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Durham Review (1897), 4 Jan 1934, p. 7

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same pri Hamilt affiliat As: and »oâ€"operati shenew‘i ve amzatio~s cident with y after, coâ€" ablished in nconscious es and th Mac: ige K L0 ad Five Days ipiing pany _ } and i larmeors ere wors nizationg st being e Creamâ€" 39,000. SDAL x press he CA the w M ~Aishzp an inmad o sert ot bis »UT an 1e ud " amed 1 20 "I want to see the advertising ager," he said. "He‘s out," said the office boy "Well, hi: assistant." "He‘s out, too, sir." "Well, I‘ll see the Editor." "He‘s out, sir." "Great Scott!" shouted the mz ©verybody out?" ‘‘Yes. They‘re all lookin‘ for ‘ere lost dog." Ladyâ€""Can you give me a room and bath ?" 8 Clerkâ€""I can give you a room, madam, but I‘m busy now and will iwo met on holiday. "Hallo," chaffed the Englishman, "How on earth is your office managing to get on without you?" "Fairly well," answered the Scot, cautiously. "You see, I left two Engâ€" lishmen and four Welshmen in my place," A Scotsman holding an important lJob in the city was always being twitâ€" ted by an English friend about his nationality. By a curious chance the iwo met on holidaw [ _ o C TTZ T CCC HTgeE TOF COUIECHE $UQge pers but bean soup‘s better for them what‘s got to wield a pick. Wifeâ€""Dear, toâ€"morrow‘s our tenth anniversary. Shall I kill the turkey ?" Her Husbnnd-â€"‘A‘No, let him live. He lidn‘t have anything 'toV ;l; ‘;ith it." The pumps the girls wear gained popularity from the fact that they can be slipped off under the bridge table, Waiter (in highâ€"class hotel) ner here is a la carte, sir," Scotsmanâ€""Well, whee} it my boy." reason a pin hasâ€"to keep us f ng too far. Mother says a Cc woolen blankets make about t antiâ€"freeze mixture. _ A little ledgo is a dangerous thing, but a brave people and so many lo er. A lot of folks are hapy don‘t know it until something u ant occurs. Suitor â€" "Â¥, here‘s no one it Fatherâ€""Wel it odd!" Womanâ€""Ob, deart Troubles never me singly." Her Husbandâ€""No, marriage is the urce of them all." Angel food‘s all right for church W Some â€" dressed she does The tron some way when a girl thinks she‘s ressed up she walks different than he does mornings around the house. he trouble with a rapid reducing diet that it shows the chisel marks.> It‘s 0o bad Burbank died before he olved a Christmas tree that would ‘ow with the presents already on it. woman always sems to like the gltts! man buys her until after she mlrries" m. Trying to get even often puts a llow in a worse jJam. Mone doesn‘t cessarily make one rich, but plenty it does. No matter how much mey a man piles up, if he can‘t igh he is indeed poverty stricken. e have a head on us for tha sama rouble in breaking ast they succeeeded First Burglar=â€""G ‘oppers,"* Second Burglar he window )â€"*"Y es, treet." Correct this Qentenco: 8 ign Bill‘s note," said the * seems to like me as w ut I‘m busy now and wfli the bath later." H That each of you ma Healthâ€"enough to easunre, Wo-alth-enou‘h to time on Mr. Snagg‘s trail)â€"*"; _you would tell me what is your ction to having your life insured * ‘. Snaggsâ€""Well, 1 don‘t mind ‘z you. The idea of being more ible dead than alive is very dis. ful to me." Is This Service Simile Collectors idvertising chat burglars had ngthâ€"enough to Ar A New hbor enough to enough to God. mough to s "C"~ "ad expérienced great breaking open a safe." At Your daughter thinks in the world like me." Il, 1 suppose you are a Splinters of you may have sentence: "I refused to 8 are happy and something unpleasâ€" Year‘s Gruting > ‘ning, but we are so many love danâ€" to see some good wheel it along t (who had been a . Snagg‘s trail)â€""1 ll me what is your your life insured * e rich, but plenty tter how . much Up, if he can‘t poverty stricken. us for the same keep us from goâ€" ~‘0°sâ€"â€"liresome as chatter over the (peeping through and so is the be confident of th'o s a couple of Bill, 1t*s full make real the e friend, "but well as ever." ut the best little knowâ€" make work overcome dif support your foce ced Every day brings its evidence thati’ Will|we are not availing ourse!ves of the | modern means of safety and preven-} tion that do offer for the protection i of life. A great number of these inâ€" coup.| fant and â€"maternal deaths can be preâ€" ic in-i vented if all women receive proper 10(-allj"°tru°ti°” and care during preg-l | nancy, at the time of delivery and s reâ€"| ward, during the postâ€"natal period. ews.| A slogan chosen by one community â€""Public health is purchasable, Withâ€"| man.| in natural limitations any community || can determine its own death rate," | ~â€"is just as true of your city, town | or countryside,_ & Opportunities for expectant mothers to obtain free advice are afforded by the series of nine letters, sent free | i "Is on request to anyone asking for them | ! |by the Canadian Council . on Child | Y this ‘mfi-ny Welfare. ‘These are avail.|" cable in both French and Eng‘ish as | C Din «e°0ss Canada. One letter runs: "Thank you very much for the series of parental letters. With great regret I must say I will not require the postâ€"natal series." elreui t P s Bectetn i hk it sls ed and extended during her long deâ€" cades in the work, as she herself has pointed out, our maternal and stillâ€"birth rate has shown little imâ€" provement until the last twenty months. _ But now come the prelimâ€" inary figures for Canada for the first four months of this year, recording the death of 275 mothers and 4,723 babies under one year of age. _ One glimpses the individual tragedies beâ€" hind these figures in such extracts as the Canadian Council on Chlld.‘ and Family Welfare quotes from its heavy correspondence with mothers' across Canada. One letter rune: 11 of Toronto.â€"Retirement from active rpublic service of Dr. Helen MacMurâ€" chy, ag chief of the Child Welfare Division of the Dominion Department of Pensions and National Health reâ€" ca‘ls her years of valiant battle for the protection of mothers and the extension of better provisions for obstetrical and maternal care in Can-l ada. 275 Mothers and 4,723 Babies Die in First Four Months | _ Prague (680,000 population) is the capital of Czechoslovakia and was the eapital of the former kingdom of Boâ€" hemia. It is interesting from an archiâ€" tectual, business and historical standâ€" point. The old Royal Palace dominâ€" ates Prague from the Hradcany Heights. _ With the exception of a small portion of this enormous buildâ€" ingâ€"this portion reserved for the Preâ€" sidentâ€"the edifice is used mainrly for government offices, with certain large auditoriunms kept for occasions of state. Behind the Palace and in the centre of a large courtyard stands the Canada‘s Maternal | Death Rate High } While=~services have been In But it is with Bohemia, the most ,densely settled portion of Czechosloâ€" | yakia, that we wish to deal. The Boâ€" hemians=â€"are well educated, capable farmers and clever artizans. In Boâ€" hemia more people are engaged in inâ€" dustrial than in agricultural pursuits. ‘The domination of the Czechs in Boâ€" hemia dates from the 5th century and the country had a chequered career under various rulers until the Hapsâ€" burgs came into power in 1526. Wars and conquests, changes of rulers, etc., had been the history of the country; now the encroachment of the Catholic religion and of the German tongue created an epoch and everything that went to make up the identity of the Bohemian nation was swent awar ’ The Czechs and the Slovaks are an industrious people; their country conâ€" | tains the best land, the principal inâ€" | dustries and the most ‘progressive | units of the old Austrianâ€"Hungarian Empire. This is a source of great bitâ€" terness, Consequently, frontier posts: | are more zealously guarded than in other sections of Europe,. Another thingâ€"whereas under the leadership of the great Bohemian reâ€" ligious. and political reformer, â€"John Huss, a great part of the country beâ€" came â€"Protestant and Lutheran, â€"the 300â€"year domination of a Catholic country changed that. Toâ€"day, in a population of about 14 millions, there are only one million protestants. This religious adherence was also an imâ€" portant factor in weldi;n; divergent units at the late war. Another thlng; leadership of the ligious. and politi 1xb ho e C Coms St T0 er Austrian provinces of Bop Moravia and Silesia, Slovakia, ; tion of Northern Hungary and pathian Ruthenia, the whole, ce ed by the common Slav origin of forefathers â€"ana the revival "o Czech tongue, is making great st politically, commercially and int tually. Czechoslovakia is a new republicâ€" 56,000 square miles in area and roughâ€" ly 600 miles long, from east to west, and 150 miles broad â€" from north to south, in its widest part, It comâ€" prises an area which never before October 28, 1918, had been a separate political unit, Composed of the formâ€" er Austrian provinces â€" of Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia, Slovakia, a porâ€" tiBE" nF KE uks L k s us But it is ‘an nation was swept away,. ue (680,000 population) is the of Czechoslovakia and was the of the former kingdom of Boâ€" It is interesting from an archiâ€" _business and historical standâ€" The old Royal Palace dominâ€" welding together the at the close of the whole, ceme'nt- _origin of their develop ‘of the strides intellecâ€" The writing of the children of toâ€"day is formless, careles@PPand inrccurate. In business this is a serious disadâ€" vantage and retards the progress of many yourg people. â€" Sir .William the future of a generation yet unborn, the mothers of which are harassed with a desire or slimnesgâ€"and excesâ€" sive smoking.â€"Dr. H. R. C. Rutherâ€" ord, of Dublin. of Lloyds. The demonstration showed that no one could snatch the case withâ€" out setting in motion a Klaxon horn inside it. The case has been designed for bank messengers and other emâ€" ployes who have to carry large sums through the streets. \ Two spinsters named Kemenitz, livâ€" ing in the small Roumanian port of Galatz, have been convieted of harborâ€" ing too many cats. When Police visitâ€" ed the house to demand the destruction of the cats, they discovered them to number one hundred and fifty ! A shrieking leather bag, intended to foil snatchâ€"andâ€"run raiders, was tried recently by members of the committee A French naturalist states that robâ€" ins sing in their sleep; mackerel swim while asleep; elephants sleep while standing up; and ants yawn and stretch like human being when they wake, ]Y.” Prisoners at McNeil Island Peniâ€" tentiary, near San Francisco, are to be given an aviation course. The priâ€" son officials have thoughtfully removâ€" ed the wings of the machine so that none of the Pupils will be tempted to "graduate and leave school too quickâ€" Y 49 Carâ€" Oqo contemplates with some James Carroll, arrested at New York on a charge of falsely inserting a notice of his wife‘s death in a newsâ€" paper, admitted his offence ; exPlained that he did it in the hope that his wife‘s relations would see it and keep away from his house. i is a series on the care of the baby to one year of age and now on the preéss a series on the care and trainâ€" ing of children from one to six. Write to Council House, Ottawa, and one or all of them will be sent to you. P Next week we shall return to Oporto â€"the subject of a former articleâ€"an amusing incident occurring there is worthy of note. W On the Feast of Sté;l;en; Where the snow lay round about, Crisp, and fresh, and even." The chief interest in this church for Englishâ€"speaking people will be the Chapel and Tomb of Saint Wenceslas, known to us all through the words of the celebrated carol. "Good King Wenceslas looked out noble cathedral 6f St. Vitus. Restoraâ€" tion work has been done on this old church recently and Only last year were new discoveries madeâ€"underâ€" ground crypts and passages which will be opened to the public in 1934. The chief interest in this church for Are you looking to: something different in the way of entertainâ€" meblt for your church, societ3, club or institute} Capt F. H. Reld, the wellâ€" known travelier, who bas been contribut Ing the series of articles to this paper, under the beading of "Travel impressions, has what is, perbaps, the finest collection of European views in the country. _ Pictures taken with his own camera, beaut fully coloured, showing sume of the outâ€"ofâ€"theway places, as well as. the localities about which you have read and beard. Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Switzerland, Austri®, Jugoslavta, Hungary, _ Czechoslo vakia, Germany, Hollana, Belgium ind Britisb Isles are included in bis unique collection. For particulars regarding this, sommunicate with Captain Reid at Room 421, 73 Adelaide Street West, Foronto. News Oddities alarm w# is s ; M nres: memee t ho & +c Capt, James Mollison, in spite of his crash at Bridgeport, is awardâ€" ed the Johnston Memorial trophy for 1933, for his Atlantic fights. Rt. Hon. F. E. Guest is doing the presenting, Three tons of coal provide more energy than the total physical energy expended by an average man in his lifetime.â€"Sir William Clarke. Flyweights. â€" Miget Wolgast is the United States champion. Jackie Brown, of England, bolds the Ruroâ€" pean claims. Wolgast beat Brown in a nonâ€"title bout in Manchester. Bantamweights. â€" Al Brown is still the champion. Welterweights. â€" Freddie Miller and Kid Chocolate are both at the top ‘of this division. Miller is conâ€" sidered the best in the N.B.A., while Chocolate leads the* New York commission. The Cuban deâ€" feated Seaman Watson, the British champion, in New York. Lightweights. â€" Tony Canzoneri lost his crown in ten rounds at Chicago, to Barney Ross, who in turn defended it in a fifteenâ€"round return bout in New York. Welterweights. â€" Jim McLarnin, the Irishâ€"Canadian from Vancouver, won his first title bout by taking Young Corbett in one round, at Los Angeles, _ McLarnin is rated the most worthy title holder of 1933. Middleweights. â€"Lou Brouillard won the middle title in August from Ben Jeby, by a knockâ€"out in the seventh round, but lost it two months later to Vick Dundee in ten rounds. Brouillard will make & bid for Rosenbloom‘s Lightheavyâ€" weight crown. Light Heavyweight. â€" In this division very lHttle has happened during the past year, exceptâ€" Maxie Rosenbloom‘s successful defence of his title against the tottering "toy bulldog," Mickey Walker, one time ruler of the welters and middles. a shock he received b)-' A c;lar;éé irn the fight code. Professional Boxing of the Past Year Heavyweights. â€" Primo Carnera registered a smart uppercut on Jack Sharkey in six rounds to be hailed as the â€" first Italian to hold the Worlds _ Heavyweight Championâ€" ship. Max Baer,; from California, introduced class and colour into the heavry division by putting his K.O. on Max Schmeling, the German exâ€" champ, in ten rounds. Jack Dempâ€" sey once again made good in the fistic sport, this time. as a proâ€" moter and earning thé title of "The man who carried on from where the greatest promoter of all time left off." Before the great Musâ€" solini, Primo Carnera defended his title against the Spanish pugilist, Paulino Uzcudun, in the first heavyâ€" weight championship bout fought in Italy, Sharkey passed out of the picture when he met defeat at the hands of King Levinsky in Chicago. The death of W. L. ‘"Young" Stribâ€" ling, the twentyâ€"eight year old Georgian globeâ€"trotter, shocked the sporting world to the depths. The passing of William Muldoon, the "solid man," and James J. Corbett, who ° introduced â€" scientific boxing away back in the Gay Nineties, was regretted all over the fight world. Muldoon‘s death was partly due to The Yale hockey sextet seemed to be in smart shape when they deâ€" feated the Toronto Varsity 5â€"3 the other night. It may be just the thing that is needed to encourage the formation ‘of the long proposzed international intercollegiate hockey league. Lets hope so. Football is generally betieved to be the roughest game, but few footâ€" ball encounters can be classed with the Bostonâ€"Leaf game of that eventâ€" ful night in Boston. St. Clair McCabe, Staffâ€"writer, _ Dominion Sports Hlustrated â€" Bill Grimes, sports writer for the Boston*American, commented the following on the Bostonâ€"Leat fight. Abetted by some wedkâ€"kneed pubâ€" licity, which was sent out by the Bruins, was responsible for the disâ€" graceful and muchâ€"toâ€"beâ€"regretted debacle. Fans were informed that the Bruins â€" were going to "step into the Leafs. They were also led to believe that theyâ€"could expect a real slaughter. In that case the game certainly lived up to expecâ€" tations. SPORTS REVIEW The average man, in my view, is a pretty poor speciman, and the average intelligence, in my view, is very low. Is it realized that the firstâ€"class man can do something like five times the amount of work of the average man? That is not the product of inherent capacity by a long road. It is largely the product of early training. â€" Sir John Reith. ‘ For the past two years people in Canada have been enjoying the lowest prices for tea in a decade, but this has meant tremendous losses to growers, who, to save their industry, have reâ€" stricted tea exports and caused prices to advance. Tea packers, particularly those supplying very fine quality teas, have reluctantly been forced to inâ€" crease prices. Notwithstanding this, tea is still the most economical drink next to plain water. TORONTO Despite Price Part your hair into little sectionsâ€" about two inches squareâ€"and brush each portion. Place the brush against your scalp to start and, as you move it slowly upward and outward, tilt it slightly so that each and every hair in that section will be cleaned, stimuâ€" lated and "pulled.‘" Wipe the brush on a clean towel and go on to the nex* section. Now stand erect, throw your head| slightly backward and brush the front | of your scalp upward from the han--; line to the crown of your head. l The best time to brush your hair is; just before you go to bed. You should devote at least 15 aninutes to this beauty rite, $ | Begin at the back of your head. 1t‘ is best to hbend forward from the, waist, allowing your hair to fall dow i over your face. Brush upwards fmn, the nape of your neck until the back‘ of your scalp tingles. uothves, Anraicnnidialibemasiies zie this 145 is just no use in bothering at: all. First of all, learn how to do it corâ€" rectly to derive full benefit from a beauty tréatment which pays large dividends. A woman who wishes to be truly beautiful should consider the brushing of her hair almost as important as cleaning her teeth. > If you‘re going to brush your tresses in a haphazard manner, there Nightly Brulhipg of Recent demonstrations showed that! one of these machines could Ay sol' slowly that a man running below could I attach a message to a cord let down | by the pilot. #@ [ Steering is done by tilting the reâ€" volving wings of the windmill, which are on a universal joint. A tilt of about five degrees is all that is reâ€" quired to effect a steeply banked turn. The entire control is operated by one levrâ€"for and aft for ascent and desâ€" cent and sideway for turns. For "blind" Aying in cloud or mist‘ the autogiro is said to be an ideal maâ€" chine. For as long as the pilot keeps his lever in a central position he knows that he is on a leve] keel, while with an ordinary airplane the pilot | needs instruments such as turn and bank indicators to tell him his posiâ€" tion relative to the ground. This latest "windmill" plane has an engine of 140 horsepower which gives it a top speed of nearly 120 miles an hour and a low speed of 15 miles an hour. The plane with its overhead windmill, a norma} propeller in front, and no wings such as the ordinary airâ€" plane has, appears to saunter along in the air. Against a head wind it can practically hover. London.â€"With a takeâ€"off run of unâ€" der 20 yards and no landing run at all, Senor de la Cierva‘s latest type of autogiro was shown off to great adâ€" vantage here recently at â€"the Hanâ€" worth Airdrome, just outside London, Can Attain Top Speed of 120 Miles An Hourâ€"Low Speed of 15 Miles An Hour Startles Spectators ea Still Most s Economical Drink ir Important Eskimos are feasting on the ptarmjâ€" gan, one of the few birds found in Greenland at this time of year. cent. being registered. Exports to France, One womans collection â€" would do credit to any trained botanist; it conâ€" tains nearly 100 species of orchids, all pressed, neatly mounted and correctly labelled. A far cry this from the days when country dwellers, if they gave heed to orchids at all, knew them onlyl as "spiders," "tigers" and "greenies." What struck me most forcibly was the knowledge of orchids displayed by young men and women. The quaintâ€" ness and beauty of these fantastic fowersâ€"of which there are about 150 species recorded in Victoria and about 460 in Australiaâ€"have exercised a strong fascination throughout various states in the last few years, so much‘ so that Dr., R. 8. Rogers, the Adelaide authority, declared recently that the‘ cult had swelled to a mania. | _ The casual prize of the agricultural | show for "best bunch of wild flowers" is out of date. At one local Tair, for example, there were 18 sections for native flora, and every one was based soundly. _ There were prizes for the best collection of orchids, the best colâ€" lection of wild flowers botanically named, ‘the best collection of ornaâ€" mental native grasses, the best colâ€" lection of ferns, the best collection of Grampians flora, the best bunch of thryptomene, the best bunch of sprenâ€" gelia, the best bunch.of heath, and so on. Ever flower in a beautiful collecâ€" tion was named properly, and most of the people who attended seemed to be on moderately familiar terms with th flowers, There was littte of the old unnecessary baulking at necessary scientific names. Wild flowers study and culture is very popular in Vietoria, Australia, acâ€" cording to a lecturer. After their marriage â€" Mrs. Lindâ€" bergh accompanied her husband on | several flights, crossâ€"continent flights, ’one of them to east completed a few 'momhs before the birth of hber first son. _ A‘ready she was acting as coâ€" lpflul on their flights, Studied Navigation ’ When Lindbergh planned a vacaâ€" Horticulture Being Studied in Australia MECT 4 ’ ,All ber training has been 'un'deri the direction of Col, Lindbergh, and ; began before they ware married when the young aviator, engaged in' & goodâ€"will flight after his famous nonâ€"stop flight to Parig, visited Mexâ€" ico City, Lindbergh took Ambassador Morrow‘s daughter on several flights, on one of which they crackeq up on | landing, due to broken gear, , | _ Mrs. Lindbergh‘s fiying achieve ments, however, differ from those of Amelia Earhart, Amy Johnson, and Maryse Hilsz, of France, in that she !has accompanied her husband, and nevéer engaged in the more spectacuâ€" lar solp flights. Her responsibi‘ities n Lindbergh‘s fights, however, have been such that only @â€"weteran fjer could meet.‘ ~ ‘ ® ‘ xcellent _ Knowledge Orchids Displayed ’ Mrs. Lingbergh has achieved skill as a pilot, navigator, and radio opâ€" erator, capable of taking part in fights that made aviation history, with so litte attendant hailyhoo that her ability was unnoticed when the n@ames of women flierg were mentionâ€" ed. o New York.â€"The aviation wor‘d mar. vels at the vunassuming but meteoric rise of Ann Lindbergh j#nto the f:ront rank of women flilers Ann Eeat Ptarmigan Ranks With Foremost Women F liers Lindbergh Has Achicveaall as P Radio Operator Husband‘s Train‘ng h wl prafr. it __ _ |men‘s nom«top « .“t’the autogiro alt * "* i wirk, Lindbergh‘s lmnn‘iage. while n [ kind, entitles her \-uca-l foremost women smmz A§ORtS 107 ORtAFIO! â€" | REESORS MARMILL, N OFFER TO EVERY INYEXTOR. A List Of want â€" inventions ans full information sent free The ..-.l, Come pady, World Patent Alos nevs y a m Siree; Ohirwe Canada Although hope may often have choat» ed us, yet we never lose faith in its promises, Careless smokers have boun blamed Oor starting more fires in the national parks than other causes, bui this year lightning was the most frequent fire hazard . [ At McGill Observa plained that the sieet ered in coming throug tain quantity of fins hardening in the icy particularly brownish would otherwise have greyish tinge. Unds:, conditions the colorin sibly appear reddish, rumors of "red snow" The hard covering apy sulted from sleet Trling night, Wien broken, it greyish aspect, viewed in tities in the hand, while the hard covering, the sn usual brilliant white. cial coat was about oneâ€"e inch thick. __ Montreal.â€""Brom the curiosity of re real and neighborh they left their hom: town. â€" Wherever th smnow a hard icy she the top of the bank or brown color. Scientists Explain Curioves Enow Co‘or [‘equ.tor, and almost twice & , the distance travelleg by \v in,his record so‘0 @round t It hed them over mountainon in Greenland never heo over, and into little Africs where the arrival of a soa»! occasion. enough for a civie i tion. _ Miss Johnson has to i solo fiights friem England tralia, to Cape Town, to To fight with her hbusoang a Atlantic. _ Miss Earna c Atlantic by air rouie twice ond time alone. Bue hold men‘s non«top discance ie the autogiro altitude reco Mrs, Lindbergh‘s | fivine marriage, while not oi the = kind, entitles her to ranx w foremost women flors The flight over the was in itself a majo Guided by Mre. Lindi tion, the plane never course, ISSUE No. 52â€"‘33 This summer‘s trip ambitious than the P Mrs, IJndbergh hand like a veterau. _ The 30,000 air miles in f\ ther than around th, tory, and over Sea., ’Uon trip to the Orient she took up the study of navigation and radio telegraphy, and proved herself superâ€" ior to her bhusband in the latter, It was Aun Lindbergh‘s messages from the plane that kept the world inâ€" formed of their progress while they few over Canadian northwest terriâ€" tory, and over the dosolate Rering Classifhied Advertising PATENTS ilot, Navigator and hed w ndleq t Ve The d 1@ 4 t7 rgh UJ) W rip w mon world f uts ich n# ange $4}a «uai rmeat w V ht the= n the willi08 o at over DL but t8 ng Nax PQG

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