The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 6, 1933, Page 4

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4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, FEB. 6, 1933, o . issuance of substantial amounts of new national Dally AlaSka Emplre bank notes secured by Government bonds. The im- provement in the banking situation was reflected in an increase in deposits, and in increased investments JOHN W. TROY - - FRESIDENT AND EDITOR 15 Uriitad Stites securities. ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER During December California crude oil output and the | adjusted lumber production changed little. The Published every evening except Sondny by EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main [value of engineering contracts awarded and build-| arregant Mark Lodely settles himself in the London house of millionaire Farrell Armit- ready for Armitage to make good a promise to es- ber month. 9 y i 4 tablish him as an artist. department stores sales from November to December| even takes Farrell’s room, al- has fitted an scribers will confer a favor if they will promptly |carloadings and intercoastal traffic decreased slightly.| upstairs suite for Mark. Bar- o The credit situation became somewhat easier dur-| bara Quentin’s Mark’s fiance, Telephone for Editorial und Business Offices, 374 |ino the five weeks ended January 18, a seasonal] has agreed to postpone their reduction in demand for currency having enabled| Wedding a year. The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the |y. e t5 reduce borrowings further. Principal| t© Win her in that time. Mean- while Leila Cane, Mark, who paid Patsy Raoul, eccentric actress, to have an affair with Mark. Bieee; Junélu, | Alaske. ing permits issued was smaller than in November, e tn the Pokx Office In Junesu &% Second Class |y, which month the Golden Gate Bridge contracts ey | were included. Flour milling and cement production Delivered by casrliler in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25|increased, after seasonal allowance. Expansion in oiEY, mail, postage paid at the followlng rates: $6.00; Subsc notify the Business Office of any fallure or irregularity | in the delivery of_ their papers. | onie month, in advance, $1.25. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. as for republication of all news dispatches credited to i it <r not otherwise credited in this paper and also the [changes in the condition of member banks were I blished herein. o " i s oA heren the continued decline in loans and increase in time ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER |, " THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. deposits. A doctor warns that too much dancing is apt to affect the hea Boy, he ought to see what too much sitting out does to it. The individual who uses the shoes he wears as a paper weight is never successful at anything. (Cincinnati Enquirer.) VOTING PERCENTAGE HIGH. show the total population above 21 years of ng!‘,‘lled in a phrase. exclusive of foreigners, of the Territory to be about| 32,500. Thus approximately 44 per cent. of those | qualified by age to vote went to the polls. Probably the actual proportion of the vote cast| were naturalized. And of 12,922 Indians or Eskimos|gold movements, and the vital question is 1O |nhe leaned forward, trying to will| in the same age class, a very large percentage do longer whether to maintain the gold standard, but|her to look up. not possess necessary legal qualifications for voting.|what policies to pursue within the limits of the Thus the precentage of the vote in November was |gold standard. probably nearer 65 than 45. ’ 4 !word. One has but to shout Socialism and a worthy This is clear evidence of the interest taken by - riee _ all Alaskans in political affairs, and is highly grati- |Proposal is disoredited. “Yel itiere. wasia time, not fying. It shows that voters were alive to the issues uying Barbara L by Julia Cleft-Addams ¢ Author of “YOU CAN'T MARRY® the age, me year, 'In advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, |yas somewhat greater than seasonal but freight though Farrell Farrell hopes CHAPTER 24. ENCOUNTER NO. TWO It was mot on that evening, but the next that Mark Lodely sat in the Novelty theatre and watched Patsy Raoul. He sat at the back of the box, keen with excitément. Down below on the stage, bare ex- cept for a table and a chair and In the effort to make our great national prob-|a screen, Patsy Raoul, thin, plain, [lems intelligible to the vast number of persons who|draped in greenish black, was be- share in the governing process, there has been a|ing a whole dispensary, tend:ncy to oversimplify many intricate matters.|women, all of them were under- This has led to the assumption among large num- |nourished, bers that our problems are fundamentally simple,|one confessed to being “nearly as |and that a neatly turned catch phrase is an answer|drunk as I was last Christmas.” The Territorial vote last November, 14202, WaS to many a complex question. But, in fact, most of| Patsy Raoul was also the dis- the highest ever cast in Alaska’s history, although the political and economic issues of our time are|penser, the nurse and the police- the population figure probably was not quite as large junimaginably complex, and no possible procedure{man who came in once to restore as in other election years. Census figures for 1930 |can make them so simple as to be accurately epitom- |order and once to ketch the drun- 1 ken woman home because her child | Such a phrase is the “gold standard.” Its pri-|had just been burned to dea(h.{y"’u can buy them. I'm asking mary meaning is simple, to be sure. But within the|. . . “Doctor, you'll have to give me | |framework of the gold standard we can pursue in-|a drop of something for me nerves flation or deflation. We can so manipulate foreign naow, S = exchange that the gold standard becomes a mere| Then to the number legally qualified to vote Was CON“|gyjhyoleth and really inoperative. In'recent years|hand-clapping and the wondering siderably larger than that. Of the 22599 white 21|ipo development of short-term credits in interna- |murmer that lifts & SUcCESS to & | years or over, 9,952 were foreign born and only 6,265 [tional finance has totally changed the function of |sensation. The Danger of Catch Phrases. his eyes some dandied there was the crash of) Mark did not clap but stare, but Miss Raoul still arguing with the bowler-hat one, picked it up and mechanically began to undo it. | Her screech of excitement when Mark’'s sketches of her lay open |to her gaze, stamped her forever |an artist. For these were not car- |iactures, they did not display her art, but only herself, her ugliness, her unwomanliness, And yet they iid not make her just any ugly scarecrow. of a woman. She was | magnificently—someone. | She pushed the admiring circle |aside: ‘Go! Be away! 1 have not money now, not anything. I am break. Which why should I checks write when I have not any mon- ey?” There was a great deal of fuss, but she flapped the sketches in their faces and at last pushed the other artist bodly aside. “Me "—genius, you miscree-ations!” she |shouted, slammed the door upon them and came back to sit upon the couch next to Mark. “They're better than anyone so far. They're me. What arc they appearing in?” She had abandoned her “jargon” without any explanation, and Mark’s sur- sed chuckle was tribute to her good sense. “D'you mean, what periodical? one. T've not offered them any- where.” “Youre giving them to me. 1then?” “Oh, dear no! If you want them twenty pounds each for them.” Miss Raoul, still in her make-up and her velvet, leaped to her feet, swore that she would throw him out after the others and sat down again beside him. “I can’t pay you for a bit,” she informed him. “I really am broke.” screen, revealing a piano. She sa it and began |many decades ago, when the chief aim of Socialism |, myse aloud to the lisping com down laid before them, and informed themselves not Omylday_ about the several candidates for office but of the eight hour day, but we do not admit being Socialists. |in America was the achievement of the ten-hour|p..nt of the music. People Be ‘We have accepted this and gone on to an to smile, suddenly s! gan positions taken by the parties they represented on|what many Socialists ask for now will be granted those who could mot understand those issues. |tomorrow and we still will not accept the word. It (her showing & rather more jpen The interest manifested at the polls will continue |is a case of using a term to express our fears, and appreciation than those who @puld. as the victors—the Democrats in this instance, go|not our ideas. Then she sang, surprisnigly true he was singing | in French and smiles broadéned,| into office and translate their promises into per-| In like manner “inflation” has come to be a buga- formance. If they keep their pledges, in so far as;P00. Yet any policy of government respecting cur- their power makes it possible, there is no reason|Fency and credit tends to promote either inflation to doubt that succeeding elections will find them B i‘]‘(‘)“:;:‘:r‘naxi Cl‘::f“éir ;’;;EW“"‘)‘I‘ICCS‘EN:‘]-] ;:'- ‘2_"11]; returned to power. If they fail, through neglect | - or indifference, to make them good, they will Pay linflation we want. A single word is madequate at the polls in future elections. Interest in political ipere to express a genuine idea, for the subject is matters, which after all is but inte: in Govern- |too0 complex. ment, is the best stimulant known ;00d govern- “Buy American” is a phrase that has come sud- ment, and the most powerful deterrent to inefficient denly into some vogue. Yet it is another over- and sweet, a little country Jove- Mark peered at the #pro- ithe glass. gram and discovered that this;w: a composition of her own. Hedhad ireal porblem ds the precise: method and degree of 503‘;:’:35;20‘;1? Il;m:;g:‘a v ken her last call, he had A4 sit had not looked: up. He waited for the interval, then summoned an attendant. plaint. back. government. It forces parties to bring out the best simplication, and has no logical foundation in econ- talent it has, keeps public officers alive to their omics. responsibilities and weeds out incompetents ruth-to restore their national well-being, but it does not |properly express a plausible and workable economic program. All of these are catch words, and they are more likely to confuse our thinking than to clarify it. we are going to deal with important and complex problems, we must be prepared to do some close |thinking and patient explaining. Catch words are rarely useful, save to demagogues, whose purpose lis to confuse rather than to enlighten. lessly. The November vote is a healthy sign. It augurs well for the future. And in succeeding elections even higher percentages of the potential Territorial vote should be cast. CONDITIONS MORE STABLE AT YEAR'S END. Twelfth District, of which Alaska is a part, business declined steadily during the first half of 1932, but became fairly stable in the second half of the year. The volume of crop production was agricultural commodities marketed was slightly smaller and - agricultural income declined sharply because of reduced prices for farm products. Activ- ity in several leading industries of the district— lumber, petroleum, electric power, meat-packing, non-! ferrous metals, and cement—fluctuated near the low Jevels of late 1931, showing little net decline during the year. The paper and pulp and textile indus- iries increased production schedules during the year. Flour milling and canning of fruits and vegetables permits issued was considerably smaller in 1932 than in 1931, although State and Federal Government | projects continued to be initiated on a relatively | large scale. Both retail and wholesale trade im- proved seasonally in the last half of 1932, but sub- stantial declines in values were reported for the year. Adjusted freight carloadings and intercoastal traffic advanced from low mid-year levels. Registra- tions of new automobiles and the value of foreign trade receded in most months of 1932. Prices for commodities important in the Twelfth District con- tinued to decrease during 1932. There was little net change during the second half of the year, however, and the average price decline from the year before was less than in 1930 or 1931. The strained credit situation of late 1931 grew considerably worse during the first two months of 1932 as a result of continued large deposit with- drawals and heavy payments of funds to other dis- ‘tricts, accompanied by numerous bank failures. Borrowings from the Reserve Bank rose to the high- est levels in eleven years. With the passage of the Glass-Steagall Act and the opening of operations by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in Feb- | ruary, however, sentiment improved and the decline in deposits and the rate of bank failures moderated This partial improvement was offset by a consid- erably larger than usual mid-year withdrawal of money. Beginning in late July, the credit situation became easier, a tendency which continued through- < out the remainder of the year. This improvement was traceable in part to a continued large inflow - of funds through Treasury expenditures in excess of collections, anp to a marked reduction in the net ~ outflow of funds to other parts of the United States because of commercial transactions. (In early months It expresses the dim yearning of Americans Sell Harder! (Seattle Times.) A Middle Western Chamber of Commerce recent- larger in 1932 than in 1031, but the quantity of |}y made an experiment that should be interesting to Seattle business men who are wondering just how |they should deal with this particularly era national affairs. It sent out ten men, each with $10, instructed to buy a small specific article, but also to purchase anything else that clerks suggested during their visit At the end of the day they turned with $94.60 in cash. Ten salesmen had pass- ed up an opportunity to transact business in that to the stores. re- 2 E One can only wonder whether this situation is decreased during 1932 as compared with 1931. The not rather general all over the country today. How value of engineering contracts awarded and building |many sales people now are “licked” by the slow- “I want to see Miss Raoul before she leaves the theatre.” “I could take your card} sir, but—" “That will be all right. She will see me.” He waited, smiling to himself. tapping a parcel with his long fin- gers. The next “turn” was over It before the attendant returned with the message that Miss Raoul would see him. Even then he did not hurry. He adjusted his crutch, his parcel and himself with care. It was fully ten minutes later, af- ter ‘an unhurried journey up and down stairs and along passages in the wake of a sympathetic dresser, It held a good many people, none of whom paid him particu- lar attention. He did not resent this—he sank down on a couch end undid his parcel. From the welter of conversation he gather- ed that amongst those present were a woman writer, a man dress- maker and an in individual in a bowler hat who had come about a little matter that was to have been settled on last Monday. On an opposite couch a man younger than Mark craned forward to see in ness pr business to such an extent that they actually |y, Raoul and then huddled back permit a customer to get out of the store without again and drew frenziedly what ‘makmg a real effort to ascertain whether he is interested in merchandise other than that for which Mark watched him without ran- He was' quite sure the work % 1 Y was very bad. executive who curtails his advertising and sales pro- After a reasonable time, as the motion to the limit and then some more? His policy cris-cross of talk showed no pros- can be explained only by the assumption that he pect of abating, considers the public simply will not purchase his himself along the couch and bend- product, no matter how excellent its quality or how |j,0 o Jittle, swung his parcel neat- 'y N ly on to Miss Raoul's table. It dis- Yet during the Christmas shopping period, when placed some jars and bottles and man-dressmaker airplanes had to be employed to Tush in Stock after | e he asks? Isn't this somewhat the attitude of the business attractive the price at which it is quoted. Santa Claus was providing the traditional urge to the he had seen. cour, Mark dragged “Then you'd better borrow from . |someone. I'm broke, too, and, in She had eyes for no one yet any case, I made up my mind| Sy " x d 5 £ She nodded, curtly enough, to the i Similarly, we find “Socialism” a much-misused packed house and then moved the ars ago I'd never be careless bout money if I had a chance f making any.” “I can’t borrow. There's no one left to borrow from. TUnless—I might get a favor from Farrell Armitage.” “You'll do no such thing,” said Mark sharply. “T'll do all the bor- rowing from ‘Armitage. He's mine.’ She relinquished the sketches abruptly, went back to her dress- ing table and stared at.herself in “You're a bit above yourself, aren’t you, Mr. Mark Lodely? Hon- estly?” “I'm the wusual temperamental artist. Ask Armitage.” “You can’t pull that stuff with \me—I've got a temperament my- self! What's behind you? What are you doing?” “Hating and loving.” She clicked her fingers impa- tiently. “Who? Why?” As he did not reply she answered herself—‘One of the people you hate is Farrell Armitage. I understand that. Why do you take such a lot from him, then?” “Perhaps because 1 rather think he’s taken something from me.” Mark had spoken on impulse and because he liked the sound of the retort. And certainly, a part of his mind, perceptively alert, had toyed with the idea that Armit- age might be sentimentally inter- that he entered Miss Raoul's room. |ested in Barbara. But it was an idea barely worth weighing. It “don't really matter whether it had any foundation. Barbara would never—it was faint- 1y ridiculous to think of Barbara, the patient housemaker, as desert- ing in favor of a monied life. A slow-moving, plodding, home-lov- ing creature—Barbara, an excel- lent type to settle down with one lday; a beautiful background to life. “What did you say?” he asked Miss Raoul. “I sald I'd back Farrell Armit- age against you any day of the week if he has really madé up his mind to anything. He knows how to work and you don't.” Quite undisturbed Mark again indicated the skeaches. “There’s work in those.” “I'm not so sure that there is,” Miss Raoul examined them anew. “They’re good. I don't deny that. But in a way I'm an easy subject just because I am such a freak. ‘There’s a good deal more luck buy, stores sold so much goods that in some cities shelves had become depleted. Is Santa Claus a better salesman than the trained business executive, or was the pre-Christmas buying due to the fact that the holiday spirit was on the job while many a trained executive is' merely at his desk? The Japanese have been taking so many gates in the Chinese Wall they probably will inform the League of Nations it is nothing but a Hallowe'en prank.—(Indianapolis Star.) On March 4 the Democrats will rush into 117,- 000 Federal jobs. They will rush in faster than 117,000 Republican will rush out.—(Atchison Glabe.) Among the best sellers this year may be a tome by that very Dear Kunnell Fess, entitled “I am & From the Anti-Saloon League.’—(Macon Daily it becomes more and more evident that the Japanese use the word “pacification” only in of the year this inflow had been offset by losses through individual and banking transactions) An- -other “factor "ol jmporfance ' in easing credit con- the old Roman sense.—(Detroit Free Press.) —— Now it is said that the ‘country is crazy over technocracy, or, in other words, is suffering fr ditions during the last half of the year was the |technochosia.—(Boston Transcript) 1 %, 1891 42 YEARS’ BANKING SERVICE to the People of Alaska. COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS The B. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA ¢ 1933 20 YEARS AGO From The Empire ——— FEBRUARY 6, 1913. Dr. J. K. Simpson was called in taken ill on the way north from Seattle with tonsilitis. Dr. Simp- son also attended First Oifficer Charles Glasscogk of the Yukon, who suffered two fractured ribs when he fell down the hold on the last trip. Mr. Glasscock did not reslize the seriousness of his in- on the way north. the Yukon was the word that H. A. Duke, the steward, had fallen heir to part of the estate left by the death of an uncle. The estate amounted to $1,000000 and Mr. Duke's share was one twentieth of the amount. Z. R. Cheney had a batting and fielding average of 1000 for the term of the District Court. He did not lose an issue in the civil department and won the only vic- teries in the criminal department during the term drawing to a close. J. E. Everett, well known Se- attle architect, had recently ar- rived in Juneau and had prepar- of plans and specifications for the new Goldstein Building to be erected at the corner of Second and Seward Streets. The building was to include every modern con- venience known to builders and was to be the first of its kind to be erected in Alaska. The concert-recital given by Mrs. J. V. Davis was a success in ev- ery way. Word was received by Mrs. J. E. Barragar of the death of her mother, Mrs. Samuel Lind, of paralysis.” The remains were to be sent to Portland, Ore. for inter- ment. A farewell party was given for Mrs. DeVighne, who planned to atlendance on Capt. A. M. Jensen of the steamer Yukon who was juries until the ship left Seattle|$ More cheerful news brought by! PROFESSIONAL | PHYSIOTHERAPY Musage, Electricity, Infra Red ' Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER ' DENTISTS Blomgren Building | PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pn. | Helene W. L. Albrecht | i Dr. Charles P. Jenne DEMTisT Rooms ¢ anu 9 Valentine Bullding Telaphore 176 Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, § am. to 5 pm. Evenings by ap_ointment Phone 321 | | Lr. A. W, Swewart ’ DENTIST | — Hours . am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 276 ey Robert Simpsun | Opt. U. ! Graduate Angeles Col- | { lege of Optometry «nd ¢ | Orpthalmciogy i | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouud ol Dr. C. L. Fenton CHIROPRACTOR Hours: 10-2; 2-5 LELLENTHAL BUILDING | | Douglas 7-9 P. M. i e . v ! DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL. Optometrist—ODptiiian T ——— Fraternal Societies | sttt Gastineau' Channel 3' 3 B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m Visiting brothers welcome. Geo. Messerschmidt, Exalted Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secreta y. KNIGHTS OF COLUMEUS Seghers Counctl No. 1760. " eetings second and last :{onday at 7:30 p. m. “ransient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councl Thambers, Fifth Strees, JOHN F, MULLEN, C. R. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. el e T i r— e f NEW RECORDS NEW SHEET MUSIC { RADIO SERVICE | i Expert Radio Repairing 5 | ! H Radio Tubes and Supplies JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE e s . e e D JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY [T Moevs, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prempt Delivery of leave soon for the south, at the|| Eyes Examined—Glasses itted ' FUEL OIL Congregational Church in Doug-| | Room 7, Valentine Bldg. H |las. 3 | Otfice Phone 484; Restdence ALL KINDS OF COAL | Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 The proposal of the City of Ju-|| to 13; 1:00 to 6:30 PHONE 43 » i L neau to enter into an agreement with the Alaska Steamship Com-|poge A Andrews—Graduate Nurse pany whereby the city would buy all of its coal from the company e ki iz R ¢ Cabinet Baths—Massage—Colonic H and the company was to dock all o6 Tivigaitions - PLAY BILLIARDS | its ships ¢y the city wharf was Office hours, 11 am. to 5 p. m H turned down by the company, ac- Treniiis (ks ATOMDRBEIT | SralT \ cording to Judge J. R. Winn, who 2 ] took the matter up with the steam- | Scoond and Main. Phone 259-1 ring | . A¥ RFOR]L'. ship officials on a recent trip s * south. Capt. Sid Barrington, well known Yukon navigator, and Jerry Quin- lan, conductor of the White Pass Road, were In Mexico enjoying the bull fighls and other things, according to word received from them. People were pleased to hear that Judge James ‘W. Witten, Democrat of Missouri, was a candidate for the appointment of Commissioner of the General Land Office at Washington, D. C. Judge Witten had made several trips to Alaska and had recommended some val- uable legislation for the Territory. A Douglas merchant was agree- ably surprised to be approached by a man from the Interior who said, “I want to pay-an account I ran with you in 1890.” The amount was paid and a receipt given, People were awakened during the night by the shaking of build- ings and the fierce howling of the Tsku wind as it swept over the town. MNightwatchman Sam Kohn was lifted off his feet while pa- troling lower Franklin Street and hurled through space for about thirty feet. He suffered several flesh wounds and painful bruises. Miss Cora Benson, grand-daugh- ter of “Chilkoot Jack,” who pilot- ed the first white man over the CLilkoot JPass, was aboard the Curacao on her way to her home in Skagway. She had been vis- iting her brother, William Ben- son, missionary at Kake, The Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff, who had spent some time at Prince Rupert, B. C, returne¥ to Alas- ka on the Curarao. Ernest Kerberger, cannery man, came north to Kake with a crew (2 | | Dr. Richard Williams ’ DENTIST | | e OFFICE AND RESIDENCE | Gastineau Bullding, Phone 481 | TRIANGLE CABS 25¢ Any Place in City PHONES 22 and 42 YELLOW and 7; ( S NS R SR T ‘ L. C. SMITH and CORONA i TYPEWRITERS | J. B. Burford & Co. ! “Our doorstep worn by satiatied | customers™ | Harry Race DRUGGIST l “THE SQUIBB STORE" ! ! S |. Cleaning and Pressing MICKEY FLORIDAN | ! TAILOR | THE JuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 [l DONALDINE BEAUTY PARLORS Telephone 49¢ RUTH HAYES RNy PIGGLY X FINE Watch and Jewelry REPAIRING at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON l Next to Alaskan Hotel L e UPHOLSTERING MADE TO ORDER Also Recoverinng and Repaliring SAVE YOURRAR] Loooe o onm i I R CARL JACOBSON \ ‘WATCH REPAIRING SEWARD STREET pacity and youll sit and make|| OPPosite Goldstein Bullding out it’s the fault of being a crip- ple! You can't swing that pathet- ic stuff on me any more than the temperament. So don't try!” (Copyright, 1932, Julia Cleft- Addams.) to begin operations for the com- ing season’s work. than judgment about your work, so far.” This was @ shrewd bit and se- cretly Mark accepted it, but com- ing from Patsy Raoul it roused him to retailiation. ¥ ] “The same applles to your per- formance tonight!” he retorted. “Your ugliness was a make-weight | —you relied on it heavily in the ,surgery sketch. You couldn't have held the stage three minutes with an ordinary pink and white kind of countenance.” “There’s hard work behind it, anyway!” Miss Raoul thumped the table. “You can't work like I do, haven't got the guts—" “I haven't as healthy a body.” “Never mind that, you're the kind that won’t work to your own ca- Mark seizes a curious chance to torture his hostess, to mor- Tow, E —— ‘The advertisements ‘- Make Millions ‘Think—ana Buyito efficient spending,

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