Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 101, 18 February 1911 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE ZUCIIMOXD PAIXADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1911L

The Richmond Palladium sl Sen-Telegram Publl.h.4 and own ad by the PAIXADIUM PRINTINO CO. Xasuad T day each week, evening and Sunday mornlnar. Office Corner North 9th and A atreat. )'alln1lum and Bun-Telearam Phonea Kuslnea. Office. Sit; Editorial Itooms. nil. niCHMOND. INDIANA.

Nwdolah O. Lwi Editor J. tr. Itlackorr Baalaeaa Miiutr Carl Barabardt Aaaoelata KUItor W. R. PauatUtaa. Ktm Kdltor 8UBSCIIIPTION TEHM3. la Itlchmond S 00 .-r year (In advance) or i0o per week. MAIL SUD8CRIPTIONS. On rear. In advance '5 22 Mia montha. In advanca On a month. In advanca AURAL IlOUTtSj On year. In advanca 'S22 Six iron t ha. In advanca - On month. In advanca Add.'eM changed aa often as desired; both new and old addressee must be Slven. Subscribers will please remit with order, which shouH be slven for a specified terra: name will not bo entered until payment la received Cntsrad at Itlchmond. Indiana, post office aa second class mall matter. Kaw York ltnren:atlva Payne Your.. 3ft-3l Weal SJrd street, and 2 at West a:nd street. New York. N. T. ChlraT Tteoreeentatlvea Payna A Touna. 747-74S Marquette liulldin-. Chicago. 111. YV Aaaaa-lattnn af American 2 MfWtsMrs (Nw Tens uIB" ualasd and eartHled to tha eirmlatlaa , mm this mkiieatbm. oniv ui usruraa ea atreulation atwtalnad la Ita report axa y tbe AtaocianoB. RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Hit a population of 23.000 and la a ro win v. It I the county scat of Wayne County, and tlt tradlna; tenter of a rich agricultural community. It Is located Uuo vast from InUlanupolU ti inllt and 4 miles from tlio stale line. Itlchmond la a city of homes and of InduHtry. Primarily a manufacturing ilty, It Is alao tlx JobblliK center of KuHtcrii lutllaua and enjoys the retail trad of the populous community for miles around. Itlchmond is proud of Its plen did streets, well kept yards. Its cement sidewalks and beautiful shade trees. It has 3 national banks. S trust companlva and 4 building association with rom Mnecl resources of over $H, 000,000. Number of factorlea 12a; capital Invested f?,000,ooo, with an annual output of $27,000,000, and a pay roll of .1.700.000. The total pay roll for tb city amounts to approximately (,300,000 annually. There are five railroad companlea radial In v In right different directions from tho city. 1 nromlnsl freight handled dally, 1.760,000 lbs.; outuninaf freight liandl.nl dally, 760.000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day 1.700 care. Number of passenger trains dally K. Number of freight trains datly 77. The annual poxt office receipts amount to $80,000, Total assessed valuation of tho city, $11,000,000. Wlclimond has two Intorurhan railways. Three newspapers wit It a combined circulation of 12,000. Itlchmond Is tho greatest hardware Jobbing o uter In tho state and only second In general Jobbins; Interests. It hits a piano factory producing a high grala r ilano every IS minutes). It Is thn eader In the manufacture, of traction enaines, ami produces mora threshing machines, lawn mowers, roller skates, train drills and burial raaketa than any other city In tho world. Tho city's area Is 3,40 acres; lias a court huusa costing $000,000: 10 public schools and has tho finest and most complete hlgtt school In the middle west under rnuMtructlon; 3 parochial schools; Karlhiint college and tho Indiana Huslnesa College; five splendid fire companies In fine ho )mues; tilen Miller park, tha largest and most beautiful park mond'a annual chautauqua; seven In Indiana, the home of' lllrhliotels; municipal electric Itsrht plant, under successful operation and a private electric light plnnt. Insuring competition: the oldest public library In thn state, except one and the second largeat, 40,000 volumes; pure, refreshing water, unxiirpussed; S3 miles of Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers; 33 miles of cement curb and gutter romblncd; 40 miles of cement walks, and many miles of brick walks. Thlrtv churches. Including tho Held Memoilal, built at a cist of $:&0,000; Iteld Memorial Itnopltal. one of tho most modern In the stste: Y. M. C A. building, erected at a cost of $100,000, one of the finest In the state. The amusement center of Kastcrn Indlnna and Western Ohio. No city of the sis of Richmond holds as fine an annual art exhibit. The Itlchmond Kail Festival held each tvtober la unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It Is given In the Interest of the city and financed by tho b'jlnees men. Success awaiting anvona with enterprise In the Panto Proof City. This Is My 53rd Birthday BISHOP MAC DONALD. Rt. Rev. Alexander Macdonald, bishop of tho Roman Catholic diocese of Victoria, B. C, was born at Mabou, Capo Breton. Feb. 18. 1S58. His education was begun in his native section, continued at St. Francis Xavler's rolIcRO, AntlgonUh, and in the Propaganda, Rome, where he was ordained to the priesthood In 1834. Upon his return to Anvortca he waa appointed to the faculty of St. Francis Xavler's college. In 1900 he was appointed vlrar general of Antlgonigh, where he bishop of Victoria in lOuS. As a theologian, as a linguist, and as a writer Bishop Macdonald is said to have few or no superiors in the Dominion of Canada. He has written much for the Roman Catholic press on both Idea of the Atlantic. MASONIC CALENDAR Saturday. Feb. 18. Loyal Chapter, No, 49, O. E. S. Stated meeting. Trade et the United States with non-contiguous territory In 1910 reached a total of over $200,000,000. an Increase of roundly 100 per cent, over 1903, the first year for which the figures arc available, j .

Taft's Tardiness

This paper has already gone on record for reciprocity. There Is no controversy about that. Kveryone knows what It is; how much It Is needed and more: How often it has been promised!

In every case the theory has not been reciprocity but the motives of men. , The special Interests In time gone past have been given a tariff higher than that uctually needed from any point of view affecting the general welfare of the community because they tsaid we needed something to trade with. But when tho cup was well poised and about to touch the lip some

thing happened. It Is this little' sohiething in the conduct of American j affairs which Is getting on tho people's nerves.

Let's be reminiscent, briefly, and just for a little bit. When- William Howard Tart stood, on his brother Charlie s porch. VJ miles rrom Itlchmond. Indiana, in the neighborhood or the Pennsy station yes, that old fashioned colonial house In the heart of Cincinnati he delivered a mighty good speech of acceptance. This paper among others tame out in a pretty strong editorial tcliing about what a fine speech that was. We quoted a lot of it. It was a good speech and we said so. If joit want to drag out the files we are vyo.i -ing.- we rrinled. Why? Wo believed. a .Wo were sincere. We did the best we could for our ideal. William Howard Taft wo believed in him. Conservation. Tariff Revision. Reciprocity.

Ball'ngcr. Payne-Aldrich tariff. What?

Docs it mean nothing that despite the fact that if every congressman and senator were heartily in favor of reciprocity that there would scarcely be time to accomplish the passage of this treaty?

There Is somewhat more to this! Kvery cabinet officer has his reason. It is very clearly a bad reason. The speeches yes-

Hut why throw jour hats In air? PATCHED SKULL WITH BONE FROM LEG Waynesboro, I'a., Feb. 18. His head patched up with a piece of bone taken from his right leg, Augustus Totter, of Itouzerville, is back from a Balti more hospital, apparently on the road to recovery. Dr. Joseph C. Bloodgred performed the operation, by which a hole In Potter's skull the size of a half dollar was filled. rotter's skull was fractured last Jan uary at tho plant of the Waynesboro Electric Light company. An operation of trephanlng partly relieved paralytic conditions, and It is thought the "THIS DATE

FEBRUARY 18. 1795 Georgo Peabody, eminent philanthropist, born in Danvcrs, Mass. Died In London. Nov. 4. 1861). 184C -Wilson Barrett, celebrated actor, born in Essex, England. Died in London. July 22. 1904. 1861 First Italian parliament met at Turin. 1867 Maximilian's forces entered Querctaro. 1874 Thomas Davidson, who drew the plans for the tim torpedo boat . of the U. S. navy, died in Philadelphia. Born in England, August 28, 1S28. 189D Emile Loubet elected president of France. 1902 Charles Louis Tiffany, the great diamond merchant, died in New York. Born In Killingly, Conn., Feb. 15, 1812. 1910 The Nicaraguan army was defeated by insurgents at San Vicento.

NEWS FROM THE

Uraguay's labor bureau Is preparing a "workmen's pension bill. A union of jewelry workers has been organized in San Francisco. Twenty-live international unions now have locals in Great. Falls, Mont. Toronto union labor men are seeking a continuance of. the labor bureau for the province of Ontario. On May 1. at Chicago, the international union of cutting die and cutter makers will hold its annual convention. The highest accident death rate among industrial workers in Great Britain is among the seamen fifty-three a thousand. Minnesota labor men are working to obtain the passage of a workingmen's compensation act In the legislature this winter. Men workers in Japanese cotton mills earn on the average 23 cents a day, the women 16 ments and the children from 8 to 10 cents. The building of the labor temple of Sacramento, Cal., has progressed so far that unions are now arranging meeting nights in the structure. The Carpenters Union of Minneapolis Is now the largest in the northwest, having 2,428 members in good standing. This is the high water mark. The total of death benefits paid in the last fiscal year by all unions affiliated with tho A. F. of L. was f 1,320,644.52. and of sick benefits $719,165.66. The Texas state conference of brick layers is now composed of thirty-three unions, with a membership of 2,500.. The wage scale for the entire state is $6 a day. Foreign miners will be taught American methods of mining by photographs and the moving picture machine in the anthracite mining region of Pennsylvania. At a cost to the city of ten cents each, 27.593 men -and women have been furnished employment during the year 1910 by the municipal free employment bureau of Portland. Ore. An appeal "to the officers and members of organized labor" is being sent out by the American Federation of Labor, asking financial aid for the striking cigar makers at Tampa. Fla. The Musical Protective Union at Toronto, has succeeded In enrolling every musician of ability as a member of its organization, until now the membership is more than six hundred men. The movement started in California a few months ago to organize the migratory workers Is . spreading rapidly throughout the country. The American Federation of Labor at its recent convention decided to put trained organizers in the icld.

latest operation will restore Potter to the full use of his limbs. Franklin county people are marveling at this triumph of surgery, and also at the case of ten-year-old Paul Flohr, of near Chambersburg. Young Flohr's jaw was so badly broken by being thrown against a fence by a frisky colt several weeks ago that the bone protruded. He was sent to the Medico-Chirurgical hospital, In Philadelphia, and operated upon by Dr. Ernes La Place. Parents of the lad went to Philadelphia to pay him a visit and well enough to accompany them welle enough to accompany them home.

IN HISTORY" LABOR WORLD

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$100 Reward, $100. Hie readers f this paper wilt be pleased to team that there t at least one On-acted otseaae that science haa bcea aMe to care tat all lis stagea. and that la Catarrh. Hail's Catarrh Cure to the otuy positive cure Bow knoa to ttv medical traterntty. Catarrh twins; a consUttiUonal disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Kail's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, at-unt- directly upon toe blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroyma; the foundation of the disease, and rlvtng tbe patient strength by building up tbe constitution and asststtaf nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have so much faith m Its curative powers that tney offer One Hundred Dollars fur any case that it tails to cure. Hend lor li of testimonials. Address V. J. CHEXtY A CO.. Toledo. O. rd bv all Druggists. 75e. lake hUU Family Pllis tor cocstipaUoa.

Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye THE BIBLE. Three hundred years ago next April r.arker. tbe king's printer In London, published a book which had a great rogue. It is Will "the best seller." The book bad its beginnings back in the mists of the world's infancy, and its latest sentences were penned 2.000 years ago. It has been conned by the wise of earth, discussed for centuries, and portions of its text have been memorized by millions. It has been purchased in numberless editions, and yet Its sales are growing. Its present popularity is attested by the fact that the Bible societies of this country and of Great Britain to say nothing of those tn other countries and of hundreds of private publishers print and publish each year between Dine and ten million copies. Moreover Since the era of printing literally billions of copies of tbe book have been printed, circulated and read. To us of the English speaking world the translation of 300 years ago by forty-seven leading scholars of Klnp James' reign is tho most interesting. Revised and rewritten again and again, it remains today substantially the, same. Men have fought for tbe book and died for it It has been carried by the most darirg heroism to earth's remotest bounds. It has informed childhood, comforted age and afforded inspiration for every forward movement of the race. Now Is it not significant that today it should be "the best seller" of all printed books? And Putting aside tbe reasons which make it for millions the most precious book extant, how may its popularity be accounted for by those who are dis posed to measure the value of things by commercial standards? Must not M material success be accounted for by its value to human ity? How else will you explain the phenomenon of the Bible as tbe best sell ing book In any language? How else? Small Comfort. "I bad a message from the Black Hand." said the resident of Graftburg. "They told me to leave $2,000 in a vacant bouse in a certain street" "Did you tell the police ? "Right away." "What did they do?" They said that while I was about it I might leave them n couple of thousand in tbe same place." Washington Star. TO PREVENT THE GRIP. LA.Aiit; BKiiJiu quiaink removes the cause. There is only one "BROMO QUININE" Look for signa ture of E. W. GROVE. 25c. REFUSED TO LOOK IN EMMA'S STOCKING Magistrate Thus Declines to Verify Man's Theft Complaint. Brooklyn, teo. 17. "I was coming out of a moving picture show and I saw a dollar bill on the sidewalk. picked it up and put it in my purse. Then this man grabbed my arm and demanded the money. He said it was a $10 bill he'd dropped. I told him it wasn't a $10 bill. He said I must 'fork over or he'd take the money. I slapped his face and he struck me. Naturally I defended myself." Miss Emma Shepperd of No. 4 West One Hundred and Fourth street told this story in the Night court when she and Morris Ainbinder of No. 208 Ditman avenue, the Bronx, were charged with fighting in Thirteenth street. "It was my $10 bill," asserted Ainbinder. "I took out my penknife and the bill came out with it. This girl grabbed it and put it in her purse." "What have you in your purse?" asked Magistrate Appleton. Miss Shepperd opened her purse and showed two $1 bills and a powder puff. She said one bill was hers and the other was the one she had found. No $10 bill had been found in the police station, said the arresting patrolman. "She has it in her stocking," peraisted Ainbinder, as he wiped his scratched face. "Where did you get hurt? asked the magistrate. Ainbinder said the Sheppard girl had scratched him. That was the "defense" of which she had spoken. "You made a thorough job of it." commented the Magistrate. "I want my money," insisted Ainbinder. "I know she has it in her stocking. Just look and see." Magistrate Appleton said he couldnt very well do that. He discharged the prisoners, with a warning that they be more careful in picking battlegrounds.

MEN "HEN MINDED" MINISTER DECLARES Tells Woman's Club Members the Balance of Power Has Changed. Chicago. Feb. 17. The charge that present day women are becoming "hen minded" has proven a boomerang. The mere man who hammered the statement out on his typewriter hereby is informed that his own sex has been drawn under the same indictment and worse still by a member of his sex. The Rev. Perceival H. Barker, pastor of the Maywood Congregational church, turned the tables in an address before the Hull House Woman's

club. He praised the women of wealth -whom Professor McLaughlin, of the University of Chicago, accused in a magazine article of indolence and lack of ambition. Just a Few Examples. "There never was a time when wo men of wealth were giving themselves so freely for the amelioration of the world's troubles," said Rev. Mr. Barker. "Call to mind Susan B. Anthony. Frances E. Wrillard. Miss Jane Addams, Miss Anne Morgan, Mrs. Russell Sage, Miss Helen Gould and a

score of other wealthy women who and levels up the other. No favorites, are doing their utmost for the good,no billy-goats, no Dundreary whiskers of others. on the former; no mouldings, carvings

"The real American women is a wo man of ambition. She is not 'hen minded." We can see a much greater peril in the lack of intellectuality among our young men. It is truest to say that the men of today are 'hen minded.' ure.' They are 'slaves of pleasGirl Graduates in Lead "Three times as many girls as boys

are graduated from institutions ofilol,et

learning. "The ape in man makes him relish a

brutal prize fight and he knows more;tacn.e is an obstacle to the perfect

about stocks and bonds than about books. "Unless men awaken the latent powers within them we shall rapidly come to an age devoid of heroism and power among men. While there are some women who wear a $10 hat on a 10-cent head, most of their sex seek education because of thc power it spells." PLAN TO IMPROVE AMERICAN HORSE New York, Feb. 18. August Belmont, presiding at the first dinner of the Sportsmen, an organization growing out of the United Hunts Club Meet at Belmont park, announced that he will offer six stallions to the United States Government for an International Breeding bureau. The announcement was made to three hundred members at the Waldorf-Astoria. There were present representatives of sporting and athletic clubs from all over the country. The new bureau is to be established along the same lines as those in France, Germany and Canada. Prize Winners Offered. Among the horses which Mr. Belmont has offered are Henry of Navarre, which once brought $30,000 at auction, and Octagon, the sire of Beldame, winner of the Suburban, one of the greatest animals ever bred. Both horses are now in France. Introducing August Belmont as the! presiding officer of the dinner, Henry W. Smith said that the affair would be held as one for sportsmen of the broadest distinction. The principal aim will be to uphold clean sports under the state law. Replying to the introduction, Mr.

Belmont said that every other nation But this fine spirit of national indeof the first class recognizes the devel-1 pendence was fated to disappear.

opment of the thoroughbred, and that in his ambitions to breed animals, he planned the gift where the highest development might be attained. Stunted maple trees, grown in mountainous regions, where the winters are long and severe, and the

snowfall considerable, furnish the , as if they had been rubbed with embest wood for violins, in the opinion j ery paper. Yesterday they were only of German makers. ione or two, who passed for "des ex-

That Brings Health, Happlnocs and Long Llfo The wonderful story told by thousands upon thousands of men and women in all walks of life who have been benefited by the use of the great tonic stimulant. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, is most Interesting and the three old men whom you see reading this story show by their vigor and pleased expression the great good it has done them. The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co.. Rochester. N. Y.

Abasing Americans a Favorite Pastime With French People

. BY LA VOYAGEUESE. I centriques;" today their number is (Special Cable from the International i legion. The "American face" has trl- , v To -wC ' .v h umphed, it has been declared "chic" Paris, Feb. 18.-hen the French I d what is ..nonhic and we the have nothing else to do they pass the numb,er unit8 of the n thc chit time in abusing Americans. homdren of & clay, nave only they accuse of all kinds of crimes j acquiesce and look peasant, against "le grandenatioir. If we The contagion, ! , earn, is spreading are to believe the French. Americans ! d vilQ ncredibIe rapidUy and alone are to blame if the trench na- g threa(ened wilh a veritable tion deeadem, Americans are re- idemk. of ..glabjTrie." Whether the sponsible for the gradual disappear- fashion na8 me tQ t doubt. ance of politeness in France, they The ch are aQ artigtio have introduced cocktails crackers, u be conceded tbat a and American shoes. But all these common place face can frocrime, are forgotten in the cry that; be rendered almost looU. is going up from the women of trance b beard and moustache which aga.nst the American face. Thejroost h f h or gm. women here love whiskers, soft, and .. . , . , ,

and the smooth shaven face of the average American fills them with disgust. They have found a worthy exponent of their indignation in' M. Miguel Zamacois. Neither beard nor moustache, says this "spirituelle" writer is the device of the genuine Yankee for, from the American point of view everything condemns the hirsute countenance. For the American, essentially practical and positive, the beard and moustache are superfluous growths. In the opinion of Uncle Sam, ornaments are as useless on the face as on the fajcade. He shaves the one and evens or festoons on the latter. A face should only contain eyes, nostrils and j ja mouth; faces and houses are both meant to be useful.- Besides a beard ! and moustache require delicate and ! continual attention time that might be devoted to Dusiness. l neretore, tne American razor suppresses Drutally and imperatively all excuse for fastidious idling in the course of the The American business man has further discovered that the mousi emission of the voice, especially when using the telephone, and the beard is a dead weight and profitless. In verbal discussions the beard is excess and useless baggage; it cannot but be hurtful to volubility and articulation. The moustache is a filter which retards the issue of the decisive word, which muffles and deforms them In their passage in a word, increases the likelihood of ambiguity and confusion. All these motives for passing sentence of death on the hair of the visage have long seemed puerile to the i Frenchman. For years the American habit of shaving the upper lip, the cheek and the chin has been looked upon in France as -nothing more than ethnological curiosity. Traditionally the American must be "glabre," just as the Norwegian must be fair and very shaggy, the Chinaman furnished with a pigtail, and the negro woolly-haired. What would the cartoonists do if they had not this infallible method of indicating an American millionaire, a tin king, or an emperor in molasses? But despite the gradual invasion of "Americanisme" in all its varied forms, Frenchmen had turned a deaf ear or, shall I say an unresponsive cheek? to the insjdious advances of the safety razor. According to their fancy and at times their fancy is very fanciful the sons of the sister republic piously and patriotically held on to their ancient Gallic moustaches and their flowing beards. Only comedians used a razor on their faces as a rule, in order that they might the more easily stick on false hair. 'As for magistrates, admirals, waiters and domestics, they made up for the absence of hair from their lips and chins by a wealth of favorites and "cotelettes." "Snobisme," the spirit of imitation, the necessity of applauding and adopting that comes from outside, everything new and exotic, all these sentiments which create the fashion, ended by inducing Frenchmen to smear their faces over with soap and appear with chins and cheeks which looked

"Lola," was the name of a skirt much worn, it seems last spring; "Parisette," that of another also fashionable last October. The creator of the 'Ixla" has been suing the genius who invented the "Parisette" for infringe-

iment of copyright. The case proinisjed to be a difficult one to decide. How i could one determine whether the art ist of the Parisette had or had not plagiarized the designer of the Lola? The court haa got out of it well. The question of the originality of the two skirts is evaded. The court finds that copyright in dress applies only to "Such garments are works of art court mantles and dresses, stage costumes which derive a special character from their style, from the richness of the stuffs, the diversity of ornament, and particularly from the fact of their being designed for a unique use." This definition of the artistic gar ment is a trifle involved and ambiguous, but the point is that the court decides unkindly for the creators of the Lola and the Parisette. In the circumstances neither can be protected by the law on artistic copyright. The only thing the creator of the Lola could have done was to enter the design of his skirt at the council of trade judges, called the "conseil des Prudhomes,' and this he omitted to do. Consequently, whether or no the Parisette be an imitation of the Lola, the creator of the former has no case in law. He gets his costs, however, as a solatium. LOVER OF ACTRESS UNDER FATHER'S EYE Evansville. ' Ind. , Feb. 18. Leo Weinmann, age twenty-six, whose father is the president of a Philadelphia jewelry house for which the young man was traveling, was taken away from her by detective Edward Marks, of Philadelphia, on a warrant charging him with the larceny of $1,500 worth of jewelry. Infatuation for May Emery, an actress with the "Newly Weds" company is said by the detective, to have caused young Weinmann to desert his business and spend money lavishly. He met Miss Emery here last Sunday, The father made an affidavit against him to insure bis detention here. Weinmann will be taken, the detective says, to some hospital or retreat near Philadelphia where he can be under his father's eye. Tha Saint's Larder. Not much i3 known in this country of St. Corentin. but Qulmper. where be j dweU cber,8nes a icgend of him. Ac cording to the version given by Mary Atkinson in "A Chateau In Krittany," "God, pleased with his life of devotion, provided his food. A little flb swam to him every day, presenting its side that the, hermit might cut away a sufficient portion for his needs. As soon as it was thrown back into the water the fish became Immediately whole again, with no faintest trace of the cut." IF YOU ARE A TRIFLE SENSITIVE About the fir ot yocrtboet. It's soma satisfaction to know that many peopla can wear ahoci a tiza mailer bjr shaking Allen' KoouEaae, tbe antiseptic powder, into ihem. .lint t lis thm for Dane. Ine Parties. Patent Leather Shoes, and for Breaking l'l New Shoes. When rubbers or overshoes beroma , necessary and your shoes pinch, Allen's Voot-Kasa gives Instant relief. Sold Everywhere, 8Sc Samp' FREE. Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, La Boy, N. V. Don't accept m.ny $uhttUute. mi fs.

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