Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 298, 23 November 1906 — Page 7

f

ihe Richmond Palladium,-- Friday, November 23, 1906. rage Seven.

WORST ECZEMA OCTDRS EVER SAW

HIS IDEAL.

PLEA OF JUSTfFICAT

FOR THE CHILDREN

f

Sprekd Rapidly Over Body Limbs and Arms Had to Be Bandaged an:! Scalp Looked Dreadful Suffered Untold Misery for Three Years Better in Two Months

MARVELOUS CURE BY CUTICURA REMEDIES

( " . "My son, who now twenty-two

years or age, when ne was lour rnqmins old began to have eczema on hi V face, enreadirje auite raoidlv until bis was

'pearly coverwi. We had all the round us and some from larger

but no . one helped him a The eczema ' was something

and the doctors said it was th

rae thev ever saw. At times

body and face were covered, all . . a a

feet. -A Jiaa to banaage.iua 11

arms ; his scalp was jukt

Is or pat

drei

octora

laces.

rticle.

rrible,

worst

whole

at his

bs and

fuL I

dicines

es,

ised manv kinds of pafl-nt

before trvine the CuticurJKe

all to no avail. I

"A friend teased me tc trvjJuticura. At last I consented, v lenJmy boy was three years and foJr months old, having had eczema 11 jliat time, and suffering untold miser . ml began to use all three of the Cutic rg Remedies; the Cuticura oap helpf lias well as the Ointment. lie was Utter in two months; in eix months he was well; but I gave him the Cuticura Resolvent one year,- using twelve bottles, I think, -and always used the Cuticura Soap for bathing, and do now a good deal. He was four years old before he was well, and his skin became perfectly fair when cured. I give you permission to publish this letter for I am always glad to do good when I can. I think I have told you all there isnecesary to tell." Mrs. R. L. Risley, Oct. 24, 1905. Piermont, N. H. Complete External and Internal Treatment for rry Rumur.from FlmplM to dcrofiUa, from infancy to Ace, rornt.tlug of Cuticura .op, ie- Ointment. iOc, Kraolvat, 4e. (in form of Chocolate Coated Ii'l,2e. per rial of 60 mar b had of all druggiita. A (ingle t often eurea the nmt Ji.tMitng c.mh, wh all other remedies and area the beetphyaiilana fail, hotter Drug Cacm. Corp., bol Propa. Morton, Mm. r-Maile-1 Free, " How fa Cor Dbflipirlng HumMT d "All About the Skin, bcalp, liair. and iUnda."

Conspiracy to Dsfraud Charged. Pittsburg, PaNov. 22. C. S. Cam

eron, president of the Tube City rail-J

road, and It. V. M.-r'on, a member of

the common council, were arrests! here on charge of conspiracy to de

fraud the Tube City railroad of about

370,000. Fail was fix-d at $80,000, brt

reduce! latr to $10,000, which was

furnished.

f-'cuid D?d In Office.

ina snaciis. in3., Nov. 22. wll-y

Armstrong, &3s':tant cashier at th freight house of the Cincinnati, Han ilton & Daytnn ra:lroud in this c.'tv

was fouri 1 d:-ad in the office with i

bullet holi In hi3 right temple. Ear

Wilson, an allosed police character,

was arrested rnd locked up pending

an lnve: tlatlen ns to his knowledg

of the jifTair Torre of Armstrong;

friend3 attribute his death to suicide

saying the r. an has been despondent

Kai'a Spread.

Minot, N. D., Nov, 22. Engineer

Comfort an J Fireman Morrlssey were

killed and 17 pe"soaa were more oi

less seriously injured In a wreck of

the Great Northern ' Oriental limited

near ..;hoa. The accident was carsec'

by the spreading of the rail3. Th

train was going 43 iciies an hour anl

all cars went oir the tracks.. Many

passens3rs wore taken from the win

dows of th cars.

TO THE POINT

B. G. Cavajna, teller in First Na

tlonal bank at Cincinnati, arrested cn

charge of embezzling $31,600.

F. F. Martindale,' workman, lost his

ife In Sre at furniture warehouse cf

Owen & Co., Detroit. Loss $75.000. .

Santa 'Fe 'passenger trains 5 and C

collided head-on at Hilton, ColoFiie

man killed, two passengers seriously

Injured.

Remaining indictment at Washing

ton against State Senator Q. F. Green

of New York, acquitted at former

trials for .alleged postofflce irregular!

ties, was nolled.

At Columbus, O., Alfonso Davis, col

ored hod carrier, while intoxicated

iot and seriously wounded Irene

nomas, his mother-in-law, and es-

taped-

KW

and

Worry

Hurry, like a cyJone, whirls

you along at a I rate that

quickly exhausts and leaves you wretched, broken

ical wreck.

w orry accon

same results in.

It drags you th gloomv tunnel

wrecks 3-our ne

down the constitution.

ur energy, nerveless,

own th va

nishes the

lother way.

kgh the dark,

forbodings,

1 and breaks

.. m

.it

IXC

urry : don t

will ; and austed con-

daches, neu-

tomach, liver

Ies. The thinjr

Then don't worry. But y your nerveless,

dition brines h

ralgia, heart,

and kidnev tro

to do is: Strengthen the nerves

with Dr. Miles' Nervine. - "Six months I was bedfast with

nervous prontrmtlon. I had alnklnr

spells, a cold, clamy feelinc couldn t stand the slightest noise. At tims I woukl aimo5t fly to pieces; stomach very tt-eak. SJy husbanil insisted on my takintr Dr. Miles- Nervine, and I

began to improve 1 'fore I had finished the first bottle. ai.J to-day I am entirely eur?d."

U4 Hudson St., Tiffin, O. Dr. Miles Nervine f sold by your

druggist, who will guarantee that the first bottle will benefit. If It fails, he will refund your money.

Mile? Mediil Co Elkhart. Ind

"Well, old fellow, Ieed hardly say i

how pleased I am to see you again. You are Just in time to fulfill your long made promise." - . - "What was that?" "I am going to be married next week, and you know it was always a bargain between us that you should support me on that occasion." "Yes, I recollect. Well, let me offer my hearty congratulations. Who is the lady?" "The eldest daughter of Sir John Graham and the dearest little girl in the world." "That goes without saying," laughed Charles Medcalf. "And her name Is Enid," continued Captain Lane without heeding the Interruption. "We have only known each other sir months. I met her first at my godmother's. Lady Martyn, and 1 think we both fell in love with each other at first sight. There you hare the whole story." Medcalf had just returned fromSouth Africa, where he had held a lucrative appointment, being a Junior partner in a large firm of engineers. "Have you 'succumbed during your travels to the fascination of Home fair one, or do you still hold the sex In abhorrence?" asked the captain. "Scarcely that," replied Medcalf, flushing a dull red beneath his bronze. "But I have never come across my ideal except In a picture." "Ah! I always said yon were a romantic fellow, notwithstanding your boasted stoicism. I am curious to know the story." j "It was three years ago, just before

I went abroad, one Sunday afternoon

In Kensington gardens. I was with ,

Jack Dunmore you remember him. i

We had been sitting there some time j

criticising the multitude when Jack left me to speak to an acquaintance he :

recognized In the distance.

'Just then my eye was caught by

the face of a girl passing. It was my Ideal neither fair nor dark, but with

a nappy combination or tne two. It was not that she was strictly beautiful, but she had a fascination for me that I could not resist, nor can I

describe it.

'Presently I saw Jack returning, and

at the same moment the girl rose. She was with two others, and as they

moved away something dropped out of her lap. I hastened to pick it up. Her

back was turned, and by some hasty

Impulse I slipped it in my pocket. My treasure proved to be a treasure Indeed, for It was the photograph of my darling. Yes, It had come to that! I

think of her still as that, though I left England next day and have been away three years." "Let me complete this tale," added Captain Lane slyly. "Your task Is now to find the fair unknown and to lay your heart and fortune at her feet. Joking apart, old fellow, I fear you will have a difficulty in accomplishing your object. But, talking about photographs, let me show you Enid's." Captain Lane detached a locket which dangled at the end of bis watch chain and, opening it, displayed iho miniature of his ladylove, which he offered for'his friend's Inspection. It was well that Gerald Lane had not a full view of the other's face just

at that moment, he having turned his back half round in order to get a better light on the portrait, for as his eye rested on it Medcalf started violently and turned ghastly pale. It was the pictured face of his ideal, the fellow to which even now lay next to his heart. "She is lovely," he managed to stammer as, with a trembling hand, he returned the locket. And then he had to listen patiently while the captain descanted on the many virtues of the original. He declined, however, his urgently pressed invitation to Join his party at the theater on the plea of feeling tired, and It was with relief that he found himself at last In his own room.. , Wheu .al week later, however, Captain Lane called on him to fulfill his promise on the wedding day the temptation of seeing nay, more, of speaking to the girl Just once was too much. It would be 'difficult to say which was the more nervous, the bridegroom

elect or his best man, as they waited In the church for the arrival of the

bridal party. Not once during the

ceremony that followed did Medcalf glance at the bride, though his pulses were thrilling at the sound of the

sweet, clear voice that made the re

sponses which bound her to Captain

Lane.

It was in the vestry after the sig

natures had been duly entered in the

register that some one whispered In

his ear:

Come, old fellow, don't you know

your duty? Kiss the bride."

Then he raised his eyes, which rested

for- one brief moment on his ideaL

The next moment he had gravely bent and pressed his Hps on the cheek of the dainty vision beside him.

There was a general titter as the

girl gave vent to a little exclamation

of dismayed surprise.

"The bride, man! That's not the

bride.'"

Then for the first time Medcalf look

ed about, and his wandering gaze fell on the apparition of the bride.

In puzzled wonderment he turned

once more to h's neighbor. She and the bride were alike as two peas!

Which was his Ideal? Well. It mat

tered not, since one was free!

It was not until years after, when

Charlie found the courage to tell his

wife the story of that purloined photo, that be discovered that he had married his Ideal after all and not her twin sister. ';

TO BE ENTERED BY THAW

There is Saia to be Certain Evidence Concerning Life of Murdered Architect Which Will Change Sentiment in Case.

.Publishers Presal The near approut-t of the crial of Harry Thaw of Pittsburg, who shot Stanford White, the noted architect, in a New York theater roaf garden last summer, ha3 reawakened public interest in that most sensational affair. According to the latest statements of his attorney, Harry Thaw will stand on the plea of justification when arraisnied lu the New York courts for the killing of Stanford White. His attorr

First American Flats in British Port

Th& following is token from an Eng-

' ush history printed in London during

the last decade of the eighteenth cen

i tury: "The ship Bedford, Captain Moores, belonging in Massachusetts,

arrived at the Downs on the 3d of

February (1783), passed Gravesend and was reorted at the custom house tn the 6th. She was not allowed reg

ular entry until some consultation had

taken place between the commission

ers of customs andthe lords of council on account of many acts of parliament in force against the rebels of

America. Thi3 was the first vessel which displayed the thirteen rebellious stripes of America in any British port." This vessel was a whale ship

from New Bedford and undoubtedly was the first to carry the American flag on an errand of peace Into a port

of Great Britain. Housekeeper.

The Oame of Ad Jetf -s.

A party of schoolgirls had capital

fun one day over a "game of adjee tives."

One of the girls, who was rather

clever, wrote a little story about some

thing that had happened at their school, and she was careful to use no adjectives. The story was not more than 300 words altogether, and where the adjectives should have been she

left blanks. She did not show any

one her paper, but she asked her com

panions one after the other to supply

her with adjectives for the nouns.

wmen she told tnem hapnaeard, so that they might not gcess what the

story was till all the adjectives had

been supplied, says Home Notes.

Then she read the tale aloud, and the shouts of laughter from her compan

ions showed that the game was a sue cess.

HABRT K. THAW. neys will make no attempt whatever to prove him to have been Insane when he killed White. It Is rumored in Pittsburg that Roer O'Mara has discovered facts of great interest regarding the late Stanford White and his attentions to Mrs. Harry Thaw. It Is even claimed that when his evidence Is produced it will create a change in sentiment in favor of Thaw. O'Mara has been closely associated with the Thaw family and the attorneys for the defense. He has had eharpre of the detective force employed In obtaining evider.ee In the case, both In Pittsburg and New York. ITarry K. Thaw is a son of the late William Thaw of Pittsburg, who left an estate now valued at S40.000.000. Ills wife, on whose account he shot White, was Miss Evelyn Florence Nesblt; an artists model and actress and noted for her great beauty.

CITIZENS MEET TO

Letter Entarma. The letters which spell the name of a once great personage appear In their order at the beginning of the first or second words, helping to form the following well known old sayings: What's in a name? All's well that ends well. A sitting hen never grows fat. Aim high, and you'll never fall low. Virtue Is its own reward. We never miss the water till the well runs dry. Return good for eviL Where there's a will there's a way. One swallow does not make a summer. New wine should not be put into old bottles. Answer. Washington.

The Caarowltc'a Christmas Present. The czarina's Christmas present to her little son, the czarowltz, last Christmas was an exact model of the czar's favorite chalet, or summer house, In the Imperial pleasure grounds attached to Tsarskoe-Selo palace. The model, which is1 beautifully carved in soft whltewood. Is built up of eighty-four separate pieces and can be pulled to bits by the little prince and put together again. The czarina, who is an

PLAN SOCIAL CENTER ePert woodcarve, fashioned th toy

nerseir.

Cambridge City, Nov. 22, (Spl.) A meeting of the citizens was held

at the Town Hall last night for the purpose of planning and organizing a Social and Civic Center in this city. Mrs. V. C. Meredith, president, Introduced Dr. Caldwell, who spoke on the advantages of such an institution in Cambridge and the possibility of getting it here. There were about 150 persons present, nearly all of whom

signed the subscription lists. The yearly subscription will be $3. Soliciting committees were appointed who will begin their work in a few days. The interest taken In the project by the citizens offered a great deal of encouragement to the officers of the association, and they will do their utmost to make it a success.

i Conundrums. Why are grasshoppers like watches? Because they move by springs. When is an umbrella like a person convalescent? When it is recovered. What is that which we never borrow, yet often return? Thanks. What coat is finished without buttons and put on wet? .A coat of paint. What is it that has neither flesh nor blood, yet has four fingers and a thumb? A glove.

INDIANA PLAYERS ARE VERY CONFIDENT

CONFLICTING STORIES

DAMAGING EVIDENCE

Herkimer, N. Y., Nov. 22 Vague

and conflicting stories of tho drowning of Grace Brown in Big Mocss Lahe,

were told by Chester K. GJlette, when

the officers placed him under arrest

at Arrowhead three days after the girl had lost her life. These stories were damaging bits of evidence

against Gillette, facing the charge Qf murder of his sweethc-nrs and were recounted in the trial of the prisoner today.

Bloomington, Ind., Nov. 22, (Spl.) At 11 o'clock this morning the Indiana University football team, accompanied by coach Sheldon, trainer

Mann and a small number of students and local enthusiasts, left in a special car for Minneapolis, where Minnesota will be played Saturday the last game of the year. The players are more confident than usual that Inc una has "a chance to win the Western championship if the field is fast. Most sanguine of all is "Heze" Clark. "Heze" declares that Indiana Is in better trim now than she has been in the last three years. Coach Sheldon says he will be satisfied with a low score. The men taken were Captain Hare, Steele, Clark, Tighe, Waugh, Hill, Mendenhall, Heckaman, Wade, Bloom, McGaughey, Talbott, Jones, Paddock, Hart and Cartwright.

Queer Thins About Insects. A horsefly will live for hours after the head has been pinched off. The dragon" fly can devour Its own body and the head still live. Some flies thrust their eggs Into the bodies of caterpillars, but always in such parts of the body that when the larvae are feeding on the flesh of the fo3tar parent they will not eat into any vital part. Four Leaf Clover.

There is' an old superstition that it brings good luck to find a four leaved clover. The superstition is founded, first, on the rarity of the specimen, but chiefly on the fact that the four leaves are arranged In the form of a cross.

DEATH OF MRS. B. F.GRAVES

Former Richmond Woman Passed Away at Kalamazoo, Mich. -An Account of Her Life.

A Riddle. What is it that is so dangerous that all people fear it, but which a woman proudly wears about her neck with comfort? Answer Boa.

What Y e Uwu lu Insects. Professor Darwin said that if it had not been for insects we should never have had any more imposing. oi attractive flowers than those of the elm, the

hop - and the nettle. NLord Avebury compares the work of the, insect to that of the florist. He considers that just as the florist has by selection produced the elegant blossoms of the garden, so the inseets by selecting the largest and brightest blossoms for fertilization have produced the gay flowers of the field. Professor Plateau of Ghent has carried out a series of remarkable experiments on the wavs of insects visiting flowers.- He considers that Hft'T a tA nrnt.-tiw-f ernnr f f rnv

4v. i , , T , . , . Rocks safe. Oh, such a tadness creep

v"ult""vi,,f into my heart when Betty sweeps;

he is at variance with certain Briti

naturalists. Whatever may be theat

tractions In flowers to Insects syf yet It appears undefined It is certaru "that the latter visit freely all blossoAs alike, making no distinction between the large, bright colored ones ad the less

conspicuous blooms like nose of the

currant, the lime, the nettle ani tb wfow.

SPECIAL SOUINIR PRIZES

GIVEN EVERY BABrV CONTESTANT

AT THE ELKS FAIR BABY SHOW SATURDAY AFTERNOON.

tre the

Mrs. Frank Bell is visiting her

daughter Mrs. Omer Chase : of

Knightstown.

When Betty- Sweeps. When Betty sweeps the nursery It is a woeful sight to see " The landmarks of our pleasant room "Wrecked by her devastating: broom. I'a straightened up. but I'd prefer To have It somewhat crookeder. Why, all . the world seems upside down! The lady doll from Paris town Lies in the middle of the zoo Beside the bear and kangaroo. And somehow books get stowed away In stalls where horws ought to stay. And toys climb up upon the shelves "Where we can't reach them by ourselves, "While often to the rubbish heap Go things we'd greatly like to keep. For, though you might not find them rare. To us they're very hard to spare. Last week we lost the spears and swards That Betty used to call "old boards. But then she does not care to fence And never heard of tournaments. And once some worms we meant to pric Until they turned to butterflies. And once we lost Aladdin's lamp. The tent, where Indian-like we camp. Before that broom so quickly falls. Smooth folded Into mother's shawls; Our castles tumble In. and where The ocean nsed to roll a chair

Caroline

McCormlck In. Tenth's Com

Mrs. John Hawekotto. Jr., of Xorth

8th street entertained last evening in ! honor of Miss Edna Phillfps, of Xenia, Ohio. Those present wer 3 - Misses

Came Personette, Katie Ilawekotte, Messrs. William Kluter Frank Eugelbert, Everett Hawekotte and Messrs. and Mesdames Howard Sad-

hoff and Edgar Haweko

Special souvenir

baby contestant

how Saturday af

prices

a U

1

w

given every

re Elks fair baby

rnoon.

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

The following taken from the Kalamazoo Gazette of Sunday, November IS will be of interest here as Dr. and Mrs. Graves formerly lived here: "Mrs. B. F. Graves, a daughter of a former mayor of Boston and a woman of marked accomplishments, died early yesterday morning at her home, 124 East Dutton street. Mrs. Graves would have been 51 years old had she lived until Christmas. She was born in Boston, being the " daughter of Mayor Hathaway, once proprietor of the famous Taunton Nail Works. She was well known in society as Merton Hathaway, and in early womanhood was married to a son of Sir Samuel Clavering, of England. The young nobleman lived only a short while. Had he survived she would have come to the title of Lady Clavering. "Mrs. Graves was an authority on literature and was an artist of considerable ability. Many of her paintings adorn her home. She was in

public life as an artist and literary ex

pert in her earlier years. "About 24 years ago she was mar

ried to Dr. B. M. Graves, who sur

vives her. Her home life was ideal and her patience in her continued ill

ness was remarked by all who knew

her. She had no children, but her

adopted daughter, Daisy, nursed her

constantly for seven years and was

thoroughly devoted in all respects. Dr. and Mrs. Graves lived here sev

eral years ago but were in Detroit

for a while, coming back to Kalama

zoo a month ago.

"The funeral at the home Monday

morning at 10:30 will be private."

WILL REORGANIZE CHOIR

Miss Laura Gaston to Take Charge of

Music at Reid Memorial Church December 1. Miss Laura Gaston will assume

charge of the organ at the Reid Me

morial United Presbyterian church, commenciing about December 1st. The music In this church will be led by a quartet and chorus choir under the direction of Miss Gaston. The work of forming the choir will be pushed as rapidly as circumstances warrant good results. The choir loft

nthis church will accommodate a

arge number, but it is the intention

to limit the membership. No trouble should be experienced in securinig a good chorus, as the advantages offered by this church to sing with the fine organ, and "under the direction of an

experienced director like Miss Gaston,

s not often offered.

It is the intention of the officers

and music committee of this church

to furnish first class, consistent

church music. The music commit

tee is composed of the session of the church, together with Mr. Chas. Magaw, Miss Clara Myrick. Miss Edna Keever and Mr. Rutherford . B. Jones, with whom applications should ' be filed.

Tho Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been. In use for over 30 years, has borno the signature of

and has been made under his per snn.il siinnrvision Klnoo ira 'nfhtiov-

Allntirnn n.is IndceAlrA vnnln fhlcL.

All Counterfeits, Imitations and "THst-as-STOod" are but Experiments that trine with, and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, lrops and Soothing' Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Jiarcotia substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys 'Worm and allays Feverishness It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulate the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS -

Bears the Signature of

The KM You Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years.

Tut etimuN esuMN, mimut TfiiT. ,nr err.

ANOTHER OPERA HOUSE

O. G. Murray and Gus Sun Add Vaudeville Theatre at Kenton, Ohio to Already Long List.

O. G. Murray was at Kenton, O., yesterday looking after his business Interests at that place. It Is the intention of Mr. Murray and Gus Sun his partner in the vaudeville business, to open a vaudeville house in that city. II will be the first house

of the kind in the city and it Is expected to be a payiug venture. With the addition of the Kenton house the Murray-Sun syndicate will have eight first class vaudeville houses in their circuit. .

Gives vigor, strength, vitality t your nerves, stomach and every part of your body. It's easy to take; swallow a little Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea;' it does the business. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents.. A. G. Luken & Co.

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

NEW YORK WOMAN

RUN DOWN BY TRAIN

FSodd Leafas .- -

Publishers Pressl New York, Nov. 22. Mrs. Jimmie

McLaughlin, wife of the well known horseman, whose gray Farrady colt

Oxford is the Hindoo of the present Bennings meeting, and Mrs. B. H. Lindsay, of Brooklyn, while driving

across tl a tracks of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company, at Beverly

road and Flatbush tonight, werjrun

own by a Brighton Beach trrfl. The orse was instantly killejrand the

buggy completely wreckl. Both, of

e women are very sJfiously if not

tally injured.

th

fa

Artificial gas, the

r20th Century fuel.

y lo-u

ooo

Fancy New Yorkldwin Apples, 75c a bushel. Fancy large smoon Potatoes, 70c a bushel. 2 lb Mule TeanvBorax, 30c and 30 stamps. Nice Fresh Sausage 12c. Smoked Sasage 12ic.

Hood's Fancy Blend Coffee, 23 stamps, 25c.

1 I

Im

ial, Young Hyson or Japan Tea and 10

stamps, buc.

Pride (ichmond and White Lilly Flour, 50c

6 IbfNevy Buckwheat, 25c. S. & H. Stamps given. Store open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday nights.

Special souvenir jpizes given every baby contestantlaWhe Elks' fair baby show Saturday ftfernoon.

HOOD'S MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE Trading-Stamps with All Purchases. Free Delivery. New Phone 1079; Old Phone 1 3R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. 411-413 Main Street.

Pf PAY t ir r

- Yu

tTpCR making taasJ; or baking roast; Or boding things

for change, 'Myroa mintain& jtnd staunchly claims. fo stove can beat ' J her range. ; The woter tank, she has; to thank On tiresome ashinjT . days- ' Li ani ojt. and ail,

about,, , -jhe gies

JOKES IffllWM .0