New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 14, 1929, Page 16

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T | [] association $1,623.57. The Income |manufacturef products of peace to for the year of 1928 alone was over that the parts should be interchange- able for quick repairs or replace- T : "of saving time and delay, is evident and, as stated above, the cost of sin, Minnesota and the Dakotas all GOOLIDGE IN FAYOR the necessities of war. | | manufacture on subsequent orders experienced the severe cold. Snow - NEW GHURCH HAS 1$80,000. The outstanding expenditures for “We are anxious to do our part,:ments in action. This required that and, in order to do our part, fecl the job should be as thoroughly for this new gun carriage will be bauked railroads, disrupting sched- \ | |the year include $29,300 for the |church building; $8,200 for the par- ish house on Eddy-Glover boule- |vaza; expense incurred during the 'summer school session, $734; jani- |tor service, $645; rent for the us . |of the Y. M. T. A. B. hall for serv- cm Pm 1n Yfl[‘ ices prior to the ercction of the |church, $450; church fixtures, § 455; pews, $3,175; parish house fur. Although only 13 months old, the niture and office fixtures, $1,600 youngest parish in the eity has other outstanding debts paid during " |the year, $35,616, while the pastor's shown a gross income of $100,175.28 4 ¢ assistant’s salary, and other for the fiscal year ending Decem- |incidentals made up the balance of ber 31, according to financial report the entire sum expended during the s ¢ Rev. |vea ; ,480.15, leaving ade public yesterday by Rev. vear, Which “35 $97.450.1 Stephen Bartkowskl, pastor of Holy |a balance of $2,695.13 as of January Cross church on Farmington ave- 1st. " $106,17 INCONE Remarkable Strides by Holy it incumbent upon us to urge con- tooled up as is neceasary in the pro- much reduced. ules, and many highways were 8 N st gress to enable the mnuhclurem“ of the country, who will have this | }lml responsibility, to prepare “One factor which influenced to 'a very considerable extent the de- livery of equipment in 1917 and 1918 which, I hope will never be Quction of automobiles. “Four thousand three hundred and sixty-three tools, jigs fixtures, blocked. Temporary rellef late today— about 20 above, the weatherman said—was _expected to be followed | Says it Brings "telief From Exscessive Bequosts Which Have to Be will be served. will be the hostess. The Hartford County Y tracl meet will be held Saturday- after- | | | themselves by acquiring knowledg” a.q gauges had to be designed and In advance, and by studying and|manufactured for this purpose. A planning the manufacture of the ar- poe i Cr o, L ares, L B 2ol paotusiinn. sn acasly EA0. ool bodioniwero muade from e e e throug castings, 1,006 different patterna had qdu tional orders. (to be designed and patterns made, . Trise. 4a chairman. of fhe|SSxinee oitalgad, petare. the ma- special committec of the U. . Cham. | Crune hop '-""“‘: u:'!‘" wath on . ber of Commerce, has ably discussed “r: xtures an 1a required m{' {the importance of educational orders | CFaft gun carriage. . I have lista o |and has gone into the matter o | these tools which are a very interest- ! thoroughly that there is no need of |In€ exhibit and illustrate, perhaps. ! my enlarging upon the points which |88 Well as anything that could be he has mentioned. displayed, the immense amount of preparatory work required before a nue, Less than a year ago the parish crected its temporary edifice, which | was constructed at a cost of $29,- 10, bought other adjoining proper- | | kowski expressed his satisfaction of In giving the report, Father Bart- | pescribes Manufacturers’ Dificulties 4 “I can, perhaps, give you an illus- the excellent progress of the parish ! tration of the difficulties that a man- and thanked the members as well a5 | yracturer would encounter in at- the societies and the trustees for |tcmpting to produce munitions and | their work during the year. He|equipment in time of emergency | y and cleared all of its debts with | the exception of one outstanding |insinuated, however, that there was other work ahead and other projects in mind, which will require as much |zeal and cooperation to fulfill, PEASE ADVOCATEY WAR PREPAREDNESS (Continued from First Page) g contract was la- ter increascd to a total of 612, One hundred and twenty carriages were lly finished and are now in ac- srvice, T understand, as regu- pment of the United States army. Almost superhuman cfforts were made by the New Britain Machine company and every preference was given the planning and manufacture of this work. “By July, 1919, the company was delivering these gun carriages com- plete with sighting mechanism, mounted on steel trailers, guns REV. STEPHI BARTKOWSKI mounted, proof fired, tested and in- | note, and since the erection of the church has made tremendous pro- ress both financially and in the growth of its membership, so th today the edifice, which was then thought to be large enough to min- ister to the parishioncrs, is ovel crowded at cach mass. It was prosperous year and largcly due the untiring cfforts of the and his able assistant, Rev. Plaskowski, who was material in the building up of a splendid morale among the younger members, and grouping them in sodalities and so- sccted, at the rate or nearly three a day, but they should have been delivered in July, 1918, at this ra instead of in July 1919.” Danger in Lack of Preparedness e declared with emphasis that Germany had been attacking the ‘nited States in July, 1917, it is doubtful whether these guns and arriages would have been of rvice in July, 1918, and much s in July, 1919.” | Submitting photostatic prints of the detall drawings of this anti-air- craft gun carriage, Pease said that cieties. The and cooperation 4,363 different tools, jigs, fixtures manifested in the beginning of the land gauges had to be designed and parish’s existece was kept up|manufactured for it. throughout the year and today the| “These items are all special,” he parish, although the youngest in the declared, “cannot be designed and one of the largest and from |made in a minute, and if not in the indications of the report, promising | manufacturer's hands in time of | without having had previous experi. {ence in the manufacturer of the! |article in question by giving the ex- | perience, briefly, of the New Britain | Machine Co., in manufacturing three inch anti-aircraft gun carriages in | 1917 and 1918, “The New Britain Machine Co., | was chosen to manufacture this in- | tricate piece of mechanism because | of their experience in the manufac- | ture of precision machinery of about the same size and weight as an anti- | aircraft gun carriase, the supposition | | being that there 1 ‘re very few con- | cerns in the country better fitted to | !undertake a contract of this char-| | acter. i “A contract was placed with the | New Britain Machine Co. on July | 1917 for 408 auto trailer car- for three inch | | | 1 later increased to a total |One hundred and twenty carrlages | | were finally finished and are-now in | | actual service, I untlerstand. as reg- | | ular equipment of the U. §. army. “The delivery required in this, emergency was 10, January 1915; 80, February |1918; 60, March 1918; 80, April 1918; 104, May 1918: 124, June| 1918; 102, July 1918; 102, Au[usli 11018, “Almost superhuman cfforts were | made by the New Britain Machine Co. and every perference was given | the planning and manufacture of | this work. Facllitics were increased. | and the deliveries required would | have been somewhere nearly approx- | imated if-it had been humanly pos- sible. The actual deliveries were as follows: 1, August, 1915; 4, January, 1919; | 20, previous to May 1, 1919; 12, May, | 36, June, 1938; 37, July 1, to 16 1919. Three a Day Production “By July 1919, the New Britain Machine Co. was delivering these | gun carrlages complete with sight- ing mechanism, mounted on steel trailers, guns mounted, proof fired, | gun carriage or any other similar piece of equipment can be put into | production. “The time required of the en- | gineering organization of any ma- {chine shop or manufacturer in the necessary again, to such an extent 'by new cold, borne across the mid- at least, was the incompleteness of | West by winds from Alaska and ac- design. The 3-inch anti-aircraft gun companied by snow. carrlage, model 1917, had never | East Also Hit been built. I hope and believe that| New York, Jan. 14.—UP—The |the ordnance department will never |mercury fell to new low marks for be caught again in an emergency the winter in the eastern part of the without finished detail designs of country today. thé most modern inventions of war,| A sharp drop in temperature, ac- thoroughly tested in service. I_hope companied by snow, brought sub- the department will always have 2°re weather to many points in New funds available for investigation and YOrk state, while in western Penn- experimental work along these Svlvania theremometer readings lines. |were close to the zero mark. 4 400 Revisions in Design | Stony Creek had the lowest tem- | “Because the department was not | Perature in New York state, with 12 ' in this condition, the New Britain |below zero. At Ogdensburg, where it | Machine Co. received over 400 re- |Was 11 below zero, the St. Lawrence | | visions in the design of component |Fiver froze over for the first time noon at 1:30 o'clock in Manchester M 1. Chaetty at the Recreation center. All cn- ‘Washington, Jan. 14 UP—Rellef tries must be in by Friday. from excessive expenses sustained| The Wesleyans of the Methodist by charitable organizations in seek- ' church will meet in the church par- ing funds has been pointed out by lors this evening at § o'clock. From President Coolidge as one advantage 7 to 8 o'clock the church will be |of the Community Chest method pf open for the election of a lay dele- | sathering contributions, in a letter to ' gate to the coming conference. All {officlals of the local fund organiza- church members are eligible to vote, tion. On Wednesday evening the Proba- Approving the Community Chest tioners will meet with Rev. A. L. plan as “the best which has been 'Burgreen at 6:30 o'clock. The mid- | devised” to provide for local bene- | week service will be held at 7:30 volences, the president added: “By eliminating much of the cost of collection it increases the amount actually available for charitable purposes and makes for a wiser and o'clock. Children's haircuts _reduced from S0c to 35c. Patsy Sisti, A. E. F. Barber Shop, Kensington.—ad\t, parts of the model 1917 3-inch anti- |this winter, Plattsburg had five be- more equitable division of funds in | i | manufacture of all preparation for the manufacture of aircraft an article cannot be ignored, and if process of manufacture. These revi- not provided for will stultify any sions, in almost every instance, call preparedness program. |ed for changes in tools and fixtures, Preparedness Program and the delay in the completion of “In my opinion, an educational the work caused by substituting new order to a manufacturer will be of |parts for parts discarded and re- very little value in the preparedness machining parts where interferences ' program unless the ordnance de- |developed, is almost beyond esti- partment is permitted and instructed ‘mate. to include in that order, although it| “In this statement, there is no re- is only for a limited number of |flection intended as to the ability or articles, an order for the design and | the sincerity of purpose of the de- tools, fixtures, | signers of the gun carriage. A sit- and gauges that would be required |uation of this kind would exist in a ghn carriage during the | accordance with the needs and op- portunities of cach. The very fact !en snow. The light snow fall ushered ',{'f;,";: .'},m:x',';,c;nm T&plf w:,::: [the cold wave into New York city cause tends in itself to increase the Wwhere temperature dropped at the |pumber of benevolences dependent |rate of four degrees an hour to 12 | for their existence upon annual con- above, | tributions, so that there is a real There was extreme cold Weather danger that the fine objects of each throughout Ontario, with 44. degrees | may be obscured by the problem of |below zero at White River, a record | maintenance and the true spirit of {for the province. Temperatures @t benevolence chill by an endless |other points ranged from 33 degrees succession of pressing demands.” helow to 21 below. At Saulte Ste.!| |Marie the §t. Mary's river was | frozen over, causing a suspension of ow, while Syracuse suffered near- ero temperature with a wind driv- | | [ | { ST. MARY'S CHURCH PASTOR REPORTS Receipts of Parish for Past Year Total 887,706 | 8t Mary's cemetery on Stanley to be financially independent, The income includes among other items, a balance of $18,946.96 col- lceted in 1927 before the parish was organized and during the six weeks from the time the parish celebrated its first mass in the Y. M. T. A, B. hall, which was used for Sunday morning services up until March 23, 1 the temporary edifice was |fore your committee in reference to | emergency would delay the produc- tion of intricate articles of equip- ment far beyond the time of deliv- tested and inspected, at the rate of nearly three a day, but they should have been delivered in July, 1918, at this rate instead of in July, 1919. “If Germany had been attacking {he United States in July, 1917, it is mittee was as follows: doubtful whether these guns and gun | “The opportunity that you are|carriages would have been of any glving manufacturers to appear be-|gervice in July, 1919 and much less | uly, 1919, The Statement Mr, Pease's statement to the com- for the manufacture of the article on a production basis. “These items are all special, can- not be designed and made in a min- ute, and if not in the manufactur- er's hands in time of emergency | would delay the manufacturer of in- ricate articles of equipment far be- yond the time for which they are |scheduled for delivery on the present | preparedness program. “These tools and fixtures could be | made in connection with the first ed- ucational order and stored by the manufacturer or in government ar- senale, but could be used in subse- quent preparedness orders and, by their use, the economy in the manu- facture of the equipment, compared with manufacture by tool room methods without fixtures, would pay | for the tools in the manufacture of & vory few units. “As an illustration, the New Brit- |ain Machine Co., under the present preparedness program, is on the schedule for delivery of six anti- aircraft gun carriages in the seventh month, 10 in the eighth month, 24 in the ninth month and so on, and the program calls for the same three |in anti-aircraft gun carriage, model 1917, as is covered by the drawings before you. 1917 Model Obsolete “The New Britain Machine Co. has made the special tools, jigs, fixtures and gauges to the number of 4,363, and they are now stored in the Rock Island Arsenal. It would be possi- ble, with no change in design, and it would be perfectly practical to ex- pect the New Britain Machine Co. to | get into production and make the deliyeries called for on the prepared- ness program because the New Brit- jain Machine Co. has had experience private plant where production of an intricate machine was attempted | from drawings before model ma- chines were built and the “bugs,” as we call them, worked out. “In the emergency of 1917, a mod- crn_anti-aircraft gun carriage had to be designed and production had to be started znd the officers in | charge of this job in the ordnance department deserve a great deal of credit for their accomplishment. “The pilot mount, or models of other equipment made in the arse- nals, would avoid delays from causes described above. Original deliver- ies of 18 months would not be neces- sary as designs would be established but for manufacturers to do part in supplying munitions and paredness program, i |sirable but necessary, | that they would derive from educa- Itional orders and that they prepare themselves for the emergency by | having on hand special tools and fix- | tures, being necessary for inter- { changeahility and required for mod- |crn methods of production, all of | which could be provided for if funds | Moosehead lake, where the govern- arc provided the ordnance depart- | ment thermometer registercd 16 de- | | ment for educational orders.” BITTERLY GOLD IN their | ferry service. 16 Biclow in Maine Boston, Jan, 14.—(P—New Eng- {land temperatures were lower today [than on any previous day of the winter apd many communities awoke [to find the mereury below zero. | The official readings in Boston showed 2 minimum temperature of G degrees above zero. Unoficial | readings hovered around ' the zero | mark. | In Greenville, Me., reading was 16 degrees ad this was believed to he the coldest spot in New England. Al- though snow covered the ground in most places, the weuther was gen- erally clear. the official below zero cquipment under the - present pre- | s not only de- | experience | Windy Also Portland, Me., Jan. 14 (P—The cold wave, accentuated in | Maine by a north wind, | throughout the state temperatures extending | zero. Officially the coldest spot. was at Greenville, at the lower end of extended today, with far below | grees below zero. |~ Unofticial reports ranged down to 130 below at North Gray, miles northeast of Portland. The lowest reported from Aroos- castern | | street will be completely equipped | with amiesite drives by next sum- mer, according to an announcement made by Rev. Matthew J. Traynor, | pastor, in connection with his an. VETFRAN WICKET | PLAYER IS DEAD }Devitt Clinfon Stevens Member of Famous Bristol Team - | | | | | (Special to the Herald) Bristol, Jan. 14—DeWitt Clinton | Stevens, 79, a member of Bristol's famous wicket team of the 70's, died Sunday at the Bristol hospital fol-| lowing a six days' illness with pneu- monia. Mr. Stevens was born in the Cop- | | per Mine district on April 23, 1849. [He later moved to the Forestville | section and for a number of years was employed at the Welch Clock | Co. For the past 30 years he had| ! been employed by the E. Ingraham | | Co. Mr. Stevens was a bowler on Bris- {tol's wicket team which was recog- nized as the strongest in the state it not in the entire country. On the | team with Mr. Stevens were Miles | Lewis Peck, president of the Bristol avings bank; Michael Rohan, at| resent employed by the Bristol| ppy, MATTHEW J. TRAYNOR Traction Co.; City Clerk Thomas B. ¥ Steele, A. M. Sigourney, H. A. War- nual report rendered at the masses opened. During the year of 1928 a total of $10,7. was collected for seat offerings; church collections at offertory netted 34, first and third Sunday of the month offerings | of war is very much appreciated. wmounted to $4,532.11; the yearly| “The, preparedness membership collection netted a sum |conceived by the war of $11,669.50, while collections dur- was based on the experience gained ing vespers and other services net- \in the World war. The part of this ted $887. Other donations and program with which we are con- offcrings through other sources | cerned, as manufacturers, will made up the balance, whereas ex'ra income came through various chan- nels, such as the dramatic circ plays during the year, which netted the parish approximately 00; income from the banquet given in | honor of Father Bartkowski in Iebruary at the Rialto hall, $871.9; the bazaar held in November at the Y. M. T. A. B. hall, $9,821.87, and a donation from the Holy Trinity the importance of educational orders equipment from the 732 |insuring the country’s safety in time with munitions and equipment army under the preparedness mo bilization program. The require ments, as I understand it, have been | worked out so that if the manufac- turers come through with the pro- duction of munitions and equipment allocated to them, the army and navy will be supplied with these he New Britain Machine Co. wa: lin time of peace for munitions and | complimented by the U. 8. army ord- standpoint of | nance on the efficiency of their pro- duction methods, and the quality of | their products. The delay could hav program as peen avoided if the New Britain Ma- department | chine Co. had had educational or- | ders, How to Avold Delay *“If you have no objection, I would ' be |like to go a little further into de- |the supplying of the army and navy | tail so as to make clear the reasons as| why it took 18 months to begin de- ! fast as they are needed by the new | livering these gun carriages in quan- ity instead of six months, and how | large part of this delay could hav | been avolded. | facturers thos: | and pargicularly to make intricate pieces of mechan. 1sm, the details of which they w: *“The case is that of other manu- manufacturers who were called upon | necessities from month to month as|unfamiliar with and of which they the different units are trained and|had had no experience in manufac- \ Skating Schedule Skating at Stanley Quarter skating at Walnut Hill Skating at Willow Brook ready to take the fleld. . | “The war material and equipment that will be required, with few ex- ceptions, is not the standard produc of any of the country, and the problem which we |as manufacturers, will have the re | sponsibility of solving is the tra | portation of our plants from th AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN “Ella used to argue that whatever a man and wife had belonged to one as much as the other, but she ain’t men. tioned it since she inherited that thousands dollars.” (Copyright, 1928, Publimers Syndicate) “Ma says I'm sym- pathetic that my heart goes out to all outsiders that I see havin' as hard a time as S0 Pl A Wb, »:» :,w For Modern Five Room COMMERCIAL COMPANY INSURANCE REAL ESTATE Commercisl Tram Compaay Buiiding Bungalow it manufacturers in this | ture, “I have brought photostatic prints |of the assembly and detail drawings of this antl-aircraft gun carriage. In order to make this gun carriage a | serviceable unit, it was necessary AN DO THINGS RANPAY I JESS DROPPED IN T'SEE HOwW MOU WAS MAKIN' OUT YER FUST DAY IN THE DRUG BUSINESS s | i~ manufacturing this particular gun carriage and because the tools, jigs and fixtures, above referred to are available. However, the three inch |anti-aircraft gun carricge which the New Britain Machine,Co. made in 1917 and 1918 {8 being superseded by a more modern gun carriage. “A pllot gun carriage had been made at the Watertown arsenal. 1f this works successfully in tests, it will be adopted and substituted in the preparedness program for the one with which we have had e perience in manufacture. sirabllity, therefore, of not only th New Britain Machine Co. but what- ever manufacturer nssumes the re- | sponsibility for the manufacture of e e e - |the new anti-aircraft gun carriage « | under the preparedness program, to have an educational order for the manufacture of & few of these gun carriages, is sclf-evident. The de- sirability, also, that this order should include an order for a com- plete set of special tools, jigs fix- tures and gauges, required in the manufacture, from the standpoint MA wWANTS FIVE CENTS WORTH OF ASAFETIDA. The . de- | 0ok county w below at Fort Farifield, where a strong wind made lit the most uncomfortable day of {the season. Farmington in Frank- | lin county reported 14 below; Bath, | gadhoc county ten below. Fourteen Below pavements | Pittsfield. M Jan. 14 ®—To- 32 Below Recorded day was the coldest duy of the Cary, TIl, was believed to have | wWinter in the western part of Massa- been the coldest spot in the state |chusetts. The thermometer regis- Sunday when the temperature hit |tered fourtcen degrees below in 32 below during a ski meet. At Pana | Pittsficld and twelve below Ithe snow and the unusual cold lenox. brought out slelghs for the first, time in a quarter of a century. | Among the 114 alarms the Chi-| New Haven, Jan. 14 (P—Below cago fire department answered yes- | 7°F0 lemperatures were registered terday was a spectacular blaze atop |11 Many towns throughout the state the Foreman National Bank build. | 104y in the cold weather wave that !ing, under construction at La Salle StTuck Connecticut from the west and | Washington strects, A sala. 21y Sunday. The coldest spot in wenlee Jott 1 kekp' W Goncret ]'\"," state to be recorded was at from freezing was believed to lz;x\\-"l‘rlo"“::}' % ‘l‘p""‘]' ,”‘", il started the fire in the tower, which | (o rPet 19 ton wegrecs helow zero. |became @ torch lighting roofs of | corrcaP{MINEN 1OW marks wero re- |surrounding Loop skyscrapers and |yowna Tristor mevmrten o gerent 3 3 owns. Bristol reported a drop to sending flaming brands 1o nearby | it pelow, New Haven kept above :JI‘Y;'!N{“T‘OS:“ ‘)‘::{f‘s‘:‘:“:l‘io:':‘i l“:"l"v‘:p {the zcro mark, with the thermome- i 25th 1 2 ter registering officially at five of the 40 story building were de- |anove. stroyed by the fire which was not | - WESTERN STATES (Continued from Tirst Page) sons finjured in falls on slippel in Connecticut Cold | | Hartford reported a low mark of | ner, James A. Matthews. H. B. Cook, Seth Barnes and J. H. Ward. On August 5, Stevens as a mem- ber of the Bristol team scored 40 runs while his teammgf, H. B. ! Cook, scored 47, in a gamd @igainst Burlington. Bristol won 409 to 109, the newspaper account of the fol- lowing day indicating that “the Bristol players made so many runs vesterday. Father Traynor described |the work being carricd on at the | cemetery and stated that all of it is of a permanent nature. Mis report showed that the re- | ceipts in the parish for the year just completed amounted to $87 |1706.25. The parish numbers ap- | proximately 12,000 and the churgh plant, including all of its buildings . “"‘i' 8";‘[ tired “fa:"‘ "'l"’""»"r mem. |04 other real estate, is worth con- Mr. Stevens was a charter mem- | g0 oo 000,000, g [ bor of Weleh Fire Co. and was the | Sacrably ever $2,000,000. 1t s in oldest active member of the volun-|~"yy /ol Ry At e ane teer department. For a number of il Y ; years ho also served the town and | MarTiages ook place in the parisi horough of Bristol in the cnpamty‘durmg the past year but the births St Gonstable }(‘XC(‘L‘dl:d the deaths Ly more than Siruiving are his wits; ane sorf | E7ice. Thero were 18 marringess Kermit Stevens; two brothers, [PROTMed 155 death, TL males ! Charles Stevens of Torestville ang | 204 64 female BlLiven St e | Philo Stevens of Moodus, Conn, | 3dults were baptized. L D i e held, at 2| Confirmation wus administered to o'clock ‘Tuesday afternoon at ”"_‘HS children and adults during the funeral home of Thomas I, O'Rrien | Year and 449 children received their 39 Main street. Rev. John Wil-|first communion. kins, rector of Trinity Episcopal There wel 307 children taught church, will officiate and burial will |11 St. Mary’s Parochial chool and he in West cemetery. {the weck-day chureh schools took |care of 1,300 more for religious in- istruction who attend the public BERLIN NEWS as costly as it was threatening. Firemen worked 300 feet in the air in below zero temperaturcs, and came down when the fire was out coated with ice. The loss was esti- lmated at less than $5,000. | three ahove the zero point at 7 this morning. Watcrbury registered eight above. (Continued from Page Seven) The Knights of Pythias will hold Herald Classificd Ads are for your their mecting tomorrow evening at convenience. |8 o'clock at Community hall. | schools. | The trustecs of the church ‘are | Patrick F. King and John Collin: i | | READ HERAL ASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS Herald € helpers. BLONDES ARE LIKE THAT SUCH A FACE -1 $HOULD THINK THAT YOU WOULD BE ASHAMED OF VOURSELF— AND I WASHED YOUR FACE NOT HALF AN HOUR THE KIND OF FACE THAT HERE YARE. YOUNG LADY ANYTHING ELSE? I GUESS I GOY A i, FER GOSH SARES, TAKE T Ig 1 WOULDNT WRITE THEM Two

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