Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 25, 1917, Final, Image 1

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PAGES 20,21, 22
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IV. NO. 36
PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1917
CnriitanT, 101T, m Tnu Folio Ledoeb CouriNt
PRICE TWO CENTS
fCADORNA'S LINE PIERCED;
1 r
E
DOLLARS TALK
IN WAKE OF OLD
LIBERTY BELL
Parade for New Loan Brings
Money March to U. S.
Coffers
$275,000,000 RAISED HERE
FRENCH AGAIN ADVANCE
fams press
IHEAD; ENEMY
NEARRETKEAT
petahVs Army Extends
Gams on i-.aon
Front
SrrMANS LINES
GIVlli WAI AUAliN
Amv nazes Viiiuua i"
I0UC1"J
preparation lor Anotner
'Strategic' Ketiremem
Lilians quit menin
t
SSeualion of Flanders Town
Begun, Dispatches from
Amsterdam Assert
LONDON, Oct. 25.
jfnother unsuccessful German coun
:.u.A south of Houthoulst wood
' reported today by Field Marshal
JM. The assault came aucr aruncry
wpiration ycsieruaj ouhub. " -
Cmui completely," according to the
fjHtish commander-in-chief.
I PARIS, Oct. 25.
SGaieral Petain's victorious poilus
firove further forward toward Laon
todiy, ,
Rapture of Roscy Farm and advance
efthe French line to new forward posi
tions between Chavignon and Montdes
Mtes were announced in the War Of-
li'ft statement.
iTarther to the loft, orv the Chcmin
)amesj advances were rcportca
Cemv-cn-Laonnpis.
fennany is believed to be preparing
mother "strategic retreat," botn
i tltnAers and from around the region
irtheMitest French victory north of
rfcAisne.
An Amsterdam dispatch received to-
r lays civilians are reported cvacuat-
the town of Menin, southeast of
pres.
Tht Paris nrcss today asserted tnai
rfwh Aitntnra flulnc nvpr the Laon BeCtOr
.Kported evidences of the German plan of
lltitn villages and trees which preceded
jtti famous "strategic retreat" on the Arras
vbmbral line last spring Trees have been
ftlkiand villages destroyed In what would
em to be the path of the French advance
towird laon Everywhere great activity
it the German "destruction corps"' was
ietn.
1 The victory of General Pctaln's poilus,
'which, oddly enough, fell on the annlver
uij of the recapture of Fort Douaumont
'it Verdun, caused an outburst of rejoicing
&"
"it Is impossible to overestimate the Im
Jortince of this battle In Its relation to
ear final success," said Le Statin today.
The victory Bounds a daathknell to the
Geraun hope of retaining the Chemln-des-Pmes."
ffETery report that came from the Alsne
ifrjnl today emphasized the magnitude of
jWjTlctory. So badly shattered was the
p,rman army south of Laon that It could
mIIv Via niiHtii nttnnlrn lint unant all nf
AlWnesday bombarding the French posl
. AU of the newly won ground has
Hen consolidated by the French troops,
M they have been busy Blnce Tuesday
Wbt removlnir bootv from the irreat cavern
lftres .formerly held by the Germans.
plhe number of German prisoners taken
l V TA L 1 1 I .... 1 -.
t-.u? cream HUH ituw ueejl iiiuicubcu iu
JwW 9009, while seventy-UN e guns of all
ittllber wpm lni.1iiHi.rl In itin hrtntv
jiVeiiln, from which the clll population
m wen ordered, according to tne Amqter
o report. Is approximately eleven miles
jieutheait of Vpres, and Is about six miles
from where the lltlitlnc front Is now lo
oted after General Haig's most retfent
Uyconaes. The town la one of the general
WettUes of the British drive Some of
m mot bitter fighting of the Flanders
ywlsn has centered astride the Ypren
fttin highway and railroad. The town Is
M'the main line railroad from Lille to
wuna, which Is one of the arteries of Ger
Jufi communications to the submarine
jMw on the coast.
A civilian evacuation -would seem to Indl-
Mta etthP f... 1... tk. r!A.a.. arm.. f
5sl11' Immediately around the city or a
g" vi retreat.
Pg increase in world
CORN AND OATS CROPS
Kl Wheat. T?VP Rnrlav nnA Pico
However, Reports Rome Agri
cultural Institute
KWAStrrvTrtpmsM, -. .- . . .
titer iCrCp on,y sI18ht'y mr than half of
-. iiu reuueea worm crops or wneai,
wley and rice were reported by the
- icmauonai institute or Agriculture,
.lJOVf.rnn.an --.... x.i .
W. -"""" tiuM cuina.ie Dureau an
fwaced today. Big Increases In world corn
-- vroaucuon mis year were re-
KtT' "owever- .
: Wregate wheat erop of the prln-
..-.u tounines, exclusive of Russia,
" liven as 1.77K nnn nnn hii.h.u -- r -
I fit of the average for five years.
The Continuation of the Story
RASPUTIN
Devil or Saint?
by the
m Catharine Radzlwlll
,) printed on Pige 21
i
SAILORS IN LIBERTY LOAN PARADE
1 1 '.. "M." 'ii i irrtHifc ' tdL -'T-t
' : A
4?" '...'.'""' - - --y
Y4-.A A. . r -"-. r .oJ UaVxiju.ViVA A J. - J. J. j-.r . i, , . -W rtf '
ll. ZVtR .i .t. t S. . .u. 4uui.Aa'u.v,VA A. . j. jr ht-.-w i -liniM .-maajC. I'M I HI li mM i'i nvw tf ulW4 ' ! i
Philadelphia's millionaiies, its working people and its orphaned waitls
to the number of several thousands backed up Uncle Sam's bluejackets
and marines today in the city's Liberty Loan turnout on Market and
Broad streets. The sailors from Philadelphia Navy Yard, comprising
part of the first division, are shown marcliing west on Market street.
PALMER WILL
WIDEN ENEMY
SEIZURE RULE
Decides to Take Over Hold
ings of Bulgars, Turks
and Austrians
REGARDED AS ENEMIES
WASHINGTON. Oct. 25.
All holdings of subjecwof Bulgaria.
Turkey and Austria In the United States
will be sefzed, together with Cermans' prop
erty. A. Mitchell Palmer, alien property
custodian, announced today.
Talmer's decision regards Bulgaria. Tur
key and Austria as enemies, although the
United States has neer formally declared
war against the three allies of Germany.
Ills ruling followed a series of conferences
,ith Treasury Department umtmio, i
vhlchhe scoype of the tradlng-wlth-the-Tnemv
act was carefully studied.
nulearla Turkey and Austria have vast
stores of war supples In the United States,
stores 01 " ' ot the German prop
e?tySewUl be Bdd86and used against the
Kafs'er Austrian capitalists are especially
i?int.ii hv Palmer's new ruling The dl
aft,C nHa fm their investment, also will
hL ?Srned ovr to he Treasury Department
investment In I"'ure Llberty Loans' -for.'
Snt U expected shortly of
, ifSwho will enforce the act In all
ihe pdndpal Industrial and shipping centers
"e6 OeUrman embassy here, despite the
. .Inn. it rests on "German territory,"
tan taken over by A. Mitchell Palmer,
will be taken mer ,
rtCi hi Rented and the rental turned Into
lV Tluury Department. The trading
th,h enemy law is interpreted to In
wlth the enemy i aw remained Idle
slnCnfvoVrnstcrff and his party
returned to Germany.
REPORT VILLA IN ACTION
Rumored Preparing to Attack Parral
and Chihuahua City
s.tt tjaro Tex.. Oct. 25. A mining com
VS'nTv received a report from Par-
p i,.V Pranctaco Villa, at the head of
Lthani camped along the Wo Florida
idthrenat.n.S attack Parra. and Chi-
huTjJ"eCpori"S.o alleged that Vila, after
raWIngeveral small hamleb, wuth of Pr-
atf aW Jha men of hi. nd to carry
, ' . .1' ' N -'". '" 7V iV!, I
mk
TOWN MEETING
PARTYSUESCITY
COMMISSIONERS
Asks Court to Compel Print
ing of Candidates' Names
in Three Wards
"IMPUDENT VARE TRICK"
Tho Town Meeting party late this after
noon brought mandamus proceedings In
the Court of Common Pleas No. 3 beforo
Judge Dala to compel the County Com
missioners to print the names of Its can
didates in tho Seventeenth, Twenty-sixth
and Thirtieth Wards on the ballot for tho
offlcUl election. Tho writ will be argued
next Monday morning.
The action followed the announcement
of the County Commissioners this morn
ing that when double sets of nomination
papers are filed tho names will not be
printed on tho ballot.
Tho affidavits of tho Town Meeting party,
which were filed by Paul Hellly, allege
that the second Bets of papers In these
wards were filed by Vato worker long .iftc r
the candidates of the Town Meeting party
had fllul theirs.
In a statement Issued at the headquar
ters of the Town Meeting party the action
of the County Commissioners Is declared
to be "a particularly Impudent effort on
the part of the County Commissioners In
collusion with the Vare-Smtth combina
tion to make use of palpable fraud to de
prive the citizens ot these wards of an
opportunity of voting an honest and Inde
pendent ticket
"It is a clear effort to elect the gang
ticket In these wards by remoWng all
opposition to It, und It will be fought
to the full extent of the legal recourse
open to the Town Meeting party "
RULING DENTS VARE ATTACK
Judge DaVIs made a big dent In the Vare
Smlth" case against the Town Meeting
party's nomination papers today when he
ruled that an affiant vouching for the
signers of a nomination petition need not
Know all of the signers, provided that tho
five affiants collectively know all of the
signers to be qualified electors.
The ruling, considered ery Important by
the defense, came during the testimony of
Howard Klatz, a salesman, of 2141 West
Susquehanna avenue, who was one of the
five who signed the affidavit vouching for a
nomination petition containing seventy
seven names. Klatz, under questioning by
William Connor, the 50-60 ticket's attorney,
CeMaMdMj raf!X7.t,(Celuaut Zw
TEUTON ALLIES
PIERCE ITALIAN
LINE ON IS0NZ0
Austro - Germans Break
Through Defenses on
East Bank
BATTLE CARRIED
TO WEST SLOPES
Enemy Checked at Monte
San Gabriele, Rome War
Office Reports
KAISER'S BIG GUNS AID
Infantry Attacks Preceded by
Violent Artillery Preparation
on Eighteen-Mile Front
ROME, Oct. 25.
Austro-Gorman troops broke through
the Italian lines to the left of the
Isonzo, today's ofllcial statement an
nounced. '
To the west of Volnik, on the western
slope of Monte Sant Gabriele, the
enemy was checked, the War Office
stated.
The Teutonic gains, it was explained,
were achieved by the enemy taking ad
vnntnge of the bridgehead positions at
San Maria and San Lucia, south of
Tolmino. In violent fighting the Austro-Gorman
troops, carried the battle
to the slopes of the right bank of the
Isonzo.
Every dispatch from the front em
phasized the great concentration of
German and Austrian forces on the
whole of tho attacking front a sector
of approximately eighteen miles. Tho
infantry attacks were preceded by n
violent artillery preparation, mostly by
heavy German guns.
10,000 ITALIANS TAKEN
PRISONERS IN ATTACK
BERLIN, Oct 25.
Ten thousand prisoners, including a
brigade and dMslomil staff of the Italian
army, hae already been captured In the
Austro-Gcrman drhe on the Izonzo, the
War Office announced today.
"Much rich booty has also been taken,"
tho statement afcsertcd.
Tho positions captured, tho War Office
said, aro situated on Bteep mountain slopes
barring the roadway to the surrounding
alley They were scaled and captured by
Teuton troops desplto desperate Italian re
sistance The War Office statement on the opera-
tlons ngalnst the Italians Is the first to
come from this source since the entry
of Italy into the war.
Great masses of concentrated guns of
olg caliber began bombarding the Italian
positions in the Julian Alps and along the
upper Ioonzo on Sunday Increasing to great
Intensity. Fog and snow flurries at times
hampered the work ot observation, but
tho guns were kept thundering up to the
hour for tho attack.
The grand nsBault was launched simul
taneously nil along a. fiont of twenty miles,
nnd, despite the stiff resistance of the Ital
ian warriors, the Germans occupied a num
ber of first-line trench systems The pre
liminary bombardment of the German and
Austro-Hungarlan .artillery used large
quantities of a new gas shell against the
Italians At latest reports the battle was
continuing.
A London cablegram on Monday quoted
Rome udices as saying that the Germans
and Austro-Hungarlans were massing rein
forcements of men and guns on the Italian
Continued on I'aae Tour Column Two
RESENTS REFLECTIONS
UPON RUSSIA'S ARMIES
Slav War Minister Declares Country's
Forces Will Fight on to
Final Victory
PnTROGRAD. Oct 25. "He who iaH
that the Russian nrmv no longer exlBts
utters a lie." declared General Verk
hosky. Minister of War, In a speech before
the grand preliminary Parliament of the
Russian Republic today. He added that the
Russian army, when discipline Is completely
restored, can be looked upon to do Us duty
and to fight to final victory.
The War Minister has submitted a spe
cial measure to deal with disaffection Spe
clal tribunals will be established which
must act upon all cases of Insubordina
tion within twenty-four hours after charges
are made From the tribunals the cases
will go to the commanders.
M, Savlnkoff, former acting Minister of
War, was expelled from the Socialist rev
olutionary party today. He had been sum
moned before the central committee to
make certain explanations but failed to ap
pear. Premier Kerensky Is leader of the So
cial revolutionary party.
City Treasurer's Statement
The weekly statement of City Treasurer
William McCoach shows that the receipts
amounted to $138,663 4! and the payments
to 1989.249.26. which, with the sum on
"hand, not Including the Sinking Fund Ac
count, leayes a balance, of 2t,C61,li.23.
HIT THE HUN!
America set a new record yesterday for Liberty
Loan subscribers. Did you buy a bond? If you did,
buy another today. If you didn't, buy several.
Only Two Days More to Buy
Liberty Bonds
Philadelphia must subscribe $190,000,000 more
by Saturday. It's up to you to do your part.
GET BUSY!
QUICK
FOOTBALL SCORES
Q'T'NP. JKS, 0 0 0 7 7 C'NTRT VK. O
SOCCER
1 1 a
0 2 a
CENTRAL tt
GEH-'IANTOWN H
FRANCE GE1S ANOTHER $20,000,000 LOAN FROM D. S.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20. Another loau of !?ao,000,000 to
Pruncu was extended by the United States Govcriiineut today. Tills
briuga l'rauce'a total up to !8lO.OOO,000 unci the totuls lor nlJ rfc..
Allies to i?3,820lOO,000
LUTHERAN BODIES IN U. S. SANCTION MERGER
Union of tut millions of I.utlieuinu hi the Untiud Sutsv m one
body, by merging tilt General Council, Gent ml Synod auutiie UuiteJ
Synod ot tho Suub into an urisiniUuliun to hv knuwa aj tile fllta
Lutheran Cauri'h in' Amorlcn. wau uimiuinouly ai3procci';u a re.-o
hiHou by tlw rouYWrtioii of tlit Genial Council ot' tho Evaneollcol
LuHn-iun Cluuth, IncludWix ilvlefraicL from every tato la tau Union
in tiie Vrtlinipon- Building lute today.
GERMAN SPY SUSPECT SHOT
r
(!AMP GBEENE, Charlotte, IJ. (J., Oct. yi. I'rUderlct BeethoveJ,
IHiuve'i to bo a German srv, vriti sliol asra luto today ly a. prcrvot'
yunrtf w.Uils r,ro?liag about tht cumv He lut been cnli&tod uad d'j
z'.rtc::. He !:. xpsctd to re'soer
DECISION WITHHELD IN PASSENGER RATE HEARING
No decision wao reached today In tho hearing In the protest case against the
rates of the Philadelphia nnd Western Railroad, held befoie Michael J. Ryan, mem
ber of the Public Service Commission, In City Hull. Haloid S. Schertz represented
tho complainants, which Included civic nnd improvement associations of Brookline,
Ardmore. Hecchwood, Nonlstown und tho Philadelphia nnd Western Commuters'
Association.
, GERMANS BOMB NANCY; FRENCH BAG 25 PLANES
PARIS, Oct. 25. Twenty-five enemy ulrplanes wcie brought down by the French
on Wednesday alone, todny's official statement unnounced. Nancy was he object of
another German air raid, but without any victims
PADEREWSKI, POLISH PIANIST, PLANS NATIVE ARMY
WASHINGTON, Oct 23 Ignace Paderewski, noted Polish pianist, wants to
recruit 150.000 Poles In the United States to fight for Polish Independence. Ho has
tried to obtain permission from the War Department to rnlly these men, none of
whom Is a citizen l) to tho present, he has been unsuccessful. Paderewski has
expressed the opinion to various olllclals with whom he has come Into contact here
that tho people of Poland hae no desire for a freedom gained through an alliance
with Germany and that his people have no confidence In Russia They want tu play
a lone hand, he declares.
SUNSET DIVISION VANGUARD REACHES NEW YORK
NRW YORK, Oct. 25 The vanguard of the "Sunset Division," which will bo
composed of 28,000 men, nil from points west of the Mississippi Rler, began nirlv
Ing In camp near New York toda. The first airltaW weie tho 145th and l'"th Artil
lery regiments. They enmo In on nlnet Pullman tars, their equipment being tar
ried on thirty-four freight cars. Theso units were transferred from Camp Greene,
Charlotte, N. C. Nearly every State west of the Mississippi 1h represented in tho
"Sunset Division."
COLONEL "TEDDY" TAKES STUMP FOR MITCHEL
NEW YORK. Oct 25. Colonel Roosevelt Joined Major Mltchel's campaign Hituad
today. Roosesclt will speak at fle Mltchel rallies, beginning October 29 and cover
ing the last week of tho campaign.
SEEK GAS AND FLAME
NEW YORK, Oct. 25. Gas nnd flame fighters for the United States army are
sought in New York today. Tho recruiting officers assured applicants they would
be In Franco before Thanksgiving day.
NAME WINTER QUARTERS FOR REGULAR REGIMENTS
WASHINGTON. Oct. 25. Winter charters for the jegular ainiy regiments now
being expanded In northern camps were designated by the War Department today
The troops now at Syracuse, N. A, and Gettysburg, Pa., are to be moved to Camp
Greene, Charlotte, N C. One regiment ot regulars now stationed at Fort Douglas,
Utah, are to be moved to the National Army cantonment at Des Moines, Iowa, and
the remainder of tho post are to be sent to Camp Pike, Little Rock, Ark. One bat
talion of Infantry now at Fort Snelllnjr, Minn , will be sent to the regular army post
at Fort Des Moines, Iowa. Only tho troops that havo no wooden barracks .for winter
use are to be transferred, the War Department announced today.
IOWA VILLAGERS CHANGE THEIR MINDS; BUY BONDS
MANILA, Iowa, Oct. 25. Almost every man In Asplnwall, a small village near
here Inhabited mostly by Germans, owns a Liberty Bond today, and thosewho do not
are under Investigation by Federal authorities. After attempts to hold a Liberty
Bond meeting nt Asplnwall had been frustrated through tho alleged unfriendliness
of the townspeople, seventy-five citizens of Manila Invaded the town, closed the stores
and obtained subscriptions for almost the entire amount of the town's, quota.
NEWS
O- 0
SCORKS
SO. PH1LA. H
PEDAGOGY .
O 1 1
o y y
FIGHTERS FOR U. S. ARMY
Great Outpouring of People's
Cush Follows Patriotic Proces
sion Headed by Ancient Relic
Monev talked today N'ay. It fairly sang
as bullets sing It did more. It paraded,
throwing doun the gantlet to the Hun In a
challenge unmistakable In Its determina
tion Money, which we have been told for weeks
nnd weeks, will win the war against bar
barism, spoke today In terms of the $275,
000,000 that Philadelphia has already con
tributed to the Liberty Loard and It spok
In teimq of the millions more that she In
tends to contribute; that she must con
tribute "Make tho day ominous for the Kaiser."
It was Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo
who gne the slogan
Delayed by yesterday's weather. Phila
delphia demonstrated today with an enthusl
asm that amounted to a patriotic fervor
Just how ominous she enn make this, and
every succeeding dnv, until "finis" shall
havo been written to tBc Teuton menace.
They brought the Hell out for tho parade.
There Is only one bell for nn occasion Ilk
this tho Liberty Hell. Lovingly It was
lifted from its sacred sh.-ine yesterday and
guarded with reerent care through the
night
Today embowered In leaves It led the
parade once moro doing service In behalf
of n people bent on being free. Thousands
had assembled In Independence Square to
tako part an marchers or spectators In ths
gigantic demonstration
SlLi:.NT SPELL OF OLD BELL
Onco moro that nnclent cracked object
of brass worked Us magic spell and
tightened with emotion the throats of all
who beheld It Aurned by Its Incomparable
tradition, the most cherished symbol of a
people who Willi not lle If they cannot be
free, the Liberty Bell was none the less
potent because of Its awesome silence. Rut
doubtless could It hae rung out as It did
of ynro It would have mixed with the
triumphs of Its peals the supplication:
"Give. gle, gle' Give ns your fore
fathers gac Oh i? until you feel the pinch
of giving. And then give I"
Men, women and children who have
bought and who will buy until the last
penny Is gone, If necessary, made today's
parado tho uplifting. Inspiring, soul-ttlr-rlng
demonstration that It was. On and
on, wave "after wave, a surging, rnaijsjof
everybody bankers, bollermakers, ""'"hews
bojs. sailors, mailnen, society women,
working women. Boy Scouts and school
children they came. Many who had
thought to stnnd In the sidelines were
swept Irresistibly Into the parade, caught
by the contagion of the overwhelming'
necessity to give patriotic expression to the .
profound conviction that dohars will win
the war.
Regiments of dollars were represented by
tho marchers Many of them have worked
untiringly for the success of the loan, buy
ing bonds up to tho hilt meanwhile. All
icnllzcd that this was lAit the beginning.
All realized that Germany, which has sub
scribed to eighteen billions of dollars in
seen loans In thren jears of the war. must
be drhen back, dollar for dollar, man for
man, If necessary to make the world a llva-
Continued on Tare Two. Colamn Ons
MRS. FOX BEATEN
BY MRS. BARLOW
City Champion Eliminated
in Bumm Golf Semifinal at
Whitemarsh by 1 Up
MRS. STETSON IN FINAL
CHESTNUT HI LI Pa . Oct. IS.
Mrs Ronald II. Barlow, of Merlon, and
Mrs. O. Henry Stetson, of Huntingdon Val
ley, qualified for the final round of the Belle
Steelman Bumm Memorial Cup at the
Whitemarsh Vallej Country Club today.
Mrs Harlow defeated Mrs Caleb F. Fox,
of Huntingdon Valley 1 up, and Mrs Stet
son defeated Miss Mlldien Caverly, of the
Philadelphia Trliket flub, 3 up and 2 to
pla
The niatt.li between Mrs Barlow and
Mrs Fo was tho more exciting, and It
.Mrs Fox had been able to putt the match
might lme had a different ending At It
was. Mrs Barlow won on the Inst hole one
up On tho flist hole Mrs Fox missed
putts for a win In four and on the fifteenth
and eighteenth holes she misled putts that
she should 1iae made easily.
On the other hand, on the sixteenth she
holed out with her approach the ball run
ning up the hill nearly into the rough and
then down again Into the hole At the end
of four holes Mrs Fox waB two up, but on
the fifth she put her tee shot into the creek
and then put two out of bounds and gae
up the hole. On the sixth she put her
drixc out of bounds and lost with a six to
a fixe '
The peenth was halved In sixes, but for
the first time during tho tournament Mrs.
Barlow plaen tne seenm wen ana won
with a six. and a seven Mrs. Barlow misted
the green on the ninth and took a four to
Mrs Fox's three and the match was square
at the turn
Mrs. Fox won the tenth with a six to a
seven, but on the eleventh Mrs. Barlow had
a fine six to a seven, only to lose the tw'elfth
Continued on i'RKe Fifteen Column One
THE WEATHER
roitncAST
Vor Philadelphia and Vicinity: Partlu
cloudv and continued cool tonight and
Friday; vioderate tce$terlu u-inds.
For eastern Pcnntilvania and NV-tc Jw
sev: Fair tni0ht and rrldav; not much
change In temperature, fresh west tcind.
I.ENC1T1! or nY
Bun rlMf .Q--1 a m. I Sunsets . S;0Sd. m.
DEUVWAHB KIVER TIIIK CUAN0E8
"CHESTNUT STJtBET
T.or water S 48 m ILovrwuttr .4:05 p. m.
HUhwatVr tH m. Xlsh w.r .:jSp.3:
.Tiaii'iaiATtsB Jir mn suns
"ri'PlJoj .Hi "!-"' gl .'.
W'
- $?
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