Evening Star Newspaper, February 18, 1928, Page 24

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WOMAN'S PAGE." Directions for Papering Rooms BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. POLD THE PAPER OVER CAREFULLY SO THAT THE PASTED PARTS COME TOGETHER. It is quite possible for a home deco- Tator 1o paper Rer own rooms satisfac- torily. If it is a first attempt the se- lJection of the paper is of much impor- tance. Choose simple “background" papers. such as imitation grass cloth, indefinite self-toned papers, stipple pa- pers, etc.. for the main rooms. pick out an absolutely plain paper, for it will show every mark, and there is quite a chance that some mark may be made by accident. What are known #s plain papers, but which have an in- definite color and design, will stand & number of marks without being se- Tiously impaired. For bedrooms wherever located, choose small pattern floral papers. There are many that are charming. ‘These papers do not “cut to waste” easily as do large bolder designs. A well covered ground will show discrep- ancies the least. Measure the height of the room from baseboard 1o ceiling. Cut the paper into these lengths. after finding out Irom the little marks on the margin of the paper that the strips will meet so that the pattern will come together cor- Tectly. It may take a good deal of time to plan the first three strips, but after that the rest of the paper can be managed with ease. The first two strips cut will indicate just how much paper will have to be allowed at each end of a strip to insure matching. Skilled paperhangers always cut off | the margins from wall paper and put | the edges so absolutely together that | j‘g‘lmng of strips are scarceiy percept- le. margins on the right hand side of the paper with the marks indicating where the paper must come to join correctly. As the margin is the same color as the ground of the paper, if strips do not meet perfectly no white wall shows, but merely a hair line of the back- m tint. Of course this should not . but amateurs may expect some slight imperfections. The margins are cut off with a sharp knife, never with T e Dok engen ot whe s of stry) o #w cut if 3 . o Te Are numerous prepared pastes, requiring the addition of water only, to make them usable. The directions are on the packeges. These can be p; chased at any store keeping painter and paperhanger’s supplies. Do not ex- pect to get the paste where you buy the paper for it is more than lkely that it cannot be bought there. Ask, should fail you. 3t then must truet 15 viose and ear ny Meadow Mouse, Most of the little people of the Green Meadows and the Green Forest will agree 1o that. Nearly all of those who wear fur put more faith in their noses and their ears than they do in their eyes. They know that eyes are more HOW LONESOME NAY i ears of 5 i thelr noves Mewdow Mouwe had no hope e put thie 11 you emuld would have wid Perhaps through all the duys the sun Whe cannot rkznqe its course = jot Peers down on sur vnhzmpered ways And ernvies wllof us 2 lot fri Do not | as | It is not so easy as to leave the | however. If it is carried time will be saved. To apply the paste, lay the strip of | paper wrong side up on the table. With a wide brush apply the prepared paste | from the middle of the strip to the top. | Then fold the top of the paper over to |the center. Apply the paste to the | other half and fold the paper over to meet the first turning. All the pasted side of the paper is protected, and you can handle the strip easily. Mount a stepladder close to the least conspicuous corner of the room. Take . the end of the paper that should come at the top and gently pull it away from | the center, holding it so that the paste | side will come in contact with the wall | when unfurled. Press the paper to the wall, nearly to the middle of the strip. Then take the remaining end by both corners, and unfold its length. = Press | this section in place. Now take the ispecm brush and go over the strip, pressing it gently but firmly to the wall, | removing any wrinkles. The strip must fit the corners of the | wall perfectly and hang plumb. The | first strip should be hung in the least | conspicuous corner of the room, be- {cause when the last strip of ‘paper is | hung. it cannot be guaranteed that the match will be perfect, whether done by | professional or amateur workmen. The | unavoidable mismatching should be in iLhc least noticeable place, DAILY DIET RECIPE Mayonnaise Assaisonne. Mayonnaise, one-half cup. Horseradish, one-fourth cup. Paprika, one teasoon. SERVES SIX PORTIONS. Stir horseradish into the mayonnaise. Add paprika. The eggu;ln the mayon- | naise would furnish lime, iron, vitamins A and B. This highly seasoned sauce is good on broiled fish. DIET NOTE. Should not be eaten except in great { moderation by adult of normal ufin- ytfin 1f mineral o}ld mayonnaise were | | the base sauce, could be eaten by wishing to reduce. e Objected to Forks. When forks were first used a cele- {brated = divine preached a | against them as an insult to the Al- | mighty, who gave us fingen S gers for the BY THORNTON W. BURGESS you that she knew he wasn't alive. She knew that he had been caught and eaten by Roughleg the Hawk. She had scen him caught. She hadn't seen him eaten, but she had seen him caught. At least, she thought she had. You know, people often think they see Im‘n“ which they really do not see at | My, my, how lonesome Nanny was! She wanted 1 move away from there. | Yes, sir, it seemed as though she juat | couldn't go on living there where everything reminded her of Danny. 8he wanted 1 move away, but this was no | time to0 move, She was afraid to travel on wp of the snow for fear she would be caught by Roughleg the Hawk or | Hooty the Cwl, and she couldn't travel under the snow without digging a long tunnel wherever she wanted 1o go And that was more work than she could undertake S0 there was nothing for 1t but for her 1 continue to live where she and Danny had lived o long and been #o happy. It happened one day that she had gone out clear t the end of one of the longest of the 1 Danny had dug ‘There viere some seeds ry fond, and she had gone out for Wi ing there how fond Danny was of thos when her ears caught a Dttle Bhe ttopped eating in order that she might lsten better !hitened for two or three miny nesrd nothing "1 gues | tonlen |eat the seed she | moments Jawe httle round ¢ she kKnew There was & w8 and iny, “my ears more began e 4 up those of hers ugain. This shie wasnt mistaken und U came from w n n'tmuch of for N D) Nanny Her heart guing i the snow oft 4 snie o Lerselt 50 nobod. can 1t he? re touble 15 con Just another Meados A 1 wonder g Perhiaps it WMouse, L hoge 56 | "Bt ran wack w litte way along the [tunnel 8o bs W be Lesrer home. Then she sat down and looked back Bhe felt wure \hml Whoever was digging would souner or later come out i Uhelr itile tunnel. Bhe wanted 1o see who 1t mght be Bhe was ull resdy to {take L her heels and run 10 might be an enemy. Bul then, sgain, 1t might friend Nanny ves so lonesome right Gown i Lier heart she hoped 1 voula prove U be another Meado s Aoise st wanted somebody 16 toik ted o tell somebody al fan happened ) e vaited, ready 1o yun i an enemy hould appesr nd vendy U greet & friend it a friend it shoild prove 1 e, Cousviait. 1028 tunnels she and | there of & kind of which the was | Bhe | skipped @ | O LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. 1 was wawking to skool wondering if I could ever lern to be a ventrilo- quist out of my little paper book call- ed “Ventriloquizm Made Easy, How to Throw the Voice at Will” and some little kid started to wawk pass in a hurry as if he thawt he was afraid he mite be late, and I threw my voice up in the air as if it was somebody call- ing out of a window, saying, Wats a big hurry, kid? And I kepp on wawking pass him as if I never even herd of him, and the kid looked at me doutfill and then look- ed _all around jest #s doutfill. Being a big incouragement for my ventriloquizm, and we was having spell- ing in skool and I started to wonder how it would be if I threw my voice under Miss Kitty's desk as if somebody was hiding under there. And I kepp on thinking about it till all of a suddin wat did I do but do it, saying, Hay heer I am in the waist paper basket. And everybody in the class started to 1aff, being wat they was sippose to do, ony they all looked rite at me in- sted of looking at Miss Kittys desk, being wat they wasent sippose to do, | and Miss Kitty sed, Benny Potts. come up heer. Wich I did, and she sed, Is enything ;1 m)nllrr with you mentally this morn- ng? Meening was I crazy, and 1 sed, No mam, and she sed, Well then you must of done that delibritly, wich is almost werse. do you meen to look me in the face and tell me vou did that delibritly? ‘li‘lo mam, I was kind of dreeming, I sed. _ Wich I was, on account of ony dreem- ing I was a ventriloquist, ony U had stay after skool enyways and write by I am awake 300 times without a blot, and if enybody wunts to buy a paper book telling them how to be a ventriloquist cheep Iil sell them mine. NANCY PAGE Tea Wagon and Box Make Serving Easy, BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. *s gifts had been a tea wagon and a large round tin box filled with luscious dried and glace fruits. Both the box and tea wagon became permanent possessions and found them- selves inseparable. The tea wagon was wheeled beside the breakfast table. On it was placed the toaster and the percolator. This arrangement kept the cords and their entangling meshes away from the breakfast table. ~ When Nancy made waffies she put the iron and the pitch- | er which held the waffle batter on the tea wagon. On the bottom shelf of the wagon she kept the round tin box. It was lac- | quered on the inside. The outside had | a Christmas scene. This red and | green did not fit in with her color | scheme. Accordingly she purchased | shellac, lacquer and silver stars. She | lacquered the outside of the box a decp | blue. Silver stars were fastened on, here and there. She did not use the adhesive surface of the star, but pasted them with paperhanger's paste The whole box was given a coating of shellac The inside was left just as it was in the original. This partic- ular box held cookies. Nancy had another one which held her cosmetics, while a third one held her patchwork Dlecex, WINTER BY D. C. PEATTIE. Perhaps all limestone caves are sim- flar; perhaj he who has seen one has seen them all. But there comes ! to nearly every one that wonderful first time, the enviable shock of won- der that can never quite be recap- tured. And 1 have had my first experience. | Frankly, I had always rather scorned the idea of caves, loving, as I do, the living things. I could see no reason why, on a beautiful day, when car- dinals were whistling me down the brooks, and saxifrage and downy | chickvieed were o be found in the high | woods, 1 should bury myself in the earth, in darkness and bad air, W look at sights that should be almost worn away with all the gaping and gazing they have sustained But the day that I visited my first cave was not a fair day; it was quite a gray and Wintry one, and the scdge was withered from the lake; no birds Isang. And so 1 stepped into those depths of hidden splendor. Here once a mighty river had rushed | down inside @ mountain, a river that, [ like Alph, descended through caverns i numberless to man. For centurles it swirled und churned and ate its dark- ling way, And now the last of it is| fgone, and In I terrible wake the flowers of stone have ceme 10 bloom It is the customary thing to com- | pare the crystals of these caverns to coral, but there were many stranger | tiings than coral to be seen - Urans- Hlucent ribbons of rock, like brown ae kelp with the sun shining through LIt “tracertes like the marble lacework "of the Alhsmbra curvers, contorted fig- jures that seem to writhe n invisible cold firen, broken nerustations ke nothing i the world s0 much s ity pretzel, und ghttering, dustike crystals Hke the gruficial and oo-bril- Hant snow upon & German Loy village Inside one bottle-shaped Uny op g was s stalsgmite resembling a full- [ rigged ship, s ship In a botte, if ever |there was one. Or so some people suw I To me 1L looked more ke that bit of frozen music, Milan Ca- | thedral, Ham Crescents, | | Weigh mashed bolled potatoes, about one cupful or w Witle more, &nd add to them the same wmount i vght of flour wnd butter. Also add one cgg and | beat thoroughly Roll ot quite thin, Cut In squares, wud put one or two tea- spoontuls of chopped bolled ham i Uie center of eneh square. Beghnnig at | stranger’s do. Sage Advice to a Girl Who Tries Unsuccessfully to Attract Men—Why It is Easy for Two People Who Work Side by Side to Fall in Love. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: There are some girls who are sweet and gentle; others who are cute and witty; others who are vamps. I know girls of ach class who are attractive to men. I have tried to play the part of each, but in neither role have I succeeded in making myself popular with boys. I enjoy acting a fool and cutting up, but that doesn't seem to please the men either, yet I know girls who act like 1diots, and who are wild women and the men are crazy about them. ‘Why is this? Why am I not attractive to men when I am doing just the things that they find attractive in some other girl? ELEANOR. Answer: It is because you are not the real thing. You are an imitation, and you ring false, and men instinctively know this. ‘The greatest mistake that a girl can make is to be a copy-cat, and yet it is a blunder that thousands of girls make. A staid, sober girl sees some other girl who has quicksilver in her veins, and who is always laughing and dancing and full of animation, and who is much admired by men, and she thinks the thing to do is to be vivaclous. So she begins jumping, and hopping around, and giggling incessantly, and screaming at the top of her voice, but instead of attracting men they flee from her. Yet this same girl would have been attractive enough if she had just been herself—dignified, practical and sensible. She would have been a relief and restful after the girl who was always talking and always on her tip-toes. Or a girl sces another girl who is little and cute, and who always sits curled up like a kitten on a sofa, and who rolls her eyes at men and asks them fool questions, and who always has a string of dat: So the big girl tries to imitate her, with the result that she looks like a pezforming elephant when she does babyish tricks, and when she tries to make sweet eves she looks like a dying calf. Yet this girl might have won the admiration of all beholders if she had kept to the stately part in life that Nature assigned her when it made her a daughter of the gods divinely tall. Or a girl sees another girl who is a cut-up at whose outrageous speeches | everybody laughs, and she imitates her and gets sent to coventry for it. | Nobody can explain why some girls can do a thing and get away with it. and others can't: why the speech that is funny when one girl makes it is | vulgar when another does: why the charm with which one girl can conjure the | birds off of the trees fails to work when another girl uses it. | It is just a matter of personality, and that cannot be copied. That belongs | to the individual, and no girl can step into arother girl's character, and give a | convincing imitation of her charm. Therefore, if you are wise, you will not try it. You will develop your own personality. After all, there s nothing so attiactive as sincerity, and no people | are more universally admired than those who are genuine and without any | affectation or pretense about them. And remember this for your comfort: That there is no one particular type of girl that men admire. There are just as many men who like sensible, practical | girls as there are those who admire fluffy ruffies: just as many who like quiet | girls as those who like vivacious girls; just as many men who admire modest girls as, those who fall for vamps. So'if you want to be popular don't copy-cat another girl. Be yourself. DOROTHY DIX. possible for two people who work side by Lou. . . . DEAR MISS DIX: Do you think it side to_ fall in love? Answer: Easiest thing you know. Propinquity is the greatest matchmaker in the world. Throw any two people together day after day. and unless they are utterly antagonistic in temperament they become attached to each other. Those with whom we are familiar become a habit with us. We get used to their ways, and their looks, so that they no longer grate upon us as a ‘We never notice whether they are beautiful or ugly. or whether they are entertaining or dull. Their little peculianties cease to irritate us because we have adapted ourselves to them. They have become as comfortable as an old shoe, and we cherish them often beyond their deserts, just because they have become part of our daily lives. Besides this, those who work side by side have the strong bond of a common interest. They are working to the same ends; they have the same plans and hopes and aspirations. and they are mutually helpful, and come to depend on each other, and all of this tends to promote affection between them. Also, they have something to talk about and never bore cach other, because shop talk is | always fascinating talk. And when a man and woman work side by side they come to know each | other as no other man and woman ever know each other outside of marriage. | Many a woman who has not been blessed with beauty, or with the attractions that aliure men, has a heart of gold. and a clever brain and a nimble tongue, and these the man who works beside her discovers. Many a man who is rough and uncouth in apprarance and has a gruft manner. is really tender and chivalrous, and kind and generous, and has a hundred good quaiities that the woman who works with him finds out. And that is why many matches are made in stores aind offices. Also, no one can conceal his or her cloven foot from those who work with them day after day. and so the men and women who work together are likely to fall in love with each other, or else to hate each other. DOROTHY DIX. EAR MISS DIX: I am engaged to a girl who refuses to marry because she is afraid of marriage. Her father has made her a pessimist about matrimony. Her mother warns her against it and tells her that when she herself was married her husband was an ardent lover and swore t7 do all in his power to make her happy. and that he robbed her of her little savings, and went after other women, | and has left her a b.oken old woman with seven children. I have told my girl that because her parerts' marriage was a failure is no reason why ours should be, but she is afraid to try it. Answer: Is vour girl going to refuse to eat meat because people have died of ptomalue poisoning? Will she never ride on a rallroad train because there have been wrecks? Will she refrain from going into any kind of business because women have failed as stenographers or bookkeepers or actresses, or what not? There is nothing in the world that is foolproof and in which you cannot fail. We can't stand shivering on the bank of life. We have to take our courage in our hands and shut our eyes and leap in, and take our chances on drowning, or winning the swimming medal. And that is true of marriage as it is of everything else, and whether [ marriage is a success or a failure depends altogether upon what you make of it 1 The fact that father was a rounder is no sign & girl's husband will be, and the fact that mother couldn't make a go of it is no indication that she cannot. She | may have profited enough by mother's experience to succeed where mother failed. | DOROTHY DIX. ! (Coperight The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle 1078.) 1998.) (Copstight Myself. Itallan river, Agalnst ‘Tip of the foot. Ourselves. ‘Twitehing. Within, 1 8 I 10 1z 114 Acknowledges, Conjunction, Girl's name. Southern State Dry Gioddess of earth, Vensel Nicknume Uppermost part Conduet ahbr) Japanese coin Hebrew month Swimming pool Down. = Rule Company Openings Small apike. Indin (poetic). Zme (symbol) State of being doubtful Exiat Ammon, Proceed Back of the neck Canvas shelter Act Mother ot Upon Dlesire. Amswer 10 Yesterday's Puzzle, : bbr). the wp corner, 1oll the squares Ughtly and when rolled shape bito crescents, pinching the ends togethor. Buke In & moderate oven uniil nrowned, 'These are deliclous for ) Printe Meadow 32 Patriotio organtzati o (b 44 Hireet (abby.), 30, Prefix; two, measure When all the photoplay houses re- quested the girls to remove their Merry Widow hats so that others in the audi- ence might enjoy the “flickers"? THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Sunday, February 19. Good and evil planetary influences will contend tomorrow, according to astrology, which reads in the stars cer- tain menacing promises. The early morning should be an aus- plcious time to seek new positions or to look for employment of any sort Under the planetary influences, be | fore noon the mind should be keen! active and awake to its best possi bilities. Prafessors, lawyers and writers should benefit from this configuration. which indicates Intense activity in certain types of mind. ‘There is a promising aspect for those who start any new enterprise. Mer- chants and manufacturers should profit. All planetary conditions presage for the United States continued prosperity, but there will be great increase in Gov- ernment expenditures. Leaders in public affairs are de. veloping under this planetary govern- ment, it is forecast, but there may be a period when new men will suffer from serious criticism. Women are to exercise influence in politics, but it is to be indirect infl ence in which past conditions and present status affect elections. Increased interest in the study of foreign languages may be apparent this year in the United States. Beauty will be much sought at this time when artistic imptises will be strengthened by the positing of the stars. The planetary government is most favorable to the development of all the finer things that make life rich and its experiences uplifting, the seers prophesy. Persons whose h date it {s mav expect success in ‘ways not looked for and favors from sources that are sur- prising Children born on that day probably will win success through real ab! ‘The sublects of this sign are usual most trustworthy. (Copvright. 1978 ) SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. I don't mind her gudge! her's only a baby and can stylish yet, but why 'joy her mush? [ ieht g her food. eat 1008 MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Sliced O miny W Sausages. Hashed Brov Brown Bread Mashed Puts - anmed Ginger Ale B Crackers, Cheese, PPER Cotfee. Baked O With Mushrooms ov Preserved Po Spice Cake BROWN BREAD Two cups rye meal. one cup cornmeal, one-third cup mo- lasses, one teaspoon salt. one cgg. one teaspoon soda disse m two tablespoons hat one pint sour m sins. Steam four b Toast ars Tea QINGER ALE FRUIT SALAD Sonk two tablespoons graw lated gelatin i two tablespoons cold water and ditssolve i one- third cup boiling water. then add one cup ginger ale, one-tourth cup lemon juice, two tablespoons sugar and few grains salt Strain and let stand until misture st fens. Fold 1 one-third cup mal- age grapes, skinned seeded and cut fn halves, one-t ery, seraped and sllves crosswise, one cup apples, cored, pared and cut jultenne-shaped | and four tablespoons canned shredded Plneapple. Chill i individual malds BAKED CREAMED CHICKEN WITH MUSHROOMS. Cook two tablespoons 1 flour twae tablespoons butter, when rothy, ndd gradually one pint hot milk, then add half a small onton, fine- Iy chopped, sprig of paraley, dash of cayenne, one-half teaspoon salt and one teaspoon leman futee SUr and cook until thick, strain add one and one-halt cups diced cooked ohieken. two-thinds can mushrooms cut i halves and one diced hard-boiled egy T to buttered dish. sprinkle with crumbs, dot with butter, bake Ln U brown and garnish with pan- ley befure aening The Sidewalks of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. Several professional men were sitting 1ul}y geflm;rlnr-d its ruré;uan..” Pa: lflm; unfathomable reason that ding-donge around s table in & ‘local club. One [UTVAEROmADIE Feason Lot A e of them chuckled as he rtlu.;u:d R Te- | iried to use the faucet. A few weeks cent experience. “My wife,” said he, | jaeer the electric light plant went out has always been enamored of the | o commission. While 1 was in town crinoline period. For many years she one day, my wife tried to call me up | protested “against the complexities of | ¢ I3V, P Fo® LG B S M. for !modern = living. ~Spinning wheels, | ginnel put a storm came up and put ! candle light, quilting parties and straw | the te lephone ont of commizsion. | rides, according to her, were far more |y R T er wh adequate than automobiles, moving | g Vet ? t a sma | plctures and radio. 1f she could only syer; those old, simj have an old-fashioned country house | fr folie didn [like her mother's father owned. We | S s tre wrtom could then settle down to the simple | Lt T life and I could practice in a small | prasnipros ! town among congenial neignbors and | FAndfather | everything would be ‘jake.’ { rambling roses meandering picket fence and inhale the evening | fragrance of honeysuckle. Crayon por- | traits would adorn the walls and a ' ypopr I reed organ would supersede our grand | M.nton | piano. What an imagination! What |y | would be more restful than to sit be- | | neath an old kerosene lamp shedding g | its feeble rays on an antique table. We uld draw our water fresh from a well bucket and in the Winter we i Jould sit and ruminate before a log ire. “Personally T prefer the white((— Fie—) warea! | In rented an ei; on a two-year lights and_ plenty| of action. In self- defense, though. I bought an old- abandoned place in Virginia. By the time 1 succecded| in reducing the &~ house to something | resembling the an- | te-bellum period 1120 | had set myself / back about $8,000. I'll admit we did get results. “Once into mess, 1 as t wife if it wouldn be a good idea to hire some colored boys to sit in back of the house in the eve: I m strum banjos and ground 1 even suggested the ssa’s in de cold. lend more atmosphe: that we hang an arti trees. “These wise cracks didn 1 bought a horse and buggy. We agreed ! to have nothing modern except a tele- | { phone, elect: lights, an electric pump | | for water, a bathroom and a modern | | furnace. Everything else was to remain | |in its medieval state, so to speak. We didn't even have a radio or taiking machine. Oh. we're going to lead the simple—the foolish—life all right. i “The village weekly printed thic squib: and Mrs. —— of Wash- ngton have purchased the propertv of —— where they make their per- | manent home. We welcome them to ofir midst.’ . “Well, for first e d ourselves Just before the tres to leave the wife decided to invite some old friends out. Up to that night, the water pump had faith- { 2 clap of O. 0. N. ‘Under this sod Lieth the bod! He is not For he’s God. 'w months we EDITH TANNEHILL. KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY PROF. JOSEPH JASTROW. A Difficult Daughter. T have a daughter 1133 weams of 3 i A reac or aa Az e 13l S ol traits may be appe: abmission s This is s0 sincer: called out typical a letter stions on disci: pline and the reply ad- dressed to one applies to many, making vance for slight differences in the cases. It also gives me a chance to say that letters often contain confid "‘d 1 ) e~ to respect them. e many an ts nts that are s ¢ aTe ready W@ wp of d e \\:ashington at Mt. Vernon of Wasn. e in his es- { ow hy took Butler-Flynn Paints consist of products bearing Trade Marks of national fame—such *61" Floor Varnish for floars and woodwork Rogers Brushing Lacquer for furniture “No Lustre” Wall Finish for interior walls Interior Gloss Finish for Nitchen and dathroom walls of Parking Space Butler-Flynn Paint Co. Whalesete and Retadd 609 (' St. Frank 131 tively to v bad | worse Teb bossed. OME CASes ) Red to mg Row the pa- and that 1 also & factor AMaking & ohid = Plenty often most Kindiv dispased or uncle or friend . M the fa and others w o old enough well W group daseny i albly would make a good a [ Bul canstder this aise 18 she willing to ged Wl she fee! that she is deing | seut away, O (hat w1 one of el

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