Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 175, Decatur, Adams County, 27 July 1953 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller —-i President A. R. Holthouse - Editor J. H. Heller „ Vice-President Chas. Holthouse .1 Treasurer * Subscription Rates: By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00; Six months, 14.25; 3 months, $2.25. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $9.00; 6 months, $4.75; 3 months, $2.50. 'IBy Carrier, 25* cents per week. Single copies, 6 cents.

5 V - ■y-If the post office boosts postage tp four cents, fewer letters may be mailed and more go unanswered. ' ■' .. o o The modern interpretation of - dog days probably is due to the fact that they lead to the period ■when tax officials are dogged with ’ budgets and tax rates. \ ——o o— — Mayor Doan has appointed a four-man committee to determine if the city needs an airport. Composed of Robert Cole, Lewis Jacobs, Andy Appelman and Robert Smith, it will be the duty of the aviatijon commissioners also to investigate possible sites ’ and submit estimates on acquiring of land, operational costs and. income of ah airport. These facts will be submitted to the council and then it will be decided if the city proceeds further on the proposal. Those jiamed to the aviation commission are conscientious ' citizens who will give their assignment earnest and intelligent study and make their recommendations to the city fathers. O Oh— —-- I When the fillin at the city dump is completed, a site should be available to ereit an incinerator, if it is determined that a utility of this nature is hecessary to dispose . of garbage and rubbish. A properly constructed and operated in? cinerator need not be offensive, for all fumes and smoke should be burned and not belched from the chimney. The garbage crematory proposal is one of several launched here following the federal rul- * ing prohibiting the city from delivering garbage to a nearby farm for hog food. Officials are investigating the suggestions with the hope of solving the vexing problem in a satisfactory way aaid at-the same time create a inea.ns Qf disposal to medt future demands in this line, pf municipal service. , \ I —! —o o \ , A new school is being built in New York City, right across the street from the Polo Grounds where the New York Giants play baseball. The school .will be of modern Construction,' surrounded by trees and a playground. Tho. youngsters will not be able to sco the baseball field but they will be able to hear the-crack of bat hit- \ ting ball and the roar of the crowd. One wonders if the school - authorities have thought the matter through. It is temptation enough for a boy to spend his Afternoon in, the classroom when

Early Diagnosis of Toxemia May Save Mother and Infant

By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. I \ IN an era that seems to be primarily concerned with the pros 1 and cons of natural childbirth,| other aspects of pregnancy should | not be overlooked. One of these is the continuous research that has been done on toxemia of pregnancy —a severe condition which sometimes develops in pregnant women. Most toxemias of pregnancy occur during the last few months before the baby is to be delivered. For some unknown reason, poisonous substances are given off in \ toxemia of pregnancy which cause • swelling of the legs, high blood pressure, rapid gain of weight, headaches, and changes in the eyes to occur. It is believed that these poisonous substances, or toxins as they are known, are released from the mother** womb. Infant Mortality High Toxemias can get so severe as to cause convulsions in the mother, and are one of the major causes of death of the mother as well as loss of the infant. The mortality is as high as forty per cent in the infants of mothers suffering from toxemia. It is important that a woman having toxemia should have her case diagnosed as soon as possible because the sooner treatment is instituted, the better the chance of recovery. ;

the ball game is far away. When it is just across the street it may prove to be more than flesh and blood can bear. o o _ U. S. Senator Charles W. Tobey pf New Hampshire, who died in Washington last weekend of coronary thrombosis, was a distinguished member of congress and a militant crusader against crime. He gained nationwide fame in 19&1 during the senate crime commission hearings and feared no criminal. He blasted them to the gutter with his arrow-like words and was able to drive many of the racketeers froim power. The NewHampshire statesman was elected to his third ferm to the senate. He was a leading Republican and his leadership will be greatly missed in the halls of congress. Strenuous work and long hours devoted to legislative matters probably hurried the death of the 73-year old Bible-quoting fighter against crime. — o—o Pioneer Spirit:— The pioneers of the old days packed their w.agons and journeyed into the wilderness. When they got where they wanted to go they unpacked, built cabins, cleared the land, planted crops and settled down. In time settlements and towns grew up. Today the spirit of the pioneers is not dead - but modern pioneers employ different techniques. The town of in Manitoba, Canada, for example, was mpyed 150 miles into the wilderness. its homes and its mining plant are now situated on Lake Lynn, neat new copper and nickel mines which will begin operating shortly. The houses were moved across the ice of the cold Canadian winter on sleighcoasters pulled by tractors. The community church broke through the ice at one point and was tn danger of being lost. Astute nianeßveriibg of the tractor mapaged to save it. Today man, can move to' almost any place pnleafti where is something wßrth producing. Modern devices! have made possibly ventures which the boldest of the pioneers would have been unable to attempt. But one quality which enables men to make these moves is constant, h heritage from their forefathers, ill is the will and the courage that has always spurred men to set out to make with their own hands a new cha’nce for a better life.

Usually, a woman suffering from toxemjia [of pregnancy is hospitalized immediately and put on a low salt diet. She is given sedatives and feedirigs into the vein and also drugs to reduce the high ’ blood pressure. However, this treatment does not always work. Antibiotics of Help It has been found that women suffering from this disease seem to respond to penicillin and the antibiotic drug, terramycin, very readily. It is believed that these drugs rxt as antitoxins and neutralize or eliminate the poisonous substarxes or toxins from the mother’s system. They do not act in their usual manner of germkilling activity. , Up to now, this treatment has proven successful in many cases only after standard methods have been tried. It is believed that, when the giving of this antibiotic occurs early with toxemia, more and more women will recover from it. QUESTION AND ANSWER T. C.: Is there a'fiy value in eye exercises of the muscles of the eye in cases of nearsightedness? Answer: Although certain eye exercises can train a person who is nearsighted to see a little better, the actual deformity in focuaihg is not corrected.

LAND OF THE MORNING CALM n- a

Modern Etiquette BY ROBERTA LEE I

Q. When the brief form of introduction is used, such, as, “Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Smith,” in what way can it be made apparent who is being introduced tp whom? A. The more important person’s name should be accentuated so that it will be as (clear as though the words, “May I present,” were used. Q. When eating a baked potato is it correct to take the potato from the skih and mash it pn the plate? ? A. No; the proper way is to split the potato and then eat it directly from the skin. Q. Whose place is it to set the date of the wedding, the bride or the bridegroom? A. After the prospective bride and bridegroom have decided between themselves that circumstances are favorable for their wedding, it is up to the bride and her mother to decide the exact date. There are 156 major fires out of control in inactive coal deposits throughout the United States, dozen shepe to produce.

T * E J uniper Tree

SYNOPSIS Having imbibed unwisely while attending a convention away from home, successful businessman David Barton awakens unsteadily in a small hotel room. His slumber had been disturbed by bad dreams, but bad drcams had been usual with him ever since the bitterness of grief had so completely engulfed him. It was the grief, he told himself, which caused him to drink too much. He who’d always been a sober fellow! i David's family and friends had begun to worry gravely over his strange conduct and it was proving a new barb in the gentle heart of his good wife, Emily. At home ance more and suffering with a severe cage of "flu" David resolves to be done wi3> the drinking business, now and forever. , CHAPTER FOUR FINALLY, Dave consulted Dr. Elwood, who said: “Would you care to tell me about your son? Or would you rather not, as yet?” Dave said: “I’.ve talked about him ever since he was born, and ever since he died, at school, of a disease we thought was about licked. Pneumonia. I suppose you know my firm sells the drugs that lick it?” “Yes.” •’Perhaps I know what you’re thinking. Pete’s talked with me about it. That’s not the reason. I’m not, I expect, that rational. Os course I can’t help wondering —no, resenting. It’s like, say, you made the best lifebelt in the world and someone you loved drowned wearing it. There have been other cases which didn’t respond, a percentage. The miracle doesn’t always come off. Oh, sure, I asked why about that, too. .Why in, say, a thousand cases, Tim’s? But there Is an answer, you medical men know it. I know it. For it was explained to me.” “Atypical." “T*hat’s it. Atypical. I can take that I can take anything with an answer. But it goes beyond that. Why should Tim’s case be atypical?” “You were going to tell me about Tim,” the doctor* said, not answering. “He was—he’d been —17 for a few weeks, last fall. He would have graduated this past June. My father graduated from Daleway, my brother and 1 did. Family routine. I think Tim was better than any of us. He was all the things that sound sappy and are the reverse—good, kind, decent, fair. He had a sense of justice, and humor to match. He couldn’t gee anyone or anything hurt Took up for kids who couldn’t fight back, and animals ... I haven’t said what he looked like? He was reasonably good looking, I suppose. Perhaps his mother and I thought more than that But not actually. He looked like us belli, and then

THE DEOATVB DAILY DUMOOU7, iMOCATUB, INDIANA

Communique Text TOKYO UP —Text of the official communique on the signing of a Korean armistice today is as follows: ' HEADQUARTERS UNITED NATIONS COMMAND PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE 1445 27 July ; 1953 Immediate Release: Official communique from CINCUNC advance PIO: A military armistice between the United Nations Commapd and the armed forces of North Korea and Conimunist China was signed initially at 10:01 a.m. at Panmunjom Korea, by Lt. Gen. William K. Harrison Jr., representing the U. N. ■ Command, and General Nam II for the Communist forces. General Harrison signed the first of the IS documents, 6 in English 6 in Chinese and 6 in Korean, at 10:01 and the last at 10:12. Nine of the documents were then returned to Munsan-Ni, headquarters for the UNC advance, where they were signed by General Mark W. Clark, commander in chied of the United Nations Command. General Clark began signing the documents at 1:01 p.m. and finished at 1:08. p,m. The armistice becomes effective at 10:00 p.m. 27 July 1953.

again, not As tall as I am, and thin. I could tell you about him till Doomsday.” ’’l’m here to listen.” Sooner or later he. and Dr. Elwood had to get around to Emily. Nothing so far had been as bad, yet even in trying to explain it there was a certain lightening of the burden, in itself a minor miracle. Dave talked with silences between sentences, and the doctor listened, his bright blue eyes concentrated on the man across the desk. After a whije it was he U’ho talked and his patient who listened. / A week later, in Elwood’s office, he said: “I’m not coming back. I’ve a lot to thank you for, you’ve helped me more than I can say in one, to me, very important respect. I’m grateful. But now I have to go it alone for a time.” He talked with Emily and George, took a leave of absence, and drove alone to Vermont to see his mother in the white house in which she had been born. Her distant cousin Kate was there, brisk and cheerful, and, said Mrs. Barton, in welcome, “We’re glad you came, it’s about time.” Isabel Barton was tall and spare}, She stood and sat erect. Her eyes and plentiful hair were gray. There was humor on her lips and in her face great strength, reserve and courage, and hard-won serenity. Dave stayed three days, spent in good talk and company and blessed by good food. She told him, “Dave, you can’t bury yourself with Tim.” “I know. But I have,” he said hopelessly. “Roots. Yours in Tim. You had to pull them up, but you didn’t. I loved your father, and I love you boys and the children; and many others. But I’m not rooted in one person any more than I’m footed in one spot. The real roots go with you everywhere. In God, they are. I tried* to teach you that. Pity you didn’t learn it” When Dave was leaving, his mother said: "Give my love to Emily and aIL You’ll be home tonight ?” “Can’t say, mother. I may stop off at Daleway.” “If you do,” she said, “remember me to Dr. Newton. Want me to call Emily?” . | “No, dear, thanks — I might change piy mind. I’ll call her from some plftce along the roAd.” Two hour? later, from a drug store, he called Emily to say that he would break the trip at tse school "That's fine; 1 she said.

U. N. Assembly Meets Aug. 17 On Problems Set Up Conference - To Implement Triice Signed For Korea UNITED NATIONS, N. Y..UP--The United Nations general assembly is on call today to‘meet Aug. 17 and set up the Far-East-ern political conference which may determine the success of failure of the Korean truce agreement. General assembly president Lester »B- Pearsoh of Canada issued the call to the 60 member nations by Cablegrams Sunday night.. He acted within moments aftek he had been notified officially by Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr!, chief delegate of the United Sta'les. that the truce had been signed at Panmunjom. “The signing of the armistice.” Pearson said, "is the end of one chapter —of the bloodshed and conflict — but it is only the beginning of a new and difficult one — the making of peace.” Lodge delivered the official -notification of the truce to U. ♦N. secretary-general Dag Hammafskjold and Pearson here at 9:47 ptm. e.d.t.. in a letter addressed to ’Hammarskjold. Pearson promptly notified The U. N.’s 60 members that the general assembly would meet at 3 p.m.. three weeks from today.i The assembly will set the |ct ual date and site for the political conference, which the truce agreement specifies must begih within 90 days by Oct. 26. It will also designate the countries to participate in the conference And it is expected to set up \at least a general agenda, the specific terms of which may be left tb the conferees themselves. V ! ,/ "There are a number of decisions that will have to be made by the assembly before this political conference meets,” Pearton said. "There is also the need lor further V. N, action to aid the Korean people in the restoration and reconstruction of their ravaged land. ' \ ' Hammarskjold paid tribute to the men and women "who have risked or given their lives in the defense of the principles of the U. N. charter.” "The agreements which have

Daleway was old, the heart of an old village. According to no particular plan, the gray-stone buildings rose on either side of the road. They were in classic good taste, enlivened by Ivy, still green, by woodbine starting to glow ruby-red. t He stopped the car by the roadside across from the building that contained. senior classrooms, library, and the Head’s study. Up the street, the chapeL There had been a memorial service there for Tim. Dave had not been present ... on that day, he was jn New York and sodden. Emily had gone, with excises, George, and Maria. Beyond the chapel was the infirmary, which now had a new synroom with a bronze plate bearing Tim's name upon one wall A gift from Tim’s parents. : , 1 didn’t attend the service, so I gave a sunroom. He looked at the buildings, the people intent upon their own concerns. He knew that Old Boys ivere welcome here, whenever the Head was in residence. Perhaps (Dave hoped) he wasn’t now. If he isn’t, I’ll leave a message and go on. If he is, he’ll expect me to stay. I suppose he’U put me up in Goethe Hall; there’s always a room there for visiting firemen. He’d never let me go to the inn. Almost a year ago when he and Emily had stayed at Daleway been — how many days ? two? three?—in t the Headmaster’s home. He got crossed the road, climbed the bank, and went Up the path a little way. Thon stopped, shaking and sickened. Why did ,1 come? he askefd himself in desperatioxi, and turned to retrace his steps.; why am I here? It was too late; someone stopped and spoke his name; a middle-aged woman, slender and hatless, wearing the sort of tweed 'suit that during her 20 years as (the Head’s secretary she had always worn. “Mr. Barton," she cried, and put out her hand, "this must be telepathy. There’s a letter to you on my desk, waiting for signature. Come right in with me. Dr. Newton has callers but they won’t stay long—and he’U be, so happy to see you.” “1 was Just passing by, Miss Stark,” he said, "so stopped,, bn the off chance that he’d be back.” “It wasn’t a chance, at this time of year, as you should know. Mrs. Newton is still in Maine closing the cottage. And parents are arriving like locusts." Be

Bi: y ‘y 4 '“ • - ——2— — J r... ' ' ' I ; ■ ''' ■ i \ 1 ' i ‘ J f A NCW WUTISH DELTA-WINO JET PLANE, the P-1 ILA, Is shown after completing a successful test flight at 3 Boscombe Down, England. Powered by a turbo-jet engine, the plane will be used in aerodynamic research f at or near the speed of sound. A new feature of the craft is air brakes. (International Radiophoto)

b eii reached now open the way for the .strengthening !of collective action for bringing assistance to the people of Korea,” he said. "The I). N. will devote the best of its endeavors to the tasks of rbcpncllmtion and rehabilitation thsi tie ahead.” , ' Sir Qladwyn Jebb, chief of the < British ; delegation, said: “The jhistofic and indeed endujr- ; ing significance of the armistice is that aggression has been defeated |y the U. N. and has bedn shown npt to pay.” , ■ Rajesjiw-ar Dayal, chief of the ; Indian Relegation, which fathered 'the compromise prisoner-of-war formula on yrtiich the final truce was! based, said: "We are gratified that it has been given to India to make a humble contribution toward bringing about a cease-fire.” 0 s 1 ' Great Dane Is Both I Baby-Sitter And Cop * Grand Rapids Dog Is Good Caretaker / GRAND RAPIDS. Mich UP — A huge Gre|t Dane who decided on his own to be a combination baby-sitter and canine cop had the praise today of everyone on his street. . .He escorts children to school, "baby :sits” for three neighbor children, and accompanies a partially crippled woman to and from work. , c One-hundred thirty-five pounds of fury and tenderness, depending on the situation at hand, "Ptd” serves as Miller Commnity’k canine policeman. If a stranger comes into the neighborhood. Pid follows hi ni around.; until some one gives the high sign the person is okay. At night he patrols the street. There hasn't been a break-in in th§ area since the huge dog took on his duties ; about a year and one-half a&o.. < J When school is in . session. Pid escorts, 3o or mftre children across the btfsy street each day. He’ll take only two at a time because he insists the children .hold-.on to his collar. When school is over, he’s right there at the corner waiting for, his charges. Pid is 2 1 j> yiars old and owned by Fptest Simmons, operator of a roofing company. Simmons said Pid baby-sits for two oti his grandchildreii "on a regular basU.” ““Pid! is the most wonderful 1 friend we’ve ever had,” said; a wonjan w|io is recovering from polio. In addition to taking cave of their children, the dog accompanies the woman Mrs. Proos to her parttime job at a furniture company. > He shows up at her doorstep 10 niiiiuitek befqre she is ready to leave and is waiting at the office to make certain she gets home.all right, . His owner said Pid never hits been trained in any of his duties. “He (just likes people and this is jiist his own d°gß ie wa P showing U ” —— r- ' : \ !I ' ; ! 20 Years Ago I | Today I (y | j j ■■■■■» July 27 4- Lew G. Ellingliam, publisher of Fort Wayne Jpurhal; Gazettel is appointed a memibeT of cjommittee of the Indiana public works t organization. k Phil Sauer and WRliam (jolch’u go to a point 12 miles west of Roanoke in Huntington county to remodelza large dairy 'barn. 'Mr. and Mrs. David Adams purcbkse the Jeff Klopfenstein farm, . 95 acres,;.for $71.50 per acre. Richarß King, 3, has stomach punctured by falling through a i glass show case at the Christian • church. ( 1 t-i 1 French: Quinn speaks ajt Geneva Urging CTinvletion of plans for Limberlogt lake. Man Killed As Car Hits Truck, Tree LAFAYETTE, Ind. UP —James R, Downirtg, 26. Clarks Hill, was . killed today when his auto glanced off a parked truck at Clark# Hill, traveled 22a feet and smashed into a tree.

1 1 _L yL 1 Stopping Aggression In Korea Costly To World

WASHINGTON UP ; —Stopping Coniinfinisi aggjressiorf in Korea cost the free world billions of dollars, tfensj of thousands of lives, and measßrless miserly. Exactly ; how much it cost the United) States to fight the Korean war pi-oba’bly can never be determined. (The actual fighting costs are alt miked up with the generalcosts of the nation’s efforts to get its defenses in to cope with the thteatj of Solviet aggression. The; best defense department estimate is that Korea cost sls*000.00ß.p0d. World War I cost about $25.O«0.Oo(i,OOO and Wdrld War H Eveß harder [to es|iipate than the money costs} are ihe costs iff terms iof ( human suffering. More than three years of v|ar left millions of i Koreans homeless and their land: devasl ated. Theß there ard the 4’ ou oded.and crippled pf many nations whose sons fought in Korea. There are military |-asualty statistics, tljough they i|ell little of pain and jsuffering/ A)uerican battle (casualties f alone, through Friday. July 24. totaled 139.272, including 24,965 dead. 101,368 wounded,! 2,935 caplured, 8,476 —[ — L 4 Cooling Air Blows Over Great Plains Hat Humid Weather J Elsewhere In U. S. By UNItED PRESS Cpol afr blew across the Great Plains tqday, but elsewhere the Weather Stayed hot ai|d humid. Early hioaning temperatures in the 50s \yerp reported in Montana, the Dakotas an I Minnesota. Hut. with the ’exception of areas in? thefar west land northwest, 75 was a common morning- 1 , In most areas the weather was generally fair. Showers and thunderstorms were in Western New York and ja ; . few light showers ; occurred ih Northern Illinois, Florida ahd in the Roekids’. Fog spiead over Southern Wfe consin and along adjacent are#s. In Ipkß, William Tibken, 54. of Wiot. was struck by ijghtning and killed as be fished neaj- Ruthven. ■ To the (north residents of Eagle Lake, Minn., were ? battered by high winds that came after a tornado ripped! a six-slock ’area in the town Satiirdav. v , j 7-4-4 Serving In Korea Army (chief warrintj officer Charles J| Knapp, son ■ of Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Knapp, .Laßue, recently arrived in Korda for service with |the 999th arinored field artillery battalion, past of the I corps. ; i Knapp, whose wife. Catheri-ie. lives in :Gelnevi„ is adjutant IL the battalion. (Entering the ‘army in 1936. Knapp completed basic trainiug in Hawaii and served in Europe dur ing World War 11. Before his ra? cent assigumeut he we# stationed at Fort Rosencrans, Calif- He wears the bronze star medal with oak leaf cluster, Euioppan-African-LMiddle (Eastern theater ribbon, good conduct medal. Ajmerican defense service medal and Wor.d War II Victory medal, i Trade in < a good Town —Decatur ““ —— - - *

SALE calenoar JULY 2s-f~7:.J0 p. m. ©laddh Buchahan. 5 miles south of Willshire, 0., ' then M mile west. Bred Sow Bate. Paul Good'.. A net. 1 ‘ JULY Moore. Persona) Property and Household Goods. South H Main Street. |Payue, Ohio, S:3O P. M. Midwest Realty Auction Cc., J. E. Sanmann. Auctioneer. JULY 30—6:30 p m. Mr. & Mrs. Pau) Strickler, owners. X. 13th St. between Jackson and Nuttmau -Ave. on rear lot of Zcsto and appliance jauctioni • Gerald Strickler, D. S. Blair.* nuctioijeers. C. W. Kent, Sales Mgr. JULY 81-*-10:00 a', m. Mr. & Mra. Verpon Davis, owners, Bigin. Ohio, whkh is W miles south of Van Wert on Rt. 127 to Rt 81 then 6 milcs castJ Complete close out sale of groceries, equipment. hardware, plumbing suppjioa gud furniture. Gerald > D. sS. Blair, C W. Kent, sales mgr. AUG. 3—Charles C. Crduip, 418 East Second street. Hartford City, Ind. iGood Six Room Home and Two Lots. 6:30 P. M. Midwest Realty: Adelin Co.. J. F. t-aumanu. AucU

I .. i . ■■ ■ MONDAY, JULY 2T,

missing, and 1,525 previously reported; captured or missing and since returned to duty/ Pentagon sources unofficially estimate South Korean casualties at more than 184,000 and those of other : United Nations forces at around 13,500-befdre the ■ heavy fighting of recent weeks.! Thele figures add up to more than 336,772 casualties for all U. N. forces. i k-; I- j V . The enemy, however, suffered more, according to the most recent U. S. estimate;. As of last April 20,* according to this estimate, Korean and Chinese Communist casualties totaled 1,885,000. But by far the greatest number of casualties were among the innocent victiips of modern warfare—the civilians. Ah estimated 2,000,000 South Korean men, women, and children became casualties as the war raged up and down their little peninsula. Half of them were killed. Some 10,000,000 have been estimated to have been left homeless. North Koreans mtist have snf- ! sered comparably, but there are . no statistics on them here. o 0 I Household Scrapbook I I BY ROBERTA LEE 0 o Easy Baking > Potatoes can be baked in a jiffy instead of the usual long period, if you'soak them in hot w*ater for 16 or. 15 minutes before putting j them into the oven. Slicing the • ends off beforehand produces ex- • tra ihealy baked potatoes. .White to Black 1 To' dye white shoes black, try • lining quick-drying black enamel .paint.- This often wears better than’ liquid or 1 paste dyes, and 1 doesn’t wear off so, easily. • Ironing Curtains ( Ironing straight edges on long [ is difficult. But you’ll . find it easier if you iron them ' J slightly damp, and if you pin one 1 eijd of the curtain to the end of I tRe ironing board and hold the other end with your hand so. you stretch it tight as you iron..

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