wm-vzm AT' ' . ' 'l ' "''. .-... v. SlK PICTORIAL SECTION PAG&&18, 19, 20 ' ,'"" :-fc EXlSR ':.. ,a III.-NO. 178 PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1017 Corir.icHT, 1017, nt tnk Pcbuc I.eixiui CojiriM PRICE TWO' A, . S. FIRES $5,000,000,000 WOMEN HELP QUICK NEWS OFFICERS WAR SHOT THIS WEEK 450 RECR N menger TtlU UlUU , M CONGRESS WILL GET BIG BUDGET. PUN THURSDAY i II Gash Aid for Entente to f T3o PacePfl With Vigor HOUSE MEMBERS ASK DETAILED STATEMENT Warn Against t Danger of Destroying Nation's Fis cal System TO REVISE INCOME TAX JointvCommittee of Both Houses May Handle Money Mattel's WASHINGTON, April 10. Taxation legislation will be reported is goon as the members of the Ways and Means Committee are acquainted with the full demands of war. The fact that Representative Hull, income tax expert of the Ways and Means Committee, has been called into con sultation 'by Secretary McAdoo, indi cates there will be a radical revision of the'income tax. Representative, Hull, who wrote the inheritance tax and ex cels profits tax features of the more Nrnt revenue law. will also be dele- $' H gated, it is believed, to revise those rtrcnue-producing features of exist iaf law. WASHINGTON, April 10. yr& .legislation 'has begun to nssume definite form In the House, with the announcement that the $5,000,000,000 bond Issue measure would be presented Thurs. lay and ihe development that the Ap iroprlatlons 'Committee, taking over by J general consent certain of the supply ! powers of other committees, Is to become 1 the "war budget committee" of the lower body. Simultaneously, It has developed In tho House debate that while tho leaders of that body are willing to give tho Adminis tration every dollar needed for I war, de tailed estimates must be submitted by the f executive branch of tho Government, and there Is to be no destruction of our fiscal 1 ijritem because wo are at war. sThat the Appropriations Committee and the House purposo to keep a tight hold on the nation's purscstriugs was disclosed wjien .the general deficiency appropi la wn bill, carrying a Senate amendment putting 1106.000.000 at tho disposal of the .l.SPresldent 'or national defense, was sent ?t to. conference. Leaders on both sides of ? tot aisle said lumnsum annronrlations wblild not be made "blindly," and tho leg- , mauve urancn or. me uovernment wouiu f Continued on rare Two, Column Thrrr Mazil to break WITH RERUN SOON feGbvernment Awaits Only PPormal Report on fjfcik- r , mg of Parana r READY TO SEIZE VESSELS fi $9 JANEino. April 10. A'rupture" of f!l.'?n8 between. Brazil and Germany Is kZ-f?. ' today at the latest- The break i T?f,4 Mely on the fnrmnlllv nt lin r. fl tMlfin Af UA Tlnll - A. S -.-, - IIk''Inl,lnB of th0 Brazilian steamship ' ?f y tt German submarine. i ii? break probably will be followed by - wairo nr n,ii.i i.Tn i t. i. BT, X&uro Million r-...i- .i..t... l'-iT?.to'rCelve tin German Minister. Doc- ' !Lsruer thC" gavo urBent orders that a rl5iL '" n' tlanelro bo mad0 ready at r j"- " """aion aoroaa. Doctor Muller 5TWred with n. w.. h.ii. , ,.,.. it'll iiiiaic(- unu vjiuci tJ 7$"" the Bralan Lecatlon In Pari . "Ported In political circles that Rt . special Bess! of Onni-reica bolte says th MinlniA,- nr o.in.Vg . a reDOrt from thA mmmamlnr nf LJtroyer Alaioas. ,nt Dostorra that h Urcep,'ed soveral mysterious wireless fW ent from an unldentiftjd statlcn. I wnmander' also reported that he had 'llfht Bljnala flashlnr In the nelgh- ".0 the Deiterro forts, pnnlrnrv o "lUtary'reiulr.tlons, govcrnlne the forts. 7-newi that the Parana was ehelled ,1 had beun lornednrA Vinn'InrrMiaM U""fation here. In a special edition .after the cablegram from tho I m;rder was received A Nolto' IV , lUiMwisIolivare Incapable of it REFUSED TO PERMIT DEPREDATION ' PaHaaaaaaaaaL '"" JbbbbbbbW 'J ' iiHHViHaaaH 1 , I ir t lll53Ma,' rsi&ex I Sr Mr . sHT.ssssssssssssssL Iff n IIH LMllMTiM '" ' ""ill WBaaaWTCinBMUlBBaaaaaaaaaB f i.-vSsiiJA- JiAaaalHPw'wilBJMlBaaH k : m BaBi2HVHBaH ( i BIIBHBiilii.iiHHiiiiH ' eaS -laHaaaBaHaaaHaaaaRBHaaaaaaaaH ' 8 BflHCTnHBaaaaHHaamnBfaaBaaaaaai VaWaHitil I BaHafflaflHaaH lHHlaHKW' ' '' iBHBHBaliaH 91 HaaaaaKaHHP aaaaHeHaHBHBalaBiB HbH WtiaraSan9aamBaHBHHI . t HHaHnHaHiii VaHHaHBBBBHaP ?1 -HaaHMMHaf ';' ' laaHHHHaF l ,A tMaaaMIHWfcliWP' - r "'"- MmmmMmMW':, a?aBJHBBfauiaHBV. , i iMMMMMMar K(mafA,LivF I r .SawalaHRNiiHHHHBiHT'' ' Captain Hans Ruser, of tpeVuterland, the world's gre&test.i5teamstfip, forbade his Crew to damage tho vcssel-whcn its sclzure'by.thc United States became certain. He is now interned at Ellis Island. U. S. WILL NOT ENTER FORMAL WAR ALLIANCE Gentleman's Agreement Wjth Entente Powers Against Germany Likely ENVJOYS 'MEET LANSING WASHINGTON, April 10. Opinion is btronj; in Washington that conditions will not arise that will make it essentiarfor the Ujiited States to give a holcmn promise that no separate or premature peace will be made by Washington. There is reason to believe that the United States feels that it could not consistently enter into any arrange ment with the Kntcnte Governments with reference to the part to be played by this Government in the conclusion of a peace until it Knew more definitely what sort of a peace the Entente Allies contemplated. WASHINGTON, Apill 10. WliIIo theie are Indications of closer ariangements between tho United States and tho Governments of tho Hntcnto Allies for the purp6se of bringing the war against tho Ccrman empire to a victorious ending, nothing .has' yet taken place In any formal way to lay tho foun dation for ofllcial agreements. It Is too soon to make any statement as to tho ultimate outcome of tho closo-worklng compact into,, which tho United States must enter with tho Allies, but from what Is known of tho situation It is believed that thero will be nothing approaching an alliance within tho understood meaning nr ii. nt tm-m. Tho Allied Governments havo shown great delicacy In their attitude toward tho tt.,..;i amies in tho new situation created by tho entrance of this country into the European conflict. They have not made any definite approaches to the Washing ton Government with a view to the for mation of a political or other arrangement that will insure complete cdncert of plan ina action between all tho nations en gaged 'in trying to brins tho German autocracy to an end. But It is expected St Tome exchanges will be- instituted soon. " IN CLOSE COMMUNION An Indication Pf "l0 cloBu; fa1"".10-1 between thU Government and its partners , .if- ,.i- has been given In the more In tho " , ill- dlDlomattc repre. L..1avjmi . ;; r-Jii-zZ&.Vrf N . -J - n,-j-r. GERMANS RUIN FAIR LANDS OF FRANCE IN AISNE RETREAT Wanton Destruction and Diabolical Devastation of Towns and Country Mark Teutons' Depar ture Take Young Women With Them By HENRI BAZIN Sjircldl Corirsiioiulfil Vranie u We Kirntag Ledger. TAUIS, March 22. The bam news in this story will be old when It Is printed. Hut news Is a thing teisely concerned with facts and dates and geographical aiea; and whilo this writing covers the.-.e points It also concerns many more. I hao ju.vt ictuined fiom a two-day visit, iiy special pci mission, to the prin cipal Allied fronts, for I was behind tho l'rcnch and Hngllsh advance ns It covered. tho very tenter of a length of 1C0 kllo metcis, or- about seventy miles, upon a front of thhty-llvo kilometers, or about twenty-three miles, In which It has re deemed inoie than 110 villages, towns and hamlets for Franco Horn tno retreating foiccs of Prubsl.i, the most Important gains upon tho. western front since the battle of the Marne. And tho end Is not yet. It was full icticat still and full advance, too, when I icliictantly left at the expiration of my permission. I -have walked thiough the streets of Chaulnes and I'cronnc, towns that, upon previous trips to this front, I had looked upon through the glass. lloth were In ruins, deliberately and brutally destroyed by the Bocho at leaving, for tho Flench nnd Eng lish flro of the last seven months had not caused great material, damage to tho towns themselves. Each, as I saw them, was a mats of smoking cinder from fresh Are In all I'eronne I did not see a sound house. and In Chau'.nes I could find but seven. All had been pillaged. I could not find a single pleco of furnituicr and the only crockery vlslblo bad been broken, Every thing that could not be carried away had been smashed and destroyed. There was not one standing fruit trco In what were oncotgardens. They had been chopped down, and in CO per cent of cases left where they fell at tho last stroko of tho ax. Evety vlllagoi en route upon tho miles between mo two towns was burned, pillaged, destroyed. In one Instance I raw an orchard of apple and plum" trees and stopped to count 1C0 stumps with ninety-two murdered trees lying' beside them, I went south to Nesle with tho same constant vision of diabolical destruction beforo my eyes. And I entered Npslo with 'emotion, for thero my father, and Ills father, and their fatlters before them were born. 1 hid visited It before, n the; years of peace, and entered, the old house In which many of my line saw- tho light, visited tho ancient church of, Ropian archl teotufe'jvMr. myJtHf and'-mot lr J were " i ii nii i n ii nf i il if - ' - ' BRITISH TROOPS TAKE 9000 MEN AND MANY GUNS All German Counter Attacks Crushed, Haig Reports VIMY RIDGE ENTIRELY CLEARED OP TEUTONS Continued Gains by English in Drive on' St. Quen- tin Announced FIERCE BATTLE RAGING Kaiser's Forces Win Foothold Near Yprcs, but Are Ejected LONDON. April 10. Hitter fighting marked the continu ation of Field .Marshal Main's forward smash in the great spring off cash e today. The British commander-in-chief reported 9000 prisoners and fort guns as yesterday's captures in the first day of his tremendous sledge hammer smash. Repulse of all German counter-attacks in severe fighting on the Vimy ridge was also reported by Field Mar shal Haig today. "There was severe fighting during the night at the northern end of Vimy ridge," he said. "The enemy was ejected and a counter-attack by them failed. The eastern slope was cleared and counter-attacks repulsed." "In the neighborhood of St. Qucn Uin," the report continued, "the enemy Continued on l'nse Threr, Column Onn through devastation to the old homestead, to find It a mass of smoMng ruin. In com mon with nearly all tho others, It had been set on fire bcfoic the Gennans left. One standing wall paitlally remained, tho wall against which rested tho great flicplnce, tho crane twisted, the icd brick hearth Invisible under the charred smoking wood and blackened plaster. I counted eleven houses Intact, and, I'nntlniifil on 1'nitr i:iriril. Column Two AUSTRIAN SPY SUSPECT TO BE ARRAIGNED TODAY Chester Man Nabbed Hero by National Guard Sentries Last Night sz An Austiian describing himself as Jobeph Conovlck, of Chester, who vwis arrested by .National CJuaid sentries on tho llaltlmnic and Ohio Railroad brldgo over the Schuylkill Illvei- at Gray's Ferry last night, will be arraigned today at Central police station. He said he was walking homo from a visit to friends In Philadelphia. Investigation of a piece of oiled paper containing a vvatermaiked plan ot the Phila delphia Navy Yard is being made today by Federal ofllolals. Search Is on for tho owner of tho paper, said to be a German. The map was taken from tho man and turned over to agents of the Department of Justice by Horace Martin, of 081 North Eleventh, street, who said that the German had boasted to fellow employes In a factory at Twelfth and Wood streets that ho had "something that could blow up Philadelphia." Tho man fled after a fight with employes. Tho promised "round-up" ot aliens sus pected of harmful acts against tho United States has not materialized, according to Frank U Garbarlno, special agent of the Department of Justlco, He said that no ar rests have been made so far, but that a "round-up" may come at any time. Tho break in diplomatic relations with Austria Hungary caUBed added work today for Fed eral authorities. Free Princeton Men for Army PRINCETdN. N. J., April 10. The faculty of .Princeton University passed a ruling plllttltttu4Dt8Viho BjNJplann'hm to FIFTY STATE CAVALRY HORSES SAVED FROM FIRE Fifty horses of the Fiisf Pennsylvania Cavalry were rescued Hliottly nfter 0 o'clock this morning from a fire that swept the stnble nt Fiftv-tifth and Vine stieets. in vrscvilnjr, It is believed, nil the horses In the stable, of the file, which started in the hnyloft. is unknown. FIRE IN FACTORY MAKING SHELLS FOR RUSSIA TAUTON. Mflfs.. Apiil 10. File stnited early today in the plant of the Miehle Pie;,s Company. The plant has heen manufac turing shells for the Kusstnn Government. COUNCILMAN HEXAMER MAKES PATRIOTIC PLEA Select Cuuiicllmau AVlltinin K. Itcxamcr, of tho Fifteenth, Ward, a brother of l)i: C. .1. llcxiimcr. picsldcnt of the German-American Alliance, urged nil to nuppoit President Wilson In the pit-sent war, at u meeting nt the Voting Jlcn'H Republican Club, lie nNo advocated opening part of tho club as n recruiting station and that a loll of honor be diafletl. on which the names of all the liicinbcis who enlisted would be placed BRIDGE SENTRY STRICKEN ON DUTY Pilv.iU- IIIkIi n.uli, of Company D, First Ucglmcnt, !? In the L'nivcislty Hos pital iccoeiliiK fioni an operation for appendicitis. He was stricken while on prunul duty on a IiiUIrc over the Sohu.lkl!l Mver estcida Clark lles at 7UJ ClarldRf -street. HOME DEFENSE GUARD FOR HAVERFORD TOWNSHIP llcsldentx of llaxeifonl township ate oi'K-inlnhiB a home defense guard. The township commi-ixloncis passed an oidiiiancc authorlzlns Kdwaid T. Hnllisscy, chief of polite, to swear In 100 picked men a-? emergency police. The men will undergo a wystematli- course of training. LANSDOWNE MAN. ALLEGED DESERTER, HELD ATLANTIC CITY. Apill 10. Jacob l.ltzoi, twenty-four c.lls old, of Ians downc. I'a., at-t-u?c(l, the police say, of being a deserter fiom the Second Regiment, National Ciiiaril of Pi-nnsylvania, was unestcd on the lloardwalk and sent to jail pending an Investigation The police said Lltzcr told them he was wanted nt Fernwood, I'a.. In connection with thefts from gas meters. lie said he had been here for two weeks, and admitted he knew his regiment had 'been ordered to mobilize. He saw service on the Mexican border. HIS FLAG STOLEN, HE PAINTS ONE ON HOUSE XUW nUUNSWICK, X. J Apill 10. Edward Armreln, an cmployo of the Xcveisllp Manufacturing Company, nurtures a sturdy loyalty to the United States, although boi.u In Germany and not yet a naturalized citizen. Armreln hung out an Ameilcau flag from the porch of his home and It was stolen. Determined that no vandal should get the better of him In showing his patriotic spirit, Armreln painted the red, white and blue on the weatherboards of his home. FLAGS OF IRISH REPUBLIC APPEAR IN DUBLIN LONDON, April 10. Excitement was caused on O'Donnell street In Dublin by the hoisting of the republican flag on tho ruins of tho postofllce, while a small party waved a similar flag from tho Xclson pillar, say's a dispatch to tho Star from Dublin. The police icmoved the flag from the postofllco and dispersed tho crowd with out making ai rests. Here and there In the city, tho dispatch reports, a small re ptoductlon of the pioclamatlon of the provisional government of the Irlh republic was seen, with a footnote leading: "The Irish republic still lives." Tho Sinn Fein revolt broke out In. Dublin on Easter Monday of 1910, a little more than a calendar year ago. ROOSEVELT IN WASHINGTON; MAY SEE WILSON TODAY WASHINGTON, April 10. Theodore ttoosovclt arrived hero from Xew York, and although he declined to make a statement, It was reported he would confer today with President Wilson and offer his services for the war. "BE AMERICANS ONLY," ROOT TELLS REPUBLICANS NEW YORK, April 10. Elihu Root, nddiesslng a meeting of the Ilepublican Club, called upon till Republicans to support Picsldent Wilson und "to submerge nil ., --, . t . rn..uit,.n til i, i i . I pal UStlll lCCIlllK, iuir.l'1 Lucy iiiu jii-i'uuiiwtiiia limn tut: win la uci, .111(1 10 UC Americans onl." FORMER SAILOR DIES IN FIGHT OVER INSULT TO FLAG RAIriMORE, April 10. Refusal on tho part of the proprietor to permit nn orchestra to play the "Star Spangled Banner" nnd the Interjection of the remark "Damn the Stars and Stripes," led to tho killing with a billiard cue of BJornc Holland, formerly u j-.illor In the United States navy, in a saloon conducted by Stanislaus Klnkovvskl. At tho timo Helland was going to the rescuo of Frank Atkins, guninaster on tho coast guard cutter Apache, wlio was being beaten by several men. Klnkovvskl nnd four other men In the placo wero arrested. SHORE HOTEL MEN DROP TESTING RANGE SUIT ATLANTIC CITV, April 10. Hotclmen announced that a suit brought by icp. icscntatlves of $10,000,000 worth of hotel properties to challenge tho closing of twenty-two loads upon the testing range of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, near Maya Landing, has been abandoned. This is In accordance with an agreement cached at a conrefei ence here between Chailes M. Schwab and n committee of hotel owners, at which Schwab gave his word that nothing dctilmcutal to Atlantic City would bo permitted in connection with tho now range. ITALY PUTS RESTRICTIONS ON IMPORTATIONS WASHINGTON, April 10. The Italian Government, dispatches to the Com merce Department say, has put rigid restrictions on importations. Only theso goods will be admitted: "Commodities Imported by the Government; foodstuffs and raw materials to bo designated by tho Government; such largo quantities of morchundlfee of known oi Igln as may be admitted by special decree, and goods for which special permits will bo Issued." AMBASSADOR PENFIELD PARIS, April 10. The ai rival at Zurich of Frederic C. Penflcld, American Ambassador to Austria, Mrs. Penfleld nnd three members of tho embassy staff, is reported In a Havas dispatch from St. Gall, Switzerland. ,. CHESTER RECTOR ENTERS NAVAL RESERVE CHESTER. Pa., April lO.-Tho Rev. Francis M. Taltt, dean of the Convoca tion ot Chester nnd rector of St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church, has enlisted In the Naval Reserve. With their lector a dozen young men of the congrega. tlon signed enlistment papers. Herbert Wright, son of City Councilman 'It, D. Wright, prominent in amateur automobile racing, has enlisted in tho army aviation corps nnd will leave for a training school. PRIEST OFFERS $1000 TO HELP TRAIN BQYS HCRANTON, Pa., April 10. The Rev. William P. O'Donnell, pastor of Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church, offered to give $1000 toward the training of boys i Hm Rellevuo section for military duty. Father O'Donnell declared he would draw his check, payable to the State Committee on Public Safety, if provision la made to have a competent military man appointed to train the boys In army tactics so that thene boys will bo fit to tako up urms just as soon as they aro called by the Government for military service. . 550,000,000 LOAN BILL FOR ROADS IN STATE SENATE HAItniSBURG, April 10. The Sproul amendment to the State Constitution, providing for a loan of $50,opo,000 for good roads, was Introduced In tho Senate laat night by the Sonator from Chester, g Senator Sproul also sponsored the measure tw' .yrs ,a;o,arrer mnau aesi .. Firemen nml stauiennmiB u. The origin AT ZURICH ON WAY TO U. S. m.jjjw hv ?.- w n.mwBiwsp. Enthusiasm Brings; gest Day Since Span! ish War S00 PATRIOTS SEEK a rvn mm urn trrvo -n'Tj jlw riuni i' jj x ui Wireless Stations in ,Ci Taken Over bv IL Sir, Inspector MAY BE SEALED BY NlGIH Mrs. Martin Leads in Moverfiea to Care for Tnv.Jl3 i-jfi-iciiucjua of Enlisted Men Another rush for enlistment began to with nu early promise of cquallng"orl cccamg yesterday's High mark for crultlng since Spanish-American Wardj Lieutenant R. Y. Cadmus, United Statf! Chief tireless Inspector, will assu charge today of alt wireless stations Inlti city, nnd it Is expected that before ri& all will havo been sealed by the Govcri ment. Thero Rre many receiving statloa and a few- sending stations hi Philadelpt that will bo closed. MORE NAVAL, MILITIA Fresh ill detachments of Naval Mllltlaa ig at the Philadelphia Navy Yard? arriving avgmcnt the force nlready there. PhM dolphla's two divisions of citizen salli have been assigned to their ship. ThoTtJ Erie divisions and the Lancaster dlvisM are expected today or tomorrow. SKj .v loinmiucc icpresenting several relw oiganlzatlons wilt bo formed within 'th next few days to provide for tcnance of the dependents ot Philadelphia soldiers and tailors. The committee, -wh will be under tho supervision of the . Cross, will be financially independent.i ,t.n r.. -..! ..lll 1.- -..I 1 -..' AK mi; iuiiuo ,n ue litiscu uy popular; scrlptlon. Distribution of the funds with In charge of Mrs. J. Willis Martin1., Mrs., John C. Groome. ?e2 About S00 men who applied for 'ment In the several branches of thj and Navy-yestcrdny?made that dayi one for enllstmrntn. nvn,!f1 hir haii'. the day President McKinlej- caiiedl voluntecis for the war with Spain, v: tween 450 and 500 men were accepted enlisted. ' ' ij WOMEN GET CREDIT $! Not a Uttlo of the credit of enlistment': the navy Is duo to tho work of the womwtl Continued on Pace Two. Column ' CITY INSURANCE OF ENLISTED Idea Suggested. by Evening Ledger Indorsed by Coun cilman Walsh WILLING TO FRAME BII A piopositlon that tho city of Phlli phla Insuro the lives of young men who 5 list was enthusiastically indorsed today James E. Walsh. Select Councilman the Thirty-eighth Wnrd, and a w Known Insurance expert, with offices at. I Walnut street. rfj mr. ivaisn saiu no was willing to iri nn ordinance which would provide forij payment uy the city of $1000 to depend en joung men who Ule in the service of I country. He urged that Councils in ulatcly appropriate a gutllcleut sum to i nntee payment of premiums to relative; Phll.-uh-lpnla so dlers who aro killed ml lighting. Tho "enlistment-Insurance''.' 14 was llrfct conceived by tho Evening; Lkc "We should have an appropriation," J Mr. vtulsn, "that would more than 11... ,lfA... I ...1. n llnlllA .n l.n nnl.l Aa . t. niv 1'iv.iiiiuuin liuviu iu ui: 1J.JIU (U lliej iiic.h or ucpenueius oi rmisieu men. J w suggest that the enlisted 111411 ba Ins by the city under a group policy. na to the Mayor of Philadelphia as trustee! the dependents ot men who die !!' tcrviee. . . . V 'f.d . .. , . -' .1 kiuuj jjuiicj vvuuiu ue mrf STS nuio 10 separate policies (or cacn lpaivK Miuier going trom rmiadelniua. IpHlv policies won 111 require tno services large clerical force, and there would:! lot of unnecessary red tape and confu 1-ttrlAn ilm I'rnlln nnllnv lnn ftiM nv would bo very Blmple. Ono" clerk.Sa'S under orders from the Mayor could; at to the payment of ptcmlums. i'-l "I consider tho lnsurance-enllstmenti:i a splendid one, ana 1 am willing; tovfa such an ordinance and work hard, h passage. I will co-operate with tho 1 l.i A......1 men., t,aa1ttln In nil,, Ins lh. -"!"?" . .-t.r-n "Auoption or mo kveninq xki; would bhow that i'lillauelphl Interest of her young men of at heart. It would be establish dorfully patriotic precedent make Its influence felt througho tlon. Other towns and -cities w follow Philadelphia's lead, and ;t would pu a great stimulus in en over the fnlted States," i Mayor Smith, when presented J plan, unnesnaiingiy ueciuruu io,i feasible nnu praqijcau iffl " "i' f . THE WEATJ31 roiiEaXwn For Pilladeipftla'oit day and prooaHi foornvc itvnw' ar-t . A V Sun rtw...? :? j IfMO Hun .t.,,.VJ .. J MNm 1 StttAWABK MM1 j-fc?.vj5vwj wimmmi MMMMMMMMMI. WT, tt
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