Whitby Chronicle, 9 Nov 1911, p. 3

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TTuEM WKOLE I'IIIZ TISOLE.Vermil7 'ani Dl.gostl,- Flgbte t. Deatis la s sea. I r Slîarke are bti eewurtiiy anc cruel but iL idiffiulît to stuti their wva r itheia ueck cf s shipp &» they 'nove alovly ;-u a refractive, inedium sncb as vater seme tventy or LWs-t7 leet below tLb. observer, Hence the. many erroneous dedue- tions olseaînen vitb respect to tbe.e unsociable denazen o! Lbe deeP wiQih appear Le juetify nol -ualy the statement o! le Conte thal the evîdenoe o! Lb, senses if often unrcliable but aIse Lb. jocular op- iltion -o! a novel 1st that '<ne s3tery wath a shark incidentaily thrown lu ucati ai) te bc interesting.- Yet Lthe siark belorge to -a type whu<-h bas aurvived the flught of tne, whuîe ct-ler more attractive tiî-Kciesbhave ceased toe elst. The ea.rly voyagers vere vont to attri- bute euperaturai preocience tc the ,hark. ()ften diuring iight wnd.% <-ne of thege sea Peav'enger,3 will follow a islow gaffhng sbup for aeveral succes- &ive daya and nighte, and it vas er- ronr-ouustly as.tumed thât he doffls beca.mo aware an sounie myt-erious wSy (>ifSan irnpending death onj boardl *hîclà u-ill usLure for lir a stimptiioux relpa!t Heredity bas simlarly be-n put (u,'wurd asq an explaiination -(f this t..'denoy for a mltary shark te )teep company wth a ohip, vrite8 W AlUIngharn n C(hambers'a Mag- sain.-,. altho4ugh the experence of ue-uintieuj generatioras h,98 net sif- fir-41 f 4) impre*ss Utp<n hum that IPEATII IY TORTURE aýas asny &liark who dar" e-sizev * tait thast trails attraetivel v f(rom a ihtpe ,Lctrn and cncloses a a t4ut hook that will not Le &-nied. Na- ti-al hisut-ry notes by uilitcrate sea- mien (oýn >mprlitly s.ppreciated data are wore Ilan umel<s, fur thoy arernialeadîng Matiy a tiha-'k Ls îîreced by s few elhimirrang compaaiaon3 known A,% plut flsh beau3e t-bey ar suip- p-o'ed te warn tte shark of danger ahoad, but they n ,ver prevent this hoati-4 humani generis f romn swaî- lowînig the. temptîng mior8el and its rtinnungly cenccaled lsook. The". irrideq-cent pilot fleli move bither and tlitther in close4- proximity te the shark's cruel rnouth, and somoe aa»erî- that tht-y occaaonaily take refuge thcrein should danger threat- Inammruch as tb.e hark's moutb je inconveniently placed belind hie enout and und'rneatuh hia body this cen Only bc uascerned !rom above viien bic turne on hi.. back and deapite travellera' tales te the con- trary lit ims impiy unb-eiieveable that either pilot ish or young shark.s .eek -afety withîn tIhe cavernous J awa -A a mature ,,hark, for h. vould nover permit e-gre«s to any bonnje bouche soeu.mly obtaiua.ble. A 1IHARKS VOR.A(ITY l, uaot le"t marveilouts than hie dig- estiona. heîiier lie b. a man eater by chie (as seems the more probable> <ýî-L., tho compulsion o! buuager (asc is ocýaoiouslly a3serted)~ the. fact romains that any one wbc baepeus tu fal everboard in Lb. vicinsty o! a ahark is ikely te b. *sapped uap by the latter vithout o.,rensony. It in Lb. cvii reputation attachina to t1 h voe hark tnibe cass of Lthe buifisie, unknc'vn k, liseEe amateur unakers 4)! biatory, l'a-s tliton boardl the MAceste. There arc net santiaîg writers who vould have us believe that maen les. thein lives owing t.) panie wýherm in thepresence of a êhark in bisç native elemnent, but prtobably the. resuit i. equally sgainbt the man i <1<1ho have aIl l, its about hIm. Néverthelc*3 circunmtamtiil accountis are in eyidençe ot in- at.aneeu wher. tihe *ha rk bas bot% defested by Lthemain. mAt Jumuaica o* buge uhark lasai! te have heen a terrer La frequesut. ors nitlise barbo e b. affed. Ossec ho overturned a boat carrving pro- vions tte shipping andI deveur- ed the vile of tbe bo"uaa. Tise maddened. wiahw-cr reaehed thse aarst ip. SEIZJED A tilA!!? EÇWfg. involced tise&Wid oNsis patron samint, Ieaped into the a. er, gavo battle te the ibaa4 deupt tIse.-avfual ode!s and tuc.tded ins aveginsMi hvite. 1>7 alaylng ber detroyer. MAtr bades-aWlalY4, if ve;Ua.Y soePt thenm vau aeisëd by-,the, s1br*,but theslelat., lId bot et codtil .bore d'oeuvre. A oaagIe femaléc shris Ià It capable 'd tockiuga nm in aquarim wlth Y*UUg Of coeôn"r. miii. tîÏze at on. birtb, and veli bot for the, **nt of sopathing te e«t and thé. liability te be etten, Certain parts of the. Oman muet teem vithach iveradocue and fecuud viisitors In Jialy, 1910, on the pssage f rom Australia te Nev Ze Lbdth crew of a sailing vessel caught a sha.rk oontaining 44 young, and in 1906 a nine foot long apecimen captured on tbe Australi.n coast had 27 yeung al- most mature. Records of catches set forth' in ships logbooks show that the numb- er o! young gbarks produced &t one birth vs.ry f rom 83 to 2. With this minimum total a doubt ie pardon- able, because parturition may have been nearly completed just prior to t.he shark's capture. STRANGE PLAN 0F SUICIDE. Gave Instructions te KlI Peachers and Then Rau Into Danger. Suicidesî often adopt ingeniotas f metiiods, but the art o! tbe felo de se geerus net t. have advancedi -m'tterially iurmg Lthe centuries. -The mode ru case o! a beavily in- eure.d broke-r vbo on a feigiiet hunting trip stoop bare-legged i 1a quagmire for heure and se vii- 1 fully contracteti a fatal pueumenia, us matceet in cievernegs by ou. five - hundreti year» oid. The. foloving s(aete are weli vouched for, anti, in- )deed, were nover questioneti: s Sir William Haaktord, ajutige o! -tise King's Bonch in Lb. reign o! fFA ward III., He-nry IV, Henry V. ansid Henry VI., anti at the. ime o! hl% dt-ath Chief Justice o! Eaagland, vas a man o! me.iancbo>ly teumpera- ment. He scemus to have contem- -plaleti suicide tise great-er part of i bus long lîfe, anti during hie later L Y-crs tise idea became a fixeti pur-~ pose. The act wviseof peculiarly serrons con8equeno. in tiiof. days, 1for tise reason tbe iav treateti iL aa r a capital crime. The offender vas btiried at thse cross roads, vith a t stako driven through hie body, sud iail bis goodus anti pro-perty ver. forfeited to the Crowu, te the ut- ter ruin o! bi& famuly. Hankford madie gooti use o! bis waLs aud sueceeded in accomnplisbh- 1ing hi& purpose vitheut ineunrin >eitber unplea.sant penalty. H. .gave open sud notorious mstruc- >tie>ns to huaà gamekeeper, vbo hati been troubleti witb peechens in Lhe deer preferve, t. challenge ail trea- passera lu the, future, andti Leshoot to kili if Lhey v-ould net stand sud give an accouait. Ono dark niglat b. purposely croed etiLi.k.epor's path, and upon cha1fllngeaaaa motions o! reistenoo anti escqme. The faitbful servant, failing te r,- cognize bis master, feleved in- structiens tote sletter aa vas ex-. pected o! bina, anti Sir William feil dead in i&iistracice. The viiole trutb o! Lbe affair vas coanuon knovlodge, but il vas ina- possible tLeostabli.sh & ctase ef suicid, by logal proof. Tise ser- vant vas pro-tectoti by hi& instruc- ions. Hsuktond bati honorable boy doe.s ot geL bis "nev Job." burial andi hîe estate pasue t Licse. viose iDIenestats c bira h. beti 50 visely ooaiidred. 8ILETLANII'S TAIE GULL8. Chiuren Mais. pelaet Tie. aBd They are Foi Eegularly. Thoro are many asmali vllagoe in Lbe worli that have only o» e êtroot; but I.erwaek,, ii Shetland,4 bosies baving viily a single aIr-oct, possesés only one t-neo, and it ita nut. a ver>' Laileue, cither. Tien. are ne birds thero, net even u.epar-1 row; but tise seagail s are plentiful.1 'i'be inhalsitassts o! Shetlsand are very prouti o! tbeir troc, anti ver>' kina t e tbegulis, o!1viaom tise cbdldren mako pets. Chu.loren vie aro brougit. for tiie first time to se e the Wonder& cL! one-atrecteti 1er- Iwick are always iâsown, as a great1 curiesîty, -the oui> tro in liiet-. land.'" IThse soaguils are the sparrove Oft Lcrvîek ; and s such tiey have àa greater Mlare s inse towu'a 1Ma- tissuthe. aparrows. o! Lonadon. lu 60 ail dfay lmgthe ..MguIet anmd <s-ilovet ret e tofLeuw i 1¶u. - . th tw t» I ic iÎ11=1e L fate, Dans. IL (Tomperane Sn-u dtir>. Golden Test, Ecl,. .14, 1 Verse 1. A great toast -te a Lieu- tsnd.--ilverythiùcg about the ban- quet suggeats Oriental magnificence. Tii. Palace in vhichi iL took place, withitil immense halls, ita columa, ita tapentried valle, amdits statues, ras onoeo! Lthe vonders cf the venrd, Before his princes anth ie îreet Belsiazar (kuowu by the Babylonien inscription as "L#th Crown Prince"), seated on a raiseti dais et the cuti o! tb. banquet éhamber. sud facing Lthe gueste at a separate table, drank vine. This was tb. customary mnanner o! cou- cluding a feast, vine floving f reely, and everyone beooming intoxicat- cd in the. apirit o! wild revel. Tii. unusual feature vas the. presence o! the king, inasmuch as Le ord-în- ari, banqueteti in solitary etate in hie ovai private cbamber, noue ho- ing present but the queen and at- tendants. 2. Taated the wine-Oradually came under iLs poverful influence. Commnauded to bring the .... vesses-S. on Dan. 1. 2, Word Studies for September 10. The act was one o! wild and irreverent folly. The well-known example aud decrees o! Nebucbadnezzar ougbt te have been a warning. Assuming tht the fest vas in houer o! some Babylonian deity, Liiere could bard- ly b. conceiveti a more impicus in- eulL te Johovali than this public profanation o! the. sacred veasele which Wa been seized in the holy temple. Hie fatber-We knov that Bel- shazzar w-as the son o! Nabunsid. But by marriage Nebuchaduezzar may have been bis father-in-law, or bis grautifather. lI either of these *asee the. word father, acoording te Hebrew usage, vould b. permis- sie. Wives . . . concubines-The prou- cence e! somen vas net in keep- ing viLla ancieut custom. lInLthe Septuagint these verds are omit- ted, us if there vere au inexplicable impropriety bore. But there vae notbing toc rude or abocking in this fest. e 2 y 4. Drankr in them-It vas us- tuirai that lips which vantonly praised their beathen id-cIi o! every description, f rom golti te atone sbould aise defile thse holieet things viti embruting vine. 5. And the. king sav-It -u pe- culiarly fitting that retnibution' shoulti descend upon tLis e eedesa, niotons ompan> in tihe ame heur vitis their bestial revel. But as a sort of preludeoft arning, »sett flrst enly by the kinag, Lier.appoar- ed over againet Lthe golden chande- lier, and thorefore on a part o! thse vall censpicueusly bright, Lb. fini- gem. of a mans aud. As Lbe vall vas eitlser paint.d visite, or con- sist.d o!fullaa o! alauater, thià veuld reuder the moving iand stli more visible. te hisu in bis utter godlenaou. H bad joissed 1inlthe praise e! <rayo J images, but nov, ho knosvitiey eaua do n.taînt for lu.. snd lhe turne to tie qiaaîlyimpotentaai. i (lohisd viîtb s pp-A sip ai roy*ity. Tise chaie of!£014, remaintaI us ut tise houer don, Josepb (Oeu. il. 4s). A' guidon aeo 4e4ia so*me« pien a.s oml 1et snd vas vuru as a token o!tamisk. Tisexipsiou. thtid uber in tii. kiagdous , àdl5esa, hImt *et=, te retif to bm u tclab»era* twe lator eqOyei lsy »aniel- (Dan. 6). loren m.ér Wals iAnt s ,-n Iaepbmm t4oeodthe t0yxma g' royal pame.. - Tbv oW ao md bew ie ~~WUpw --i85maU. brut- W rhesset U 1ng MK d r1eVf- Once. Ti. umkUess -Of! d*eI4Àz- zar'. guilt le lI 6p4d by the, int,' lu whioh ho -hâd us zâd-Chou kneëw-, est ail tii, (2). 25n. Mono, Me1si4, tkelt Upharsin" -Much thou#b bfs been expended 'n", an 0efort té a4beiler tii., Wordu.' nhe thoory o! â Frenchman, named', -Jlermont-Ganneau, that w. haVeý b.re the. "mes et three weights, a- mina, a shekel, end two paras (or a haif-minA>, has met with Mos-t favor. Just why Belahazzar and the magi excjprinced any difficulty in read- ing these verdi on- the.vaîl cannot be determined, but it seema to have been because o! sôme peculi.srity in their arrangement. The myatcry o! their interpretation je anothertmat- ter. Bout the key appears tô bq found in rendering each word twice; thus, the. firat word means both "cvunted" or "nuxnbered," and "handed over" ; the second means "weighed" and "thiou art light" ; while the third means "fragments," aud "the Persias" or "Media and Perria." FromLIis key it lu easy to, obtain the, interpret-ation o! the thing (26-28). 29. Clotbed Daniel witb purpe- In a«3ord vitb the promise made hini. In viev o! the near approach of the army o! Cyrus, the coolnes with which Belshazzar gives this command je inexplicable. FRENCHI GOVERNESS TIRICKED German Oficer 8ecured net Con- viction as a Spy. The conviction before a Ger- man court a.t Leipzicofo Mlle. Thirion, a young Frenchi governees, aooused of being a epy, bas arous- ed no littie indignation in Franc. The. case waa tried in secret, and uotbing officialisj knowu about iL, but the. story as given by French newt3pape-rs je as follove: Mlle. Thirion belongs to an Mss,- tian family vh.ich settled dovu flot far f rom Paris aftcr the end of the war in 1870. Her ambition vas te trave " , 80 &h. visited England, viiere sh. earned ber living by teaching French, and then vent to Germany. Among ber pupils at Dusseldorf vas a German officer, Lieut. W., vho feUl in love with ber snd wished te marry ber. Ris family vould not hear of iL. A council vas held, at which (Japt. Tachesmer, variously describ- ed as a f riend or a relation, under- took to relieve the, aristocratie W.'ôo et he"adventuress." Capt. Tschesmer began by taking French leasone, and aoon induoed Mlle. Thirion te move te Cologne, viier. ah. could find moré, pupils, esplciallY among the. army offiera, tien in )PrusaMd<orf. Tii. captain, a veil-preserveti mm oef 50, kpt hig. word. H. iutroduoed pupils and Madie himneot tihe friend of the. Ione- IrPrech *Mm. in time hopro- pesed marriage, ad *eventually won the beart of lji. teaher. At thi, point ho begante ceplor. tbe miserable pay or a German subaltern, and teok pleagure in drawving eut bis sveetheart's en- thusiasm for France,, until Qne da, h. suggested that as gise Wa.Wse Patrioti, and au b. was in Posses spy oninomtn ie y Ii captaw .Tihe court ehov.d it. sympatisy wuth LePr -noueor k . atenig ber teti ose iium term in prison, aix menths, mdtboi Wrif .oMi-OSCiaI veou, 01 Lbé trai given by tho <Mtram r postedly t!tismat »eot=r verdkt but gniutïy vas pomlible «W- tg te s xasio0 i t Ù»i la"d ritteus to Fram.e rm. AhtWr itChmus WIM I!uoe. L 4te Aran" IIsh PeOPle Ar, Modern. Wi boast oasle lal POPO8nd are aPt to saccru the î oreigner, whoio o daily per- fôrm the ritusaieoftth. tub, 'raya the Westminster Gazette. Yet, Lh. Brtitii Medical Journal points out,, it je net se long ago since ve bad thec Meutation et bcing an excop- tionally dirty people. Iu the year 1800 ther, vas not a single, private bouse in London providied with a bathrooan. A vituese stated b.- fore the. Heaith Commission about Lb. middle o! the. last century that Lb. only tvo occasions on vhich one o! tbe laboring classes vas waebed a l oyer vas immediat.ly after birth and a!ter deati. Even at the present day, our contem- porary doubte il dirtier people could b. found anywbore in the world than among our lover cla8- ses. 'A French vorkman woul be ashamed to vear the clotheà in whichi the British laborer goe-s to bis daily work. There je notbing that tramnps who apply aL work- houe think a more brutal tyranny than the enforced bath" In the middle ages, v., are re- miuded our -dirt, and squalor ver. th. theme of comment by foreign visiters. Threo centuries ago what struck a Portuguese traveller in England was the fact that the Eng- lis-h gentry neyer vashed. Erasmus bias left a picture .of the dirt that prevailed in Lh. houîses o! noble- umen. IL je not difficuit from this to imagine what the state of thinge must 'bave been among the. poorer classes. At oue ime both mnen and vomon wbo were careful o! their complexions jeleaued their faces wfrh a dry white linen olotb, beca&e it was believed that waab- ing the face vith vater -made iL more susceptible teo old in vinter -nd Le tan in summer. Jobuson s-aid ho bad no passion for clean linen, and even Lb.efine gentlemen o! his day vere far from éacrupul- ous-ly dlean ini their persons. IN DARKEST LONDON. That Seber City Wui Permit No Great Wsite 'ay. Il you desire te, put up th.e mali- est lamp--either gas, electric or oil -vith the. avoved purpose of at- tracting customers Le tpur place of business, and that pla-ce ot busines L ithin Vth, boundaries of the City o! London, yeu muet firet o! al obtain a permit from the. Corpora- tion aud tisen abide by certain lawis. LIn Lb. case of outeide ilghtiiag, you should b. cars! ul tha"tise ýînder8îdô o! Lb. lasnp b. net leu tieboatveîtieeettrom the surface ofthéie fotway., sud, itf ftted výitis a igh-power light, mot Jes iaii tventy beLt resatLb.foetw-ay love1. Yen_ m-juotalis eb *, susy t L-&ite Otrsnd Kagaine, ftthise extona dimentions - o! yens ' laznt do net ,exceedfiiv.ltest l in h u ta foot in suy otie: direction. IL muet net projeet more thaun -tour feet,#si hches from tise froust o!i Lthe ions.wher. fe pvenen PUSEYNTS F~ OX AT W", tW.luIs gieri sto thse ~>Iaeof Wi. reocs4ly sene, »Mof lthe gifatatcls ba*v* rom tùn a tin»m. roê*IfiS id* finkI's"F.IYTEI OITY MORTOACES SAPE, BUT THIS mot 80 lu TOWN$ ANO VILLAOË$. Villages and Towns 0fton Stagnant- Sinali or Ns Demand for Proporty In Case ef Foreolosurs-A Rueont Example --Cuaran teed Mortiagbns, The articles contribaited bi "Inventert are for the sole purpoe of guiding prof- peotive inventera. and. il possible of @ai Lcth.ni froinlomiug moner tbrbarh placing ltin lu 'd.ont" tuterpies. The 1w partial and roliable oharacter of the information mai b. reli upon. Th" wriLer of thes articles amu the publisesr of this pazer have no intereeôa rvo thosof the roader. Wbat bas bee s aid about farmn mort- gages te iu a general way true of mort- gages generally. But. of course. there are everal differenoes which are worth noting. Wbie mortgagos on farm land, whes caruufuly- chosen, are safo ai regarda principal. the same cannot b. sad vith- out qualification wxth respect to village and town property. The great danger ef Invemting I inmortgages on property itu-. ated i; s town i. that thero im, aa a rmie, no very pressing demand for land of thio clame. For oxampie. if it becamo neces- saryr to f oreclose such a mortgage it would sot b. ut ail an easy matter to fSud a purchamer. Non would ht be much eaeier to fiud omeono te rent the place. Thon. agaiu, thero in always danger thal a sunail tovu viiidecrese inOse. Anyosc who has glasced over the cons-ne returna publishet lami week canuaif&ai to note that the rural and village population cf mauuy parts of thia provinc, ha. matent- aUly decresed lu namber durins the de- cade. The resuit to au investon wouuld b.. of course., that thons wouid b. a veny good ohance that the property on whioh h. held a mortgage vouald b. on: cf the. many. that one may e inlaalmst uni Ontario village, that ha. lais vacant for years. The. very fact that the. bau and mortgage companies wifl ot accept au zecunity mortgages bsed on ouoh pro. perty te a conclusive proof that there malat be omethisg wrong vith that sort of ecurity. Of course. if ose coulul b. mure that the Lowu or village lu vhloh the house-or whatever the.sscurity may bs--le eituated la lu a fair vay to grow, tiser. veaulu not then ho tise m rne t. Even ai llittà tiser. ià. hoviever. sothing lu " t ori cf investing te attraci asuro0106m ta. .-veston. wrlter found Lt cfse toessytu iamont- ta gage oùnsoms eva mpnpentyti ps71efl1t si of a bai d.bt. Ie triM l tdso- . he, =' I au gae.Esvst rssss& broe elu u> -ez -H I'I 1l -aÀ@ IM The name, pe1lagra, derived from two Itallan verds whlob mean firough akrin," belongs to a chroiato izsually incuFabIe diseas», worge in bot wýeather, a'ccomipanied by symptomas of nerve aud brain diÎ- burbano., intestinal troubles, aud a reddish eruption on tiiose parts- of the. skin flot covertd by clothing: The diseate vas firet ohserved -in Italy, and for mauy years was be- lieved to b. confined to that, and neighboring countries of douthern Europe; but within the, pasi ten y'ears it has been found wlth in- creain frequency in this country, es in uthe. Southern States. Whetber it has always been or was brought by Italian im-migrants -je not deûinitely known, but that it was brougbt by the immigrants oeems most probable. The oarly symptoms of the dis- ease, which -are very indefinite, cou- sist chiefiy ini a feeling of fatigue after light exertion, slight dyspep- s, great thirst, drynese wn the liroat, ringing in the eare, itching, and mental depreesion. These symp- toms appear usually in the. spring or early summer. They may Iast for a month or two, and then dis- appear, or they may persiet, in which case thb. skin eruption ap- pears.* This begins in a redueue, vith ptif - fiuesa, of the. bands, neck aud other exposed parts, a.coompanied by itcb- ing aud burning, and je followed by chapping aud a bard, dry, ecaly condition- oi the. kin. The. nerv- oue symptoms incresse until there MAY b. trembling or even slight cop1- vulsions; or more eoinmonly, som. legre. of paralysis; and the. mmd gradually veakens until the pati- ent becomes melanoholie, with a tendency to suicide..1 The symptoms may disappear en- tirely with the adveut oi vinter, but usually they reappear in morepro . nounc.d form with the. ret*tù of" warm, weather, ani progre.sivi*ýi iucrease. The. mental s7mptoma ~othse nost .rkne nnu~cssii an s ,mDrigt Tt ierps. utiolg lti «Uae btsi. ha t si u tssa tisa a cri' thse eomnpnY vouluS sot tOuôis lt-ue*r1 would mwasay il»5,. Tison th&a tLWiai rAte ~ ~ De 6MI#tIt5 ent., AU&, "seun,' isfte stu oai(. vas p-Y 4#iai»>'a i o isre eLs u sawu.Prim Lise nafontt .-uortgage. .LA"i-th Mini111 yen , *"a*nvllut vao. Tise mort. gags'* vas etfor, a @xshot tonna ci vAI hoe payable ta a fev inoâsts bul-tise chancos t-batItfi vi»b& pffloff ans Vsry very slîlgii. ini b e s ta itise poa . sca Aemne LThe-lt» Panties te tise mnortgege ae fid eamb IbMis1dn.1 iss az> 0lnounasta'sooe, te foreo, aMdi' «M il tisSa ers dose, tiersWvodSb. s» osai>' mariolte 'theiseplce Atogetboen t tea ever>' uaevt>sattousudamiou-etisat au tvoer vwouluS do ssi teave&. la a vur iltmstoeaierstics ioý hi ls~e a&'s -lastisfet siplu#, tise atile et ýtht. pn<useg lusv. isna rpvlng of a greas rate durtps tb-be pt diecsi Amd as 6, matural, reuI -et tbts grevh -aso ttwm cIfl h*- ThisSosis aver>' substactii e.tulty bçbI*4n, tise sepuaty me wIdesthe b.mot gae 14 haseS<uui so tise îvtàv ust suol mortgage. bas Dotet socit4 lo"s asy*$ug uSuarisr tise ut - to e ve he ai acrc ief pesulastiai s bse aM».rat est oiJte Sa a 154 demusi -or iwelMugi, htasas a resut et ltoreea "MW, 01 t veI* tuthe -00* Wte.s#7 fr fo,. aril-, àhonse me , '. aitb 1à te etý the 1ar-u 714 ts aron,.r' ?.ULI LtpT Lb. blinda 44x"!I the. carPeo-1t Ws sudné i pou ada bousé s»-tssu sunlighat. -nom. la ýW.'

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