The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, September 01, 1905, Image 3

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vith ite
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a, it is
inbab-
ere are
Fifty
tion of
school
seven
tal pri-
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schools,
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14,000;
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*h Yid-
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12,000.
1g ever
n 1903,
second:
rg, Ga-
hitants,
uses.—
1g and
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oanoke
lug up
achine,
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r were
Coun-
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iology,
acy in
patch.
Thousands of Women
ARE MADE WELL AND STRONG
Secooes of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
pound Rests Upon the Fact that It
Really Does Make Sick Women Well
Thousands upon thousands of Ameri-
ean women have been restored to
health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound. Their letters are on file
in Mrs. Pinkham's office, and prove this
statement to be a fact and not a mere
boast.
Overshadowing indeed is the success
of this great medicine, and compared
with it all other 1aedicines und treat.
ment for women are experiments.
Why has Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vege-
table Compound accomplished its wide-
spread results for good ?
Why has it lived and thrived and
done 1ts glorious work for a quarter of
& century ?
Simply and surely because of its ster-
ling worth. The reason no other med-
icine has even approached its success
is plainly and positively because there
is no other medicine in the world so
good for women’s ills.
The wonderful power of Lydia E.
Pinkbam’s Vegetable Compound over
the diseases of womankind is not be-
cause it is a stimulant—not because it is
a palliative, but simply because it is
the most wonderful tonic and recon-
structor ever discovered to act directly
upon the uterime system, positively
OURING disease and displacements and
restoring health and vigor.
Marvelous cures are reported from
all parts of the country by women who
have been omred, trained nurses who
bave witnessed cures, and physicians
who have recognized the virtue in
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, and are fair enough to give
credit where it is due. If physicians
dared to be frank and open, hundreds
of them would acknowledge that they
constantly prescribe Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound in severe
cases of female ills, as they know by
experience that it will effect a cure.
omen whoare troubled with painful
or irregular menstruation, backache,
bloating (or flatulence), leucorrhcea,
falling, inflammation or ulceration of
the uterus, ovarian troubles, that
‘‘bearing-down” feeling, dizziness,
faintness. indigestion, nervous pros-
tration, or the blues, should take im-
mediate action to ward off the serious
consequences and be restored to health
end strength by taking Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound. Anyway,
write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass.,
for advice. It's free and always helpful,
BROWN WAGON
MADE IN ALL STYLES.
Bend for Booklet giving full description,
BROWN MANUFACTURING CO
ZANESVILLE. OHIO.
DRO PSY EY, DISCOVERY: ive
quick relief and cure: worst
cased. Send for book of testimonials sud 10 Days’
treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S EONS, Atlanta, Ga.
A Well-informed Guide,
The late John W., Mackay was at-
tending to business at the great Com-
stock mine one day when a party of
tourists approached and asked if he
knew of a guide who would take
them about. Evidently none of them
knew him. Mackay offered to escort
them and did so, explaining the whole
mystery of gold and silver quartz
mining. When they emerged the
visitors clubbed together and made
up a small sum for the guide. Among
them was Andrew D. White, re-
cently ambassador to Germany, and
at that time president of Cornell
University. “Here, my man, take
this,” he said. “Your explanation of
the working of the mine has been
singuuarly clear and informing.”
“Well, it ought to be,” replied the
guide, as he slipped the half-dollar
in his overalls pocket. “I dug ‘em
and I own em.”
A Sure Cure for Gout.
Dr. William Osler, in one of his
Baltimore lectures, recited a quaint
old cure for the gout—a cure, from
a seventeenth century medical work
that was designed to show gout’s
hopelessness.
“First pick,” said the cld cure, “a
handkerchief from the pocket of a
spinster of 35 who never wished to
wed; second, wash the handkerchief
in an honest miller’s pond; third, dry
it on the hedge of a parson who
never was covetous; fourth, send it
to the shop of a physician who never
killed a patient; fifth, mark it with
a lawyer's ink who never cheated a
client, and, sixth, apply it, hot, to the
gout-tormented part. A speedy cure
must follow.”
Large Fossils Found.
Scientists of the University of Cali-
fornia, who have been searching for
prehistoric animals on the Nevada
desert for the past few months, have
succeeded in finding skeletons of some
sea mammoths on the dry wastes.
One of the specimens is 29 feet long,
and, jacked occupies 54 boxes. This
specimen was found on the great 40-
mile desert in Humbolt county and
is considered one of the most valu-
able fossils ever unearthed. Before
finding this one the scientists suc-
ceeded in locating several smaller rep-
tiles, which must have lived in that
region ages ago.
FITSpermanently cured. No fits ornervous-
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
NerveRestorer,$2trial bottleand tweatise free
Dr.R. H. KLINE, Ltd. 981 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa.
Cabbages were introduced into England
in the sixteenth century.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup ror Charen
teething, soften the gums,reduces inflamma-
tion,allays pain,cureswind colic, 25¢c.a bottle
Cromwell is said to have originated the
board of trade idea.
Piso’s Cure for Consumptionis an infallible
medicine for coughs and colds.—N. a
SAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N.J., Feb. 17, 1900!
A baby was born the other day on @
Gotham trolley car.
Snake Tries to Swallow China Egg.
Mrs. Young, a widow living near
Bellefonte, Pa., was terrified on be-
holding a blacksnake coiled up in a
chicken nest. The snake was killed,
when an investigation revealed that
the reptile had been endeavoring to
swallow a china nest egg.
When you are at a loss to know what
Libb 4 (Natural
1 Y S Flavor)
Ox Tongues
Veal Loaf
Food Products
Once tried, you will always have a supply on hand
Chili Con Carne
Ham Loaf
Your Grocer has them
Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago
to serve for Juncheos, dinner or supper —
when you crave something both appetizing and satisfying—try
Brisket Beef
Soups
1 counters won't do.
The Secret of Good Coffee
Even the best housekeepers cannot make a good cup of
coffee without good material. Dirty, adulterated and queerly
blended coffee such as unscrupulous dealers shovel over their
But take the pure, clean, natural flavored
LION COFFEE, the leader of all package coffees—
the coffee that for over a quarter of a century has been daily
welcomed in millions of homes—and you will make a drink fit
extra for the pot.”
to settle. Serve
WITH COLD WATER.
r
3 {Bont boll it too long.
DONT'S
COFFEE belo
i Water instead of eggs.
for a king in this way:
HOW TO MAKE GOOD COFFEE.
Use LION CO becanee to get best results you 1aust use the best coffee.
Grind your LION COFFEE rather fine. Use “a tablespoonfa! to each cup, and one
First mix it with a little cold water, enough to make 8 ste, and
add white of an egg (If egg is to be used as a settler), then follow one of the following rules :
1st. WITH BOILING WATER. Add boiling water, and let it boil
THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add a little cold water
minutes m .
2d. "Add your cold water to the Dante and
bring it 10 a boll. Thea set aside, add a little cold water, and five
minutes it's ready te serve.
Don't let it stand Ee than ten minutes before serving.
Don’t use water that has been bolled before.
TWO WAYS TO SETTLE CO!
Use part of the white of an egg, mixing it with the ground LION
2d. With . After boiling add a dash of cold water, and set
aside for eight or tem minutes, then serve through a strainer.
and set aside five
COFFEE In future.
Insist on getting a package of genuine LION COFFEE,
ar it according to this recipe and you will only use
Lion-head on eve e.)
’ (Save these Lion-heads Ee iiuis)
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
‘WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
(80d only in 1 1b. sealed packages.)
How to Secure Good Roads.
Os%. HIS newspaper is very
much in earnest in the de-
[+] O sire to see a system of im-
A Rr proved highways in the
ON” country. Its editor knows
teat no systematic highway improve-
ment can be had except by a great
national movement, such as has been
outlined in the Brownlow-Latimer bills
in Congress. The people of this State
have an interest in the highways of
its sister States. Highway travel does
not stop at State lines any more than
river transportation stops where the
waterways pass from one State to an-
other, or railroad transportation where
the railroads cross State lines. High-
way improvement is sooner or later
to be recognized as a function of the
Government. The Government com-
prises a union of States of mutual in-
terests, and interdependent, each obli-
zated to the other in a compact for the
general national welfare. We do not
believe any question, present or prob-
able, is more pregnant with import-
ance to all the people than that of na-
tional aid to good roads, and we want
to suggest to our readers that the only
way this aid can be secured is for the
people to demand it. The Senate Com-
mittee on Agriculture a year ago fav-
orably reported on the Latimer bill, it
being substantially a copy of the
Brownlow bill, which was earlier of-
fered in the House. The bills will be
reintroduced on the assembling of the
Fifty-ninth Congress. If the people
who favor national aid will write to
their Senators and Representatives, in-
sisting upon the measure, the little dif-
ference in the two bills will be elim-
inated and the one thus agreed upon
will be passed. It is all with the people
themselves. One citizen is as much
obligated as another in the matter.
No citizen is so humble but that he
has the right of petition. Every citizen
can afford the time to write. He can
attend the county meetings that should
be held everywhere to emphasize the
demand for Government help to better
roads. He can sign a petition with his
neighbors asking Congress to give this
relief. He can write to his Senator for
Senate Document No. 204, study of
which will enable him to talk good
roads to others. All may be posted for
the asking; and we suggest that our
newspaper brethren keep standing in
a prominent place in their columns
some such paragraph as this:
“Write to your U. 8. Senator for a
copy of Senate Document No. 204.
Also tell him you favor the enactment
of the Brownlow-Latimer bill for good
roads.”
The press and the people must speak
out on the question.—Brooklyn (N. Y.)
Uptown Weekly.
Road Maintenance.
In the maintaining of the State roads
so little experience has been had on
the part of the Highway Commission-
ers and the people in general that it is
usually thought that when a road is
once built it will maintain itself. Many
Highway Commissioners and town
boards feel this same way toward
an iron bridge and neglect to paint
it, but even a bridge built of iron when
neglected loses its strength, just the
same as a road built of stone if neg-
lected will go to pieces. The real life
of a stone road is dependent upon the
care which it receives during the first
six months after it is finished, and the
perpetual attention which it receives
after that. Some commissioners think
that when a road is completed that if
the loose stones are raked off ence in
thirty days that it will maintain itself
for three or four years, and then the
road can be resurfaced with top dress-
ing and a steam roller and again be-
come as good as new and ready to go
three years longer without attention.
This method of caring for roads is far
from economical and satisfactory. The
best way to maintain a road is. as soon
as it is turned over by the State to the
town, to engage a man to take charge
of a five-mile section at an agreed price
per year and put him in charge of the
road, providing him with surface ma-
terial, which is stored at regular inter.
vals on each side of the road for resur-
facing. This man goes every day with
his rake, his shovel, his hoe and hig
wheelbarrow the entire distance of the
road, rain or shine. He removes thd
loose stgnes, he keeps the shoulders
low at the side of the road so that the
water passes freely over them to the
ditch, he keeps the sluices opened, hd
fills the depressions, fills the ruts and
repairs each spot as fast as the surface
dressing wears off or blows away. If
is this constant attention which keep¢
the road always in good order and af
the least expense to the community,
Our American road builders may bé
inexperienced in handling stone roads;
but it won't take longtto adopt the best
methods, which long years of usage in
Europe have proven to he the most
economical.—Rider and Driver, New
York.
Economy That Doesn’t Ccunt.
“It’s mighty hard te economize be-
low a certain point,” said the clubman.
“Some friendsof mine, of artistic tastes
and inartistic income, suddenly found
it necessary to reduce expenses, and
they nade serious efforts to do so, even
to the verge of discomfort. At the end
of six months they found that the only
Item they had been able to clip out
was loaf sugar: They made the less
elegant “granulated take the place of
the chaste blanc blocks, and thereby
effected a saving of about fifteen cents
& month.”—New York Press. /
THE PLAYWRICHT.STAR.
Odette Tyler, Famous Actress Velues
Doan’s Kidney Fills,
Miss Odette Tyler is not only one of
the best known dramatic stars in
America, but has written and produced
a successful play
of her own. ‘Miss
Tyler has written
the following
grateful note, ex-
pressing her ap-
} preciation of
Doan’s Kidney
Pills:
Foster-Milburn
Co., Buffalo,
N.Y:
Gentlemen—My
Qastte P
yier
experience with your valuable remedy
has been equally gratifying to both
myself and friends.
ODETTE TYLER.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Price, 50
(Signed)
Foster-Milburn Co.,
For sale by all dealers.
cents per box.
A Sailor's Burial at Cherbourg.
The most impressive feature, how-
ever, of the day on which John Paul
Jones’ body arrived at Cherbourg was
the real funeral of Seaman Rodgers
of the Chattanooga, who died yes-
terday in the Civil hospital here
from nephritis. In the afternoon 100
sailors and a firing squad of marines,
accompanied by the scarlet coated
band of the Brooklyn, marched to the
hospital and received the body. The
escort was augmented there by a
detachment of French sailors and
soldiers and a number of professional
mourners. The route was lined with
spectators. Thousands of the inhabit-
ants joined the cortege as it passed
along, the band playing the Dead
March in Saul. The body of blue
jackets mourning their comrade
marched in perfect alignment and
step. As the coffin passed the male
spectators removed their hats, and
the women crossed themselves. The
coffin was draped with the American
flag, and was flanked by six mess-
mates of the dead sailor. Arriving at
the cemetery. the escort formed a
hollow square about the grave, and
the Episcopal burial service was
read. Then the firing squad deliv-
ered three volleys, mourning taps
were sounded on the bugle, and
America had given France a sailor
for the one she was to take on the
next day.
The Largest Lump of Ice:
The largest mass of ice in the world
Is probably the one which fills up
nearly the whole of the interior of
Greenland, where it has accumulated
since before the dawn of history. It
is believed now to form a block
about 600,000 square miles in area,
and averaging a mile and a half in
thickness. According to these statis-
tics the lump of ice is larger in
volume than the whole body of water
in the Mediterranean, and there is
enough of it to cover the whole of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland with a layer about seven
miles thick. If it were cut into two
convenient slabs and built up equal-
ly upon the entire surface of ‘gal-
lant little Wales,” it would form a
pile more than 120 miles high. There
is ice enough in Greenland to cover
the entire surface of the United
States a quarter of a mile deep.
What May Be Found at Skibo.
The sporting attractions of Skibo,
Mr. Carnegie’s highland home are thus
summed up: The extent of his shoot-
ing is about 20,000 acres, of which
about 10,000 acres are moor, 6,000 acres
arable and 4,000 acres wood; 600 to
800 brace grouse, 22 stags, 4 fallow
bucks, 42 roe deer, besides black game
partridges, pheasants, snips, wood-
cock, hares, rabbits and wild fowl
may be expected. There is a fair sal-
mon and sea trout fishing in about
15 miles of the Evelix, and good trout
fishing in Lochs Migdale, Laggan, Lars
and Buidhe—Westminstey Gazette.
Electro-Magnetic Surgery.
A huge electro-magnet has been set
up in a certain hospital in England.
It drew out splinters of steel which
had become lodged in the eves of
patients. In one instance it drew
out a piece of a hammer head which
had been driven ino the muscles of
a patient's upper arm, and in another
case drew out a piece of a cold-chisel
in a forearm.
EVER TREAT YOU SO?
Coffee Acts the Jonah and Will Come Up
A clergyman who pursues his noble
calling in a country parish in Iowa |
tells of his coffee experience:
“My wife and I used coffee regularly
for breakfast, frequently for dinner
and occasionally for supper—always
the very best quality—package coffee
never could find a place on our table.
“In the spring of 1896 my wife was
taken with violent vomiting, ' which
we had great difficulty in stopping.
“It seemed to come from coffee drink-
ing, but we could not decide.
“In the following July, however, she |
was attacked a second time by the
vomiting. I was away from home fill-
ing an appointment at the time, and on
my return I found her very low; she
had literally vomited herself almost to
death, and it took some days to quiet
the trouble and restore her stomach.
“I had also experienced the same
‘rouble, but not so violently, and had |
retieved it each time by a resort to
medicine.
“But my wife's second attack satis-
fled me that the use of coffee was at
the bottom of our troubles, and so we
stopped it forthwith and took on Pos-
tum Food Coffee. The old symptoms
of disease disappeared, and during the
9 years that we have been using Pos-
tum instead of coffee we have never
had a recurrence of the vomiting. We |
never weary of Postum, to which we
know we owe our good health. This is |
Name
Battle
a simple statement of facts.”
given by Postum Company,
Greek, Mich.
Read the little book, “The Road to
Wellville,” in each pkg.
A Modern Buccaneer
“The days of piracy may be gome,
but there is a bold buccaneer in the
waters of the North Pacific ocean who
comes perilously near duplicating the
exploits of Lafitte and Captain Kidd,”
said B. R. Birdwell, of San Francisco.
“This rover of the deep, Alexander
McLean by name, is the master of the
famous Carmencita, a craft which has
for a long time been engaged in selling
whisky illicity to Indians and in
poaching on the fur seal preserves of
Russia and the United States. It is
hinted that the owner of this outlaw
ship has done even darker deeds than
swindling redskins and sealing seals,
but he has thus far escaped capture,
either through his remarkable luck or
the inefficiency of the government
revenue service. The latest McLean
exploits have been committed in wa-
ters that are under Russian jurisdic
tion, and right now Russia has her
hands too full in Manchuria to bother
with minor affairs.—Washington Post.
Work and Wages.
Paul Morton gets $100,000 a year,
and Admiral Togo $3,000. That's
about right. Morton has 600,000 dis-|
satisfied policy holders to placate, |
and Togo has only a few thousand |
Russians to show how to lead a
different life. Besides, Togo's labors |
are over, and Morton's have just be-|
gun and may never end. All Togo
has got to do to keep his job and
the esteem of the public is to stay!
afloat, where he cannot spend all!
his money, and to avoid home com-
ings. Whag Morton must do could
not be told in a day.—Portland Ore-
gonian. |
A Queer Thing About July. |
How we came to pronounce July |
as we do now with the accent on the
second syllable is one of the unsolved
mysteries of speech. Named, of
course, after Julius Caesar, it should
really be pronounced to rhyme with
“duly,” and so our forefathers actu-
ally did pronounce it. Spenser, for
instance, has the line, “Then came
hot July boyling like a fire,” and even
so late as Johnson's time the accent
was still on the “Ju.” It is one of
many words which would startle
those ancestors of ours spoken as
we speak them now.—London Chron-
icle.
Shaking Hands.
When a stranger does not grasp
the hand you offer him, you are en-
titled to doubt his honesty. If he
favors you with a couple of fingers
you may set him down as haughty.
If his hand lies limpiy in yours, he is
timid. If he gives you the ‘“Ameri-
ican squeeze,” he is audacious. If
| his hand slips away, he is indolent;
| but if he is good, loyal, sincere, well-
| balanced, mentally and physically, he
{lets you have a grip, ample, firm,
modest and yet gemial—New York
Globe.
15 YEARS OF TORTURE!
i
i
i
i
Itching and Painful Sores Covered Head |
and Body=Cured in Week by Cuticura.
“For fifteen years my scalp and fore-
head was one mass of scabs, and my body
was covered with sores. Words cannot
express how I suffered from the itching
and pain. I had given up hope when a
friend told me to get Cuticura. After
bathing with Cuticura Soap and applying
Cuticura Ointment for three days my head
was as clear as ever, and to my surprise
and joy, one cake of soap and one box of
ointment made a complete cure in one
week. (Signed) H. B. Franklin, 717 Wash-
ington St., Allegheny, Pa.”
More Plagues in Egypt.
Cairo is now in the throes of a
caterpillar plague, and many of the
older resirents say they never saw
so many of the destructive insects as
are now in evidence. In some sec-
tions of the city they have almost
destroyed the foliage on scores of
trees, and in a few places have
even devoured much of the grass.—
Wickliffe (I11.) Yeoman.
GF A
MISS ELLA OFF, Indianapolis, Ind.
SUFFERED FOR MONTHS.
fae
Pe-ru-na, the Remedy That Cured
Miss Ella Off, 1127 Linden St., Indias
apolis, Ind., writes:
“J suffered with a run down con-
otitution for several months, and
Feared that I would have to give sup
ing the udvs f a phyet-
‘On seeking the advice of a
eian, he prescribed a tonic. 1 Pye
seeking the advice of our ad
he asked me to try Peruna. Ine
few weeks I began to feel and actlike
ovreased, I did not have that worn-
out feeling, and Icould sleep
didly. In a couple of months
entirely recovered, thank you
what your medicine has done for
me. ’’--=Ella Off.
Write Dr Jatiman, President of fy
tman Sanitarium, Columbus, 3
pa medical advice. All a i
ia Beld strictly confidential.
TORTURING
HUMOR
WE SELL A $300 PIANO FOR $195
To introduce. Buy direct and save the dif-
ference. Easy terms. Write us and we’ll
tell you all about it.
HOFFMANN'S MUSIC HOUSE,
537 Smithfield Street, Pittsburg, Pa.
| FOR WOMEN 2}
| troubled with ills peculiar to » 7.
| their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc-
cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, krills disease germs,
stope discharges, heals inflammation and local
coreness, cures leucorrhea and nasal catarrh,
Paxtine is in powder form to be di
| water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicinal
| and economical than liquid antiseptics for al
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box.
Trial Box and Bcok of Instructions Free.
THE R. PAXTON CONFANY BOSTON, Mass.
|
|
|
I ENSIO 2 RJJOHN W.NMORRIS,
i Washington, D, CG.
]
| Sena froteeytes Claims:
|
|
yraiu sivil war, 15 adj sdiesting claims, atty since
P. N. U. 31, 1905.
ry
Vg
| Bd men: Eoin ¥
in time.
BEST FOR
|
| 1 ;
J YU 5 (0 i
regularly you are sick.
CASCARETS toda
right Take our a
et free. emedy Com
8}
olved in pure |
| Instantly Relieved and Speedily
Cured by Baths with
(UTICURA
' Soap to cleanse the skin,
| gentle applications of Cuti-
cura Ointment to soothe and
heal, and mild doses of Cuti-
cura Pills to cool the blood.
A single Set, costing but One
Dollar often cures.
Sold throughout the world. Potter Drug and Chem,
Corp., Boston, Sole Props. E
Gr Send for “ The Great Humor Cure.” Mailed Fron,
WE MANUFACTURE
Gas Saving Gas Burners
For Boilers and Hot Air Furnaces.
Write for Catalogue.
STAKDARD HEATING AND RADIATOR CO..
PITTSBURG, PA.
THE BOWELS
CANDY
CATHARTIO
| Bh 8
GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel trou breath, bad
| blood, wind on the stomach, roubles, appendicitis, ST guaneas, Dg
pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizzine
headache, indy estion, pimples,
hen your I oe move
Constipation kill k senses
starts chronic ailments and long Fd of mci Til, aan ali boi] ase you. pip Sing
11 never get well and stay well until you get ‘your
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Tr absolute cure ¢
Never olé in} ik Sample and
cago or New York. 9.
however, that it did me no good. Om»
@ different person. My appelitein- BR
1
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