The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, February 25, 1915, Image 6

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RED OLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF
DIED IN 6011 FIGHT
SLAYER OF DETECTIVE RING IS
SHOT IN BATTLE WITH
OFFICERS.
PROHIBITION MUCH IN FAVOR
French Government Returnee Fight
en 8ale of Alcohol Justifies
Uee of the American
Flag.
Western Newspaper Union New 8rvlo
Fremont, Nob. Juan Gonzales, Mex
ican murderer of Detective King In
Onialia, waa shot a mllo cast of Scrlb
ncr about 4:30 Friday nftcrnoon.
Boys who wore with hunting party
saw what they took to bo a skunk on
a partly submerged haystack In the
river. They began shooting at the
stack. The Mexican emerged from
the stack and run.
A party composed of Sheriff Condlt,
Joe Gregg, Charles VandUHcn, Wil
liam Dlneon, Clarence ICIdam and
Charles HnsmiiBscn found Gonzales'
tracks along the creek and followed
them a quarter of a mile. Suddenly
at u sharp bond In the creek tho Mex
ican pee ml up ovor the creek bank
and commenced firing nt hlB pursucrB,
who were eight or ten rods away.
Everybody In tho party commenced
shooting and probably seventy-five
Bhots were fired.
Officers say that the killing of Con
talcs will mako It impossible to con
vict Joe Cantono, who was captured
U Norfolk.
British Office Justifies Flag Raising.
London. Tho British foreign ofllcc
has issued a note In reply to tho rep
resentations of tho United States gov
ernment concerning the uso of the
American flag by British vessels. Tho
note says that the Cunard lino steamer
iLusltnnla on hor recent voyngu from
Now York to Liverpool "raised tho
(American flag to save tho lives of non
combatants, crows and passengors."
It adds that in splto or tho fact that
American passongers ombarklng on
tho Lusltnnld on her outward voyage
from Now York usked that tho Ameri
can flag bo hoisted, "tho British gov
ernment did not give any ndvlco to the
company as how to meet this request
and it Is understood tho Lusitanla left
Liverpool under tho British flag."
FIQHT AGAIN8T ALCOHOL.
French Government Begins Crusade
Against Liquor Traffic.
Paris. Tho fight ngalnBt alcohol
was resumed in tho chamber of depu
ties when tho question of prohibiting
the opening of new barrooms or of
any establishment whero liquor Is sold
waa considered. A motion to postpono
tho dobato becauso of the absonco nt
tho front of mnny of tho deputies wns
votod down. Minlstor of tho Interior
Malvy insisting on behalf of tho gov
ernment on tho Immediate discussion
of tho bills. Tho majority by which
the motion was voted down apparent
ly showed tho sentiment In tho cham
ber in favor of prohibition.
Have 8ettled Down.tolJuslness.
Washington. Confronted with the
necessity of appropriating $90,000,000
a day for tho Inst eleven legislative
days, congress has settled down to
hurry through tho measures which
will supply tho billion dollars needed
to run tho government during tho next
fiscal year. In tho senate tho entire
day wns devoted to the ?n9,000,000
legislative, executive and Judicial ap
propriation bill. Tho houso pnssed the
pension bill, cnrrylng $164,000,000, and
took up tbo diplomatic and consular
measure, appropriating $4,r00,000.
Death of Former Chancellor Manatt.
Lincoln -Nob. Word has JUBt been
received hero of the death of Prof.
James Irving Manatt. of tho chair of
Greek In Brown university, formerly
chancellor of tho University of Ne
braska. Tho cause of death Is given
as pneumonia. Ho was seventy years
of age and had held his position at
Brown for twenty-two years.
Laramio, Wyo. A strlko of fabulous
.richness is reported from tho North-,rup-Nast
mlno, in tho Douglas creek
district, south of Laramio. A cavern
of or running high in gold and plat
Unum values waa recently penetrated,
"but the find waa kept quloL
Gas Explosion Costs Eight Lives.
Wllkcsbarre. Pa. Eight mine work
era were killed nnd six others serious
ly injured by an explosion of gas at
the Prospect colliery of the Lehigh
Valley Coal company here. Two of
tho injured probably will dlo. The
accident occurred In tho Red Ash mine
nt a point noarly two miles from tho
shaft. Tho heavy pocket of feod gaB
that had accumulated behind a wall of
coal forced tho coal out and Its ex
posure to tho naked lights of the min
ers caused a terrific explosion.
Alfalfa a Leading Crop.
Lincoln, Nob. Tho valuo of No
oraskn's 1914 crop of alfalfa at an av
erage price of $7 per ton was ?22,46G,
355, which entitles It to bo classed as
one of our leading crops, as It Is fourth
in valuo within tho stato. In a tabu
luted statement the stato agricultural
hoard Includes tlin rural population of
the various statea in order to arrlvo
at the per capita wenlth of produc
tlvity basod on tho figures na given
y the department of agriculture
BREAD GOES UP AGAIN
(Copyright.)
EXTERMINATION ONLY CURE
MADE ILL AT EASE BY GERMAN
ANSWER.
Live Stock Men Offer Solution of
Foot and Mouth Disease
Extra Session Not
Desired.
Western Newspaper Union News Service,
Washington. Germany's reply to
the American note of warning ngnlnst
uny attacks on American vessels or
lives in tho new sea zones of war
served to Increase rather than dimin
ish tho concern of oflicials of tho
United States over possible complica
tions, though tho friendly tone of tho
communication made a friendly Im
pression nnd gnvo some hopo that an
understanding for the protection of
neutrals might yet bo obtained.
Officials were apprebcnslvo over tho
formal statement in tho noto "that
Germany disclaimed any responsibil
ity for what might happen to neutral
vessels venturing in the danger zone.
Trying to Avoid Extra Session.
Washington. Blocked in their ef
forts to get tho houso ship purchase
bill to a vote, democratic senators
agreed to take up appropriation bills
and sent the shipping measure to con
ference until February 28, when It
must tnko its chances of being fili
bustered to its death on March 4. Re
publican senators entered into a "gen
tleman's ngrcement" with democratic
leaders to let the houso bill go to con
ference on condition that appropria
tion bills bo pnssed within tho next
ton days in order to avoid an extra
Besslon of congress.
EXTERMINATION IS ONLY CURE.
Solution of Foot and Mouth Disease,
Live Stosk Men Say.
Chicago. Delegates to tho United
States Llvo Stock Sanitary association
convention agreed that extermination
is tho only solution of the foot und
mouth disease problem. Speakers
from eighteen states told of tho means
utilized to wipe out the epidemic In
their localities.
"There Is hut one nnswer to the
problem," said J. J. Ferguson, secre
tary of tho association." and thnt is
tho prompt slaughter of infected cat
tie. There is danger In temporizing
with such n terrible disease and there
Is no uso trying to dodgo the Issue."
Frank James Dead.
Excelsior Springs, Mo. Frank
James, ono of tho last surviving mem
bers of tho James gang, died on his
farm near hero Thursday afternoon.,
James, who wns seventy-four years old,'
and who hnd been In III health sev
eral months, wns stricken with apo
plexy. Suffragists Win InJVIassachusetts.
Boston. Tho proposed woman suf
frage amendment to tho stato consti
tution was passed by tho houso by a
vote of 19G to 33. It will bo acted on
by tho voters at the election next
November, having alrendy passed the
senato.
Robbed a Church.
Nebraska City. Some time Inst
week tho Lntter Day Saints church in
this city was visited by burglars and
two secret drawers in the pulpit
broken into and tho contents, consist
ing of tho Christmas and birthday of
ferings, stolen. Tho exact amount
taken Is not known. Entrnnco to tho
church was gained by breaking the
lock on the front door. Tho altar was
also badly mutilated. This was tho
second tlmo tho church had been
burglarized within tho past year.
To Ask Non-combatants to Leave.
Copenhagen The report is In clr
filiation horo that owing to tho neces
sity of restricting food consumption,
tho (icrmnn government intends order
ing llvo million Germans who possess
Independent Incomes and are In
eligible for military service to lcavo
Germnny for neiltrnl countries and re
main there until tho war Is ovor It Is
plauned, according to the report, that
3,000,000 of Uipbo persons shall go to
tho Scandinavian countries, 1,000,000
to Holland and 1,000,000 to Switzerland.
i
GERMAN SUBMARINE DESTROYS
FRENCH STEAMSHIP.
Agricultural Department Finds Robins
Lead, With English Sparrows
Next Abandoning Lega
tions In Mexico.
Western Newspaper Uhloti Ncwu Service.
Paris. The Fronch steamer Vllle
do Lille, bolonging to tho Compagnle
Navigation dos Bateaux u Vapeur Du
Nord, sailing from Crebourg to Dun
kirk, sighted the German submarine
U-IU near tho lighthouse at Barfleur,
and endeavored to escape, but was
out-speeded by tho submarine, men
from which boarded her and gave the
crow ten minutes to leave In the ship's
boats. They then sank the Vllle do
Lille by bombs placed In her interior.
The U-K! headed for a Norwegian
steamer, but sank "but of sight when
a division of French torpedo boats
from Cherbourg appeared on tho horl
hon.
Abandoning Legations In Mexico.
Washington. American attaches of
the United States embassy In Mexico
City, lately attached to the Brazilian
legation, will leave Mexico City If all
other diplomatic representatives de
part. The state department has Informed
the Brazilian minister, who hnB been
In charge of American diplomatic In
terests, that it presumes ho will be
guided by Instructions from his own
government, with respect to leaving,
but asks him to advise tho American
attaches that they may leave if others
do. All the diplomatic representatives
thoro havo asked tholr home govern
ments Tor authority to abandon the t
legations if the situation warrants.
CENSUS TAKEN OF THE BIRDS.
Robin Most Numerous, With English
Sparrow Next.
Washington. A census of birds of
the United States, nnnounceil by the
department or agriculture shows on
average of sixty pairs of English spar
rows to tho square mile or .even to i
every 100 native birds throughout tho
country. The robin is shown to bo
tho most numerous bird, with the
English sparrow a close second, in
tho northeast robins averaged six
pairs to each farm of llfty-olght acres,
while English sparrows averaged five
pairs per farm. Taking 100 robins ns
a unit other birds were noted in the
following proportions: Catbirds, 49;
brown thrashers, 37; houso wrens, 28;
kingbirds, 27, and bluebirds. 2tJ.
Twelve Horses Cremated.
Lincoln, Nob. Twelve horses were
burned to death, a large barn and a
lnrgo shop building wore destroyed
and other property was imperiled by a
flro that started at 2 o'clock Friday
morning at tho plnnt of the Lincoln
Transfer & Storago company at Tenth
and Vine streets. Water pressure was
low and firemen found much trouble
In getting apparatus into service In
thl' sea of mud that surrounded the
fire. The loss was estimated at near
$10,000.
Education as an Asset.
Lincoln, Nob. Thirty graduates re
ceived dogrees at tho mid-year com
mencement exercises held at tho
Temple theater Monday evonlng. Dean
E. A. Burnett of tho college of agriculture-
dollvored tho commencement ad
drebs on "Agricultural Education, n
National Asset," in which he reviewed
tho advance of agricultural education
during tho last few years and the work
Unit has been accomplished through
education. Chancellor Avery conferred
tho degrees
Rioting In Panama.
Panamti A careful investigation by
tho Panami police and tho American
military authorities reveals that only
ono Pnnamati civilian was killed In tho
riot lug hero Sunday; hut four persons
were dangerously wounded and It Is
believed that tho total number of
wounded will reach forty-five. This
list of casualties resulted from an en
counter between Panaman police.
American soldiers and Panama and
American civilians in Cocon grove,
known ss the tenderloin district.
ATTACK THE FORTS
ENGLISH AND FRENCH BEGIN
BOMBARDMENT OF DAR
DANELLES. IN PLOT TO INVADE MEXICO
Recruiting Men In California to Oc
cupy Mexican Territory Expo
sition at San Francisco
Opened Saturday.
Western Ncwopaper Union News Service
ixjiidon. The first serioiiB attacks
by tho British and French .Mediter
ranean Meets, nsslsted by aeroplanes
und seaplanes on the Dardanelles
forts, which commenced Saturday,
has met with considerable success, ac
cording to the British ofllclal account
and unolilclnl reports received at Ath
ens from the Islands of Tenedos, at
the entrance to the Btralts. The Turk
ish olllclal report, however, stated
that no damage had been done to the
forts nnd that the casualties of these
defenders consisted of one killed and
ono wounded, but that three of tho
warships were damaged by shots from
the forts.
Opening of Exposition,
, San Francisco. This city Saturday
caw the noisiest day in Its history. It
was planned by tho olllclal noise com
mittee of the Panama exposition that
the big fair might open with a bang.
Stalling nt :30 n. m with tho noise
continuing for an hour, here are some
of tho things that happened: Big
guns In all the forts around San Fran
cisco boomed a salute. All church
bells rang for an hour. Conductors
and motormen on street cars clanged
their bells Incessantly. All policemen
blow their whistles as loudly ns they
could and beat at Intervals with
batons on trolley' poles. All sirens
and steam whistles on flro apparatus
on fire houses sounded continuously.
All factories blew their whistles. Jit
ney busses and other nutos honked
their horns, engineers of steamers
and locomotives sounded their
wliistles. Carriers of morning news
papers rang the doorbells of sub
scribers If they hadn't ypt been roused
to tho fact that they ought to be up
and participating In the fair opening.
IN PLOT TO INVADE MEXICO.
Millionaire Assistant Manager of the
Los Angeles Times Indicted by
Federal Grand Judy.
Lob Angeles. Cnl. Hurry Chandler,
assistant general manager of the Ios
Angeles Times, and millionaire land
owner, was indicted by the fedoral
grand Jury here In connection with an
alleged conspiracy which had for Its
object a military occupation of the
Mexican territory of Ixwer Califor
nia. Walter Bowker, hanager of tho
California-Mexican I.and & Cattle
company, in which Chnndler is heav
ily Interested; General B. J. Vlljoen,
a former Boer commander In the war
with tho British In South Africa, and
Baltazar Avllez, n former governor of
Lower California, were Indicted sev
eral weeks ago.
Tho charge Is that Chnndler and
the others engaged In a conspiracy to
violate the neutrality or the United
States by recruiting men nnd gather
ing supplies on American soil for a
campaign in Lower California.
British Steamer Torpedoed.
London. A German submnrlno
made its appearance in the Irish sea
Saturday morning und torpedoed with
out notice the British steamer Cham
back, of 1,990 tons register. Three of
the crow were killed, and a fourth
wns drowned while tho men wero tak
ing to the boats. This Incident was
the only ono connected with the Ger
man submarine blockade of tho Brit
ish isles reported during the day. It
came about tho same time that tho
Anglo-French fleets wero bombarding
tho Dardanelles forts and while tho
RiiEBlans, according to n telegram re
ceived from Petrograd, were admin
istering a defeat to tho Germans at
Ossowetz, Polnnd, nnd driving back
to the frontier tho troops who had aU
tacked that fortress.
Carrying Food to Belgium.
New York. Carrying 6,848 tons of
food donations from nearly thirty
states in the union, tho steamer Batls
can, under charter to tho commission
for relief In Belgium, has sailed for
Rotterdam. The largest single Item
In tho cargo was 1,000 tons of flour
and shelled corn in bulk from Iown.
There wero donations also from Porto
Rico and Honolulu. The ship carried
tho largest number of single package
donations that has yet been sent by
tho commission in one cargo. There
wero 20,000 in nil.
German Blockade Begun.
London. Thursday morning there
went Into offect the Gorman notlco
warning neutral shipping to nvold
British waters. What will bo tho of
fect of this declaration will tako sev
eral days to demonstrate. British
shipping Intorests profess to feel no
nlarm, nevertheless nil passenger
traffic from Englnnd to Holland haH
been tied up. In the meantlmo tho
British public Is perusing tho Gorman
noto answering the Amerlcnn com
munication concerning the war zone
blockade
BRIEF NEWS OF NEBRASKA
A camp of boy scouts hns been or
Sunlzcd nt Wymoro.
A state camp of the Sons of Voter
mis has heon organized nt Lincoln.
Tho old Day elevator nt Weeping
Water, erected in 1882, Is being torn
down.
Tho Nebraska League of Municipali
ties will hold its next meetings at
Kearney.
The government has decided to pur
chase a sito for a federal building at
Superior.
Sarah Wright, aged 105 years, a
ploncor of that section, Is dead nt her
home at Hyannls.
Mrs. Margaret Cuming, wife of tho
first governor of Nebraska, is dead at
hor home in Omaha.
Fire from an ovehonted stove de
stroyed ono of tho cottages nt the old
soldiers' home at Grand Island.
Rev. Kllmershue of Xenln, O., has
nccepted the pastorate of the United
Presbyterian church nt Pawnee City.
John F. Walsh of Humboldt has
been appointed commander of the old
soldiers' nnd sailors' home at Burkott.
"Billy" Hnrcld, nn Omaha ex-pol!ce-man,
shot his wife, but not fatnlly, nnd
then hlmsolf, dying a few hours later.
John D. Evcrs Is the champion boy
corn raiser of Otoe county, having
gotten 78.4 bushels from an acre of
ground.
J. W. Cutright." Jr.. n Nebraska boy
who served ns vice consul In Ger
mnny, has returned to his home al
Lincoln,
Hnvelock Y. M. C. A. celebrated He
first anniversary last week with a
banquet at which over 200 were in
attendance.
Forty persons wero poisoned at
Alma when some arsenic wns acci
dentally spilled into a flour bin at a
eating house.
The Omaha board of trade will re
build Its homo that suffered n quarter
million fire loss with a strictly mod
ern structure.
Tho widow of the murdered Omaha
detective, Tom Ring, has received a
check for $1,000 from tho U. P. Rail
road company.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Delsman ob
served their fiftieth wedding annl
versary at their home In Nebraska.
City last week.
George Folkerts, a farmer living
eight miles east of Beatrice, lost three
head of horses last week from the
cornstnlk disease.
Lincoln Is making extensive prepar
ations to entertain the State Federa
tion of Retailers when It meets there,
February 22 to 25.
The Mnsonlc bodies of the state will
erect a couple of cottages on n tract
of lnnd adjoining Fremont recently
purchased by them.
Henry Schuett of Omaha will estab
lish a Jitney service nt Hastings. Ho
will run twelve pnssenger cars on a
fifteen minute schedule.
A property loss of over $70,000 was
caused by the burning up of the Lin
coln Transfer and Storage Company's
warehouses at Lincoln.
John Llndlor, nn Omaha business
man, was Instantly killed when he fell
down an open elevator shaft at his es
tablishment In that place.
A team of horses attached to a de
livery wagon was electrocuted when
It ran Into a tanglo of electric wires at
a street crossing nt Lincoln.
A fire In the Bartley clothing store
it Ord threatened tho entire business
lection of town, Inck of water imped
ing tho work of the flro department.
Mondny, February 15, was the sev
enteenth anniversary of the sinking
of tho battleship Maine, in which 248
sailors nnd marines lost their lives.
Professor James I. Manatt, a former
chnncelfor of tho Nebraska university
In tho latter '80's, Is dead at his homo
at Providence. R. I., at the age of
Beventy.
Charles Kelley, an inmato of the in
dustrial school for boya at Kearney,
while kneeling on tho floor ran a large
needlo into his knee, penetrating far
Into the joint and breaking off. He
was sent to Lincoln for treatment.
Roy Snvldgo and Will Golden, Ne
braska City boys, were probably seri
ously injured when they went over a
twenty-foot embankment while const
lng. Mrs. N. Kelso, near North Platte,
was Berlously Injured when a gun In
tho hands of n son wns accidentally
discharged, the load striking her in
the side.
Mr. nnd Mrs. H. A. Bragg of Elm
wood are deeply concerned for tho
nnfety of their daughter, Miss Jessie,
who has gono as a missionary to India.
Tho last letter received from hor was
from Nova Scotia a month ago.
Over n thousand retailers and man
ufacturers are attending tho annual
meeting nt Lincoln.
Methodists at Elmwood nre com
pleting their new $14,000 church,
which will be fitted with league rooms,
gallery, kitchen, and a lnrgo dining
room, to bo used also as n gymnasium,
R. F. Rambo of Blue Springs, the
oldest Mason in Nebraska, is ownor
of n relic in tho shape of a Masonic
apron worn by his father, Richard
Rambo, at n reception hold at Wil
mington, Del., in honor of General
Lafayette on his second visit to Amer
ica, in 1825.
Burglars entered tho Latter Day
Saints church nt Nebraska City and
stolo tho contribution box containing
quite a sum in blrthdny nnd Christ
mas offerings.
Following nro tho winners In the
old fiddlers' contest nt Auburn: First
prize, ton dollars, J. A. Tiff, Auburn;
second prize, six dollars, .J. 13. Arnold,
Sommors, Iown; third prize, throe
dollars, William Balfour, Nehawka.
W. R. ("Billy") Adams, a widely
known United PreBB telegrapher, died
in St. Elizabeth's hospital at Lincoln
Inst week, after a lingering illness
from cancer.
Catarrh oi Kidneys
Cured By Pemna
"I had Ca- gV
tarrn ot we
Kidneys and
Bladder. 1
Am Very
Thankful
For Peruna.
I Feel Well,
My tongue
is clear. I
have no bitter taste in my
mouth. I am glad to say I
do not need Peruna any
longer, I am perfectly well.
I have Peruna in the house
all the time. When I have
a cold or when I do not feel
well I take Peruna. We
were all sick with the grip
last winter. We took Peru
na and it helped us. Peruna
is the best medicine for grip
or colds."
Mr. Go a. H. Carlaam. n.i flfll. flh
. .... ... - -
looviiir,
ParKCR'S
HAIR BALSAM
A tnllt t preparation of intrtt.
ll.lp. to eradicate dandruff.
Beauty to Cray or Faded HakJ
wc auq ilwm uroiriftiUL
That Cured Him".
You should havo Been tho way Wuf
ties' moaned over his petty ailments.
He wns one of those chaps who were
always bewailing their ill stato of
health, when nil thnt Is really the mat
ter with them 1b the need of a littlo
lecturing
"Oh. my chest, doctor!" ho walled
to his physician ono evening. "My
lungs feel bo compressed. Somo peo
plo tell me to inhale sulphur fumes.
Others recommend a seasldo holiday.
What would you advise me to do?"
"Try .fresh air," said tho doctor
shortly. "Five dollars, please."
MEAT CLOGS KIDNEYS
THEN YOUR BACK HURTS
Take a Glass of Salts to Flush Kid
neys If Bladder Bothers Yon
Drink Lots of Water.
No man or woman who eats meat
regularly can make a mistake by flush
ing tho kidneys occasionally, says a
well-known nuthority. Meat forms
uric acid which excites tho kidneys,
they become overworked from the
Btraln, get sluggish and fall to filter
tho wasto and poisons from the blood,
then we get sick. Nearly all rheu
matism, headaches, liver trouble, ner
vousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and
urinary disorders como from sluggish
kidneys.
Tho moment you feel a dull acho la
tho kidneys or your back hurts or if
tho urine 1b cloudy, offensive, full of
sediment, irregular of passago or at
tended by a sensation of scalding, stop
eating meat and get about four ounces
of .lad Salts from any pharmacy; take
a tablcspoonful in a glass of water
before breakfast and in a fow days
your kidneys will net flno. This fa
mous salts is mado from tho acid o?
grapes and lemon juice, combined
with lithla, nnd has been used for
generations to flush and stlmulato tho
kldnoys, also to neutralize tho acids
in urlnn bo it no longer causes irrita
tion, thus ending bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot
injuro; makes a delightful efferves
cent Uthla-wnter drink which everyone'
should tako now nnd then to keep the.
kidneys clean nnd nctive and tho blood
pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney
complications. Adv.
in After Years.
"Beauty," remarked tho poetic
youth, "may draw us with a alnglo
hair."
"During tho courtship, yes," 're
joined the bald-headed man with a
Blgh, "but after mnrrlage Bho is raoro
likely to grab n handful."
They stop the tickle. Dean's Mentholated
Cough Drops top coughs quickly. A pleas
ant remedy 5c nt nil good Druggists.
It's easier for a young man to raiso
a row than a mustache.
sizzling
cups of delicious
Van Houten's Rona
Cocoa for a quarter.
Cheaper than coffee
and healthier. Half
pound red can
25c
POTATO p&
Haiti.
on tiiH
li t a : 1'Mllarflo 1'i.Uto.a helped put Wlsoontln war
tlin tup w lit) It cnoriuoun uutau jlnid. Wn cn
samo lor you. UlU HtSUlT UATAIWO VHUll
du samo
Jsbn A. Salter Satd Co., Sea 703, La Crow, wit.
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