The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 1-26
» 4M The Cedarville- Herald* .#|.«x> :P* r Yjwstr* I Creethne, , KAR^H BULL - wwrvowsod rtitt iAiMMiiMM WRaM<>»<IWW(MWidl»d^ I ju t— ! <Ain;i)l-te RW SCm iG IE***Watt feyBiHatewVtwX j O h io .- “ I eontraated.*, 1 J actually taken a vary native part to j 5 promoting the territorial arwy syatero 1 j la the county. ***> Editor family of three, and Itwu hardfor me ■«■» ■■■*■ -’ todo»y work. I took diffeawat madir- i da#« without benefit. Finally I heard E nu red a t the Foefc-Offiee, red* ? - 2x*it Ytoot, usd it h*« restored # » to V 1 1 «, October SI, ltfgr, m wt-ond 1 ■ & s a s K ^ £ * 825 r a SECRET SERVICE FRfiBAY, JPEBETARY IB 1 M 6 . APPEAL, TO CIVIC PRIDE, Dr. Chesnut, in hi* address a t the Community Club gathering the other night, touched upon a subject that is of vital importance to any com- afcl munity* that o c eaning up the alleys and hack yards. There are laws, gov erning just this thing but we have been lack on a BtVict enft •'cement of them and a t time conditions in cer tain ports of town hnye been almost indescribable. The Village Board of Health’has adopted certain rules and laid out a campaign under the direction of the State Board of Health and within the near future booklets will be distri buted that the citizens, xkiay know what the law js. Property owners are especially invited to read the law carefully and therLaee that the prop erty complies in every respect.with the requirements. This year promises to he an event fu l .one for Cedarville and we must display more of our civic pride if plana for the future are carried out, blew streets would, he out o f .place with filth and •rubhish in the alley, backyard and some places .in front of business houses. Set aside a day for cleaning the property from the attic to the stable and have the rubbish, darted away. You will not only, improve sanitary conditions but reduce the chances of fire. . These campaigns have in other places reduced the fire risks twenty- -. live per cent. Our civic pride can also be appeal ed to in a paint-up campaign. Man;- business houses and residences have not had a dressing-up for sdme Jime. not had a dressing up for some time and. show our civic pride by hav ing the buildings all painted. This being centennial year let’s get. ready for this event anew. This' might apply also to the electric light ,and telephone pole’s’ that begin to shear the years of service. Where we can add most in the ap pearance of the town and with only alight expense is in the planting of flowefs, especially roses.. Every, res idence can have more or less flowers. ,. Keep the lawn mown and trimmed, --you’ll add much tej the appearance of your home, but do not forget-the grass plot between, the ^sidewalk and the gutter if you- have one. These;, are ■, all "little things that have slipped the notice of most of us in the past ‘ but can be performed with little ex- . pense and.effort and brighten up the appearance of th e .town. The town in the past .has been just what, the people made it; what it will he this, aurnmer depends on hew far we are willing to display out civic pride.. ‘ jive?»£d* lron*S c ’vd&out oil, f « chronic oooghs and colds, and for *« weak, nervous, run-dawn condition*. 0 . M, RIDGWAY, Druggist, Cad&rvUIe, Ohio. Public Hears Little of. It, But Achievements Figure Large in Archives. PREPAREDNESS RQR UFE. All the many agencies that are la boring in any community for the Im provement of the health ol children make interesting reports on diseases and unsanitary environments. They do not, however, lay stress enough upon the chief cause of the ill health they discover, which is malnutrition. Parents' in the best sanitary sections are also not.careful enough In the choice of food given to those of ten der years. A large percentage of mal nutrition cases arise frompoverty. But much labor is Ipst endeavoring to cure little . children with nauseous medi cines. "What they require more than all else are nourishing food and pure air. Given these they wlUhave better digestion, teeth, muscles and, reserve strength with, which to ward off dis ease. Sensible educators have begun more vigorously to direct attention to the health of school children. The results already achieved are gratify ing, .but only a beginning has -been made- . The practice of child hygiene is still in its infancy. More must be accomplished by states, cities and towns If the future citizens of the United States are to be able-bodied and lit for many duties of life. In Big swamp, the region known'as the Everglades In Florida, many sec tions of which are practically unex plored today, Is found the rare blue heron. The plumes of the blue-heron command high prices, and are extreme ly difficult to secure.-During the breed ing, and mating season the birds con gregate at, various points, and as the- principal tail plumes interfere with ' their nesting they cast them off! which gives the hunter his chance. In or der to locate these carefully bidden breeding places he climbs a tree, and from the top watches the light of the birds, using as a landmark, a dead tree or some other object in the. dietmee .to guide him farther, in his search through the intricate maze of water ways pnd tangled vegetation compris- ,ing the Everglades. FAY-UP WEEK COMING, The national movement to stimu late settlement of last year’s ac counts on certain dates,' February 21 .to .26, has grown and gathered mo mentum until today we --find it, in every city> town o r hamlet, I t was a success from the first and .like ail. good movements continues to grow- - ‘ There should -be' one week in the year when we can remember those who have extended-credit. Oftentimes this credit was extended when the? re tail merchant himself was-behind with There was a serious Btrlke in New Jersey lately float did not get much Jiafioe m the newspaper*.,. It occurred in a faSoiry'where s'u?ve^iF*lflBflf<F' CATCH MANY FOREIGN SPIES England Swarmed WHh Sple* In Gor man Pay-r-ln Some Case* They Were British Citizens for Whose Loyalty Their Neighbor*Vouched, it Was Ne Blunder* It looked as If the secret service had ‘ made a bad blunder. But ''' hadn’t. ! They abpwed by direet e.^cace that i this man during hie whole residence J :his payments to the wholesale houses. With many peqple times of depres- M a I i M IM M N A t U M W A ll.t ^ *ion have nothing to do with credit; the same policy being practiced when times-were good. Asking for credit is largely a hab it. We once knew of a settlement Of an estate wherein the deceased had several hundred dollars in hank and yet his Bills were unpaid for almost two years. 'This is false economy and unfair to business people. There is no doubt hut that dozens of just such cases could he found today. Your grocer, butcher, baker, all lines of business, have given you their goods on credit. You have had the use of them for months or probably a yeaf. They have not had the use of their money which you OWe them. Is that fair? ' If "Billy” Sunday was in our midst you would hear a. powerful sermon on the fellow that did not pay his debts and yet was strong on prayer and why some business men were not act ive in the church. Recognition -of this movement is not out of place in the churches, for we expect some of the members that are on the credit list as the stores are delinquent with their dues. ; Rendered Town a 8 *rvlco. Native—"That’s Eph Haskins over there. Sou of the man that put our town on the map/' Visitor—"How did *ie id it?" Native—“Made a spe cial point to go to New York to die, and the paper* there, had, right otit plain UnderHhe death notice, ‘Bung* town papers please copy/ *’*~Piick, CASTOR IA f o r In&n ts and Children. TinKMYouDmAlwaysBought 1 Bears the fgignatnreof m Th( Bookmaker 4 estaarant... IN THE BOOKWALTER HOTEL HIGH STREET ments are made and threatened, to tie tip the whole concern.; The strikers were not amenable to arbitration or other method*,of persuasion, nor could they be replaced readily with more' willing workers. They* were spiders, upon whose web-spinning industry de pends the obtaining of cross hairs for the delicate surveying instruments. A colony of 206 quit work for days, and the factory conld do nothing but Wait until. they got ready to begin again.* The strike was the more seri ous, Inasmuch as this particular spider only works two months in the year, ............. ........‘ A -writer in the New Republic con siders the question “I* Ragtime Art?" and reaches thi§ menacing conclusion: "I haven’t a notion whether ragtime is going tq form the.basis of an ’Amer ican school 'of composition,’,but I am sure that many A native composer could save his soul if he would opfen his ears to this folk-mUslc of theAnier- ican city.” He fortifies bis intimation as to what will happen to composers if they ignore ragtime by recalling that folk-music opce was condemned at the Russian court, though destined , later to furnish a fundamental element in some of the most vigorous musical compositions of the nineteenth cen tury. From Washington comes the infor mation that the United States has in curred expenditure* amounting to a million dollars’by reason of diplomatic services rendered other countries since the beginning of the European war. The correspondence-in whifh this es timate appears states that although it is considered a great honor to act as diplomatic Intermediary between war ring nations, It is also customary to keep a daily expense account of the money laid nut in such diplomatic work. It may not be Impertinent to wonder what part of the Sum will bo collected? Nature Is evidently not enough trusted by science. A table knife taken from the stomach of & women where it had been for eight months showed heroic natural efforts had been made to digest It. But the patient’s appetite plainly had not been sharp enough, The tour of the Liberty bell ha* fulfilled One good end besides its ap pearance a t the great fair. It has proved that patriotism is near enough to the surface, especially in the young e r generation, to be enthusiastically aroused. BININO ROOM POR LADtftSUP STAIRS ALSO m t ROOM. svsmyui n o w *g omnTm L*n *H Counter on Main floor OfMti Day and Might, fh * Dent of Goods U«tf kt tile Oul-j I t is just possible that many a man’s honesty is due to the fact that he doesn’t know how to manipulate the gas meter, Borne of the horrors of war are the foreign plays th a t are being driven to these shore*. , i t ia Ales* IHMV 4 M m B a am*«ae iftt London-.—A correspondent of the New York World has just had an op portunity. of learning something of what Jlhe British secret service has accomplished from one who, though not an official, has been in the ’way of knowing something about it. One has heard very little of the British se cret service at any tlmo, indeed there are those who believed that it was nonexistent before the war and had to be Improvised, like Kitchener's army. From what the World’s informant says this seems to have been another great delusion, It seems, indeed, to, have had oneVery good attribute of a Beeret service-pit -worked without being sus pected of being at work. - Some time ago, when the demand for the more*rapid internment or re-, patriation of Germans became insis tent in parliament, a committee was created, with the widest possible pow ers'•under statute,- to investigate all demands for internment or repatria tion, or appeals- for release by those already interned. The proceedings of this committee have, of course, been secret, but it has, nevertheless, dealt with many thousands of cases—about 35,000 probably—and it roust have sat twelve to fourteen hours a day to get through them. The secret service proposes, for In stance, that a certain German—or Austrian,“as the case may he—shall be Interned. The individual is brought -before the committee, bears the rea sons given for his internment, says whatever he can against tbs proposal and the committee,, gives, Its decision. Oftentimes the interned person finds some new reason why he or she should bq released, and this reason is taken into account, by the committee on. ap peal. There is no-other appeal;-the, committee’s decisions are superior to the jurisdiction o f all the courts of the realm. Its powers, therefore, are of a" very extraordinary kind 4 nothing like it since the star chamber. Such are the products of war emergency, --f-• ..A»»w Captain Suspected, NOedleolto say, this tribunal has, had some mamofdinary cases before it. For exarojk, there was the ap peal- for the cofKjnement of a British army Captain, wnLnear relatives high in the service, and 4 ;pming of an-old’ English family, It .fiMn such cases Ss antfWn; Unit the. clcvemel dTbompletcness Of the British B*cret service eqi^es. in. Failure to satisfy the committee in a case of that kind would spell dis credit and increased difficulty in get ting internment orders in other caseB, In this particular. instance nil the influence that might boj expected was brought to bear to show "that the suspicion alleged against the captain was groundless—and not only that but preposterous. But it was shown that he had been in correspondence with suspicious individuals in Ger many, and particularly With & beau tiful German lady with whom be was infatuated and who was known to be one of the units- in the kaiser’s widely extended spy system. It was not al leged that he was giving away secrets, but hi* desperate infatuation for this lady and the fact that he had fdund means of corresponding with her since the war made It desirable that he should be put in a place of security —and he was, Thi* victim of the in ternment committee's activities was a British subject; but' no matter whose subject you may be you are equally amenable to its juridiction Disloyalty That Amazed, There i* talk here of another strik ing example of tin. thoroughness with which the British secret service has been doing its work in peace time. A German of title, for ovfer twenty years naturalized, who lived In a very grand way in an English county, we* brought up for internment. He had been one of the most prominent men in his district in public affaire, a volu ble admirer of the Union Jack, had de nounced Prussian designs against tho peace of Europe, entertained oji a lav ish scale, and was an exceedingly popular as well as influential person in his locality. When tho demand wa» made for his internment he appealed to his influential county friend*. Mora than anything clfie It hurt him that it should he thought possible that he could have been false to tlie English friend* who bad become so dear to him. They were ail up In anus In his favor, and the committee gat protests from most of the representative per sons and bodies in tho county denounc ing the action of the authorities irt casting this slur an a gentleman for who#* loyalty and trustworthiness they would vouch as for their own. He had given innumerable evidences of hi* genuine love of England, and had in thi* country bad been in regular ; communication with the German gov* 1 eminent, and that there was no doubt whatever that hi* British naturaliza tion was a calculated fraud to cover his work on behalf of his native coun try, The British secret service knew everything that had passed between this German nobleman and the Ger man government at a time when it was supposed to he asleep, if not non existent Ho wgC^lmpiy interned, al though his infuriated dupes thought, he should bo tried and dealt with as a spy, But he had seemingly been quiescent since the war began, These, it is said, are only examples of n great number of cases where sus pects, having been brought up for in ternment, indignantly"contested the demand on the ground of their loyalty, and who, when' they, pushed the se cret service to disclosing its case, were’thuuderstricken to discover that their underhand, activities bad been known and watched for years,. There Is good reason for stating that within forty-eight hours of the declaration Of war every German spy regarded by tho authorities- a* In the least dangerous .yvaa put away; others were kept under observation as being .useful as decoys for the spies sent 'here since the war. Lenient With Woman 8py. Anent the killing of Miss C&vell by the Germans when sh* was dot even charged with espionage, the British government has under lock and key here now( unde? a sentence of merely ten" yeata'.penal servitude, the Ger man woman whose accomplice was one of those shot in the Tower as a spy,. This, woman was known to be one of the moat- dangerous and most highly trusted spies in the pay of the Gorman secret service, - She was full of daring, could .adopt all manner of disguises, and often made ttf> like a man wlthpUt, ever being detected— except by the secret service agents, who were allowing her to run her tether. She had cpntrol over several male spies who accepted their orders from -her. She had always planned - to commit suicide if. arrested, but she ,was spared in a way that frustrated that purpose. She had determined to take ;her own fife because she expect ed to'be shot,or hanged if caught, She knew that under all the roles of the game sho deserVed it* The pahst ingenious ana daring In ventors of spy stories are loft puffing and-panting with exhausted, imagina tion compared to the schemes, devices and sacrifices- that the spy of real life Is known to have made in further ance of the designs of the Fatherland. • -Ah Eogfiehman’s German Wife. -One hears.of the case-of'the Ger man wife of a very prosperous pro fessional man up country. She is a singularly handsome woman, a clever -talker, a very good amateur musician and singer, and an adept in ali the wiles of fascination. Being married to ah Englishman, she is of British nationality. She too had been long fh the books of the secret service. She was a kind of person who was hound to b* talked about anyWayy be cause there was. a Teutonic ostenta tion about her and a fiushuoa* of cash ’that *attracted attention. Early this year she came up to London, set up In a handsome apartment, frequented the best night clubs and other places Where officers were to be found, and soon had a train of them qftor her. 'She entertained lavishly and her par ties were very fast and furious. This was ail done for the Fatherland. Her money resources xr&r e extensive, and she is even suspected of getting im pecunious young officers into her toils by assisting them out .of their difficul ties, She had just moved Into a still more elegant.flat when her career Was suddenly cut short She is now hibernating with an assortment of dowdy frauleins, spy-governesses and Such like, in the quiet of an intern ment establishment for women. It 1 b said that she had nearly |500,000 In different bapka. I t all.-came from Germany. Will Re Changed London, - The polled are not confining their exertions to dealing with actual spies like this Delilah. They are steadily clearing out the foreign demi-monde, which was very generously repre sented in London. Batches of these woffien, who have haunts in every dis trict in the vast area of London, but who arc scon a t their gaudiest in tho neighborhood of Leicester square and Coventry street, are being sent away dally, London will be changed in many respects before this War is ovdS, but in nothing <more strangely than In the cleaning up of its streets, which, especially ift the heart of the- West end, have long been a good deal of a scandal. But that is only the work of the “Journeyman" policeman; the really valuable war work is being done by the secret service branch,- which Is now garnering the harvest of long years of patient sowing. Spray Nonagenarian, Dover, Ky.—Dr, Fletcher Smith, ninety-six.years old, may be seen on our streets most any day the weath er la good.. His faculties are clear and he converses with intelligence on any subject. .He has always been a stu dent and’ a reasoner, and his remark able memory adds proof to the theory that the more work the brain does the better work it will do, and the? longer ft will last. IS BEAUTY WORTHMUHWHILE7 YiolaCream v*jy er*di«at*e - «, taftlM, M*e>e Skin to m iftc Thtf* Mno atiOofl? OnWetorP*W<tr Mk «nr<s: glWH***aVtaffptoMfct, At *11X); •Ti BrngStetSCf prOftrtHott *«$ pO„Tnfadl«ttOto«t I fnh’ft? j'lfulw I „ t«r . .iwf.ftdl fctftl wpoit on D, SW IFT & CO. pAtKMT i-AWVtrt*. LSOSSttsat A British Volunteer By F. A. MiTCHEL Ralph Ssekviile left Loudon to the plaudits of crowds of people who wore viewing h]s regiment march to the sta tion to he entrained for the coagt and then''* to Belgium. In six months he returned under very different circum stances, There, were no crowds te greet him. instead of the handker chiefs waving front the windows and the sounds of martini music many ol the blinds were closed, and there wat only the rattle of the cab in which hr was driven through the .streets. Sarkville had' lost a foot and ankle and was' dUchatged from the ranks, He had been among the first to re spond to his country’s call, leaving the seryice of a bank in which he was employed, to Join the colors, His posi tion In the bank was stilt open to him, but it required him to stand nH day paying checks, and he was unable tp fill it. Indeed, there were- few posi tions he opuld fill. The only occupa tion dhat-occurred to. him as suited to his altered condition Was that of chauf feur. Hh was' a gentleman without means and shrank from doing menial work, but it was the best be could do. and be hobbled to a garage and se cured a position. One day he was directed to go to a hotel and call for Miss AmeliaDuncan, an American young lady traveling With her invalid panther, who was 'confined to tier room under her daughter’s care, assisted by a nurse. The daughter .needed the’air and proposed to drive out every day when the weather ad mitted. This was not very often, for the sun seldom shines In England. She had called for a reliable chauffeur whom shemight use when required. On this first afternoon that Sackvllle drove Mlsa Duncan they became cor nered in a street crowded with people who were Witnessing the departure of troops for the witr. Drums were beat* lug, flags were- flying, and the air was filled with cheers. "isn’t it splendid!” said Miss Don- con, partly to herself and partly to her chauffeur. “If I were a man I- would surely go to the, w a r/'. "And either leave your bones in Bel gium or return, minus an arm or a leg or an eye orjierhaps all three,” replied the chauffeur. “Well, I never!” exclaimed Miss Dun- con In disgust. “Have yon no patriot* ism?” “L don’t believe in a nation relying solely on its best men In case of war, I think every man of proper age Should be liable to military duty. These sol dier *1 are all volunteers.” 'That's what I like ahout them, ’ re plied Miss Duncan, “Our wait*between the states was fought by volunteers. Onrmanliest men enlisted.” - "And bore the brunt of the struggle for two-years, when those on the north ern side began to pay the laggard# to enlist, Just before the war closed?men were enlisting and deserting to get the bounty. Do you consider thatjustlce?" “1 don’t know, anything about that war. 1 was not born till many years after it hat, losed. It must be nice to be one of those noble men who volun teer, Don’t you think so?” . ‘ “No, I don’t.” “Then you admit, that you. belong to the class of laggards?’’ “I don’t admit that either, I believe In conscription." i “There’s nothing noble in a man go ing to war because lie is obliged to go.” “War la"a duty, not something to be proud of. It is a horror. .Did yon ever see men standing in line toady to face denth?” . “No, of course not.” “Every face I* seriops, solemn. Not 'a word is spoken. They are like pris oners facing a firing squad, only with n prisoner d th is certain,- while with them It is probable, or, what is worse, they may expeci to be maimed for life.” “Are they cowaids?” “No; they are uien,. but when the fight Is on they cease tp be men and become wild beasts.” * “It’s a shame for you to tnlk in this way. Instead ofvslttjng comfortably in aa auto you should be among those noble fellows marching to war." “It wfil not ho so fine when they return.” “They will come back victorious with their battle Stained banners flying, greeted with the applause they de serve.” “Many of them will never come back, Many wilt hobble back. If the regi ment returns as a unit most of its mem bers will be men who are not marching now. Quito likely they will be con scripts; possibly they will have been paid to go.” By this time the troops had passed nnd the auto was released. Miss Dun can ordered her chauffeur to drive her to tier hotel, She did not like his talk and resolved not to have him drive her again. When nhe alighted lie got down nnd handed her out She noticed that he limped. “What's the matter with your foot?' she asked. “It’s made of wood,” “How did you lose the real one?” “Fighting in Belgium,” “Ob, hoWhorrible!” Then, red as a rose, she stalked into the hotel, The next day the young lady scut for Sackvllle to drive her out again, arid, after berating him for not telling lief that lifehad been a soldier, sho forgave him. After all. lie VUflu’t Jose so much by serving bis rauntry. He lost n foot, but be gained an Ameri -mi beire-s fn * Wife. * GAMBIA The Kind Y m Htve Always Bought f , —All r* I autoim - Exact Copy of Wrapper, - th * o « nt * u » ioohw «». mmtvous emr. Rich stone T- '*£ SPENCER 'S Special $1.00 Sale February 12th to 16th 2 Cans Peas 1 Can Corn - 2 Cans Homiciy, Wilton Brand *1 Package Corn Sharsh 3 Packages Soda 1 Glass JDried Beef 4 XGlass Peanut Butter 1 Package Washing Powder, Gold Bust- f , 3 P o l l s Toilet Paper A l l F O R $1 .00 C. M. Spencer P h o n e 3 « 1 1 0 mt* C e d a r v ille , O h io —Rei farm s farm. for the «v Wednc- will jo !, visitin-' • Will th a t Cap 1 . |e s t p it We c Mourns, with a type ( name, paper 1 -in sue lndieai ahund owner, many the pre public owner ’ "frit ^ propos .hope f t . ... Dr, x r k m j a. S of <s>txpe?jcje P o c k e t f u l l Tbur ecod Twenty • i s SvA! mu , B l a c k B it * k e d in to >$2f I n 831 Mock B irds Slice the mntton evenly; trim each piece; make a highly eqasoned bread-crumb stuffing; pu t a. spoon- full of this on each slice and fold' Into oblong rolls,, or “ birds"; fasten securely with little wooden skewers; put,them all into a hot frying pan; add a little gravy; cover sim'uer very slowly tlJl they are steamed through, but do not let them boil. Have ready some squares of buttered toast; lay the'bvon this on a hot dish pour the gravy over and garnish with Bprlgs of parsley. WE COULDN’T " i . • Supply the Black Birds BUT HAVE THE MEAT FOR The Mock Birds TRY THE RECIPE I t makes a dish, fit to set before anybody WALTER CULTICE Galloway & Cherry II E. Main St., Xenia, 0 , leadquarters for Reliable Carpels, Rugs, Linoleums, Draperies, Etc. Xenia’s Exclusive Carpet and Drapery House , tow to i V*S. as* fortHjffl» av .C.A.8 N OW & 0 0 ., { .»M . r«T tST O*rtf.r,lSASHl:-aTOM. O, 0 . , FISTULA AJTDALt, a DISEASES DF THE RECTUM O f - m * m * m *9 ft*vrafcntoi h*mftw* taHMMW .( UiM. tti4 i J. McOELLAN b S t f l u C olumbus ,C! Outlook 04 QUICKRELIEFBALM Beit C*EUfh-H»yFtvtr-Aitiima ftemedy. Qtrioft toilet for fere ThreatSod TentiiHJ*. 8 f**t**t Hewfaeb*an* Nourtljla Rama*?, OrMtttt 6 toilet ter field la Headend en Larif*. irt rati#! ter Toatiiaefi and Earaoka. for Ceuoka and HsarMMta. Mmetaiifins* Rented?* BeetPreventativeendRemedyter Pneumonia. No better Pile Remedyknown. Beet Remedyter Berne and IvyRotten, Fof Sofa Feet •Aeklnf Joints-Com-Bunien*. *S», g 6 a *nd |t,M et OtofSliUi and — - . a iiltr t, er by tnati. aaatpaM. ■60Jar nentalrie ai»a tlm«» a*e iar-Rf, Jar eenuina 6 times age jar. • • THE COLUMBUS CHEMICAL fife, Akla I wVRInlllwVj VniW Me matter bow bard your bead wfhw*. t». MX** Aftti-nue ruin w #1 *w* t m d ' i DN*I ack HE k | RECj ; r : sh ry I EF Hkmaf it *nd wralfta Hdand th and ■ito.iciil-JiifW {weedy, let hwt i h y p i-Cef tt at Bfi til* n*i ■Mad'#me# «j HtMfft owe / our 1,1 pa *Ag
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