Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 269, 5 August 1911 — Page 4
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THE RICHMOND PAIXADIUXI ABD 8U2f-TELGRAXXt SATURDAY, AUGUST 5, 1911.
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CBSCmPTIOM TERMS, to KIanond ISO ;or yr Ito vanoo) or ioo per wool. RURAL ROUTJBK iOno roar, la advaaoo ...."?;! lr naoBths. in advaac 'On wonta, la aavano Add'ooo shangtd as ofton as 4"'ti4, both aew and old addroosos twos. '"an. .. tat. ; Hotaorlbero will pioaoo rmU I ardor, wblek should bo. gWoa f specified term; naroo artll not bo ontor'd watll earmoi.t eeelved. i KAIL SUBSCRIPTION tJno roar, la advance Is asontba. In advaaoo ! Oao month. In advaaoo Bntorert at Richmond. Indiana. loffloo as sooond elaas Mil matter, I Now Tork Koprosejt;Mo Payao Tseng. Wost lrd atroot. and IIWest Had otroet. Now York. N. T. Chicago Roprooontotlvoo -Payu. Tnung. Tf 4?.1te Marquotto bulldlatf. I Chicago. III. Tho AoeocUtioa of AmerI Icaa Adoartisors has o amsain and cortiftod to th. aircalatia af Ibis aabUaad . The figaros of circnlatioa aantoiaad in taa Association's oorl paly ara fvarantaad. tesa if iberkzi Aivertssrrs No. . wTataaefl IMfl. ft, T. City TWINKLES RURAL JOYft "How did you spend your two-week vacation?" "Recovering from sunburn the first week and poison ivy the second." A HINT OF ECONOMY i "I wish you would quit talking about how well Gladys Ann paints and plays the piano," said Mrs. Cumroz. "Why, I was kind of proud of her accomplishments,' replied her husband. "I know that Dut the first thing you know people will think we are depending on homemade art.' UNOUTIABLE The tariff, though It makes us pay, Must fill our hearts with glee, Blnce It reminds us day by day. That speech is always free. ' TIME MISAPPLIED ."That young married . couple seem I just a bit discontented said the ob- ' servant woman. "Yes," replied Miss Cayenne, "I am i afraid she is one of those girls whe ; read magaslne articles on 'How to . manage a husband,' when they should 1 be learning to make biscuits.' THE YOUNG PHILIGIST "rather," said the email boy, "does 'procrastinate' mean 'to put off?' " " "Yes, my son." "Well, a fellow ' got v fresh on ' the street car this morning and you should have seen the way the conductor procrastinated him V v' ) MONSTERS A dinosauras wandered out From prehistoric 4ays. ' A monster weird, he strolled about Our public to amaze. He saw the locomotive swing Around the polished curve, And as e dodged, he cried, "That thing ' Doth surely take my nerve 1" He g ased upon the motor car And heard it grind and wheeze. He saw the airship float afar, So huge, yet all at ease.. "Alasl ha cried; f'what fearful change Throughout this world I see! It is o'errun with monsters strange! The good old times for me!' This Is My 63 rd Birth da y B. J. HARRINGTON Dr. B. J. Harrington, prominent for many years as Macdonal Professor of chemistry at McGIU university, was born at 8t. Andrews, Que., August 5, 1848. He received his education mostly by private tutors and later attended McGI'l university and Yale university. After his graduation from Yale in 1871 he returned to McGill univer sity to become a lecturer in chemistry ana tne following year no was appointed chemist and mineralogist to the geological survey of Canada. He discharged the duties of both positions : for seven years, and then retired from ' the geological survey to devote his entire time to his university work, Dr. Harrington has been honored with membership and office in many of the leading scientific societies of Can? aaa ana ureal Britain. Origin of a Famous Saying. Euclid, who Is sometimes called the father of mathematics, taught this subject In the famous school at Alexandria. Being askenl one day by the king of Egypt (Ptolemy Soter) whether he could not teach him the science in a shorter way. Euclid answered in words that have been memorable ever since, "Sire, there la no royal road to learning." Not many scraps of conversation have lived, as this reply has, for i200 years. Luek. TommyPop, what is luck) Tommy's Pop Lock, my son. Is what comes to a man who has the opportunity of baying something for a mere song, but who can't sing. Philadelphia Record. A Bird In the Hand. A woman Is a person who would rather have her bnsband at home o Bights than in the Ilall of Fame.-GsJ-j lestoa News.
Get Down to Business It will take considerably more than the continual repetition -of what Mr. Justice Brewer may or may not have said in deciding the Kansas City case to persuade the citizens of Richmond that the rates of the Richmond City Water Works shall be based on the Maury report. There Is nothing against Mr. Maury's integrity in this matter there Is no personal consideration. But any one who reads the present contract and then looks over the Maury report can see at a glance that there are items amounting to over a hundred thousand dollars which have no business there. The proof of this is not necessary in as much as Mr. Shiveley has practically admitted that the service pipes which have been paid for by the citizens of Richmond oughtnot to be paid for twice. . The very fact that in the contract now proposed the company goes directly out of its way to state that henceforth the service pipes shall belong to the company as well as all meters and all mains and lines is proof enough. Mr. Dill is under the impression that the former city attorney authorIzed Mr. Maury to do this. Even if he did that would not make the report right nor the valuation 'right and it is this valuation that the Richmond City Water Works asks to be placed on the property the valuation on which the rates are to be increased and justified. But there are two reasons why we do not believe that the City Attorney approved the Maury report. One is because there was a sharp criticism of the Maury report by the administration that hired him And the fact that the city attorney of that time denies it now. All this is beside the question and the inadvertance of both of the engineers who made the report on the valuation in not considering the terms of the present contract in regard to Items of service pipes and pavements amounting to $100,779.51 may be set down to exactly what it is a mistake. That the city of Richmond shall abide by obvious mistakes in the valuation which the Richmond City Water Works wishes the city to acknowledge is just, is as absurd as that the city Is bound by the decision of Mr.. Justice Brewer (which has never even been cited in quotation.) FOR IF SHIVELEY AND SHIVELEY KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT THE LAW THEY KNOW THAT THERE IS A CONSIDERABLE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A COURT DECISION AND A CONTRACT WHICH BOTH PARTIES MUST AGREE TO. If the city Instituted condemnation proceedings to take over the plant it would occur to Mr. Shiveley, we suppose, to cite Mr. Brewer's decision but to cite it in defense of over $100,000.00 worth of items which the individual citizens have already paid for and THEN CLAIM THAT THE GOING CONCERN VALUE SUPPORTED BY BREWER COVERS THE CASE IS TO PUT THE WATER WORKS IN A DISCREDITED POSITION WHICH IT NEED NOT HAVE BEEN PUT IN. For Mr. Dill, or any one familiar with the water works plant could have supported those items in the Maury report which have not been questioned and have allowed that through an INADVERTANCE the Maury report had Included some items that were not warranted. WE HAVE NOT BEEN THE ONES WHO HAVE CAST ANY REFLECTIONS ON MAURY, THE MAN, OR ON THOSE CONNECTED WITH THE WATER WORKS. BUT THE INSISTENCE THAT THE ITEMS WHICH ARE IN VERY SERIOUS QUESTION SHALL BE DELIBERATELY SWALLOWED WITHOUT DISCUSSION AND WITHOUT ANY REASONABLE EXPLANATION IS SUCH AS TO CALL IN QUESTION THE ADVISABILITY OF ACCEPTING THE MAURY REPORT AND OF PLACING THE FULLEST RELIANCE IN THE JUSTICE OF THE CONTENTIONS OF THE WATER WORKS. We hold this to be self evident. We wish that Mr. Dill at the next meeting of the citizens and the company next Wednesday would take up the time that has been given to vaporings that did not befog concerning the Brewer decision and talk fairly and frankly about the valuation of the company. For we believe that Mr. Dill's instincts are to be Just and fair and square and to at least get down to the actual point. That point does not happen to be Maury's integrity which we have taken for granted nor is it the Kansas City case . i ; THE POINT IS, WHAT IS A PROPER VALUATION TO BE PUT ON THE PROPERTY OF THE RICHMOND CITY WATER WORKS? We suggest that he take up the Water Works on a physical valuation basis and leave out the items in question. Then to take up the going concern value and contrast it with what may be called the franchise value or the right to do business with the good will of the town. That in the consideration of these later points he shall set forth the rulings of the Massachusetts, the New York, the Wisconsin, and other well thought of public service commissions not in court decisions, but in cases where the commissions actually assisted in pending contracts. FOR UNTIL THE VALUATION IS ON SOME DEFINITE AND AGREEABLE BASIS, THINGS CAN GO LITTLE FARTHER, AND UNTIL THE VALUATION OF THE PLANT IS SHOWN TO BE FAIR (WHETHER THE MAURY REPORT OR THE COMPANY'S) NOTHING CAN BE DONE WITH THE PROPOSED CONTRACT AS IT STANDS. AND MORE UNTIL THE MAURY REPORT IS SUCCESSFULLY DEFENDED ON THE ITEMS CALLED INTO QUESTION IT OUGHT TO BE THROWN OUT AS INCONCLUSIVE.
MR. SHIVELEY'S OPINION ON SERVICE PIPES (Note: The following is an exact copy of Mr. Shiveley's statement made before the city council and Board of Public Works and is taken from the records "of the Court stenographer which the Palladium employed to record the proceedings of that meeting.) ' MR. HARRIS: Does the Company consider that the service . pipes which the citizens have paid for, belong to the Company under the present contract? MR. SHIVELEY: They have not called for a legal opinion upon tha subject. I would not want to give an opinion as a lawyer. I understand that "the city attorney told the expert when he was making the appraisal that those service pipes did not belong to the water consumers. I do not know whether he went to the extent of saying that they belonged to the Water Company, but he so advised the expert who was here at that time. It is a pretty serious question to whom those service pipes belong. If the Water Works company attaches them to their main line and they are taken to the curb, it might very reasonably be held that they belong to the Water Works Company, because it becomes a part of their system and is attached to it, but hero comes the other question that if the consumer pays for it and it is laid from the middle of the street to his curb line, In addition to paying for it he is the owner of the fee of that ground with the easement of the public to pass over it. It is his absolutely. The fee is in him. That pipe is laid at his expense, practically in his ground, and I can see where a court might hold that it belonged to the abutting property owner and do it very reasonably and very Intelligently, and I can see where a court might reason it out the other way, and say whereas it had been made a part of the water works system, connected with it, it had become a part of it and that it belonged to the water works company. A SPECTATOR: That item as a part of. the estimate of Maury was figured as a part of the $700,000, was it? MR. DILL: Yes. That was done upon the advice of the City Attorney.
LETTER, LIST The following letters remain unclaimed at the local postofflce and will be aent . to the Dead Letter Office, if not called for within two weeks ; '. Ladies' List Mrs. J. D, Bown, Mrs. Gertie Bush, Mrs. E. Dennis, Mrs. D. C. Elleman, Mrs. S. Glunt, Nett Hat, Mrs, G. W. Hensley. Mrs. A. Hunt. Mrs. N. S. Hunt, Miss Jessie Lermin, Mrs. Edith Leva. Mrs. Wm. H. Lough, Mrs. Raymond McCamy, Mrs. James McMaster, Mrs. W Moore, Mrs. H.
Murphy, Mrs. J. C. Smith. Mrs. J. Wilson. . Gentlemen's List J. O. Breitenbach,
T. J. & H. F. Burk, Otis Folger, Boisy Hunt, A. C Jones, Charles A. Jones, E. . Kearns, George Kirnan (special delivery), H. Kump, Jesse McBride, Joseph M. Miller. R. H. Smith. Newt. Stipp, ' J. J. Study. George Wallace, Robert J. Walsh. Returned to Writer B. W. Tittle. Miscellaneous Empire Mfg. Co. Finy Bros.. Graham Boiler Works, E. C. Minas Co, School for Florists. Uhl Bros. & Co. E. M. Haas, P. M.
HUTTED REBELS FOUGHT EACH OTHER Twenty Killed in Battle and Foreign Marines May Quell Disturbance.
(National News Assocltion PORT AU PRINCE. Hayti, Aug. 5. Fighting between factions in the revolutionist army broke out early today in the streets of the capital and in one engagement twenty were killed. Troops of Gen. Firmin's army clashed with soldiers under Gen Lecente. As a result of the fighting and conditions bordering on absolute anarchy which followed, the foreign warships in the harbor landed more marines. Rebels threatened to pillage the entire city and the leaders gave no indication of preventing them. The Dutch steamer Prinx Der Nederland, with ex-President Simon and his wife on board, left for Kingston, Jamaica. As 6he steamed from the harbor the international war fleet in the harbor fired a parting salute for the deposed president. The French cruiser D'Estress arrived today to protect French lives and interests. Intervention seemed today to be the only solution of the crisis. The "committee of safety" had been ousted and if it had not been for the armed ma rines landed from the warships, the city would have been sacked and probably burned before this, with heavy loss of life. Have you read page two? If not, do so. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright. 1908, by Edwin A. Nye A KINGLY MIND. One of the bravest men who eve; lived died in Des Moines recently. In the year 1874 N. F. Miller, then t mail clerk on the Burlington road passed through a direful wreck. In a collision be was thrown to tut floor of the mail car, and a redhoi stove fell over on his face. Wedged in by the furniture, he was unable to move. One ear was burned off and an eyeball destroyed, while the flesh and bones of one side of the face wert roasted and his brain seared. It seems Incredible, but it was an hour before Miller was extricated. When the doctors Anally got to him one remarked: "All we can do is to relieve him. He cannot live.", , Whereupon Miller retorted. "I will live longer than you doctors." And he did. He lay in the hospital for two years and suffered many delicate operations, refusing ail anaesthetics. The great surgeon of his time, Faenger, who became interested in Miller's case, performed many of the operations, making only a nominal charge for fees that otherwise would have been enormous. For two years the church bells in the vicinity of the hospital did not ring because of Miller's delicate condition. He returned to his mail car and served twelve years.. Finally, recognizing his injuries and service, congress created the position of superintendent of mails at Des Moines and gave Mr. Miller the life position, a place he filled until his death. Though frightfully disfigured and a cripple for life, Mr. Miller was always cheerful and a man whom it was a pleasure to know. Every day of his life conditions required that his wound should be dressed. How he endured the constant draft upon his vitality for thirty-seven years Is a marvel. With one side of his face swathed always In fine linen and most carefully dressed be was an unusually handsome man Miller was a striking figure. One day he was asked the secret of his wonderful survival and replied: . "Why, Faenger saved my brain. We do not live by our bodies. We live In our minds." This man ran the whole gamut of heroism. Through the dun days of ceaseless suffering he was no less heroic than In the ghastly crisis of the wreck. And he stood a living demonstration of the divine power of kingly mind over mere matter. " VACATION AND FATHER. All winter long mother has been on the rack, and now, what with the usual housecleanicg and the baby, she is nervous and worn. So father rounds up the whole bunch and bundles off mother and the kids to some quiet country place. They go from the stuffy city to the open spaces, the running water and sunshine and trees. The family purse permits no splurge And father stays by the stuff. To him come souvenir postal cards and cute messages. To him comebest of all letters like "she" used to write. -Pop" Is gleefaL How he glows and gloats over the bits of news about Johnny trying to walk a log and falling into the creek and Susie feeding the calf. And the baby has learned a new word! He swells huge when Mollie and the children write a joint epistle the baby making Its mark to tell him they are all having the time of their Uvea, thanks to "d, kind "popsie." and how much they wish he might be there, audit might be difficult to guess who Is the happier, those gone away or bwho stays.
"THIS DATE
AUGUST 5. 1749 Thomas Lynch, the youngest signer of the Declaration of Independence, born near Georgetown, S. C. Lost at sea in 1779. 1772 Russia, Austria and Prussia concluded an agreement for the first partition of Poland. 1805 Francis I. of Austria declared war against France. 1816 First state election in Indiana. 1861 President Lincoln signed an act of congress forbidding the selling or giving of intoxicating drinks to soldiers. 1862 At Baton Rouge the Confederaetes under Gen. Breckenridge attacked the Federals under Gen. Williams, who was killed. 1865 Admiral Farragut attacked Forts Morgan and Gains in Mobile bay. 1886 Parcels post established between Canada and points in Great Britain. 1890 United States congress passed a bill to pension army nurses.
-ana" wnca tiiey coax buv .--.. watch father! It is easy to pick him out as he wai for the train. How many times I soaps his watch and smiles! Tl. whole bunch his bunch is on th: train! And when at last the train rolls lnt the station his sweetheart's kiss is c his lips and a big bear hug for daddi from every one. Fovgotten is the loag pull. Forgotten the hot. weary days. Forgotten the long, lonesome nights It may be that the wrinkles in fa tber's face are a trifle deeper, and possibly his shoulders may droop a mite more, but all be knows and feels is pent up in one gulp of happiness, because His folks are back! Mamma is strong again, and she sings as she disposes the household lares and penates much awry despite "her" oft repeated exhortation to "put everything back in Its place." And the children go about as brown and as happy as birds. And the bond of love that binds the family is the kind that does not come untied. WHAT OTHERS SAY THE DROWNING RECORD From the Philadelphia Press. The news columns show that 1911 is somewhat ahead of its predecessors in the matter of deaths due to drowning. As usual, the fool who rocks the boat and the expert swimmer furnish a large proportion of the vicitmB. " ECONOMY From the Chicago Post. By way of saving coal billsthe government might keep a cruiser or two at Haiti right along. Revolutions are numbered there like bombs here. WANTS A LOW COLLAR From the Baltimore Sun. Dr. Wiley wants to regulate the foam line on the beer glass. That man certainly does know how to keep himself popular. DOUBLED VALUE OF FARMS From the New York Times. It will not be necessary much longer to keep up the "back-to-the-farm" propoganda. The census bureau's last announcement that the value of farms in the United States has doubled within a decade, although their number has increased only one-tenth and their acreage by one-twentieth, shows what is going on in the way of cultivating them by more intensive and more thrifty methods. Their value per acre has leaped in ten years from $15.60 to $32.50, an increase of 108 per cent The value of farm buildings is threefourth more than in 1900, while farm implements and machinery have increased by two-thirds in value. The movement back to the farms is becoming irresistible. The increase in the facilities for transit and for com munication by telephone and telegraph between the cities and rural districts, together with the systematic spreading of information about bet ter methods of tilling the soil, accounts for this agricultural transfor mation. The new agriculture has come. As its principles are inculcated in the minds of the agriculturists. farm values may, during successive decades, double again and again. NO WAITING LIST From the New York Tribune. f In his futile efforts to dodge responsibility for not qualifying as a United States senator, Hoke Smith committed himself to some curious theories as to the rigL of a governor to hold up the commission of a legally elected senator. Mr. Smith wanted Mr. Terrell, who was serving as an ad interim appointee until the legislature could elect a senator, to continue as a sort of chairwarmer after the ligislature had elected. Mr. Terrell propWe
Owing to the fact that there is less demand for slack and coke, which are used for manufactiiring purposes, the screened coal is getting more difficult to obtain, as the mines must dispose of the slack. If the depression in manufacturing continues, screened coal win be hard to buy and high in price. . . , ...WE CELL FROM THE BEOT MINEG ONLY... FATHER BC3S.
IN HISTORY"
erly declined to exercise the functions of a senator by sufferance in spite of the admitted fact that the legislature had willed the seat which he was des ignated to occupy temporarily. Mr. Smith could not deny trat the seat had been filled, but he advanced the ingenious theory that knowledge of that action could properly be withheld from the senate by the device of not forwarding official notice of it to Washington. In other words, Mr. Smith, as governor, purposed nullify ing the effect of the election for six months or longer by sequestering the credential of the Benator whom the legislature had named. Romoe Not Taken Seriously. Juliet was only fifteen years old, but she thought she was quite grown up.1 One evening, says Mrs. R. A. Pry or in "My Day." she was receiving ou the moonlit veranda a young man caller. He. too, it seemed, considered himself grown up. The anxious youth was moved to seise the propitious hour and declare himself. Juliet wished to an swer correctly and dismiss him without wounding him. She assured him mamma would never consent. A voice from within they were aitting beneath her mother's windowsettled the matter: "Accept the young man. Juliet, If you , want to. I've not the least objectlou. And let him run along home now. Be sure to bolt .the door when you come in. Evidently the mother had small respect for boy lovers and wished to go to sleep. A Prince Edward Island Legend. There is a delightful legend among the people of Point Prim to the effect that when the English attacked the French fort at that place a chain ball from one of the attacking vessels cut the steeple from the old church located on the very point. In falling it toppled over the promontory and carried the bell which it contained Into the sea. Dwellers along the point affirm that from time to time the sound of that bell comes over the waters at eventide and that its phantom tone is ever a warning of a fierce storm or some imminent danger to those who make their living by the spoils of the ocean.
Bcaadafiil Boons. MoldiaCoTCar-4ijornU.
Aay Oat Shoot
MAPLFLAI
Hie Wheat tktvsx ruDiso
15c at Your Grocer's
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AlfTM1ATURE VIEW OP
MAPLE SISTERS' SIX-ROOM DOLL HOUSE Th knit U 29 fecbaa Wa mm 20 tmch Usfe"
Mothers and Children - The fraoMwcrk of tho hmwe la mad of Mapl-Flake packaaea (either to Wheat or tho Cora). The wall paper aad the dolla a ad f oraltare are cat from twelve aheeta. aa auaed and I luted herewith. Over a million of the beaotifal "Maple Siatera" aheeta of wall paper, delta and farnitare to make the doll hooee. are la the haada of the bewt gloiei a eer here, ready to deliver free to nana of Mapl-fiake aad Mapl-Corn Flakee. Aak if ToodOBOiaee them. They are separate from the food. If roar racer cannot aopply yon. writ to th Mapl. Flake Mill. Battle Creek, Michifaa. givinc hia name and addreaa.
MapLFlahm h the Bet Food in the World Show your grocer this adwortiacmoait and Tm will 4ro yoo
with each paefcagw of too
Havo 15 Cars of Scrocncd FOR AUGUCT DELIVERY
MILITIA Oil GUARD III BEATTIE TRIAL 000OMB00N Formal Murder Indictment Drawn Parents of Beattie and Wife Friendly.
RICHMOND. Va,. Aug. 5. A company of militia, deputy sheriff a and the detective who have worked on the great Beattle automobile murder mystery will be camped on the green at the Chesterfield courthouse during the trial of Henry Clay Beattie, Jr., who is charged with wife murder. The deputy sheriffs and detectives will eleep in the tents so as to be on hand night or day during the progress of the trial, and the militiamen will be present to prevent a hostile outbreak against the prisoner. An indictment, drawn with all the legal phraseology of the common-' wealth has been written, charging the killing of Mrs. Louise Owen Beattie. Jr.. to her "husband. The indictment Is ready for the jurors to affix their names when they take up the Beattie case on August 14. Throughout the ordeal, the aged father of Beattie and the aged mother and father of the murdered woman have retained their friendly feelings, the result of years of acquaintance. Mr. Owen, father of the slain woman says he wanta justice done. Mr, Beattie, father of the accused boy, de clares his belief in his son's innocence and together the aged men are doing everything possible for the welfare of the motherless infant, which la cared for by the. aged grandmother, Mrs. Owen. -- Have vou read naire two? If not, do so. ATTEMPT TO SMASH RUNNING RECORD (National News Association) NEW YORK, Aug. 5. An attempt to smash the standing record of 11 mues smu yarns ior one nour continuous running will be made In the games to be held at Celtic park by the Irish volunteers on Aug. 13. Tom Longboat, the Canadian Indian, has been invited to take part, entries have already been received from HanB Holmer, Billy Queat, Matt Maloney, Jim Crowley and other well known runners. A Palled Ambition. "That boy of Joggios' started out very ambitiously. When his father wanted him to settle down to steady work he amid be meant to do things in breaking records." "Well, did he keep up a breaking peceT . "Rather. He broke hie father, then he broke into a bank, and now he's breaking stones." Baltimore AmerlWtth Twe PackagM lOcat YottrGrocafr Snoot Room Memo 1 NURSERY DolU and Fnfnittiro. 2 NURSERY-Wolt Paper. 3 KITCHEN Dolla, Wall Pieces Parnlture. 4 BAKN-OoQi. Wall Piocca aad Fa tn re. 5 6 LIVING ROOM -Dolla aad Pnraitaro, LIVINO ROOM WH paper. BED ROOM DoIU nod Furniture. 7 8 9 10 HED ROOM Wall PaDCT. DINING ROOM Dolla aod Puraltnra, DIN I NO ROOM Wall Paper. RATH ROOM -Dolla and PtaraJtura. 11 12 BATH ROOM Wall Paper. Today oa doll dating Una awoatna ot July aa
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PRICES GO UP in SEPTEHDER
