Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 173, 19 July 1906 — Page 2
Page Two. The Richmond Palladium. Thursday, July 19, 1905.
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rWELVE liIHGS MID NEITHER Willi BaaaBBBBBBBaant Darkness Puts End to a Battle Royal Between Chicago and New York. NERVE RACKING GAME SINCINNATl TAKES A TEN INNING CONTEST FROM BOSTON PITTSBURG AND BROOKLYN ALSO WINNERS. NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING. Woo. Lost. ret. Chicago &9 24 .711 New York 51 28 .646 Pittsburg 51 29 .637 Philadelphia 41 -42 .494 Cincinnati 37 47 .440 St. I,oull 32 53 .376 Brooklyn 27 56 .323 Publisher' Pressl Chicago, July 18. The Chicago find New York Nationals battled for 12 Innings today to a tie. darkness putting an end to the contest. Both Bides had a chance to win out in the 12th, the Giants having three men on hases and two out, but Ames, who was at the bat, struck out. $n Chicago's half the Colts had 2 on bases, with none out, hut Sharp fielding retired the Bide. Score: R. H. E. Ny 30000000000 03 5 2 Ch 00003000000 0--3 3 0 "Wlltse, Ames and Howerman: Lundgren, Taylor and Kline. Umpires Johnstone and O'Day. , REDS IN TEN INNINGS. . Cincinnati, O., July 18. It took ten Innings today for the Cincinnati Nationals to defeat the Bostons, the Reds batting out the victory in the tenth aided by the Beaueaters errors. Score: ! ' R. H. E. Bos ... 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 04 12 3 Cin ... 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 15 9 1 Dorner, Lindaman. O'Neill and NeedhanV. Ewing, Frazer and Schlel. .Umpire Conway. PITTSBURG HUNTING NEW YORK Pittsburg. July 18. Although the Philadelphia Nationals outbatted the Plttsburgs today, the Pirtes took advantage of the Quakers misplay and won out. Score: R H. E. Phil 00101000 13 10 5 Pitts ... 42000003 x 9 8 1 Lush and Donovan; Leever and Phelps; Umpires Carpenter and Klem CLOSE GAME AT ST. LOUIS. St. Louis, July JS. Hitting the ball hard In the first and sixth innings to day gave the Brooklyns a lead of one run; which they maintained to the end and defeated the St. Louis Na tionals. Score: R. H. E. Brook .. 30000300 00 14 3 St. L. ... 0 2 1 1 0 1 0 0 05 7 9 ,Scanlaa, Stricklett and Bergen; Brown, Murray and Grady. Umpire Emslle. New Menu Cards. r The lunch counter at the Pan Handle station has assumed new dig nity and metropolitan air in the ac quirement of new menu cards. One can now order anything from stewed prunes, to White Rock lemonade. FREIGHT CArV QFF TRACK Accident on Jackson's Hill Early this Morning Caused Slight Delay In Traffic. J. 4 Traffic was delayed on the Indiana polls division of the Pennsylvania jllnes by the derailment of a car load 'of steel rails at Jackson's Hill just .west of Centervillo early this morning Second division of freight train No. 81 bnrsted an air hose throwing the rear trucks of a flat car from the tracks. The wreck train was called and after an hour's work the car was put on the track again and the train ordered on. The train was in charge of Conductor Todd and Engineer Anderson. Pearls are measured by the grain. Three and one-bulf grains go to a carat The Tro Cent Flee. .The bronze two cent piece was first coined in 1804, being authorized by act Of congress In the same year. The Issuance of this coin was discontinued Feb, J2, 1S73. The Turquoise. The turquoise was once supposed to have the power of indicating the condition of the absent beloved. While the blue remained clear in its color all was well. When it turned dull and freeu disease was near, and when the groen predominated death was at hand. Er of the Martyrs. The "era of the martyrs," a famous era in use In the early church, commemorates the tenth and last great persecution by Diocletian, beginning Feb. 23, 284 A. D. British Crown Roby. The ruby in the center of the Maltese cross on the top of the British crown Is the stone that was given to the Black Prince by King Pedo of Castile after tbe battlo of Xejara, IJenry V, of England woro Jt ia his helmet at Aglnecurt , KNOLLENBER 5 pieces Union Ca per yd Great .Value, 'SALE U only 36cts
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Baseball Results - Yesterday. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Brooklyn G; St Louis 5. Boston 4; Cincinnati 5, ten innings. Philadelphia 3; Pittsburg 9. New York 3; Chicago 3, 12 innings, darkness.
AMERICAN LEAGUE. Cleveland 4; New York 6. St. Louis 4; Philadelphia 2. First game. St. Louis 5; Philadelphia 10. Second game. Chicago 3; Washington 6. Detroit 2; Boston 5. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Toledo 15; Milwaukee 2. Toledo 1; Milwaukee 6. Second game. Columbus 2; Minneapolis 1, twelve innings. Indianapolis 2; St. Paul 11. Louisville 4; Kansas City 1. AMERICAN ASS'H JLUB STANDING. Won. Lost PCL .622 .552 .539 .523 .523 .437 .407 .388 Columbus 56 34 Milwaukee 48 39 Minneapolis 48 41 Toledo 45 41 Louisville 45 41 Kansas City 38 49 St. Paul 35 51 Indianapolis ....... 33 2 AT MILWAUKEE. (First Game.) R. H. E. ,..0 4201260 015 11 4 ..1 1000000 02 4 4 Tol. Mil. Cammitz and Abbott; Goodwin and Beville. Umpire Egan. (Second Game.) R. H. E. Tol .. .. 00100000 01 8 0 Mil .. .. 20021100 x 6 13 2 Sutthoff and Land; Sage and Be ville. Umpire, Egan. AT MINNEAPOLIS. R. H. E. 00100000000 12 10 2 .0 0000100000 01 8 3 Col. Min Veil and Blue; Thomas and Yeager. umpire, Owen. AT ST. PAUL. R. H. I 02 8 x 11 16 Ind 0 0100001 St. P.. ..0 1 0 3 5 1 0 1 Thielman and Holmes; Coy and Drill. Umpire, Longley. AT KANSAS CITY. R. H. E r-ouis .. ..2 0000002 04 5 1 Kan C .. 00010000 01 4 5 Elliott and Stoner; Durham and Leahy. Umpire, Kane. Honey. If honey becomes sugared or candled place the Jar in hot water for several hours. The honey will become smooth and clear. Be careful to keep out every drop of. water. ROMAN MILLIONAIRES. T&fe Phenomenon of Mammoth Fortones Not a Sew Tuingr. While It Is not a very tangible con eolation to those of us who belong to the less favored class commercially, there Is at least a sort of historic com fort in knowing that the phenomenon of mammoth fortunes is not a new thing. A magazine writer goes back to an dent Rome, when there were no railroads or trusts or corporations, and gives some figures on the individual fortunes of that day which might look attractive even to some of our modern plutocrats. Seneca, the philosopher and author, was worth $17,500,000; Lentulus, the augur, $10,600,000; Crassus, the poli tician who formed with Caesar tod Porapey the first triumvirate, had i landed estate of more than $8,000,000 the emperor Tiberius left a fortune of $118,000,000, which the depraved Calig ula got rid of in less than a year. A dozen others had possessions that ran yinto the millions. It is true that these Romans did not "make' these fortunes in wuat we would call regular commercial opera tlons. But they got the money, and they held on to it, which is about all that can safely be said of possessions that run Into seven figures in any age or country. And, speaking of campaign coatribu tlons and so forth. Julius Caesar once presented the consul Paulus with $200, 000 merely as a token of esteem and coupled with the hope that Paulus would do the right thing in a certain political matter that was pending. The argument was effective with Paulus, and neither he nor Caesar suffered any in popularity. There are many things under the sun that are not new. Omaha World Herald. The Fashionable Dinner. Eight men exclusive of the butler are required to serve a dinner of twenty four covers, one being a flowed for ev ery three diners. Auother is stationed In the pantry to ruu in" the courses, Absolute order and silence reign among these men, who perfectly under stand the butler's cabalistic signs. Electric signals pass constantly be tween chef and butler. From the seat ing of guests until the ladies leave not more than eighty-five niinufs should elapse, for long dinners are considered bad form. Upon these occasions scarcely a member of the domesti corps escapes some special duty. The housemaids assist the pantry maid. After each course twenty-four silver plates and countless small silver must bo carefully cleansed, wiped very dry and then polished with chamois before being put away. Nearly 200 pieces of engraved crystal ware must be washed and polished, and it is too costly and brittle to be hastily bandied. Every body's Magazine.
General..
HEW YORK WINS BY TIMELY HITS Cleveland Blues Fall Down to the New York Highlanders by Close Score. MACK'S TEAM DIVIDES TAKE ONE FROM ST. LOUIS AND LOSE THE OTHER BOSTON BEAT DETROIT AND WASHING TON WON. AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING,
Won. Lost. ret. Philadelphia 48 30 .615 New York 47 30 .610 Cleveland 46 32 .589 Chicago 44 35 .557 Detroit , 41 38 .519 St. Louis 41 39 .500 Washington 28 50 .35n Boston 20 61 .247
Publishers' Press! New York, July 18. Bunching of hits, gave the game to the New York Americans today while Orth kept the Cleveland's hits well scattered. Score: R. H. E. Clev .... 02000001 14 12 1 NY 00130020 x 9 2 Bernhard, Buelow and Bemis; Orth and Kleinow. Umpire O'Loughlin. SPLIT EVEN, DOUBLE HEADER Philadelphia July 18. The St Louis and Philadelnhia Americans splft even on a double header today, the Browns winning the first after a close contest, and the Athletics hit ting the ball hard in the second, Scores: (First Game.) P.. H. E St. L . .. 0 0 0 0 0 .. 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 24 8 3 Phil 1 1 0 02 4 2 Powell, Jacobson and O'Connor; Plank and Powers. Umpires Sherldan and Hurst. (Second Game.) R. H St. L. 0 1 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 5 10 Phil .. 00104320 x 10 12 Smith and Rickey; Coombs, Bender and Schreck. Umpires Hurst and Sheridan. HIT BALL AT RIGHT TIME. Boston, July 18.-rThe Boston Americans hit the ball at the right time today and by bunching their hits won from the Detroits. Score: R. H. E Det 00200000 02 7 2 Bos 0030002. 0 Xr 5 4 c Mullen and Schmidt; Dineen and Armbruster. Umpires Evans and Conno1 ly. I f SHARP FIELDING GAME. Washington, July 18. In a sharp fielding game the Washington Ameri cans defeated the Chicagos by out batting the White sox. Score: . R. H. E Chi 20000010 03 6 Was 02000400 x 6 8 0 Owen and Sullivan; Falkkenberg and Heydon. Umpire Connor. The Motor Armchair. Anybody who has had a good, case of seasickness must have felt that he would welcome the electric chair as a relief. Now an electric chair for. sea sickness has been tested on an English channel steamer and an ocean liner, You sit in a snue armchair. A motor under the seat is connected with the ship's electric current. You sit and take vibratory treatment. Up and down and crosswise you are shaken. Most Bitters need but one treatment. Their tendency to seasickness is vibrated out of them. Some need a second sitting. A few are seasick as soon as their treatment ends. It is a preventive, mark you, not a cure. The theory Is that seasickness is essentially a nerv ous malady, and that vibration reduces the nervousness. Certainly imagination and expectation have much to do with the disorder. Blessings on the new armchair if It can block quick coming seasickness. But many believe and many doubt. Everybody's Magazine. Tongrh Greenbacks. A little incident showing the genu ineness and enduring quality of the paper on which our greenbacks are printed occurred up in the Maine woods last winter. Three years ago lumberman who had been given a ten dollar bill on his wage account lost the money on his way home. One day in January last a friend found the bill in an open field, where it had been drop ped, still intact and easily recognlzabl after having been drenched ln the rains, frozen by the snows and bleach ed in the sun for three years. Being re stored to its ' original owner, the bill was sent to the United States treasury, where it was promptly redeemed In new paper. Leslie's Weekly. In Albania. In Albania the men wear petticoats and the women wear trousers. The women do all the work, and their husbands attend to the heavy standing around. Diamond Ink. V So called diamond ink for writing on glass Is a compound of fluoric acid and barium. The latter has no effect. It being simply a white powder to give body to the acid. The ink can be used with a rubber hand stamp, and It should be allowed to remain fifteen minutes, when the bnfjum will brush off. leaving the derff n on the glass. N BERG'S SALE Carpet Bargains now See them I. '
KNQLME
Some gTTjTt heins offer&l?
Trie: MODERN TOriFZDO.
Its Wonderful Mechanism and How It la Operated. The principle of the torpedo is the placing of a very large charge of high explosive In a steel case fairly alive with mechanism and so ingenious that the missile fired from a tube with a small charge of cordite or gunpowder will automatically direct Itself to a given target and there explode. The Whitehead torpedo of today is a steel cigar or automatic porpoise shaped weapon or projectile from twelve to seventeen feet long and eighteen inches in diameter at its widest. When ready for firing even a small one will weigh over half a ton. They are deliv ered iu five sections, which contain up ward of 2,000 pieces of machinery. The wet gun cotton In the "war head" is inserted in slabs, each with a hole in its center to receive the core of dry gun cotton directly connected with the detonating primer, which contains fulminate of mercury and a percussion cap. In front of the primer is screwed the water "uose" a very sensitive nose which operates automatically when the weapon strikes and sets off the whole charge. Behind the war head comes the cham ber containing the compressed air that drives this singular projectile through the water. Into this chamber is pumped the air at a pressure of 1,500 pounds to the square inch. And this escaping through the valve leading to the little engines provides the motive power. Next comes the mechanism which au tomatically regulates the depth of the torpedo during its run. This ingenious apparatus has been kept a great secret and sold in turn to the various nations of the world. Not far from the tail of the torpedo are placed the driving en gines. There is also a controlling valve, which can be arranged so as to close automatically after the weapon has run a certain distance, thus obviating a futile explosion in the event of the tor pedo missing its target. At the end of the tail comes the rudder, which keeps the torpedo I straight. But the most remarkable piece of mechanism is the gyroscope, like a child's top. It is set automatic ally by tho release of a spring a mo ment or two after the torpedo is shot from its tube. It is the duty of this little device to correct the torpedo's course if it deviates in the slightest degree from its instructions. France leads the world with her tor pedo flotillas. Great Britain possesses about 110 torpedo boats of the lirst class, 114 "destroyers," 110 second class boats and 29 submarines built or build ing. Every nation is giving great atten tion to its torpedo boats. Even China j has 44 of the first class and 50 second class torpedo craft. Exchange. Passing of the Period. "What has happened to our old friend the period?" remarked a man who observes little things and has a" habit of reading advertisements. "It seems to have dropped out of use almost completely in the setting up of advertisements lately. And to any one who pays attention to punctuation the absence of the full stop puzzles him a good deal. "Here's a book ad., for Instance. Reading it as it is punctuated, it gives you reason to believe that in addition to the author saying several compli mentary things about his own story he asks you if you've read it, advises you to and tells you what Its price is. Of course I know they want you to buy their books, but I never saw one doing this in an advertisement before. "Printers tell me it's the latest style in composition to omit the period. If it is It's the silliest fashion I've observed in a long while, and I'll bet that when that particular author sees that ad. he'll think so too." New York Tress. Kongo Punishment. A missionary recently returned from the region of upper Kongo, in Africa, says that he saw there a curious platform thirty feet high erected in front of the head sentry's house. The latter informed the missionary that it was a large stage from which to shoot leopards, but natives told him that it was a torture platform. Unfortunates who did not bring in sufficient quantities of rubber were first beaten, sometimes al most to death, and then taken to the top of the structure and compelled to gaze at the sun until relatives brought the necessary amount of rubber as re demption. Sarasate, Who Sever Practices. Sarasate, the great violinist, is in one respect very fortunate among musicians. JIe knows nothing whatever of the drudgery and weariness of prac ticing. Most well known singers and great executants go on practicing with more or less regularity all their lives. Not so Pablo Sarasate. lie takes up his violin for his own amusement, but j his fluency and facility are such that he can dispense with the irksome daily task of playing to keep his hand in. Tainted Money. The really unwholesome money, our greasy paper currency, tainted with a tangible and offensively pungent taint, has long been a fertile subject for the pens of public sanitarians and hygienists. The carriage of infectious diseases by these omnipresent and ubiquitous microbe stages, the dollar bills, is far more than a possibility. New York Globe. The American Jew. Says Jacob II. Schiff of New York, the eminent Jewish philanthropist: "It Is my conviction that the crossing of the different types of Jew, particular ly of the Russian and the German Jew, now beginning to go forward in this country, is destined in the course of the next fii'ty years to produce the finest type of all times the American Jew," A Qnatat Old Boole A descendant of the ancjent Babylo-i nians, Mrs. Annie Najarian of Nashua, N. II., has In her possession a book written in the language of the race and supposed by her to be dated many years before the Christian era. The book is 13 inches long. 8 Inches wide' and 5 inches thick. The covers are made of black walnut covered with leather. The leaves of the book are not of paper, but are made of some kind of skin. The printing is hand work and Is legible. The book Is believed to be a history and combination dictionary j and grammar of the ancient Babylo nians.
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NEGROES WANTED TO LYNCH NEGRO They Were Prevented From Doing so by the Prisoner Being Taken Away. WAS A BRUTAL MURDER NEGRO AT LYNNWOOD, PA., BEAT A COLORED MAN OVER THE HEAD WITH A STOVE LEG AND KILLED HER. Publishers' Press Wilmington, Del., July IS. En raged by the brutal murder last even ing of Jennie Jones, a negro woman, by William Johns, a negro, one hundred and fifty Wilmington negroes this afternoon decided to go to Lynnwood, Pa., where Johns had been arrested and commited to jail and lynch him. Johns killed the Jones girl by beating her over; the head with a stove leg. The Wilmington police learned of the lynching exposition and notified the Lynnwood authorities who remov ed Jones from the rickety jail at that place to the Chester. Pa., city prison. The Wilmington police are keeping a sharp lookout to prevent the lynching party from leaving Wilmington in a body. Johns will be brought here tomor row under a heavy guard and confined in the county workhouse pending trial. It was from this workhouse that the negro White was taken by a mob several years ago and burned at the stake for the assault and murder of Miss Bishop. Mrs. J. W. Phels. Sr.. left yesterday to visit her son in Memphis, Tenn., and other points of the South. Tammany Wigwam. The cornerstone of the present Tam many wigwam in Fourteenth street, New York, was laid July 4, 18G7. The cornerstone of the first Tammany building was laid May 12, 1811, twentyone years after the organization of the Tammany society, or Columbian order. IUee. Rice is less nutritious than wheat. Rice is made more digestible by being kept. It should not be eaten for some months after being gathered. When the Fire Is Low. If ycur coal lire is a little low so that you cannot see any fire don't put on oil or paper, but get your sugar bowl and put on two or three spoonfuls. If it doesn't blaze you will know it is out. but if there is any fire the sugar will find it. X la Kara. It is estimated that the cataract of Niagara is 31,000 years old. The height of the falls was at one period 420 feet. It is now 160 feet. An Emergency Solder. In case of a sudden leak and when it It quite evident that the plumber will not be as impatient to get to you as you are to have him mix some yellow soap and jvhiting with enough water to make a thick paste and stop the leak yourself. It will do temporarily as well as solder. Bad For the Good. All the good Roman emperors had very bad wives! Psclfic Moments. Frederick III. of Germany was styled "the pacific" on nccount of his dislike to resort to war aB a means of settling international differences. Olaus III. of Norway bore the same title for a similar reasoa. The Double Eagle. The twenty dollarigold piece was authorized by act of congress March 3, 1S49, and its coinage was begun in 1850. V h Handball. . Handball is among the oldest of our games. According to Homer, it originated' about the time of the fall of Troy, and though it has passed through many changes, its principle "are much the same as when it wapayed by the ancients. KNOLLEMERG'S SALp Buy a nice $T.0O Rocker for 3.18. See them in the Annex, window.' s. ,
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Uneepa Biscuit the soda cracker that contains in the most propeviy balanced proportions a grealer amount of nutriment than any
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NATIONAL BISCUIT-COMPANY WANTED. WANTED 1 00 boys to chase balloons Saturday afternoon. See later announcement. It WANTED Dishwasher at 501 N. Street. 1S-3 WANTED A Girl for housework, 408 S. 15th. WANTED A girl at 46 St. for housework no was FOR 6 Richmond propert a specialty. Porterfleld. Kelly Block. Phone S2y. tt FOR SALE Columbia Seed Wheat, Agnes Gaar, Farm, R. R. No. 5. 15-7t FOR SALE Lot 27 Rliss addition, West Richmond. Inquire 326 N. 14 street. 13-lwk. FOR SALE A splendid 1 acre tract . with good brick house of 8 rooms, barn and fine orchard, situated in an improved eastern part ,pf the city. Address Lock Box 68'' city. Everybody buys property from Woodhurst. 913 Main St Telephone 491. june5 tf FOR RENT Fufhished rdilns at the Grand for gentlemen only. tf FOR RENT A fiat of 5 rooms, centrally located. Call Dr. Walls. 21 S. 10th street.- tf
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Quick Delivlery... 5N many cases means disalVointment your groceries fall to arrive when they were Jlromised. We make a specialty of prompt delivery. Phone us llmr trial order your next will
be permanent. FINE FBUITS-FRI
A FEWVPECIALS
New- Potatoes, nice and large f 1.25 bu; Green Beans, home grown, 10c 14 pk; New large Pineapplls, 20c size, 15c: Plenty of Celery, Cucumbers, Radishes, Oniois, Beets, Peaches and
Plums. Everything in season. 19 Lbs. Granulated Sugar $.00
Phone 1660 O'Learw's 1029 Main.
Horn Phone 593 J. H. R Parlor furniture, Mattresses Couches, Easy Chairs, Etc. : Farmers' Suimpav Richmond Pallaa Is the only pa'publlshed in Rich-; d on Saturday i which react! b the people living: on the rura routes for Sunday.. Mail for ruf U free delivery not deliverej on Sunday, therefore Saturd morning's Palla-i dium is thd only local paper j which Is d ered before Mon-: day. joves conclusively This fact the value of he Palladium as a medium In aching the rural routers. 8a rday morning's BsssssnSBnnsBnnnasBSnsnnnBBSBss , the only paper Palladium ii they have to ead on Sunday the day thej have the most time to read.!
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LOST. LOST Lady's watch, small size, blue enamel, Fleur-de-lis pattern on back set with pearls. Finder please call Home Phone 1875. Reward. 18-3t LOST A pocketbook between Penn. Depot and Hiatt drug store, containing $7.00. Finder please return ' to 321 North Sth street and receive reward. 17-3t LOST A pair of gold glasses Saturday afternon on Hoston Pike between Dick Davenports and Richmond or between Mein and list and Knollenberg's. Finder please leave at Knollenberg's or phone 811 R 17-3t3 LOST On Saturday afternoon on S. Ninth street near Main, a small black leather purse with grev lining, containing ninety-five cents. Purse valued as a gift. Finder please leave at Palladium office or telephone 149 old phone. Reward. 17-3t LOST--3aturday evening, either on Malf street or Merry-Go-Round, a Peajhl shell breast pin, wlth billliafts ia center of flowers. Valued asJa keep-sake. Reward if .return-s eto 224 N. Sth street. l7-3t LOOT A bead purse, between Coun'y Club Rnd 5th and South C. Sts. ,eave at 311 N. 9th street. ' . FOUND. IffiUND Gold watch fob. Call at Interurban Station, )South 8 street. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IGETABLES -GROCERIES OPED IN THE EVENING, Icr In and AWNINGS. Lounges. : Repair work a specialty. Now is The Time... to have your suits for any season in the year made, when you can save frcm 25 to 40 per cent, on each suit. Suits at $26 $26 Suits at $22 and be convinced, as is believing. mes Scully 923 Main St. PErifivROYAL PILLS IsJSJ-jyi'KK't IDiCLUM ud tiatA mttntt baa Dnnbw SaWOatUw mm IjbIuv ribbm. T.k. no tl . Bmj at JUT Dritniit. or ara44. ia frtl), Tcatlamtsls a "ReHsT fW L41aa, im MHr, by re. tava If all. 1 " iiM ad Vtmfpmm. Cktehaatav Ckeamlaal C
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