane, donated by the British Govâ€" ernment recently. The aviator left Santiago, Chile, and crossed the Tuâ€" pungato range at an altitude of 19,â€" 700 feet, landing at Mendoza, Argenâ€" tine Republic. J Col. Ward says he would sooner command a battalion than accept a seat in the House of Lords. "If you don‘t join us we‘ll annihiâ€" late you." That, in effect, was what the Bolshevists said to Col. John Ward, M.P., when, in October last, he marched his battalion into a Rusâ€" sian town. Col. Ward promptly arâ€" rested the leader, posted his men and guns, and by resolute action saved the battalion from being cut off. i g ND ONE BOTTLE OF BUCKLEY‘s White Bronchitis Mixture cured me. W. K. Buckley: Dear Sir,â€"Kindly acâ€" cept my, sincere thankfulness for the benefit my wife derived by the use of one bottle of your White Bronchitis Mixture. For over thirteen years she has suffered lcutfily with a bronchial cough. After speriding dollar after dolâ€" lar on various remedies no relief was obâ€" tained uniil she tried your marvelous remedy, and I am glad to state that one bottle entirely cured her. You are at liberty to use my name, and 1 should be only too pleased to answer any inâ€" quiries. _ Sincerly yours, John Hoimes, No. 1 Yorkville Avenue, Toronto. ‘The above is only one of the many hundred testimonials I receive each week, telling me of its wonderful healing power. It is sold under a moneyâ€"back guarantee to cure bronchitis, coughs. colds, bronâ€" chial asthma. No cureâ€"no pay. ‘Ten times more powerful than any known cough cure. Price 50 cents, 15 cents exâ€" tra for mailing; 3 bottles mailed free for $1.50. Sold only by BUCKLEY, the Druggist, 97 Dundas Street East, Toronâ€" to. i ‘ These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from The McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. MoCare YÂ¥ _ *_ ' A Spring suit is smart this season when one wears a waistcoat with it. This one offers an opportunity to wear one of daring form and color. McCall Pattern No. 8787, Ladies‘ Coat. In 7 sizes, 34 to 46 bust. No. 8794, Ladies‘ and Misses‘ Chinese“ Blouse. In 3 sizes; small, 32; med-l ium, 34 to 36; large, 38 to 40 bust. No. 8698, Ladies‘ Twoâ€"Piece Skirt. In 7 sizes, 22 to 34 waist. Price, 20| cents each. | Swagger sports model for women. The middy is made on simple lines and the yoke is of an odd shape. The band at the lower edge is turned up and forms pockets at either side of front. McCall Pattern No. 8796, Laâ€" dies‘ Middy Blouse. In 5 sizes, 34 to 42 bust. Price, 20 cents. | I Coughed for 13 Years A Soldier First. The Latest Designs 'a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or excessive oil, and in just a few moâ€" ments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. _A delightful surprise aâ€" waits those whose hair has been neglected or is scraggy, faded, dry, brittle or thin. _ Besides beautifying the hair, Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff: cleanses, puriâ€" fies and invigorates the scalp. forever stopping itching and falling hair, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks‘ use, when you see new hairâ€"fine and downy at firstâ€"yesâ€" but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair, and lots of it, surely get a small bottle of Knowlton‘s Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter for a few cents. Immediate?â€"Yes! Certain?â€"that‘s the joy of it. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fuffy, abundant and apâ€" pears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young gitl‘s after a Danderine hair cleanse. Just try thisâ€"moisten A man pulled out the willows that grew along the bank of a big stream ‘of water that fowed through his land. But he was a new man and did not realize what he was doing. He learned something when the water came up and ripped his meadow Try this! _ Hair gets thick, glossy, wavy and.beautiful at once. GIRLS! DRAW A MOIST CLOTH THROUGH HAR, DOUBLE ITS BEAUTY badly! Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. "The best education in the wor is that got by struggling to make living.â€"Wendell Phillips. MONEY ORDERS. Dominion Express Money Orders are on sale in five thcousand offices throughout Canada. _ "Do I like it‘â€"this game I must play? Does a doomâ€"haunted prisoner sing? . . _ . Don‘t listenâ€"I‘m tired toâ€"dayâ€" Be quietâ€"yes, that was my ring. "No, doctor, quite restedâ€"What, Dan? Not redâ€"headed Dan from Duluth" He shan‘t die . . . we‘ll save him!" She ran, For of such is our Kingdom of Youth! ‘ maimed, And of forcing myself not to cry! "It‘s the life of a dog or a slave, This salving the wreckage of war; You talk of ‘our glorious Brave,‘ But weâ€"ah, we know what they are! To sleep or to laugh or to cry! I have given them all I can give, And yet I‘m too busy to die! "I‘m tiredâ€"too tired to move, My bead and my hands and my soul, Too weary to hate or to love, To stimulate, soothe or console. «‘I‘m tired of crutches and canes, Of bandages. medicine, dope, Of doctors and dressings and pains, Of sympathy, even of hope! "Of letters to open and read, 6 From sister or sweetheart or wife; The others, that question and plead, Will haunt me the rest of my life. "I‘m tired of striplings untamedâ€" They laugh and you love and they die!â€" Of the scared and the blind and the | I have handled MINARD‘S LINEâ€" | MENT during the past year. It is alâ€" | ways the first Liniment asked for here, and unquestionably the best , seller of all the different kinds of i Liniment I handle. * (She Speaks to a Friend from Home) "l'ln tlredâ€"too tired to live, Maripn Bridge, C.B., May 30, ‘02 as the region of his future domafi. Oh, vanity!" Mr. Lioyd George would seem, says the Liverpool Post, to have had a preâ€" monition of his future eminence when ne paid a first visit to London as a lad of nineteen. "Went to the House of Commens," he wrote home to his uncle. "Very disappointed. 1 will not say but that I eyed the assembly in a spirit similar to that in which William the Conqueror eyed England on his visit to Edward the Confessor 185 ns peanen Nes qUALITY Oliver Spanner & Co. The Army Nurse Off Duty. WOULD BE A HIGK PRICE SOMZE FIRMS ARE OPFERING TORONTO We Pay Express and Postage 188VE 13â€"‘19 Dept. A. 26 BLM ST., WE WILL PAY His First Visit. NEIL FERGUSON. the world If your wife wears high becls she will be glad to know of this. This drug is sticky but dries at once and is,claimed to just shrivel up any corn without inflaming or even irriâ€" tating the surrounding tissue or skin. You simply apply a few drops of freezone on a tender, aching corn and soreness is instantly relieved. Shortâ€" ly the entire corn can be lifted out, root and all, without pain. Hospital records show that every time you cut a corn you invite lockâ€" jaw or blood poison, which is needless says a Cincinnati authority, who tells you that a quarter ounce of a drug called freezone can be obtained at litâ€" tle cost from the drug store but is sut. ficient to rid one‘s feet of every hard or goft corn or callus. Let‘s try to bring into bearing this year some little field that has not brought in anything before. That will make the world so much better. H_o_oâ€""â€".â€"‘A 0"0â€"0â€"'0â€"-.â€"0â€"; * 4 CC $RA 42102042# 404%6 "No," he answered. “f"ortnnately, his head hit the soft pedal!" Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruf. OR NONEY REFUNDED. ASK ANY DRUGGIST or write Lymanâ€"Knox Co., Montreal, P.Q. Price 60c Remember the name as it might not be seen apain © "Fifteen to thirty drops of 0 Extract of Roots, commonly called Mother Seigel‘s Curative 3 Syrup, may be taken in water C \_widl meals and at bedtime, for "He fell down and bumped his head on one of the pedals," he reported. « How to Purify $ the Blood "Oh, the poor darling" Is it a bad bump?" asked one of the guests. The young father had already dashâ€" ed toward the plano. He dropped on his knees and groped under the piano for his injured offspring. Presently he returned. ASTHMA "Oh, the baby has hurt himself!" cried the mother. "Run quick, deart" What Saved the Baby. The family were entertain::? callers one afternoon, and while th6 grownâ€" ups were talking the baby crept on the floor. Suddenly there was a loud bump and wild wail. It came from the direction of the piano. "That‘s what I call gratitude," com mented Mr. Gabb. "It says here that a weathy western man has ieft $500,000 to the woman who refused to marry him twenty years ago," said Mrs. Gabb as she looked up from the newspaper she was reading. INSTANTLY RELIEVED wiTH "I‘m agreeahble," repliod the girl "where‘s your diamond." "How would you like to sign up with me for a life game?" was the way a baseball fan proposed. "I wish I had a baby brother to wheel in my gocart, mamma," said small Elsie. _ "My dolls are always getting broke when it tips over." pation and bad blood. Persistâ€" ence in this treatment will effect a cure in nearly every case." Get the genuine oat druggists. the cure of ind C. A. HAYES, H. H. MELANSON, GEBO. STEPHEN, Vieeâ€"President Passenger Traffic Manager Freight Trafic Mageger 14,000 Miles of Railway 56,000 Miles of Telegraph Lines ,vo‘l' norse is Knocked oul Equai‘y good as preventive or cure W SPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY, Goshen, Indiana, U.8.A. ifaxâ€"St. John â€"Quebecâ€"Montreal â€" Vancouver â€" Victoria * et%@ A Mean Remark. First Essential. Canadian Northern Railway System Canadian Government Railways The Great North Western Telegraph Company For time tables and & nc Lopl 2Â¥ x\ Spohn‘s Distemper Compound Traversing every province in Canada‘s Dominion and directly serving the great ocean ports of Is the best answer for all questions concerning Dl-temror umo:xg horses lh.nd mules. D"rmx.‘ the ?utar and lsr n months, when there is so much change of weather and exâ€" posure t_o,zuuaq, s"gc of 3"0}{)‘!’8 each day will keep osure 'ld"u’m"' ise, m dose of SPOHN‘® each 'dâ€";'g;;vl-li'-ki;p our stable free from dissase. Give BPOHN‘8 before your orse is knocked out. EKqually good as preventive or oure. me tables and information apply to mearest Canadian National Rei‘ways Agest. Head Offices, Toronto, Ont. COMMON HORSE SENGE sAYys Now operating feeding. Minard‘s Liniment Curese Burns, Eto Skim milk is less digestible than whole milk. The safety lies in light you "I can not give you that informaâ€" tion, madam," answered the man in the cage. "You‘re the paying teller, aren‘t Not His Function. _ "I want to know," said the grimâ€" faced woman, "how much money my husband drew out of the bank last week." GOOD LIVE AGENTS wanted (reâ€" turned soldiers or others) to handle our music in your territory. Sell the latest patriotic and other songs before they are on sale in the stores. Pleasant workâ€"liberal remuneration. Write for full particulars. ideal Music Co.. 17 Adelaide East, Toronto. eut pain by our home treatment. _ Write & before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical .. LAmited. Collingwood. Ont. Keep a big bottle always on hand for family use Made in Canada. Druggists everywhere. + amamana 22 00000AAAE â€"comemmmemame ‘V FEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR SALB in New Ontario. Owner going to France Will sell $2.000. Worth double A little, applied without rubbing, will penetrate immediately and rest and soothe the nerves. Sloan‘s Liniment is very effective in lllayi:ctgh external pains, strains, bruises, es, stiff joints, sore mus= cles, lumbago, neuritis, sciatica, rheu= matic twinges. . L DITEDDIDT ME ________IP P Wf"lur Al.:. KINDS {JVvE POULâ€" : ,.__pay highest u‘aâ€" prompt Teturns. wm{- for prices. L Weinrauch & Son, 10â€"18 St Jean Ba"tiste Market. x P ORTRAIT AGENTS WANTING good prints; finishing a specialty; frames and everything at lowest prices: #o for $1.300 on ou! Wileon Publishing Co ks u2l AC T Montreal. Que. and(intment Quickly soothe and heal eczemas, rashes, itchings and burnings of the skin. ._Qle Fach Free by Mail. Address post» cerd:"*Cutioure, Dept . N,Boston, U .8.A.."* Sold by dealers throughout the world. WHEN NEURALGIA ATTACKS NERVES "Yes, but I‘m not the telling payer.* CUTICURA ick service. United Art Brunswick Ave., Toronto. it amount _ Apply J. H.. cle blishing Co.. LAmited. Toronto n ANCER TUMORS,. LUMPBS ®ETC. internal and external cured withâ€" the congestion and SQAP EQUIPPED NEWSPAPER b printing plant in lugm surance carried $1,600. 00 on culck eale Box $1. WANTED

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