West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 25 Jun 1925, p. 7

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The attempt upon the life of King Boris of Bulgaria calls attention te the risks run by royalty. Exalted persons live beneath the shadow of a menace which does not An underground river passing beâ€" neath Mont Blanc, and known as Eauxbelies, is now thought to pass right through into France. Tests by means of dyes or an identifiable chemâ€" fleal have been suggested as a means of distinguishing its outlet. the gering matter father wted : mitm n in t B Two expe by the i1 thr nq ph MONARCHS WHO ARE MENACED orean it He Q ne of the worst pests that Australia to deal with is a cactus known as prickly pear. It bas been found ossible to destroy the pear by up ting and the only known method is means of a parasite which lives on outside of the pe«s and, if it can introduced into the cellular formaâ€" » below the touszh skin. kills th:} n February 1st, 1908, the world walias many as 350,000,000 persons. 1t tled by the news of the ussassina-‘bas been a strange destiny that has : of King Carlos of Portugal and his | conferred such a power on Rufus â€"â€" The tragedy took place on the|Isaacs. _ As a boy he sailed up the vaide, Lisbon, the shots being fired | Hug!! River bound for Calcutta, as seven political miscreants connectâ€"| cabin boy to the captain of a brig. Toâ€" with the Republican party. Dom|day as Viceroy he ranks in Indian beâ€" moel was called to the throne, but | fore members of the royal family; that October 4th of the same year be |is, he takes precedence even before the a fugitive, and fled with his mothâ€"| Prince of Wales, this same Ruflus im Wimorkmneil Isaace. the former cabin boy and son viduals never relax their vigilance. _ experienced Scotland Yard men w the King wherever he goes; e the Prince of Wales also has a dow" attached to his suite. ieen Victoria was beloved, but five s she was the object of attack. ¢ Edward, when Prince of Wales, shot at by a crazy young anarchist Brussels railway stationâ€"a man ed Sipido, who said afterwards he believed it to be his "duty" to kings and princes. + them even if they are loved by: people; for the crazy indlvldual.‘ 1e political fanatic believing asâ€"| nation is lawful, seeks out the | s recorded of the illâ€"fated Nicho i Russia that out of curlosity he red on what terms an insurance 3 life could be effected. The preâ€" i asked would have been a stagâ€" g one. Nor can this have been a er of surprise, for his greatâ€"grandâ€" r and grandfather were assassinâ€" _ he himself, before the tragedy katerinburg, was attacked by a an at Port Arthur and wounded e head. it Power From Pears. Everâ€"Watchful Eyes. d with foreign royalty, the vereign moves with perfect mong his people. Neverthe shadows" who watch against ility of attack by dangerous ) not like being "shadowâ€" a necessity to which they King Edward, a year beâ€" th, was entering Buckingâ€" grounds when a man was aled in a shrubbery. He > a deranged person who had the right to speak to ragedy took bon, the shc itical miscre Republican At as been discovered alcohol from the ve a yield of fourâ€" ton and thus it will v to clear the enorâ€" present abandoned ants, but to provide Australia from ilâ€" Nerves it Mind witzerl Ham{id topy oth kit to enter his with a paper > "shadows‘ n Sultan shot m pler h, hi o M: that some il wl et an un of an as ears that led from ag, crushâ€" ostimated return of on would h the exâ€" 11y id p pr figu King was who an n# | in If philosophers wish to preach the lesson of the profound service of failâ€" ure in moulding a man‘s success, Lord Reading‘s story provides the text. He began as a fallureâ€"in the familiar sense of the wordlâ€"for he was the worst lad in his school, and devoted himself exclusively to mischief and to leading his comrades into it. Then he ran away op the great adventure as cabin boy. This somewhat sobered him, and he returned to some more Who says there is no romance in names? How many business men, manufacturers, merchants, â€" manual workers and professional men of this modern age go busily about their daily occupations without a thought, withâ€" out even the knowledge that their family names are the last relics of what was once one of the mightiest industries of medieval England, and which toâ€"day is obsolete. Isaacs, the former of a London Jew. FLETCHER Variationsâ€"Arsmith, Setter, Tipper, Flower. f Racial Originâ€"English Sourcesâ€"Trades. LORD READING‘S RISE BUILT ON FAILURE WORST BOY AT SCHOOL, | as BANDRUPT ON _ |2 EXCHANGE. | abi This Remarkable Jew Suffered Scandals That Would Have Ruined Others. The ancestors of the Fletchers, Arâ€" smiths, Setters, Tippers and Flowers were the backbone of the English naâ€" tion in the middle ages, for they furâ€" nished her fighting forces with muntâ€" tions, that deadliest weapon with which the English maintained their independence upon many a battlefleld before the final development of the musket and the rifie. The family name Arsmith is simply a contraction of "arrowâ€"smith." The arrowsmith was he who made his livâ€" ing by fashioning arrow heads. The Setters were those who set the heads upon the arrow shafts. fr finesse, for the true flights of the arâ€" row in those long shots for which the archers of old England were famous depended as much on the feather as anything. The term "fletcher" also was used in the more general sense as embracing the entire craft of arrow makers. "Flo" was a familiar name for the arrow in those days, whence comes the name "Flower." Tippers were craftsmen who sharpâ€" ned the points after they had been "Prince Edward" Brand English Fox Wireâ€"recognized by the above label on every rollâ€"has given more than fourteen years of perfect service on pioneer ranches and is being used for most of the new â€" ranches. most of the n "There‘s a reason." Write or wire for and prices. HKOLMAN‘S ALLISTON th n The ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. Try it! People who use "Red Rose" are usually those who like tea of extra good quality TEA is good tea See That This Label is on Your Fox Wire Ontario Sales Agent w. H. C. RUTHVEN Indi Reading, Viceroy of Inâ€" of the most remarkable ish political life, who is confer with the Governâ€" n policy, is the only man who actually rules over 350,000,000 persons. _ It trange destiny that has Surnames and Their Origin for free sample Summerside P. E. Island ONT & |ing‘s life: "Inexperienced, pennliess, almost friendless, it might have seemâ€" led that his career was ended almosi before it was begun. But it was at | this point that the resource and the reâ€" \slliency of the young man first made themselves felt." WARREN. Varlationsâ€"Warnett, Wareing, Warâ€" Ing, Warison, Wasson, Fitzwarin, Fitzwarren, Warner. Racial Originâ€"Normanâ€"French. Sourceâ€"â€"A given name; also an occuâ€" pation. Here is a group of family names, all of which come from either of two sources but from which it is imposâ€" sible to state in the case of Warren, except where the individual is fortunâ€" ate enough to be able to trace back the genealogy of his particular family to its origin. Most of the family names in this group are the outgrowths of a given name which was quite widespread in medieval England, having been introâ€" duced by the Normans, but which has become obsolete toâ€"day as a given name. They are, of course, to be found many men who bear Warren as their first names, but in virtually every case this is the result of the purely modern custom of using a family name as a given name. chant. Here, while still a young man, though through no fault of his own, he failed, and was "hammered on the Stock Exchange"â€"that is, announced as insolvent in the aweâ€"inspiring cereâ€" mony still employed there, more dreadâ€" ed by brokers than any other conceivâ€" able doom. It is the Earl of Birkenâ€" head; the present Secretary for India, who writes of that epoch in Lord Readâ€" ing‘s life: "Inexperienced, penniless, almost friendless, it might have seemâ€" Then came his bitterest failureâ€"the Marconi scandal. He was no longer the mischievous boy, or the adolescent stockâ€"broker. He was the most disâ€" tinguished lawyer in England, and law ofticer of the Crown. And together with Lloyd George he was implicated in a charge of having used Cabinet inâ€" formation to speculate in Marconi! shares. The incidents woull have ruined almost any one eise. "Every one," writes Lord Birkenhead, "who knew Rufus Isaacsâ€"personally or poâ€" liticallyâ€"knew that he was one of the men who are absolutely incapable of doing any act which they believe to be wrong. The old name, in its Norman form, was originally "Guarin" or "Guerin," but under the Saxon influence it rapidâ€" ly became softened into "Warin,"‘ in which form it fairly crowds the old reâ€" cords. Warnelt comes from "Wariâ€" not‘s«on," the "ot" being a diminutive ending. Wareing, Waring, Warison and Wasson all come from "Warin‘s son," the "son" being dropped, for the most part, in the course of time. The "Fitz" variations are explained in the meaning of "fitz" as "son of." Warren, however, often comes from the same source as Warner, which is the medieval word ‘Warrener," "Warâ€" ener" or "Warner," from "Waren," a game preserve. The farener was the officer who had charge of these forest wilds and naturally came to be known as "Jacke le Warner," "Richard de Waren," etc. Sons often followed the same calling as their fathers, and so guch names in many cases lost their original meaning descriptive of occuâ€" pation and became simply family "tags." Never Excused Himself. "He never sought to deny or palâ€" liate an admitted indiscretion. His was, in fact, the case of a lawyer who brings the brains of Solomon to every one‘s business but bis own. To a man of scrupulous integrity and of an al}â€" most â€" feminine sensitiveness, . the months that passed must have been somewhat like a long and ‘terrible nightmare." When he was at the head of the| English bar he entered Parliament as | Not An Old Top. a Liberal. But he did not immedlately" Mrs. Gold (motoring) â€" "Did you succeed, or ever establish a parhu-:hear that fellow call to you, "Hello, mentary reputation, much to the surâ€"| old top?" prise of his colleagues. Perhaps too| Hubbyâ€"‘"Yes, what of it?" much was expected of bim. He did,| Mrs. G.â€""Well, I wouldn‘t permit however, become Solicitor Geneml,!anyone to make a remark like that. and later Attorney General, which he| Our carâ€"top is brand new." remained until 1913. | www ~4per alznln ze He abandoned business and took up the study of law, and in due course passed his bar examinations. Then began one of the most brilliant of reâ€" cords as practicing attorney. In five years he had repaid every penny of his Stock Exchange debt. And he made a success of a kind never duplicated, beâ€" fore or since, as earner of fees, Lord Birkenhead says hbhe earned more money than any commonâ€"law pracâ€" titioner at the bar has ever made. The Marconi affair did not interfere with his promotion. The year before Iv. and then went Began to Study Law vent into business "in his father was a merâ€" the war he became Lord Chief Jusâ€" tice, and then, at the outbreak of the HELP FOR Tmm war, he was found to be the outstandâ€"| Ing figure in the great financial:â€" NERVOUS PEOPI‘E triumph of the British, one of the greatest feats of statesmanship in their history: the formation and appliâ€"| £ cogk cation of sound finance to the British Found in the Use of Dr.Williams‘ participation in the war, _ | â€"â€" Pink Pills. In 1915 he became president of the T Angloâ€"French Loan Mission to the Are you pale and weak, tired most United States, and went to Washingâ€" of the time, out of breath on slight ton again in 1917 as High Commissionâ€" exertion ? er and Special Ambassador. Lord Are you nervous, is your sleep disâ€" Birkenhead lauds him as "a great dipâ€"; turbed so that rest does not refresh lomatist * * * His charm, hi tact, you? his patience, his lucid intelligence and ; Is your appetite poor, your digestion his incredible grasp of detail combine, weak and do you have pairs after eatâ€" to give him an equipment which few | ing? diplomatists, even among the greatâ€"| If you have any of these symptoms est, have enjoyed." ~But he returned ‘ you need the help of such a reliable to resume his work as Lord Chief Jusâ€" tonic as Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. ticeâ€"not altogether bscaping critie Read what Mr. W. W. Francis, of Calâ€" cism for having retained this post| BAry, Alta., says of this tomic. "After But India is slowly growing pros perous. Its financial crisis has passed, the sectional antipathies are burning lower, and the hatred for the British is sinkingâ€"perhaps only temporarily. If, during his next year, which will be the Earl of Reading‘s last year as Vice roy, this process gains impetus, and a warmer coâ€"operation between the governing and the governed develops, he will have silenced his critics. while being, in fact, an ambassador. And then he was offered the Viceroyalâ€" ty of India. As Viceroy, Lord Reading‘s achieveâ€" ments may be said to be still under scrutiny. He reached India in the most serious crisis in its modern history. And during his stay the crisis has subâ€" sided. Lord Reading, the Liberal, has been patient to the point of woefully exasperating the dieâ€"hards, who think of India as a land that can benefit most by intimidation, swift blows and firmness. These old dieâ€"hards point out that while Lord Reading met and pleaded with Ghandi, it was Lord Lytâ€" ton, Governor of Bengal, who imprisonâ€" ed him, which without doubt underâ€" mined his power. HEALTHY CHILDREN ARE HAPPY CHILDREN The well child is always a happy childâ€"it is a baby‘s nature to be hapâ€" py and contented. Mothers, if your little ones are cross and peevish and cry a great deal they are not wellâ€" they are in need of a mediciueâ€"-some-‘ thing that will set their bowels and | stomach in order, for nineâ€"tenths of a11| childhood ailments arise from a disâ€" | ordered state of the bowels and stom-i ach. Such a medicine is Baby‘s Own| Tablets. They are a mild but thorough ! laxative which regulate the bowels,‘ sweeten the stomach and thus drive, out constipation and indigestion; banâ€", ish colic; break up colds and simple| fevers and make the baby healthy and | happy. The Tablets are gunrameedl to be absolutely free from opiates or‘ other barmful drugsâ€"they cannot posâ€"| sibly do ‘harmâ€"always good. They| are sold by medicine dealers or byI mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.| Williams‘ Medicine Co.. Brockvme,i Then he will return to a wellâ€"earned retirement (he is aimost 70) as one of the most distinguished Englishmen living, and probably one of the two most distinguished Jews of his time the other, of course, being Einstetn. Ruilt a Modern House in a | Douglas Fir Log. ! A complete and modern five-roomi home, built inside one huge log of| Douglas fir, mounted on a five-t«mi truck, is the latest in covered wagons.| It is the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. E.! Cave, who are reported on the way: east to show people on this side of the | Rockies what the far west can produco] in the way of trees. The big log wasj‘ hollowed out by using special saws,| after which partitions were built in, dividing the space into living room ard bedroom combined. kitchenet, breakfast nook, library, closets, showâ€" er bath and lavatory. Full sized doors, front and rear, afford easy enâ€" trance and exit. The house is electriâ€" cally lighted and piped with a presâ€" sure water system. The natural bark remains on the log. mall at 2o cents a DoX . Williams‘ Medicine Co Ont. 18 Wha‘lcâ€"meat is regarded in South African native settlements as a great delicacy, and in British Columbia it Fer Every I!iâ€"Minard‘s Liniment. Hubbyâ€"‘"Yee, what of it?" Mrs. G.â€"*"Well, 1 wouldn‘t permit yone to make a remark like that. ir carâ€"top is brand new." ca anned in large quantities for exâ€" Achievement in India returnirg from overseas," writes Mr. Francis, "my whole system was in a badly run down condition. 1 became nervous, irritable, pale and lost weight. Of course I was given treatment and recommended many tonics, some of which I took, but with no apparent reâ€" sult. At last I could not even sleep. My sister, who is in England, wrote and urged me to give Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills a trial, and I can scarcely say how glad I am that I took her adâ€" vice. My friends were surprised at my complete recovery, but 1 assured them it was due entirely to Dr. Wilâ€" Mams‘ Pink Pills and 1 nowâ€" always keep a box on hand in case of emerâ€" geney." Is your appetite poor, your digestion weak and do you have pairs after eatâ€" ing ? If you are ailing give these pilis a fair trial and they will not disappoint you. Sold by all dealers in medicine or sent by mail at 50 cents a box by writing The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Thing puzzles are indeed long out of fashion; nor does it appear likely that they will return to favor. Word puzâ€" zles of many kindsâ€"anagram, acrosâ€" tic, charade and crossâ€"word puzzle, deâ€" manding wider knowledge, less naiyâ€" ete and livelier wits, have their ups and downs, come and go and return again. The present fad for crossâ€"word puzzles will no doubt scon wane. But good ones are really clever and reâ€" quire cleverness. Perhaps a century hence everybody will be hard at work over them again. Was it your wandering voice I beard, Joy of the spring and best, With the skyâ€"tinge on your back, little bird, And the earthâ€"tinge on your breast? Thing Puzzles and Word Puzzles. In an interesting French book, writâ€" ten nearly fifty years ago, it is pointed out that puzzles or enigmas have alâ€" ways been of two kindsâ€"one popular and familiar from remote antiquity among peasants and illiteraes as well as the more scholarly, the other literâ€" ary and enjoyed only in more cultured society. These two sorts may be callâ€" ed thing puzzles and word puzzles. Thing puzzles, some of the surviving examples of which are very old often simple and rather childish example, here is one of the oldest "I wander about my home; water flows past. Men come; the house goes out of the windows, and I am a prisonâ€" er. What am 1?" Where never a note of hate is heard, And never a heartâ€"tie riven,â€" _ But what is heaven but love, little bird, And what is love but heaven? All wild flowers fade quickly cept the blooming idiots. Sing you a song of delicious lands, Where soft, sweet ripples play, Of buds aâ€"bursting their «ilken bands And meadows glad with May? Of mate and nest, little bird, do you sing, And why from your loved ones rove. Came you here out of heaven to bring A message from those I love? The answer, which needs some ex plaining and really is not very good is, "I am a fish caught in a net." We eupply cans and jpay express charges. We pnay daliy by express money orders, which can be cashed anywhere without any charge. To obtain the top price, Cream must be free from bad flavors and contain not less than 80 per cent Butter Fat Bowes Company Limited, Toroato For referencesâ€"Head Office, Toronio, Bank of Montreal, or your local banker, Established for over thirty years, CREAM WE WANT CHURNING | To a Bluebird. are for Hast thou an enemy? His purpose Beek counsel in his judgment on you; take His bitterness, a cruel pur, at need Thy sloth to break. Loving thee, even to fault in thee, thy friends Are as the genial summer‘s ambient air; Unkindly, cutting winter thy foe porâ€" tends, Bidding beware. The point of envy, malice, or disdain May prick the bubble of unwholeâ€" some pride; The words, envenomed, that have given thee pain, Thy tongue may chide. * Dread not the rapier with its lightning dart; Thou wilt be ready if thy foe be near! Thy friends‘s warm clasp, and free forâ€" giving heart The rather fear. Yea, at the conflict‘s eiud, from vantâ€" age won Thou wilt affirm, made valorous by strife: Behold! An enemy this good hath done That crowns my life! For instance, at the French port of Havre, it has been decided that one of the steepest streetsâ€"the Rue de Montâ€" morencyâ€"shall be provided with an escalator to replace the existing pathâ€" way. The steps of the escalator will be sufficiently wide to accommodate bicycles and perambulators. Experts are not surprised by this innovation. They tell us that they look forward to the time when all the streets of our large towns will consist of huge moving tracks on the escalator principle. All kinds of traffic will be carrled with the exception of very heavily loaded lorries. There will be junctions at the crossings, where you will simply step from one moving track to the other, according to the direction in which you were going. The modern slogan is "Why walk?" Every new building of any size has its lifts, and the escalator principle, in use at most of the big tnbe railwayâ€" stations, is also spreading. What would this cost? The most upâ€"toâ€"date moving stairways in the world are those at the Bank Tube Staâ€" tion, London, for which $500,000 was paid. Here one travels at the rate of about a mile an hour, but we are told that on the flat three miles could easily be attained. If one chose to walk along the moyâ€" Ing track it would thus be quite easy to travel at the rate of six miles an hour. Charms of the Arctic. Visitorâ€""Are you going to be a great man when you grow up, Willie?" Willieâ€"*"You bet. I‘m going to be an Arctic explorer." "An Arctic explorer‘s life is full of herdships, Willie." Claimed to be the most fantastle fish in the world, the coralâ€"fish of Java is deep orange in color, with paleâ€"blue bands edged with black. ‘Ces‘m. But I can stand ‘em kon." "I like your spirit, my boy. There ts a great deal of glory to be gained in a career of that kind." "Yes‘m, and you don‘t never have to wash your face." to ride behind such an animal?" he demanded. "Well," replied the minister, mildly, "it was lucky that this time there were no bones broken, but I always like to have a doctor with me when 1 drive that horse." wee & _9z # # * 9 The last thing a man ought to do is heved by Lydxa E.. Pmkham 8 to hug a girl while he‘s driving bis car, | m “nd and the coroners report that it‘s the| veget.ble CO po last thing a lot of them ever do. | summmsmmermaress Always Expected Trouble A country minister was dri spirited horse through a village he overtook the local doctor & fered him a lift. Ten minutes later the horse bolted, upset the carriage, and spilled both men. The doctor rose to his feet and turned angrily toward the clergyman. "What do you mean by inviting me to ride behind such an animal?" he T ONSILS Your stiff muscles by rubbing with Minard‘s. Leading ath use it. Splendid for sprains bruiges. Limber Up Behold! The Herbalist 2098 DANFORTH AVE., TORONTO For a $1.00 box of the TONSIL TABLETS ADENOIDS Removed by absorption. Safe and Sure for Child or Adult. Send to Everywhere by Escalator. Help Nature Help You ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Funny Coral Fish DR. THUNA Brenda Murray Draper. was driving a a village when doctor and ofâ€" ‘WlUlevm in the â€" Je Stk NIGHT 6 )0 wae i: MORNING azmé\ 1 well etes and rec | moonlight." An iAlps is true al Sterrasâ€"and ev The wavering dog barking emptily Against the gaunt front of the wood lot The dipping shadow of a floating hawk Over the yellowâ€"«green blueberry "The weather is glorious And I am working in the garden. Baby has gained a pound The brindle cow has calved And my sun hat is becoming . . . You write _ And I am out of the littered forecastle In a long chair from which I watch Fat clouds toil up the steep blue sky. patches And your swift fingers Pe Plucking a punctual needle through CIOHt;, 4. ... The letter ends With the scrawly hieroglyph Of your warm name And I am outbound again Hearing the iron groanings Of the plunging ship Seeing the aimless fingers of the wind Pulling white threads through blue. Winter Stars. Visit the Alps in winter if you would see the stars at their brightest. To quote an enthusiastic traveler, "Noâ€" body has ever seen the stars until he has visited the Alps in winter. I have heard a great deal of the glory of the Eastern night, but when I went to the East I was disillusioned. The stars that look down on the desert cannot be range Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the House, from scraps of leather mar substances, including drug compared with those that greet us from the frosty depths of a winter sky in the Alps. No moon rivals the inâ€" comparable glory of the Alpine moon. In January 1 have read small print by moonlight." And what is true of the Alps is true also of our Rockies or Slerrasâ€"and even of the Appalachian Pains in Back and Legs Re NERVOUS _ NIGHT é f* ll vMORNlN((:‘v au\ KEEP YOUR EYES Ford, Ontario.â€"*"1I had a nervous breakâ€"down, as it is called, with severe fains in my back and legs, and with ainting spells which left me very weak. I was nervous and could not sleep nor eat as I should and spent much time in bed. I was in this state, more or less, for over two years before Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound was recommended*to me by my neighbor. Before 1 had taken five doses 1 vis gitting up in bed, and when the first bottle was taken l was out of bed and able to walk around the house. During my sickness I had been obliged to get some one to look after my home for me, but thanks to the Vegetable Compnunti I am now able to loo}: after it myself, I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Blood Medicine in turn with the Vegetable Compound, and 1 certainly recommend these medicinesd to any one who is not enjoying good health. 1 am quite "illil'\f for you to use these facts as a ‘estiâ€" monial.""â€"Mre. J. SuEpHERD, 180 Jos. Janisse Avenue, Ford, Ontario. Nervousness, irritability, painful times, runâ€"down feelings and wealness are symptoms to be noted. Women suffering from these troubles, which they so often have, should give Lgdin E. Pin{ham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. All druggists eell this medicine, Chemist LEAN CLEAR AND HEALTHY Eample Each h-bz Mail. Address Canadia Depot; *Btenhouse Ltd, Montrea!" Price, S a %e. Ointment 25 and §0c. Trieum 25e DBF~ Cuticurs Sheving Stick 26¢c. Its purity, smoothrcss and fiaâ€" grance, combined with entiseptic and prophylactic properiies which help to overcome disagrecable odors, make it an essential toilet requisite. Cuticara Taleum Is The Ideal Powder yon wAEE EYE CAE BOOK: MUKIN ©0.@miGmocim SALES ORGANIZER WANTED. From Scraps of Leather. nists have recently obtained ‘raps of leather many important gM( BREAKâ€"DOWN ISSUE No. 25â€"‘25, â€"Robert Ros. me oll. in *4

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