Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 86, 19 February 1919 — Page 10
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PAGE TEN THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM WEDNESDAY, FEB. 19, 1919.
FAIR PRICES FOR LIVESTOCK ARE PAID AT FARM SALES TUESDAY
By WILLIAM R. SANBORN "When a man announces in a farm tale advertisement that he is to have five auctioneers and all the clerks necessary, people right then begin to take notice. They figure that he must " have "the goods" or 'why such a list of auctioneers. C. W. Bundy, living on the old Albert Oler farm, advertised Just that war. his Bale taking place on Tuesday. Well, he really did make a brave showing all over the place. A large tent ' was provided and the live stock was sold under shelter, also the hay, oats, etc. Conniff and Dennis of Richmond, Button of Knlghtstown, Hlndman of Hagerstown and Conoway of Moreland, comprised a mutual aid society to get the last dollar from the bidders. John M. Manning of Economy, was clerk, and Ray E. Swallow of the American Trust and Savings bank, cashier of the sale. C. W. Bundy, who Is planning to settle In Richmond, we are told, has .acquired fame in two distinct fields; first as a practical farmer and next as a preacher In the Friends church. In this be is a 'character in a wide circle of acquaintances. v He will now do his farming by proxy, his farm adjoining the Oler place to be run by a i tenant. , -$ Sale . Neta $7,500. ' " ; . The Bandy sale ranks well up I among the headllnera, the total realflsed. despite withdrawals, being in j round numbers $7,500. A Bull tractor 1 did, not reach the upset price, for in1 stance, and will be sold at private I aala. Although but 400 bushels of toata was advertised about 1,200 went under the hammer. The first bidder, Bd Johnson, paid 76 cents for a. special 4 lot of 250 bushels, the balance of the 1 mm. M. PA , A offering going 10 mm ai v ceam. a lot of 700 bushels "in Albert Gilmer's barn" told at 60 cento to 63 cents to numerous buyers.' Charles Campbell J bought three lots of corn, and paid 1.15 xor juu, jor ouu, uu for 400 hnahala. A raft of mixed hay ?went at from $16.50 to $17.75 per ton. A million or so of bales of wneat straw averaging 88 cents a bale, was sold from several locations. Tne cop or nogs was sou, pi vj Russell and Jackson. The average on 42 heads of Kilts, only thing offered. was about $46. Nine head of horses land mules were sold. Owen Stow paid $467.50 for a team of blacks, and $302.60 for a span of mules. Charles Goodson bid In a black mare at $180, land a Belgian mare sold at $192. v . . t Cows Bring Average Prices. SUA two-pound per day Jersey cow brought $122, the very top on cows. A v cow furnishing that amount of butter Is cheap at that price, if not too old. ' Ollie Fraser got a good Jersey at $101, and Ed Johnson paid $87 for a ninef year-old roan cow. ' , c v 4-;ln the Implement field some very "good prices were realized: Ed Hut5 .chen paid $126 for a binder; Arch .: Brooke $75 for a disc and Emery Oler , $52 for a mower. .Among the buyers ; not previously noted weret Ray Cox, Albert Jarrett, Clint Sanders, L. T. Ulmer, . Harrold Duke, J. C. . Russell, Harry Macy, Tom Cates, Charles Jordan and Logan Hunt. The Ladies' Aid of Sugar Grove church served a liberal lunch, , and had an abundant , supply to last out the day; the sale not closing till almost 5 o'clock. EDWARD CONWAY SALE ' There were three buyers for the three horses first put up at the Edward Conaway form sale on Tuesday. Fred Wilson paid $207.50 for a gray mare; another gray was sold to John Hubbell at $191, and a bay gelding was captured by Wood Huber at $107.50. , - Mr. Conaway recently purchased the Rose farm near him, but will continue to live at his present location, having a tenant or two interested in doing his farming. The sale took place 7 miles southwest of Liberty, Ind. A number of Implements were listed and brought very fair prices, depending on condition. ' Dolph Hanley paid $66 for a dise;M. Erb got a hayloader at. $5 V also a corn plow at $27.50. O. Cully was the heaviest investor in this ' line, his binder costing him $215.60, while Frank Young's mower cost , him but $40, and R. C. Folk got a gang; plow at the bargain price of $27. ; , " .; Fair Prices for Livestock. : The highest price for a span . of mules was $335, sold to Ed Abernatny; Joe Moffett got off cheaper, his span costing him but $150. In addition to the horse sale previously mentioned, 'were a black horse to Fred Wilson at $150, a sorrel to E. Church at $140, and a dapple colt to M. May for an even $100. Twenty-five head of sheep were sold HAVE ROSY CHEEKS AND FEEL FRESH AS A DAISYS-TRY THIS! Says glass of hot water with phosphate before breakfast r washes out poisons. To see the tinge of healthy bloom in. your face, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, to wake up without ' a headache, backache, coated tongue or a nasty breath, in fact to feel your best, day in and day out, just try inside-bathing every morning for one week. efore breakfast each day, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphat in it as a harmless means of washing from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour ' bile and toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water, and dimestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases and acidity and gives . one a splendid appetite for breakfost. - A quarter pound of limestone phosphate will cost very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to demonstrate that. Those who are subject to con stipation, bilious attacks, acid stomach, rheumatic twinges, also those whose skin is sallow and complexion pallid, that one week of inside-bathing will have them both looking and feeling better In every way. Adv. ;
to C. Bechell at $16.25 per head. Dave Showalter paid $65 for a Jersey, which was the top on cows.: Al Goble bought three heifers at $39.50 per head and one at $33. C. H. Boothe paid $97 for a bull. The few hogs on sale brought average sale prices. Sale Totals Up $3,680. Col. Brannagan and his new partner, Fred Lake, auctioneered the Conaway sale and Earl Crawford was cashier. The sale netted Mr. Conaway $3,680, and was considered In every way satisfactory. The ladies of Alquina church served an attractive lunch and garnered a nice profit for their variaus charities. J. L. SHAEFFER SALE They held a-small but good sale on the Jacob L. Shaeffer farm, just east of Hollansburg, Ohio, on the Middleboro pike, on Tuesday. Three horses, nine head of cattle and seventeen head of hogs constituted the livestock offering. ' v f ; The attraction at this sale was quite a large display, of farm tools and implements, and, to the ladies; several articles in the furniture line. The top on horses was $120; on brood sows, of which there were but three, $50; and on cows $117, we believe. The five cows sold were good milkers and averaged well up in price, as did the four yearling heifers. A lot of corn was sold at around $1.58 and the oats on offer brought a fair price in the bin. - About $2,800 Realized While not a large sale, as : sales sometimes go, a net of $2,800 was very satisfactory. Omer Piatt auctioneered the sale, and N. T. Irelan and Will Harris of Hollansburg, were the clerks. The attendance was not large because of the numerous sales taking place on Tuesday, . but Mr. Shaeffer's friends were out in force. The Ladies' Aid society of Beech Grove served a satisfying lunch. ; HOWARD ELIASON SALE. The offerings at the Howard Eliason farm sale, held 3& miles northeast of Richmond on Tuesday, brought out, all his neighbors and friends, and everything sold at face value prices. The usual run of farm tools, implements, etc., was first sold and after lunch the stock was taken care of. Four horses, six head of cattle and 41 bogs, with about 100 fine chickens, went under the hammer and were scattered across the county. The sale netted $2,000, w a. large sale, but in view of the lii.ced number of offerings may . be considered satisfactory. Simon Weddle and Chauncey Morrow
were the auctioneers and Will Jeffries and Harry Gilbert clerk and cashier, respectively. ARM Sale JL Calendar FEBRUARY 20 G. A. Cox, 3V miles north of Williamsburg. Elmer Kimmel, 2 miles south of Eldorado. Henry Huffman, 2 1-2 , miles east of Camden. . George Thompson, 3 miles southeast of Shaughn. George Gephart, 1 mile southeast of Gettysburg. ' Frank T. Raper, 3 miles northwest of Richmond. - C. L. Lyons, 2 miles north of Greensfork. FEBRUARY 21. Jones and Pike, Hawthorn farm, Centerville. Brown and'Hogue, 1 miles north west of Newcastle. 14 HENS LAY 13 EGGS A DAY. SOME RECORD! Mr. Moore Gets Lots of Eggs. Hatching Eggs, Tool Good "I had been getting 2 or 3 eggs a day from 15 hens. Then I commenced putting Don Sung in the feed, and am getting 11 to 13 eggs a day, with one hen setting." Don Sung is the best thing I ever found for making hens lay." E. L. Moore, 818 Clayborn St., Danville, Va. ' Mr. Moore started getting these extra eggs in February, and wrote this letter last March. You can figure his profit with eggs selling at around - 70 cents a dozen. And this is no better than Don Sung is doing for thousands of others. No matter how many or how few eggs you are getting, Don Sung will pay you. Accept our offer just as Mr. Moore did: I Give your hens Don Sung and watch results for one month. If you don't And that Don Sung pays for itself and pays you a good profit besides, simply tell us and your money ; will be refunded. . Don Sung (Chinese for egg-laying) works directly on the egg-laying organs, and is also a splendid tonic. It is easily given in the feed, improves the hen's health, makes her stronger and more active in any weather, and starts her laying. Try Don Sung for 30 dayc and if it doesn't get you the eggs, no matter how cold or wet the weather, your money will be refunded by return mail. Get Don Sung from your druggist or poultry remedy dealer or send 50 cents today for a package by mail prepaid- Burrell-Dugger Co., 168 Columbia Bldsr. InrtiortBrioHs. Ind. Adv. We Recommend MSIIM For Making Hens Lay Fully Guaranteed 0merG.WheIan The Feed Man 31-33 So. 6th St Phone 1679 Richmond, Ind.
James Russell, 5 miles east of Cam den. W. N. Wolf, m miles west of Bentonville. E. Brown, 4 miles southeast of Richmond. Endsley, Petty, Nuller, 2 miles north of Hagerstown. FEBRUARY 22 Simon Atwell, south of Williamsburg. Von Tilburg and Taube, Richmond. FEBRUARY 24 Wlllard Cook, 6 miles southeast of Milton. Nicholson and Stutson, two miles northeast of Greensfork. O. Gangner. 1 mile northwest of West Manchester. T. Fisher, 8 miles north of Richmond. FEBRUARY 25 L. O. Mansfield, north of Richmond, Union pike. C. M. Wagner, 3 miles south of Eldorado. McCord-Klnsinger, ' east of Cambridge City. Richmond. D. R. Funk, 7 miles northeast of FEBRUARY 26 Ed Johnson, 2 miles southwest of Centerville. J. O. Ballinger. near Economy. M. D. and Irwin Doddridge, 3 miles southwest of Brownsville. FEBRUARY 27 Daniel Markey, 3 miles south of West Manchester. R. E. Kelly, G. Dugglns, L. Davis, 5 miles southwest of Eaton. E. W. Hensley. 1 mile north of Richmond. , FEBRUARY 28 W. Glander, 3 miles southeast of West Manchester. Warner Fleisch, 7 miles southeast of Richmond. Chas. Burg, 1 mile east of Jack-sonburg.
MARCH 3 L. C. King, 6 miles northwest of Richmond. Economy, Ind. Huda Haxton met with an accident at the home of her granddaughter, Mrs. Hazel McCann. When a shawl around her shoulders slipped off, she caught her feet in it and fell, mashing the bone in her left thigh The social meeting held at the Friends church was well attended. One hun dred and sixty-five were served at dinner. Ten new members were accepted. Letters were read from members in various parts of the United States and one from John Jessup, who is in France.... Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Fenimore received a message from their son, C. C. Fenimore of Los Angeles, Cai., telling them of the arrival of a new daughter, Barbara Ann. Mr. Fenimore formerly lived here.. . .Harold Williamson has been discharged from the army and is now home... .A signal party was given at the Cranor Hotel recently , for the SenioY class.... Mrs. Alice Fraiser attended a birthday surprise that was given for her father Wallace McCall at Richmond Sunday ....Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hiatt E. E. Nicholson of Greensfork spent Saturday forenoon withj Lon Edwards P. J. Odea of Richmond was here Saturday visiting friends Miss Ethel Charles of Richmond spent Sunday with her parents Willie Charles and wife.... Mrs. W. L. Fenimore and daughter, Blanche spent Sunday afternoon at the Edwards home east of town..... Miss Belle Conley has returned from Indianajolis where she has been spending the " winter Some new cases of influenza is reported here. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Jake Williams of Losantville spent Sunday with John Williams and family Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Hiatt spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Williams. .. .Word has been received here from Howard Stanley who moved from here to a farm' near Richmond last week that he is dangerously ill. i
BMT EXPEKI1IEIW WITi CATAKffl
Here Is a Sensible Treatment That Gives Prompt Results. Winter and Catarrh are com panions in evil. uatarrn is sweeping civilization from one continent to another, just because civilization does not heed Nature's simple laws. Nature tells us what to do and we pay no heed. Don't think lightly of Catarrh. Do not make the mistake of believing that it is merely an aggravated bad cold. True, this trouble usually starts with what is apparently a cold in the head,
"hangs on." You may as WS?8 ar rou,ted from the bJo?d:
realize at the outset that Catarrh is a serious disease and one that should not be trifled with. In fact, in many -instances it is a forerunner of the most dreaded of : all diseases consumption. Don't permit yourself to be deceived. Perhaps, like thousands of others afflicted with ca tarrh you are about ready to believe that the disease is incurable, and that you are doomed to spend the remainder of your days hawking and spitting, with no relief in sight from inflamed and stopped-up air passages that "make the days miserable and the j nights sleepless. If you are in the grasp of ! Catarrh, your experience should I convince you that the disease is ; beyond the reach of sprays, ! douches, jellies, balms, salves j
PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS TRY THEM
TTNDIANA Ji Briefs
INDIANAPOLIS The "wild" wolf that was killed here Sunday after a chase of several hours by several hundred, men and dogs, was identified Nellie, neighborhood pet owned by David Watts. "Nellie wouldn't harm a baby, and was loved by all the children of the neighborhood, said Watts sadly. "But she got out of the yard and it's all over now." PETERSBURG William Minor, living near here, had a span of mules that were very fond of one another. Sunday he rode one of the to a neigh bors house. When he returned after a four-hour absence, the mule left In was dead. It had hanged itself by the halter. MARION Edward L. Minch and his son, Bertram. Minch, who were both in the service, the father in the army and the son in the navy, are having their first visit together in three years. The father was with Battery C, 139th Field Artillery, recently returned from France, and the son is still in the navy. - ,. ' ALEXANDRIA Mrs Martha Haas, sixty, years old, read in the papers that I. W. W. members were being deported, and- understood it to mean German. She made a hurried trip to the mayor's oflice to prove her loyalty, and displayed large quantities of Lib erty bonds and war savings stamps and cursed the Kaiser heartily. She is a native German but had not taken out naturalization ppers. NASHVILLE Brown county thinks four years is long enough to build four and one-half miles of pike, and the county commissioners have refused to extend the time to Adam Swank, contractor. The road, which DAILY HEALTH TALKS The Best Way to Treat Constipation BY S. C. BABCOCK, M. D. The medical- books name many drugs that will move the bowels. The drug store shelves are loaded down with laxatives, purgatives and pills. The trouble with cnost of them is the after-effects. Constipated people know that pills work all right ior a little while, but they soon lose their effect, and a change has to be made to something else. The constant taking of Dills results in a form of bowel inactivity that is difficult to cure. The system becomes so accustomed to laxative drugs that the organs just won't work without them, and so the pill habit becomes as bad as constipation itself. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., seems to me to have the right idea. Ho says the bowels should first be gently moved with Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, and in the meantime laxative foods" only should be eaten. Figs, prunes; olive oil, spinach, bran, vegetables and fruits are fine for constipation. Chew every bite thoroughly, eat little meat, and be as active asipossible. ' Now, doesn't that eem sensible? Pleasant Pellets will start the bowels working right ; then it is up to vou to keep them right by right eating, fry Pleasant Pellets for sick headache, joated tongue, biliousness, dizziness, toroid liver or to break up a cold. They ire just fine! Dr. Pierce's Anodyne Pile Ointment ioothes, cools and heals piles in a most gratifying way. Perhaps there is no other remedy for this torturing trouble that relieves so surely and quickly. Dr. Pierce believes Anodyne Pile Ointment will overcome any case that can be overcome by medical treatment. Try it right now. Dr. Pierce's Anuric Tablets are intended for people who suffer from kidney disorders whose backs ache, and whose systems are overrun with uric acid. Nearly avervbodv has too much uric acid. Anuric Tablets dissolve uric acid quickly, I as they are made douoia strengtn. and other locally applied remedies. When the air passages become ' so stopped up that every breath you take is difficult, when the1 throat and nose are so clogged ; up with offensive mucus that you are constantly hawking and ! spitting in an effort to clear j your nostrils, every effort you; make to get relief by the use of j sprays and douches is promptly followed by new accumulations, so that no headway whatever is made toward getting rid of the disease. Realize that the Catarrh comes from a germ which infests the blood, and that the disease cannot exist when these 1 he rational and successful treatment, therefore, is one tJiat ! reaches the blood, and cleanses! it of every trace of impurity and rids it , of these tiny Catarrh germs. Of course, no local remedies can reach the blood supply, and that is why Catarrh is not cured by sprays and lotions. The one great blood remedy that has made a wonderful record is S. S. S. which has been on sale by drug stores everywhere for over half a century. If you would be rid of your Catarrh, get a bottle of this great old remedy today, which will give - you satisfactory results, as it has In so many cases. You will find that you are on the right treatment at last, as S'. S. S. will do for you what it has for thousands of others. - Start taking S. S. S. today, and write a complete description of your case to our head physician, who will give you all necessary instructions by return mail, without charge. Address Medical Director, 158 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. Adv.
runs from Nashville to Helmsburg, has never been in shape for a motor to travel over it since it was first let in 1915. BRAZIL Sixty-one Clay county boys of the 309 Ammunition train, marched through the streets here, cheering and yelling to Inform the city that they were out of the service.. . v NASHVILLE Part of the high cost of living has been explained here. There is a family of sixteen- in Brown county which since September 1. 1918, has eaten the "following , provisions : 4,200 pounds of flour, twenty bushels of beans, -two barrels of sauerkraut, 1.200 heads of cabbage, forty barrels Of pickels, twenty gallons of picketed beans, one barrel of catsup and other staggering amounts of food that the father could not enumerate off hand. CANNELTON Oval Thomas has been placed on trial here for the murder of his uncle, Oliver Thomas. The evidence ,. against young Thomas is purely circumstantial. Oliver Thomas was found in a ravine on his farm last April, dead from a gunshot wound.
THE WELCOME GUEST HAS A GOOD STOMACH Not What You Eat But What You Dlgest .Tells the Story. Eat Any thing if You Follow With a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet. The Man or Woman Who Can Eat Heartily and Not Fade Away Is the Welcome Guest Anywhere. Many people just hate to eat in company. They prefer to crawl Into some by-place for a dyspeptic's plate of molly coddle. Business men often resort to this form of weakness under the belief they can work better. But it isn't what you eat but what you digest that counts.- Some stomachs can't digest even a glass of milk. So they simply keep on feeding dyspepsia and get gas, water brash, sour risings and so on that the better informed and hearty eaters entirely avoid. This they do by using Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. . Many physicians prescribe them for indigestion, dyspepsia and other digestive disorders. They are sold at every drug store, everywhere, price 50 cents a box. Ask your druggist more about them. Adv. . -
7 Studebake
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The New LIGHT-SIX $1585.00 F. 0. B. Detroit Beautiful in Design Thoroughly Modern Mechanically Right 413-415 Main
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He was supposed to have several hundred dollars In his possession, which had disappeared, i Young ' Thomas is the last , person who saw his uncle
Physicians Ddow Say Thai Ordinary Metallic Irca Preparations Cannot Possibly Give Hie Samo STRENGTH, POWER AND ENDURANCES : Am Orgulo Iron HuMted Iron United States Judge Atldiuon Gives Opu&
; Careful Investigation bf p1Ticin among druggists and patients bu revealed the - fact that there are thouianda of people taking iron who do not distinguish between or- ' game iron and metallic iron, and that auch person often fail to obtain the vital enerpy, strength and endurance which they seek, simply because they have taken the. wrong form o iron. - j. - Therefore, physicians men tioned below, advise . those who feel the need of a strength and blood builder to go to their family doctors and obtain a prescription dllingj for organic iron Nuxatca Iron and present this to their druggist so that there may be so question about Judge 0. obtaining1 the proper article. - But if they do not wish to 50 to the United Statea Atkinson, of the trouble cS eettinz a. oreWashington. D. ecription for Nuxatcd Iron then be aure to look on the label and tea that the words KUXATED IRON are printed thereon not Nux and Iron nor any oth-r form of Iron, bat luxated Iron. The remartaMe results produced by Nuxatcd Iron and its widespread
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without hesitation that-1 recommend Nuxatcd Iron to persons who in the stress of physical or mental labors have permitted the system to become debilitated, the body exhausted or the nerves rua down. It has restored my appetite and my vitality. I feel that I have dropped off the burden of months of toil in the few week that I have been following the very simple directions for the se of Jfuxated Iron."
eile (it beinz estimated that over three million people annually are to-day using it), has led to the offering of numerous substitutes, and these physicians say that health offidal, and doc toV every'uljv .uuuiu.uuu.i iub iu uiii; B iiiav ccpung- innnniies in medicines ana tney csneciaiiv warn aeainst aeceotinv aubatitufea for Nuxatcd Iron, which, instead of being
Conkey Drug Co. and Thlstlethwaite's Drug Stores. Adv. '
High Grade Coal Ind iana Block, per ton $6.00 Brazil Block, per ton $7.20 Ebong (W. Va.) Black, per ton. .... . .... .$7.50 Jellico (Ky.) Block, per ton. . . . . . . . . .$7.50 Jackson (Ohio) Block, per ton. .$7.60 We sell no poor coal! THE INDEPENDENT ICE and FUEL CO. Yard and Plant N. 16th and F St. Phone 3465
The remarkable way it stays in the road and travels mile after mile without vibration or effort, is but one feature of the New Studebaker Light-Six. Its thoroughbred appearance, its clean-cut, aristocratic lines, its comfort-giving cushions and easy springs these are advantages which make it ideal as a family car. And, in addition, its light weight, sterling high quality, its durability, its low gasoline-consumption and tire-economy, its beautiful finish, in your choice of two color options all these, with its very low cost combine to make it one of the most economical Light Six Cylinder Cars ever offered the public and especially so under conditions as they are today. Finally, its built for an owner's convenience and ease of maintenance a car which anyone can understand and operate. ' '
McGonaha
Street
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organic Iron nay ito&lflt? more than a metal lie iros compound which may in womrn cases produce more harna than good. The widespread publication of the above information, baa been suggested by Dr. James Francis Sullivan, formerly physician of Bcllevue Hospital (Outdoor Dept.), New York, end the Westchester County Hospitals Br. Ferdinand King, Net York Physician end Medical Author and others, so that the public may be informed on this subject and protected from the use of metallic Iron ' tinder the delusion that it tm Xuxated Iron or at least something as good as Nuxatcd Iron. . It is surprising how uisow 17, Atklnaea people suuer irom iros ' deficiency and do not know it. If you are not strong or well, you owe it to yourself to make the following test: See tow long yon can work or how far yon can wafle without becoming tired. . Next take two five-grain tablets of Nuxated Iros three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strengUs and see how much yooj have gained. 1 Tudre G. V. Court of Claims, C, says: "It is sTlgTTTilllllllilrnii TTniBtartlinM tili1il,. illil - VS !t8JXStt& I n" T- 1 in w 1IW Mack IMT VpwS IDS ir slim sob NMftd aa4 iwwwokww hwom mrciinq " ' ""f"?1" t pgrw r or Hfud yov 1 I Is ibm tttm this Phone 1079
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