The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 17, 1966, Image 2

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    SECTION A — PAGE 2
Entéred as second-class matter
Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1889,
year; $2.50 six months. = No
six months.
months or
at the office at
rates: $4.0
cepted for
post
Subscription
subscriptions
Qut-of-State subscrip
less. S
tions, $
a year;
from home §:¢
nts ¢
State $3.50. Back issues, more than one weel
Member dit Bureau of Circulati
Member Pennsylvs Newspaper Publishers
Member 1 Edit 1 A
Member Greate Veeklies As
Editor and. Publisher i. iv. . un inl 2
Managing Editor .. ........ I
Associate Editor
Soe ral Editor... rk oN FH
Tabloid Editor ........ HEIRS ihe
Advertising Manage
Business Mana
Circulation M
Accoun
A mon-pa
lished every Thursday
. Lehman Awenue, Dall
“More Than A New:
We will not be respo
scripts, photo
stamped envelc
held for more than 30 days
We will not be
wants to pick
One-colun
dito r
]
up i
The Post se patients in local
hospitals. If re - its
We can f> pla
rummage sales or 11 pea
specific issue.
5 man in his eightic
with pneumonia, in a
the decencies of life.
Where is this
~~ hear so much these
Do we re
shack none a
Prac:
rogram,
which we
golden sunset?
com-
about
the dream of a
A lachia is in
Poverty
our own
And what are’ we doing about it?
iis perfectly true that an
himself off from normal contact with the
intent upon going his own way I
ence, impatient
mind, is being
he becomes ill.
- If such a
his own od wants, keep him
in his rights.
But it happens too often that trag
When kelp and f ig dshi; ) ‘are st
who! might keep an eye out trouble
oC cerned. A r : :
The Departmen 1t of Public Assistance sends a monthly
check, enough for minimal
when elderly man cuts
; of society,
his independ-
,’ and of what, to his
’ he is asking for trouble when
y11e nf
us of
J “be both
used, this
for are no lenger con-
This in no way takes
need S.
the place of the human touch: which everybody needs,
whether the need is : owledged or not.
A coroner, s B
is all too often
th in fr
£
palled at his find .- When itis ac
ing weather, he may well wonder at tl
stances leading up to the tragedy.
Why, he wonders, did nebody |]
had® been sick. sPneumonia does 1
night, though i
exists, and more
People cert
in the kitehen
are not required by law to dust
dusting. :
But there are cert
matters of public con
disease which affect
On these U
ried out for the good
home remains his castle.
Such ins oo ) C
as a tip-off for further check-up in the case of the sick
and elderly.
w
y to not Yeol like
in minimal s
cern, ;bossibls bi
the 1
tandards which are
ing groundg for
welfar
So, plenty of people become crotchety as they grow
older. * They are impatient, they sen the world is
going on without them, and they into’ them-
selves.
Until the laws of
will go on doing so.
human nature are repealed, they
But, there ought to be some way in which it would
be perfectly el to apply a torch to a pest-hole, and re-
move the vict wn and decent place to live out
kis years. ' Some like ya lley Crest.
It “would be easier on every body. Especially the
coroners who must deal with the grisly findings at first
hand.
Independence is a fine thing, and greatly to be de-
sired.
But it has its drawbacks.
12,000 clubs in
occasion.
5 Since those
mover in com
helping the cri ippled and
standards of business and 1
forming friendly personal ties
tributed to bet
Qur cong ratul
and in
among men tha t ave con-
rians of
ter int
‘nation:
tions to ar
>
on this anpiversary. We wish for the Ro
world continued suce in rendering the t
service to humanity for which Rotary is.especially suited.
i
Directional Buttons Needed
Directional buttons are badly needed at the inter-
section of Harris Hill Road and Memorial Highway, point-
ing out the turn-off to Pioneer Many Botorists
find themselves bucking south-bound traffic.
Since directional buttons were installed at the turn-
off from Memorial Highw ay to Lehman and Williamsport,
there has been no trouble in identifying the road at night.
Avenue.
Before installation of these guides, out of town mo-
torists found themselves bowling past the bowling alley
THE DALLAS POST Established 1289
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1966
2) se Only
Yesterday
* x % k
6p &
) 4)
ed
Future of. a
debated in
stood by to take him
Sherman
hotly
Noxen butcher
off: the
hands of
ian of Lake
won him in a contest. Alex the
was hibernating.
cut
on
foot drifts
snow-plow
y
branch.
Bow-
rs, ‘a’ severe
threat to
inklin Township starred in cap-
Years Ago
200 pound black bear |
Noxen. “A |
by Le-
|
Davis, |
Township: School,
Severest win- |
{ sule history of region, with Gideon
[(Bebee the first known settler. Ex- |
| cellent ‘farm land, pine and hem-
I forests, attracted settlers at |
» of the Revolution. Alexander |
came in 1809. See issue of
7. 14,1936.
sewing 1
with garments for the
5 be f
materrai.
e, Lehman,
ol ‘at Fort Sill.
vas elected
secre-
> os
e rising. |
ah to
Sadie
Pauline
Kocher, accident on
skidway.
71, Beaumont.
20 Years Ago
flocks o
ears, before, a single
a rarity.
American Legion planned to erect |
2 building. It at tha
1 7
ana was
meeting
Paul
president,
dent of tl}
| Grand
Dallas PTA urged
was reelected”
Howard Risley vice presi- |
he Library,
secretary.
Warriner
a traffic light
Dallas, at the five
Tain St
| point interse
Jive Junc the spot for
nn. was
Dallas’ teenagers. A tag day for
| purchase of a new furnace was in-
i stituted.
Sandy McCulloch applied for a
taxi it after being discharged
from Army.
Servicer nd-up: Art (Keefer,
| Fort Benning; Andy Kozemchak, re-
| eri for William and
‘Cedric - Griffith,
Harold Evans,
d: Althea
Eli zabeth
Betty
Smith to | John
Parrish to Ray
Crispell to Verne Mec-
Thelma Dietz. to Robert
ied: Oscar P.
of East Dallas
Oysters had worked up in price
to 69 cents per pint, legs of; lamb
to 39, bread to 9 cents,
Compton; formerly
10 Years Ago
Architect's drawing of the pro-
jal Bowling
position. Con-
to start.
nm was about
strue
Township PTA asked for an adult
ard at the crossing, and side-
ks.
Huntsville Nurs-
on a trip to Florida.
. Harry Edwards,
ery, died while
bought an ambulance.
a school bus to load
2d became State Law.
Elizabeth White to Jerome
Noxen
Stopping for
and
Mezirried:
J. ‘Perry.
Shavertown won Church League
pennant.
Jeanette Ide won the highest
a written examination is-
sued by General Mills, became the
Betty Crocker Girl.
Jack Eck won the Pro Deo et
Patria award in Scouting.
Sweet Valley Improvement Asso-
ted Alfred Bronson Pres-
at its sixth annual meeting.
' score in
wy 1
ciation elec
ident
Anybody Know Anyone
Who Really Churns?
YWho
If anybody knows anyone
1 dasher churn, turning
into butter, please get
with Hix at the Dallas
uses a
rich cream
in touch
Post.
A rotary churn will not do. It
has tc be a dasher churn, the kind
shows yellow flecks of butter
the hole
butter
that
around
the
would
starts to come. We
like to have a feature story
a picture, of somebody actually
making ‘butter, paddling it, and
making it into a pat.
Most
and
children these days do not
Alfred |
John |
yroject enlisted 25 |
ioned from 15,000 |
appointed to.
the Luzerne Coun-
Stroud to James!
|
|
|
Last Civil War veteran of the |
area died. Peter Culp, Huntsville,
was in his teens when he marched
away in 1861. He saw Lee's. Sur-|
render at Appomattox.
For the first time, evening, gros- |
beaks arrived in great numbers, |
ty or fifty not ‘uncom- |
3 2 |
time a a FT CC DEDEDE DE RDERDLE DEDEDE DLE DEDEDE
Mrs. Lewis Le- |
| tion of the fact,
a KEEPING POSTED =
February 9: V. P. HUMPHREY meets Saigon officials
in Honolulu, flies on to Saigon with South Viet-
nam top brass.
ENTERTAINMENT FIELD loses two notables:
Sophie Tucker and Billy Rose.
FOREIGN RELATIONS committee still slugging
it out. :
VIETNAM BOMBING + datuliton
*
February 10: DOMINICAN PUL seethes in wake
of student riot.
FRANCE SCRUBS SPACE SHOT IN ALGERIA,
mechanical trouble.
MIDDLE WEST devilled by early spring floods,
much stock lost in Nebraska. 5
BELGIAN PREMIER resigns.
CASSIUS CLAY now eligible for the draft, follow-
ing lowering of requirements.
*
* *
February 11: NINTH PLANE lost since resumption of
bombing.
FOREIGN RELATIONS committee weighs cut-
back in milk program, abandonment of projected
social reforms, against soaring expense of war in
Vietnam and greed of nations receiving aid, none
of which have lifted a finger to help.
Tx * ®
February 12: LINCOLN’S. BIRTHDAY.
MENINGITIS in Southern training camps.
HUMPHREY IN THAILAND on seven-nation tour.
SYRIAN-ISRAELI border trouble.
NUCLEAR TEST (underground) in Soviet regi-
sters in Sweden as second in power recorded.
SANTO DOMINGO: YES Yerkes, go home.
February 13: VirE EXPLODES te U. S. patrol boat
off Vietnam, six killed.
MT. ETNA CONTINUES eruption.
* * *
February 14: LOCKHEED AIR TERMINAL burns.
DEGAULLE offers to take part in Vietnam peace
try.
y * * *
Februarv 15: HUMPHREY IN PAKISTAN after leaving
Thailand, offers 50 million for food.
TERRORISTS ACTIVE in Santo Domingo.
RHODESIA WEATHERS sanctions and oil em-
bargo.
* * *
Februarv 16: DEBATE ON VIETNAM continues in For-
eign Relations hearing.
* * * *
Better Leighton Never
Fara CnC Eas < CREDLE
Borough Council in good old Ben- | Inc. a producer of synthetic-rubber
ton really has things under control. | seals for machinery, reports a third
The lead headline on the front page of the firm's shipments currently
of last week's Benton Argus ust {ave to fill priority orders from the |
have put visions of absence i | Government. A year ago, only 1% |
minds of sleighriding schoolchildren: | of Linear’s shipments went to Uncle |
Borough Council Plans | Sam, Mr. Jackson recalls, adding
for More Winter Weather that “our lead time for delivering
(They were young once them- civilian requests is stretching out
selves.) to 12 to 20 weeks, compared to im-
3 # mediate supplying out of stock last
Great Heavens, it's only ten year.””
MISCELLANEOUS
Okay, I can’t stop myself. When
the fire broke out down there on
on Monday, did the manager turn |
in the general alarm to the fire]
company by singing: ‘Better Hurry |
To Murray Lumber”?
How about the daffodils in the |
Miners Bank garden on Main Street |
this week?
months until 1967.
So what's 19677 I'll tell you
what 1967 is. it’s the 150th an-
niversary of the founding of Dallas
— the sesquicentennial.
Dallas in 1817 was a township,
the borough not coming to pass
until over a half century later. But
the present borough was, of course,
part of the township.
It‘s even money that people are
going to want some kind of recogni-
and Main Street
may look like Grant's headquarters
at the turn of the New Year, for
the beards.
Lest they get caught unceremon-
ially, the town fathers should meet
with an executive board of the serv-
ice clubs around here and schedule
some ceremonies ‘and festivities, be-
cause time really moves along. Sure,
things can be slapped together at
the last minute, but it's more sat-
isfactory - to everyone if they are
more premeditated.
Tt would be a nice display of the
growing sense of community be-
tween the borough and township,
and it might be just about this
time that they, in conjuction with
the engineers and Kingston Town-
ship, will be able to announce
something concrete about the pro-
posed sew age disposal system
raary 4 Wall Street Journal, en-
titled “Business and Viet Nam” has
this entry:
“In Dallas, Pa.,
vice president for
G. W. Jackson,
sales of Linear,
| and Lake Streets,
| location of the famous old
razed)
More than one policeman has
complained that it is nearly im-
possible to do anything about
drunks they manage to nail down,
even if they've destroyed things
with their cars, because you can't
make a person take a sobriety
test, and doctors (understandably)
don’t like to get involved to the
extent of having to show up as
witnesses in insurance cases.
Dallas Rotary’s intramural com-
petition in selling turkey dinner
tickets has me wondering. Winners |
get a steak dinner, losers eat beans.
Something's missing here.
Elmer Laskowski, whose render-
ing plant out in Jackson burned
up. last year and for whom the
state police were unable to get an |
arson conviction against some
Plymouth. boys, tells me a smaller
shed on the same plot mysteriously |
burned up several weeks back, in
| the same manner.
A front-page story in the Feb-| ;
|liams a new gas station in Dallas. |
Atlantic is going to build Al Wil- |
Site, corner of highway and Church
is historic, being
(now
Raub Hotel.
Back Mountain Memorial Library
Offers New Books,
Did you know that these best
sellers are available at the Back
Mountain Memorial Library ?
Non-fiction titles: Kennedy: T.
who"!
in the lid, just as|
know a thing about butter-making. |
Some of them are fortunate enough |
to learn about it in school, but only
las a lark. The Dairy Council sup-
| plies the kit and the cream.
| Butter-making in its relation to
| everyday life is something which
is completely outside their ken or
their imagination.
By
Sorenson; Waging Peace: D. Eisen-
hower; Is Paris Burning: Collins and
LaPierre; Games People Play: E.
Berne; World Aflame: W. Graham;
Gift of Prophecy: R. Montgomery;
Sense of Wonder: R. Carson; Intern:
Doctor X.
Fiction titles: The Source: J. A.
Michener; Those Who Love: L
Stone; Up the Down Staircase: B.
Kaufman; The Rabbi: N. Gordon;
Airs Above the Ground: M. Stewart;
Thomas: S. Mydans; The Comedians:
G. Greene.
Others that have been favorites
in the year just past: My Shadow
Ran Fast: B. Sands; Hotel: A.
Hailey; A Gift of Joy: H. Hayes;
Night of Camp David: F. Knebel;
The Making of the President 1964:
T. H. White; The Ambassador: M.
West.
Sots of oes good reading to be
elves, even if not
Best Sellers
on the best seller lists. It is well
worth a visit if you are looking for
a good book, says Mrs. Richard Dale,
Librarian.
Also, for members of the Book
Club, many good books, fiction an
non-fiction, are on hand. Book Club
books, financed by annual. dues of
the Book Club, are placed upon the |
open shelves after members have
had their opportunity to enjoy!
them.
| mont; two
Three Post Editorials
In Grassroots Mag.
Three editorials from The Dallas |
Post have been reprinted during the
past year in Grassroots Editor: “Tt
Used To Be So Simple;”’ “Somewhat |
Tarnished;” and “What is
an
Editorial 7”
rHE DALLAS POST
Sales Slip Pads
~ Rubber Stamps
ive On Your ng
full of feathers.
Navy ROC Program
CHIEF YEOMAN
A. A. COURY
Chief Yeoman Alfred A. Coury,
local 4th Naval, District Command- |
ants representative for recruiting,
reports that applications are being |
accepted from college sophomores
and ’' juniors for the Reserve
ficer Candidate Program.
The Navy “ROC” program pro-
vides young college men the opport-
unity to combine education with
professional training, leading to a
Navy Commission after graduation.
The J’ROC” program is the only
first enlistment program currently
open in the Naval Reserve which
will give a student draft exemption
status to complete his education.
Selected
cipate
month at the Naval Training Center,
Mercer Ave. Kingston, plus eight
weeks at Officer Candidate School,
Newport, Rhode Island. Upon grad-
uation from college they will serve
three years active duty as commis-
sioned officers in the U. S. Navy.
Chief €oury reports that Lieuten-
ant Charles H. Davis, Commanding
applicants will parti-
Officer, Naval Training Center and
staff recruiters Chiefs Eckles and
Kovalcik will visit local colleges this
week to explain the “ROC” pro-
gram.
Other interested , persons may
contact Lieutenant Davis at the
Training Center.
Safety Valve
IT’S LIKE FEATHERS
Dear Editor:
I wonder if: anybody has ever
thought about how many feathers
it takes to make a pillow, and what
it kvould mean to open one and let |
the wind carry the feathers to the
four corners of any town. I
sure it would be
find them all again.
To me, a word spoken in anger
or a word of criticism about other
people which would cause a wound
or a heartache, is’
feathers to the wind. Angry words
cannot come back.
I am of the opinion that if every-
body would live their lives as good
as possible and stop worrying about |
other !
peoples
would be a beautiful world to live!
in.
So let’s stop finding fault with
each other. We all might find it
pavs bigger dividends than a pillow |
Jones
Cori inne R.
THE
Of-
in one weekend drill each |
like throwing
transgressions, it
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
From—
Pillar To Post...
“by HIX
It's a good time, Sunday morning, to go over all the stupid tk
| you've done during the week, while taking that last luxurious
| turning over for another cat-nap.
Getting stuck in the parking lot, for instance. Just
to have parked in the street, but there is the matter of
| took a lot of muscle, exercised by remote control, to heave th
wheels loose and get the Austin started down the
| Going back in again, later in the day; was' eve
considering what had already happened. But
the car was pointing in, with the rear wheels all rea
onto a gravelled sheet of ice.
4 +}
stretcn
after
This time it was Donnie who leaned on the car while the wheels. di)
i
spinning wildly, finally got traction. The Mormon had **
it, first time around, and were now out making pastoral calls.
And it was pretty stupid in the first place, not to have bought
snow-tires in December. _
There was a complete set. of chains inthe trunk, too, but chains
look like an admission of defeat, not to be resorted to except
emergency.
That muffler . . . well, it stood to reason that bouncing
over a curb in Wilkes-Barre a month earlier, under the
that it was the outlet from a parking lot to a driveway,
good. :
Chalk up another black mark. The works had been hissing e
since that occasion, sure sign of a poor connection, or wors
a defunct muffler. :
But that was ll fixed up, and Danny Meeker had been soof
about it. It was probably the stuff the highway department
on the ‘winter roads that had corroded the thing, he sug:
keeping a straight face the while. 3
Chemicals me eye. .It was the curb, or maybe that ice
the entrance to the driveway that subzero morning. Muf
Austins hang low, and do not take kindly to either curbs or i
And that Perry Mason show last night . . . pretty
the killer to get himself boxed in like that. What did h
break down and own the corn for? He could have gotten out of it,
if it hadn't been for that hypnotic eye upon him, impelling him
tell all.
Perry Mason ? 4
That program doesn’t appear on Saturday night. It a 1
definitely on Sunday at 9 p.m.
SO, this wasn’t any Sunday morning, it was Monday morning,
and the clock conveyed the unappetizing tidings.
It was eight o'clock already, and the Austin,
muffler, should have been backing itself carefully into the
at the Dallas Post.
No time to dwell on past Snide, there was enough of it ri
on hand on Monday morning. Enough and to spare
A flurry into and out of the tub, a quick resurrection of the fire
in the Franklin stove while the kettle heated for the instant
a sharp slap of the stick on the rump of a grey plush squi
was cramming sunflower seeds into its mouth while the ch
waited for breakfast, a hasty donning of garments, and a call
Dallas Post: 2
* “T have been delayed.
elders had
3
in dire
15
down
impression
did" it no
ver
PERRY MASON?
with the new
parking lot
ght
coffee,
which
kadees
to the
1
Be over in a minute.
n
:
a
Story Hout At Library Gr
By Enthusiastic Crowd Of ids
by Connie Havir
am |
a hard task to |
The first story hour that was The story, “Who is my Mother?”
| given by the Cadette Girl Scouts of | was read to them next. After the
"Troop 644 was very successful. The baby bird had found its mama, we
turnout was tremendous with 32 | played a game of on Says.”
children from the area showinz un. {The kids were really sharp. & <
The - story hour is a little long | | ended with eight winners.
stupid i
/
e want to vi
for the younger children. We oo It was Linceln’s Birthd Some
gest the parents pick up their chil- of the comments Ww “He \\ $s
dren at a quarter to three instead | the first president,” the
| of three o'clock. | seventeenth,” - ‘He the six-
The afternoon began with story teenth!” “hd he down the
| tellers, Chris Demmy and Priscilla | cherry tree?
| Reese, reading a poem. With the! The record, “The Ugly Duckling,”
tale of the lost beetle over, the | was then played. The only com-
| hile sang, ‘The Ittsy Bittsy |ment was, “It’s too short!”
When asked: if they wanted to
Spider,” with finger motion. It was
a good try. The kids were at least |
on ey.
SALUTATION OF THE DAWN
Listen to the salutation of the dawn!
Look to this day
For it is life!
In its brief course lie all
The very life of life.
the
Verities and realities of your existence,
The bliss of growth,
The glory of action,
The splendor of beauty.
For yesterday is but a dream
And tomorrow is only a
vision.
But today, well lived, makes every
Yesterday a dream of happiness and every
Tomorrow a vision of hope.
Look well therefore to This Day!
Such is the salutation
of the Dawn.
(Translated from the Sanskrit).
Charles Clark Was
Lifelong Resident
Lifelong resident of Beaumont
Charles E. Clark, 70, died Satur-
day at General Hospital, where he
had been admitted the day before
to the medical service. |
He was buried on Wednesday in
Locksville cemetery, following ser-
vices conducted by Rev. Donald Nul-
ton, pastor of First Welsh Baptist
Church from the Nulton Funeral
Home.
Mr. Clark's parents were the late
Edward and Maggie Smith Clark. He
was born and lived out his life on
the old homestead, where he farmed
actively until retirement.
He leaves his widow, the former
Cora Randall; a son Harry, of Beau-
daughters: Mrs. Clarence
Corby and Mrs. Wayne Weaver,
| both of Center Moreland; six grand- |
children and two greatgrandchil-
dren: a. brother Glenn,, Beaumont;
two sisters: Mrs. George Montross,
Center Moreland, and Mrs. Charles
Preston, Wyalusing.
| AFTERMATH OF JAUNT
Aftermath of the October jaunt:
to England and Ireland: pix of Sir’
Linton Andrews leaning on the rail
of the tug plying the Channel out-
side the White: Cliffs of Dover, Hix
slongside- ‘with her mouth open. as
* i wick
C. Henry Eckhart, 74
C. Henry Eckhart, 74, former res-
ident of Sweet Valley, died in Ber-
Hospital Thursday morning
| after a short illness.
Native of Warrior Run, he was a
lumberman and an employee of
Glen Alden Coal Company for many
years. He lived in Sweet Valley un-
til a wear ago.
Edith Nelson of Hudson; a son
and one grandson.
Burial was in Mossville Cemetery,
following services conducted by |
Rev. Fred Hickok Monday afternoon |
from the Bronson Funeral Home.
Mrs. Loretta Zahler
Mrs. Loretta Zahler died Wed- |
nesday morning at the home of her
son William, in Shrine View, where
| she had lived for the past year.
She was buried in Holy Cross |
Cemetery, Cleveland, on Saturday, |
following a High Mass of Requiem |
celebrated in Our Lady of the |
Angels Church. Arrangements were |
by Snowdon Funeral Home.
She leaves in addition to her son, |
five grandchildren.
She was a member of Gate of
Heaven Church during her brief
residence in Dallas. Her son is
president of Mountaintop Container
Cres ood Pak :
He leaves his widow, the former |
Charles H. Jr. of Sweet Valley RD; |
{ hear . the story. of a rabbit and a
| turtle “one remarked, “Oh, you
- | mean the Tortoise and the Hare!”
|* One ‘book was read, with this
title, “If you were a —, How would
you : Feel?’ The comments were:
EEL: “Like an electric snake,”
| “Like an eel!”
Bear: “Like a billy goat, gghis
sister replied, ‘How on
brother feels like a goat when he’s
{a "bear?"
A book with the alphabet 4fias
| read next. A name of
matched the letter from A-Z.
Have you ever heard 32 kids
| sing “Yankee Doodle Dandy?”
{ sounded great.
After the story, ‘Is This Your
. Dog?” The children went home all
eager to come back next week.
| Assistant to the story tellers
Connie Havir.
| Adults were Mrs. R.
| Mrs. T. Reese.
Children who attended were:
Tara and Margaret Mary Shannon,
Martha, Mary and Mark Hession,
Patty and Lisa Rgqsing, David and
Ian Phillips, Diane Hersh, Robin
and Freddy Templin, Elizabeth
| Boyea, Karen Hillyer, Laurie Fry,
Mike and Pat Sill, Barb Bessmer,
Henry Boyer,. Scott Weir, Linda
and Patty Rodgers, Chipper and
Lynn Borton, Diane and Cath gion-
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