West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 18 Jan 1934, p. 6

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Babe Rum ~53" pi»; baseball next ' , Ceca-Ion mum A Camry young couple report see- In: I rainbow caused by the moon. It is "mulling who: glowing and color. ful vision: the I. our body can inspire on propitious ot slalom. - Brantford pruoitur. Another Pat " statesmen ot the world would pass up grasshoppers and the cornlrorer tor I brief period to organize a gigantic conference to the ondication ot an- other post. the reader who persists In dancing public library books. they would undoubtedy earn the gratitude ot their respective tolhnrers.-thnitha ram W~News. I A California man I (talc post that can h lot In use. How alto Martian to allow a 1 It. uetttarmedt---st. Journal. An Fuurlinhwoman has Just been Ilsa £20k~lwr m'tttttsrettttt conviction. by the way-for driving a motor car “without reasonable consideration tor other Persona." " that was an offence Indur the Ontario trattte laws. the pro- ‘llltlJl tremsurv would unvoi- nan-l tn murals In ext-es: ot the previous re turd year. 1928-29. though In that your tho what shipments reached 94.838.- 023 bump-I1. the peak recorded, but the ahlpnwnt of coarse grams totalled only 536.00» bushels. In the last crop year th , Mun-gate clearances from Van- muvvr wnre ahuut 20,000,000 bushels Imm- than were shipped from icirt') real. Landon P‘rve Press. 'rm bustle-ls bust-ah. The 1933, export were Vancouver, lumen In Vancouvlr In First Place om 'ul tiquren Just Issued show that Yuma-mun during the crop year ended July " 15933, was the leading grain ”purring port In Canada. Total ship. nwnu amounted to 97,502,207 bushels, ot which wheat accounted tor 91,712,- 721 hIHhPls and coarse grains 5,789,479 Kidnap insurance .thlnn of kidnappers should stiller it-u mental strain in future it they are "Al al Lloyds." The rapid growth of thrs racket in the l'nited States, it is mil has devulopml a large secret bust. no!“ for Lloyds ot London, famous in- uIimm-e firm. Chicago is reputed to be the chief require for this new business and prominent millionaires arrange tor insurance against kidnapping. The Mnn- of tho insured is cabled to Lott, don and In)! awn members of Lloyd's staff Ire allowed to know the identity of the rnslomers. The maximum policy for an adult is £20,000 and In]! that amount for I child. Strllght hid. nmpinx policies are written at the rate of three-quarters ot one per cent. and whom. for children cost one and 3 halt war cent. There is also a rate or um- I"'r rent. for injuries Buttered while tho victim is in the Itidrtappors' barsds, Halifax Chronicle. Durant-e [in the chi?! w and promin insurance Rubbing Hub Can. A wine driver given the car he meets In much room he he reasonably can. He does not rub hub-cape with people whose driving experience he know! nothing about. The authorities gov- erning the highways might Ttrottttstrlr gather information about walled held-on colllnions and ascertain how many ot then: were side-swiped or more mlitealcultttions of a few inches on the part of one car or the other. And the length of experience ot thei diIerent drivers could be recorded. The object would not be to put the blame on green drivers, but, perhaps, to build up a body ot statistics winch might tear-h experienced drivers the danger of assuming that when they are hitting an miles an hour every car they meet is Milo to share the road with them to a margin of a few inches. Just .1 little manic in the other car may mm.- a sudden in-swr-rve ot a few iurhras "e _ another hi-arion collision mikw news on the front paqe4.--Tur- (mm St tr, rr. Palm Iuivlm There Is I moving ot pulpvood, and though the prices my be considered low the present demand will cubic hundreds of pulpwood owner: to unl- im, and obtain some money to meet presiding obligations. Thomas Conway of Barry: Bay mm in “urine for a few do]: during the past week 3nd tttV listed P. Houlilnn in shipping can " wood from Caldwell station. Mr. Coal way informed The Leader he had new contracts tor 20,000 cords ot pulpwood --i8,000 of poplar end 8,000 of spruce. wl-limnville- Leader. . CANADA 'ttht W. Thou shin null that tho buck" eateher wean at the ball park connin- ly nhould com handy at home it he plan bridge with M- wite.--Kitetott Wttiqatartdard. 1:53:33 clearances of gain for were the highest on record tor uver, being nearly 2,000,000 3 in exvess of the previous re- an vasury " funds Cab . I nth ' at). ...‘11 not be able to l nut year-his leg: men't an they used ta be. But c. "tled tn a Irv [unwell Way to Wealth dr the Inventor would never need to m has invented a an be hwered when about lowering the . a car to pass over St. Thomas Times )ckvill Record One of life's most ironic tragedies the other night in New York received but scant news attention. A man, worn out with thé3truggle {gum poverty. spent his last nlckle in the Automat restaurant for a roll. He sprinkled a deadly poison on the roll, ate part of it. then staggered to the washroom and dropped dead. A Inher- ly woman at the same table selzed the. portion of the roll the suicide lett and ate it. She too collapsed and died on I the way to the hospital, An invent“- ‘tion showed she was connntitely rich with nearly “0.000 in val-ion: banks. The man died in 1 battle against poverty. the woman in I greedy elort to a" a tickle to all I to " 'tqrt--Bo.taat Poet. At a time or unparalledel dilllculty Great Britain has recovered first place among the exporting nations ot the world. Unemployment is decreasing and though conditions are still very Mr from normal they are probably bet. ter than in an other highly industrial, ized country. Britain's manufacturers during the ditBeuit post-war period have individually or in association thoroughly overhauled their production and modernized their selling methods. ---British Guiana Commercial Review. The craze for cheaper and still cheaper goods is being carried to ex- cessive lengths, and threatens to dia. place goods ot sound merit, which ought not to be displaced and would not be displaced it consumers ind more sense and a better grip ot real values-Camp, _ have been applauded as the upholder of the decencies and the conventions. Now she is lined ten shillings for "dis. orderly conduct." Beach pyjamas Ire the convention of to-day, and their de. riders are the eeeentNcs.--Lottdon Evening News. l The world changes: and the minori- ties of yesterday are the majorities of to-day. A few years ago the East. bourne woman who called I beach-py- jama-clad girl a "brazen huzzy” would The Yellow Peril The Japanese have still one great lesson to learn-the lesson that in the long run quality always tells; and failure to appreciate this point may yet prove their undoing. Their goods, though cheap, are almost invariably "nasty." Not only are they inferior in quality to similar goods ot Western, manufacture, but they are often turned out on a plan that must be described as one of deliberate sharp practical Instances of this-especially in regard to misleading trade-marks--have been freely quoted in the daily Press during the past week; and South Africa will not easily forget the Bood ot "dummy" {load pencils (containing half an inch (ot lead at each end) dumped into this] 'country from Japan soon after the war. Many similar instances could be mentioned, and the Sunday Times was not exaggerating a fortnight ago when it referred to "heelless socks, crutch- less pyjamas, baekboneIess ties, tur. less hats. ieatheriees shoes, and silk- less silk goodtC--all from Japan-- Johannesburg Sunday Times. It was at the close of the Gladstone lobsequies in the Abbey, and Mrs. Glad. stone was sitting In lonely grief " the head ot the nai-a figure ot utter de. solation. King Edward walked up to her, and taking her hand, kissed It with consummate grace and thought. fulness. She raised it in blessing as) she bowed her head, and those of us who saw the episode can never forget it as typical of the Innate courtliness and kindliness of a truly great tmul.--- J. P. Collins, in G. K's Weekly, Lonu THE EMPIRE World Conference and the Empire Britain has already set an example ot initiative and energy; there are great possibilities, in the Empire as a whole, of economic recovery and de- velopment. To go ahead with a prac- tical program is imperative; it would have been a duty, whatever the suc- cess of the Conference; it is a duty, whatever may or may not be done early or late, to give etteet to that hope that called the conference As things are. with no certainty ot expec- tation that anything worth while will result from it, the call is all the more clear for realizing the possibilities within the Empire. perhaps with the cooperation of some other countries. --Auckland Weekly News. Mt The Improvement In Avicenna runners in Quebec seen: to be e lit. [do more optimistic this your. Cotttt- Cdettee and ntistection hue tnken the place ot gloomy ditseouragetnetst Ind apathy, now that things ere looking better. The promise ot improvement in agricultural and other industries is certainly good news. It construction picks up, of a nun can get 3 living ort) the land once again. it I. market is found for wheat, unemployment will very soon tall a victim to the economic rer'overr--Le Progress de Hull. THE UNITED STATES Lite I: Queer of life's most ironic tragedies er night in New York received ant gem; lhTyop. A man, " with the struggle {cellist -Capsargus Britain's Recovery The Changing World Quality and Price Edward VII". Chivalry For strangers and others who vio. late minor traffie laws the first time, a courtesy windshield sticker has been issued. slgned by the police can. stableis a printed slip reading some- thing like this: "You hare uninten- tionally violated the tttttie laws ot this city by parking longer than al. lowed by law. We know this will not occur again. Thank you." A high percentage of unintentional trattle law vlolations are penalized in. evitably under the present system. Pblice in St. John, N.B., however, seem to hare evolved an excellent plan of separating the sheep from the goats. ' St. John Lenient With Traffic Offenders i A still capable of producing 100 gal- ' Ions a day was found in a secret com- ;partment under the hay mow. Part :of the cow barn had also been par- titioned off as a vast underground mash manufacturing plant. Four vats were babbling over with sugar mash when the mounties arrived. The moun- ties had no thought of consequences when they allowed the spoils to flow into the creek. The answer came when a herd of cows wallowed in for a drink. Then one cow threw back her head and bellowed hilariously. A sec. ond jumped a fence. Then the pigs staggered away from the bank and flopped into mud. The officers also watched sparkling ducks attempt to walk. - heavy tog A barnyard spree took place recent, ly on the farm of Herbert Hewer. Aberfoyle, Ont., when tout large vats ot seized mash were dumped into a nearby creek. Pigs staggered. cows cavorted and ducks squawked hilari- ously. The animals had lived a m- pectable rural existence prior to the arrival of Sergeant Frank Samson, R.C.M.P., and Constables Barr, Bailey and Warner. The mounties later emerged from the barn carrying sev- eral cans of pure overproof alcohol. Pour Mash Into Creek AJrrmeals Get Drunk Mr.. Jon" harem Mutton” mm eating event in Brockville, Ontario. hem Graham of Toronto, Ontario, g P. Graham and Mrs. Graham ot Bro ot Mr. and Mrs. James Douglas Mal .armu .uulconu mum..- recent Wedding was an Inter- Brockville, Ontario. The bride was Caroline Eliza- Toronto, Ontario, granddaughter ot Rt. Hon. George Mrs. Graham ot Brockville, and the groom ls the son James Douglas Malcolm ot St. George, Ontario. An Interesting Wedding Deserted Plane Crashes into ONTARIO JiiieTiii7ittT TORONTO the neroplnno In . parachute; - - V-_-..-.. “u... nu”, on. we Dru.- ish Treasury, ttnd representatives of the United States Treasury. Lmdott.--AntrhrAmerican debt con- versations are expected in London of- fieia1 quarters to begin in Washington Oct. 5, it has been learned. The first interviews will be between Sir Frederick Leith-Ross, of the Brit. The scheme applies to Wales. When registration opened at the end ot August the farmers were so apath- etie that tears ot failure were enter. tained. Personal canvassing and ur- gent appeals by MaJor Walter Elliott, Minister ot Agriculture, finally resulted In a last minute rush ot producers to register. With its national and regional pools the scheme will be one or the biggest undertakings in the United Kingdom. Farmers will sell their milk through ‘the pools which will divide profita among participants according to the amount ot milk that each delivers. The National Board, which will be in charge. will not only be responsible for marketing and supply contracts, but have the task ot utilizisg surplus milk tor eheeatrtnaking and the manufac- ture ot dry milk on a large scale. The board assumes control October I, for a trial period until the New Year, when the scheme itself becomes operative. London.-British farmers have voted overwhelmingly in favor of a National Dairy Pool. The result of the pool of registered dealers taken rpcemly has been announced and showed $6.42 per cent. in favor or the scheme and 3.58 per cent. opposed. A two-third ttta- Jority was necessary for the adoption ot the plan. British Farmers Favor Dairy Pool 'oll of Dealers Show 96.42 Per Cent Endorse Na- tional Scheme ' Discussions Begin October 5th England and Three Homes Saint John, N.B.C- Exp Brunswick apples to Egypt, and the east cots: will ahortly be made for th on record, when the New Government will sponsor t 100 boxes on u ship lea John, it has been nnnoum Apples Paris.-ahstruuteement of the .de- posed King of Spain and his son. Prince Alfonso de Bourbon. over the latter's love match is said to hive ended. They met secretly in I Paris hotel and both appeared deeply moved I upon leaving, although they main- tained the strictest reserve Is to whntJ occurred during the interview. Mitchell's report said that weather was the largest single cause for acci- dents being responsible for twenty- seven per cent. of the total mishaps. Power plant failures, personnel errors, airplane failures, and airports and terrain were other major causes. most of whom m operation of the threetrlt fuck-ups There were forty-eight accidents. five of which resulted in fatalities, but only one involved the death of passengers. Fifteen other persons, aviation There 2 US. Airline Patrons - Killed in lat Half of '33 0: a result she added the Feuton Perpetual Trophy (Sea Swimming Ladies' Championship) and the South Shore Swimming Club Ladies' Chal‘ lenge Trophy-two silver currtr-uto her collection. All this summer she has spent her time between school And swimmlng. 'ormer King Alfonso -- Re-United With Son Having won her school trophy for nil-round swimming and I cup for divine, 3 Girl Guide chtuttttiottihip cup, and several junior trophies, she competed in senior events, Just to see what happened. li Swimming Champion There is I schoolgirl in Blackpool, Entr, who like. to get a thrill out ot lite by winning swimming trophies. She is Peggy Smith, aged 15, and she won her first race in 1930. Now she holds 11 silver trophies, nine gold medals, nine silver medals, and one bronze medal. _ Schoglgirl of Fifteen ditions but most of the eoantryU unnufnctun’ng industries are operat- ing on a better basis than for many months. 3 The “pardon in mnmrfaetarirte _ operations throughout Canada is con- I minim, many additional branches of industry showing improvement. The heavy industries. which IN usually union; the last to share in a more! upturn, have become more active. The Dominion Steel Corporation has srafti- eient orders for steel rails on hand now to keep the plants busy for the remainder of the your. The number employed has already been doubled.: Textile plants continue to operate " or near capacity with orders that will l keep the mills busy for some time.’ Lather manufactures and boot and shoe factories likewise are wCl. Fi-) ployed. Newsprint Induction in June', showed 1 considerable inervase over; the Mme month a year ago. Miscel-_ Igneous plants report more varied con- i Manufacturing Operations Continue to Exp: ___ -e'e9r- Paw“, whom were connected with Going to Egypt Ml: Beach, There 'r" . 1' - Export ot New les to Alexmdrin, east coast of Atria Me for the first time the New Brunswick 5P0noor shipment of ship leaving sun t Announced. Mines, met death 'an-ope1 The annnnl beau! States is "50.000300. though the Indies, II: tt or not. an n--‘-- I" . ThG7NH5 tWrriaiG; in oii,iel "Be tion in Canada in m, - . n " 1,219 creameriets, 1,171 cheat Bet li, ies, 317 eoetAined butter and Cheese ‘ factories, and 26 commuted milk the mime. The total number shows an u1 mm of 32 compared with 1981. [iii ""---9--- km LCM " Flu?“ II‘“ World's Fnir in on I five-cent a der 12," and children's rates, naked. -' Monticello, Wis. - Mrs. Theiler is M, and has been five years. but on n dare she I child's dress and WM“ Windsor-voir revolver sounding through downtown recently, brought police spot from oil directlonu. get them?" queried Patrol o n fellow constable emerged alley. sheathing a revolver, not him. Can't you tell smell?" was the laconic " lt was I pole cat. may: we ladies. whether 1119:0013 or not, no "mu into N. anrms Sanford Beacon-Rena. W"..- n. --w. ursuI-rly [ulna Ir'dl 'ncureri's rates. Not I question 'lh" I"! “I‘M? 'paryo. t M .. . . ter, f 'e csked. “- 7 A -..~ 4. - o - .-- ----+-----., ulna-slated1 0n the Incas. I.,.. Cot-£2". In. kai, Them“; P,rii,iiigFiiiov,iiuu, “Beyond the mug has ion in Canada in m, - . o ee u it , tram 219 crumerieo, 1,171 'eid'a%tft Itttit, itttV as, 317 mm butter and Cheese im.' L no!) whories, and 26 concentntod milk the w Mrictiom r Huts. The total nun-ha- -'---~* _ to mike u mecca quired home duties, study of money a. Windsor numbers by Wm Hence, she said and even medium sized Ida? groups,” she mid. - “Finnncisl matters-auch u mort- m and taxes on this {unity home ---that we have been accustomed to believe were hundlod by men done, me being 1ookd after in incl-Quint number. 3... ---- " "it can be said that [its dimension has mnde the iaiirii, tiiiuiiGl head of the house, especialiy in the small home-owning family and in the small -_A ----- .. hend of the average family. Mrs. Finke, manager of the wo- man’s department of the Morris Pun Bank in New York, In: here u a delegate to the 11th mnuul convention of the Association of Bank Women. Chicae0.-F'inaneiat adversity, Mrs. Mary Berkley Finke of New York de- clares, has made woman the business held of the aver-m f-mil-v He replied, “Th. try her grand lad an Wife Business Head . Of Average Family Recently he In: asked, “whlch is the greatest of them all for speed. performance. announce. luxury and atmosphere?" Harry Acton, famous shipping re- porter ot the New York American. knows all the great litters of the At. lantlc. No other liner has held the Atlan- tic record tor so long. She la still Brltain's fastest Atlantic liner. And every British 563mm ls proud of her. The glamor surrounding her achievements brings her Mum-n wherever she goes. the Tyne lion miles. She was consiruked Ice.- Normally she would be drydock- ed for her winter over-hm]. Her 3.000.000 Miles. The Maurelania is 26 years old, and has Unveiled more than three mil. It her Irtsrtormance then come: up to expectation she will be at once t'ottttniesiotted for the Atlantic nerv- She will be thoroughly tested tor another speed attempt when she re- turns from New York to Southamp- ton at the end ot her mum; Ber son on September 27. E'Ocenn Greyhound Makes 32 , knots in Cruising Tut-. 1 Attempt to Regain ' Supremacy [l London, Eng.--' lauretania, Brit-' r; ain'l grand old lady ot the seal. which I held the Atlantic record tor new] a a quarter ot I century, in being "train-i, I ed" in secret to win it back. l l The Mouretania'l record wu tour days. 21 hours, 44 minutes. T l The newly built Germon liner Dre! men took it from her with tour do". (fl, hours, 50 minutes. l j Then a tear weeks ago, the hall-n l Rex did the crossing in tour days, " , hours, " minutes, an average of 29.92 3 knots. l l The Mauretnnin. however, on July, [19, attained an average speed ot "' , knots. or two knots faster than that / of the Rex. Moreover, she had in" hand a considerable reserve ot speed. 3' Thorough Testing. (I Her best speed, made in the Hedi-l terranean during the war, wan 33% I knots. I I They are being persisted in so that the Cunurd dlrectors any be rerun that the Maurettnln on IN" compete on level terms with the Atlantic grey- hounds. She ls travelling between New York, Havana, and the West lndlel, Ind ls Inning speed: that are unheard of tor s crulung litter. She ll Imu- lng America. The Mnureunlu'l "training" In tak, In; place during her American can» lug nelson. wife Passes for Child Misuretania Starts [Ocean Liner Hae Training for Record l Permanent Boarder _ out. on a dare she donned I dress and went to the Fair in; Chicago. She trot in 'eplied. “The Maureunln, all grand lad ttatelr self!" -.. .u LnlCIgo. She got in rat ticket for “children un- md visited concessions " rates. Not t question In she said, the modern womnn . me“. of her newly no. me duties, should take up the money matters. get. His-poi. Cat heap" bill In Greyhound we. 32;She Hag Herd the siren Call directions. “lid revolver shot; downtown Win Ionlooh' Mrs. H. E. been married otBcera, u d from In by My. United Bottt, re- Windsor to the Sure I the We - aaG '7“ c; Jam in h Jny their e, w vW'": -.ceer.X L CoeniGiia an Iiroiiviid Tl?“ rd, t the ttteel 1tiyiness dts'llvl . it , traffic in thin town it iiiii2?t'jiiif,ir:i, [digit h b p sorts, IKIH'U' the and Mrictions. do very "Huh " the, New and getaway with IL tUme tf.tur days sections " the 1i.lyisttit out of all path-rm " performance, so pr"- HIGH " ”lie may, will rile on 'e?e1!iiGiiiCi2d"t'Lrt"tlC, Ott B. Bennett. The Co rum. I. on.“ by C Rttd retretarir mpg I Sary ""ett, hold. The out. ha been made that the If": "tetqtaltte to enter Can-d. was canted by It. Cochrane, who 54me “I. H...- 1m and 189s "hum due“ it to Interested onlookers an Stephen he“. (now Eighth, in Cat, Mer, m steering the rutnlwr ”-0 natd no!" vehicle unmng fright ettqd ttore Ind dodging citizens un til something went wrong and h,, lab cred tor hours to get it started auuln Fr The account goes on to any that mam ot “0 older citizen» reru,otl to in- “on t2.ttr eyes and their "an. and ma In, I- (right, which, it w- "I“ a. 1895 models. :MN‘mu m“- Mar early ('nlguvy “nu.“ “fringe, dnte and mom-l not “No-0‘. Wu owned and arm-u tr t Hull You; lawyer named " Pioneer Car Frightened -.. Jiiarlr Cahrary Citizens In some of the centres unemployed taiutrtrtt Wen te repair and "Dom the clothing of their fellow when. and in others free hair-rum Ire being given by unemployed ham tire-an. [Several Birmingham centres no puggipc gonpreben ‘ye when a of eutiatioUl We“: h') next ,7v'rriirr'." Ther ieselude phytical training for the younger men And women, radon diam-ion circles, dramatic and”, 'r' ch“ in tench. German um English. bers of the occupation centres to tho open-air swimming baths, free ot dame. during the present summer. swimming clubs have been formed in emulation with several of the city"! 21 centres. A number of them Also have cricket tennis to which free ua of pitches ha been granted. Birmingham, Emr.--Fouowine a d. cilion of the Bath- Committee of Bur minglum City Council to admit um-m played men and women tsho Ire mem Although linkers are mad manner out in the pistol practice It Mayer's ram society women med once . week for bloom." “If I nun la having trouble with a lemon he won't tell you. He doesn't ask questions, just keeps on making mistakes. Now with I woman while she'll Iak you enough questions to drive you crazy, it is possible to learn when she's missing out 1nd give her m help." “I would lather heath I woman than a mu: my day in the tses.' “MHClpuin Mayer. New York.-Captain Walter C layer, once a marine corps offksr, Mes pistol shooting to men and women. but he says his feminine pu~ ipls m the but. Before selling on the be de France she Instructed Hairy Vlllnrs. puruer on the liner. to Ind out it It would be no.- uhle to keep right on travelling on the shine. She felt that it would be a melanoma u malnulnlng n home ud when“ on land Ind certnlnly much nicer. The our-er promised to man the arrangements and ittdietttiom, were that I-e. d'Auonlevllle would became the occurs IIr-t pet-moment bourdar Women Beyt ihmiis I I... d’Auo-levllle never had been " to not ttttttt In! July, when tttte mule a Viking cruise on the Prom-h iinea Dem. When the ship returned " Ham It the and of the cruluo at?! [an- were shocked u Madame-3; - out Ilene-u when seven! hours after gun all. docked they found her Hitting malady In her automo- without I hung packed. She Inter-ed them um {she liked ocean lite and imended to any about! no mutter where the ship l went. She bought a ticket end sailed on the Decree-e. When tttttarmed met the next French line elllp would not sell tor ten My: she ceme eshore end took 1 trip to Mixer: Fells. It wee "id that having heard (at price. were high In America the dren $2,500 from her ecmnt so u to be sure and heve enough to In! the ten days. I New "ee-Matte. Vlscher (Au-onto villa, I audio-030‘ widow from Pub, lwho all“ recently on the French ~llur llo de France. bu ttlt the all got the sen. She has tell it so strong" lee, ‘IICIOIO‘ before her departure that the In making urnngemenm m be can a walnut reunion: on ma. l his traatB-Ataattie “net. thed 'mifis Admitted Free to Pools oftheSea-andi, Enchanted By It In Piitoi Shooting lawyer named It Cochrane car still ' gnarl“ Jutkm. I [an in the Cit administer an exists-o" 04 again." that any " to he- enru and And Hm I In“ a " Chh'ut, _ "ttter too m it th Ill-wt! Io- il; l, dad l lion p troul who! In! litt Re ma will ht when I to! tor a de " “Inc In {In I“! Qu " " My " [Ur ANA In: II H Ill» " C.“ " didn t “do him” Hurt Wot, bio?!" t "tos uh" hr "Ill” Draw: ttrel Oct mum "In" l "Hut " Will UNI In” Tl Berry I. " "ttre-rs. " " " Tim I -ti, "H, And but

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