The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 19, 1904, Page 2

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ISCO CALL, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1904 THREE BISHOPS ARE SELECTED Editor Berry, Dr. McDowell and Dr. Spellmeyer Are the Successful Candidates TWO BALLOTS TAKEN Slow Progress Is Made in Methodist Conference Elee- tion at -~Los- Angeles ——— LOS ANGELES, May 18.—The second ballot at the Methbdist Gencral Con- ference resulted in the election of Dr. W #. McPowell of New- York,- secre- y of the Board of Education, and HONTSFORLOST WIFE AND BABE Oregon Attorney Invokes Aid of Police in Searchi for the Missing Pair| IS FRANTIC | HU AND { Woman Starts for Her Home | on the Afternoon of May 4| | ‘and Is Not Seen Again R Special Dispatch to The Call. { "PORTLAND, Ore, May 18.—Under | | most mystifying circumstances Mrs | Geéorge H. Hall and heér ten-months- | | 0ld baby boy suddenly disappeared in | CALIFORNIA’S FORESTRY AN EXPOSITION FEATURE |People Marvel at the Wonderful Redwoods Taken From the Pacific Coa play of Lumber Imp BY PAUL ST. LOUIS, Fair city some weather that thoroughly pleases even the Californians. The days are as balmy as the pleasant ones of the California winter and the people from the Golden State are beginning to feel at home. St. Louis is redeeming her- self in the matter of weather and making up for the unpleasant variety May 18.—The World’s | she supplied before the opening of the fair. Whenever the elements behave badly here the ‘“very unusual” of the is now and has been for | time furnishing a brand of| WILL PRODUCE l A NEW DRAMA Father Kavanaugh’s Play to Be Presented by Students of Santa Clara College ———— BASED ON HISTORY st and the Splendid Dis- orted From Philippines EDWARDS, riety and distracting in name. The Government practically goes through the process of paying a duty to itself. A World’s Fair is a great bonded warehouse. Foreign goods are gp- praised and display is allowed, t duty is charged on everything sold. There is some work for the customs men to do. Mr. Maguire was chosen for his arduous post from applicants among the brightest men in the ser- ‘\'l(:e all over the country and natur- SANTA CLARA, May 18.—The pres- ally feels complimented. | entation of the great religious drama, Edmund A. Felder, who was con- | “Henry Garnett, Priest and Martyr,” nected with the Midwinter Fair in|written by/Rev. D. J. Kavanaugh, S. J., San Francisco, is executive officer of | a member of the faculty of Santa Clara the Philippine exposition board. He College, is awaited with deep interest. IS i Entire Proceeds of Enter-! tainment to Be Devoted to MecKinnon Memorial Fund Special Dispatch to The Call. ADVERTISEMENTS. Good Shoes For Littie Women $1.45 Last week we got acquainted with hundreds of boys and we tried to make them our friends by giv- ing them good values. THIS WEEK We are going to share profits with the little women of our city. Vici kid or box calf, light or heavy sewed soles, stitched edges, new low school heel. Sizes 11 to 2....... Sizes 214 to 5%4...... SOLID ENOUGH FOR They look better than the picture. NEAT ENOUGH FOR DRESS, SCHOOL. $r.45 .$1.65 SEE OUR WINDOWS. ’ SUCCESSOR TO NOLAN BROS. SHOE Phelan Buliding Henry Spellmeyer of Newark &S|, .09 ypon the afternoon of Wed- | St. Louisans gounds like an echo Biehops. The count of votes was com- 4 i ince | from California—where the occasional pleted just before midnight and the | nesday, May 4. Day and night smr\.wh oAb cat brines: Chous Fommittee having tha matter in charge |that time the husband, George H. (hallstorm or Foucbur K | same words of apology to the stranger. has an office in the main building on Martin V. Merle, who so-successfully the grounds and directs all the work | directed the production of the Passion 812-814 Market Street the resui sent the! ed to make of them, howe congratulations Drs llmeyer and thus th What the publi McDowell and result became will not ncement vas to the f vetes, but who »an " FIRST BALLOT. taken for Bishop resulted in the v e _aspirant, Rev. t vy, editor of the Epworth cordance with- the réc- mmittee on in- ht candidates. nd the-dele- were wr vote for whom they more result was that re voted for t and Dr 1 ho received that was 531 meyer of Newark re- F Chancellor 4 ers in the vc from the nv Ir red upoen the vote wa precinct vote at > vote. as t oo after- g was wn that only one A and the delega k another b ot It was unani- agreed that the tellers should cond ballot to-night and sult to the conference mp Ctic d result kn u mously count BISIIOP BERRY APPLAUDED. J. F. the ry received ovation when the fi ures were ed, the entire a sembly rising and applauding him as he was escorted seat among the Bishops on the g 3 There scoves of complimentary votes nging rom one to ten, nd from that up to twen- Buckley honored with twe Bovard M. C. ), who received v stated to the confer- fter the first ballot that he was a candidate and requested the for him. Among the complimentary votes were twenty-six for E. R. Dille of Oakland; four for G. A. Rader, edi- tor of the Conference Christian Advo- not delegates not to v vate; twenty-three for Rev. Matt Hughes of City and forty- eight for Rev. W m Bird. MUCH INTEREST DISPLAYED. Buccessive adjournments did not break the intemse interest in the re- =ult of the balloting manifested by the throngs of spectators who filled the boxes and crowded the balcony and gallery. EBach convention witnessed e number the committee refused to The conference will ballot | n morning’s sessic y again in the after- in | Hall, an attorney at St. Helens, has searched for the missing woman and their child. .Chief Hunt and his police force, along with private detectives, are also working upon th¢ case, but no clew has been found, and to-day | the mystery is as deep as before the | search began. The suicide theory has been discuss- ed by the husband, but he dreads to | think that his wife would have com- mitted self-destruction along with her | baby and does not belleve this solu- tion possible. % “I am nearly like a crazy man,” said | Hall to-day, as he left the police sta- | tion after agking whether any trace bad been found of the missing woman. | | “If T do not find hem soon I shall surely | go mad. I have been hunting her day | and night since a week ago Sunday. | She had no occasion to leave her home, as everything was comfortable for her and we never had any trouble.” The last that was seen of the woman | was at 2:30 o'clock, when she arrived from Oregon City upon the afternoon of May 4. She came in with her moth- er, M H. C. Carmack. When the | man, with her baby, left the car at First and Taylor streets she start- ed for the wharf, where she intended to board the steamer Mascot and leave | for St. Helens. She told her mother that she was going straight home. She d her husband was to meet her here 1 Portland and they would go home together. ARRE D FOR SELL BOGUS WHISKY CURE Nebraska Doctor Is Accused of Ob- taining Money by False Pretenses, TACOMA, Wash., May 15.—Dr. A. E. Disbrow of Creighton, Neb., has beeh | arrested at Sloux City, charged with defrauding J. H. Hanna of Bellingham out of $7000 by selling him a “whisky cure” formula. The purchaser claims { the cure was simply morphia, which buoyed up the aleoholic-soaked spirits of the inebriate long enough to make him willing to part with his money. Hanna bought a third interest in Dis brow’s proposed company for $3000, and later bought another partner’s interest for 34000, thus sinking $7000. This transaction occurred nearly two years ago. Last year Disbrow defeated an mpt to extradite him from Ner ka on technical grounds. He fighting arrest at Sioux City by habeas corpus. | -3 the same large assemblage and gen- | eral impatience to hear the tellers’ an-| nouncement. Hearty applause greeted | the appearance of the tellers on the floor and this quickly quiet when their handed to Presiding Bishop 3 pnouncément. A storm of applaus when the first words of the repor solute showing Dr. Berry elected by a vote | of 531—44 more than the number neces- | sary to a choice—fell from the Bishop’ lips After the reading of the entire! i list of candidates voted for, 120 in num- ) ber, 2 second ballot was ordered and | at once proceeded with. Upon retire- Eml—nl of the tellers the conference ad- until 9 o'clock to-morrow | ourned morning. | The committee on temporal economy | this afternoon decided to recommend | to the General Conference of the Meth- odist Episcopal Church, now in session here, that the size of future Geheral Conferences be reduced from a basis of 2 delegates to every 45 members of an- nual conferences to a basis of 2 for every 60 members. This would reduce the size of General Conferences to 550 membe: instead of 750 members, on | the basis of the present church mem- bership. | at fairs there. ., though, as if it's “very much oftener here. California’s fores: display is one of the handsome exhibits of the fair. W. H. Mills is chief of this depart- ment. He is not here, but the mate- rial for the display was collected un- | | der his direction by Thomas Hatch, the “wizard of the woods,” whose work in this line is well known in San Fran- cisco through displays made by him To Hatch the trees talk almost. There is a language for him in the rustle of their leaves and the crackling of the twigs. No X-ray is needed by him to tell what is in their trunks. *“What the bark shows the wood must bear,” he savs. The old woodsman gazes into the very hearts of these, his children, and knows what the saw will bring to light. Among the curious figures on pieces in his collection are the “Dutchman and his pipe,” “the human foot” and the “face of Melba.” He is going to write a bock on wood lore some day and tell all the family secrets of the trees. BURLS ARE INTERESTING. The redwood burl is the most prom- inent of the woods used in the ex- hibit. There are many Californians, even, who do not know just what this burl is. It is an immense knot that grows near the foot of many redwoods, some of them so large that boards several feet across can be cut from them. The gedwood burl is very hard, beautifully colored and susceptible of | No two | a polish that dazzles the eye. are alike in the grain. The coloriags are very warm and rich. Cut twenty thicknesses' to an inch, the polished burl makes a decorative veneer or panel that cannot be excelled. It is finding its way more and more into the interior decorations of homes be- longing to wealthy people of taste, both in this country and in Europe, and the | object of the display here is to still further familiarize the world with its | beauties and lead to the utilization of | the great quentity of burls now lying in the forests where the logger has done his work. There is nothing more beautiful in all the Forestry building than this California display. Besides the glow- ing burls there are many other sorts of polished woods that shine like succession of mirrors hung in a palace gallery. Redwood doors and casings are also shown. PHILIPPINE HARDWOODS. In hardwoods the Philippines are pre-eminent. A display 1s made by these new United States possessions | that will be one of the marvels of the | of installation. His home is now in Philadelphia, but he remembers pleasantly the Midwinter Fair and the old days in San Francisco. George P. Linden, who was in charge of the Argentine Republic display at the Chicago Fair, and for the last ten years has been connected with the | Philadelphia Commercial Museum, is curator of the Philippine exhibit, hav- | ing been sent by the Government to | evening of May 26, when the drama will the fslands sixteen months ago 1o be produced in the auditorium of Santa | | 8ather the material. He is familiar | Clara College. | With every one of the almost innumer- | “Henry Garnett” is the result of | able articles brought over, though it!years of patient labor on the part of looks as if one mind couldn’t grasp Father Kavanaugh, and is the first them all. 5 | dramatic production of his gifted pen. | Missouri and California are becoming Father Kavanaugh has already shown quite chummy. The space of the | considerable literary talent, and his mother State of the fair and that of friends predict that his dramatic work California adjoin and such a condition | will prove a great success. The drama of familiarity has resulted that they js based on a historical occurrence— exchange tack hammers and SWwap the famous English gunpowder plot— hasheeshes about fertility of soil and and tends to establish the innocence of wonders of products. Matt W. Hall, Pather Garnett from any complicity who is superintending the installation jn the crime. The text follows close | of the Missouri exhibit, is & six-footer | along the lines of history and in many | of genial disposition, who seems to af- | places the actual words of the conspir- filiate naturally with the Golden State | ators in the plot are quoted. The first boomers. He says he is going to make et opens in an English inn, with a Missourians of them and they declare number of pursuivants (priest hunters) | they are going to make him a Califor- | scated at gaming tables. Father Gar- nian. Mr. Hall is the legislative father nett, disguised as a traveler, enters the | of the exposition. He has served for room, but is soon suspected by the | years in the State Legislature, from pyrsuivants, who leave to make ar- | Saline County, where he is a large rangements to effect his capture. | farmer, and has introduced all the ex- | English soldiers are summoned and position bills, including the one au-| while they are breaking down the | thorizing St. Louis to bond itself for | front doors of the inn Father Garnett 35,080.000. | makes his escape. | Dr. Waters, dean of the Missourl — The second act shows a secluded | State Agricultural Coilege and Com- | gpot on the River Thames. The con- missioner for Missouri, is also rapidly | spirators assemble to draw up plans | becoming a Californian. for the carrying out of their plot. JOKERS IN COMPETITION. | Percy, a supposed conspirator, but in Hall wandered across the border into | Teality an agent of Prime Minister Califorpia the other day, and after Cecil, joins the band and listens to getting’by Brown’s web ran up against the details. It is here that Calesby,: Pearce of Alameda, who called his at- | the leader of the conspirators, wish-| tention to a cherry tree stump two.feet | iig to strengthen the spirits of his| in diameter taken from the Meck place CcoRfederates, tells the lie that Father | at Haywards. Garnett has approved the plan and | “What did they cut the tree down thus gives out the only evidence upen | | for?” asked the .Missourian. which the Jesuit is afterward con- | | “It wasn't having a satisfactory | demned to death. { growth,” replied Pearce. ‘“They have | The third act represents the cellar | to pull those small ones out and put in | bsreath the House of Lords, where | healthy trees.” | Guy Fawkes is preparing to light the “Wonderful,” said Hall. “Something | mine. As he fires the fuse Percy remarkable how things will grow in a | jumps out at him from a secret hiding | fertile soil. Reminds me of our corn. | Place. A duel takes place, in which The only difference with us is that we | the fuse is cut, the lamp knocked over don’t want it to do its best. There’s a | and each man fights with a lantern | law now against planting any within in one hand and a sword in the other. | a hundred yards of a river because if it Fawkes is wounded and captured. falls down it impedes steamboat traffic. | _Act IV, scene 1, shows the session Some lumber mill men were out here | of the House of Lords in which Cecil from California last year and they discusses the plot in full, condemns Play, is still a student at the college, and is nightly engaged in rehearsing | the cast of 100 persons who are to take | part in the new play. The proceeds of the production are to be devoted to the McKinnon Memorial Fund, and it is confidently expected that a large sum will be realized. The Southern Pacific Company will run special trains to and from San Francisco on the | e——— THE PROFIT-SHARING SHOE STORE/ : OUR AGENT WILL CALL. ELEPHONE, telegraph or write us that you are going East, and at the earliest possible opportunity our agent will call on you and give you full informa- tion about our service. He will quote rates, reserve sleeping car berths, tell you what there is to see en route and why you should take the Rock Island System. The Rock Island System runs through trains daily from San Francisco and Los Angeles to Omaha, Kansas City and Chi- cago. ‘Through tourist sleepers to Mem- phis, Birmingham, St. Louis, Omaha, Kansas City, Chicago, St. Paul, Minne- apolis and hundreds of other towns and cities in the Central West. Telephone, telegraph or write—that is all that is necessary. Rocklsiand System C. A. RUTHERFORD, . District Passenger Agent, 623 Marke St., San Francisco, Cal. VOLUNTEER PHYSICIANS HOLD MONTHLY MEETING | Doctors W Are Looking Health of School Children Dis- cuss Various Phases of Work. The regular monthly meeting of the volunteer school of the Inspecting Physicians’ Association was held last night in the rooms of the Board of | Health. A large number of the doc- ICHL\'ESE WOMAN SUCCUMBS TO WOUNDS FROM DAGGER After } Gut Fong, Who Was Stabbed by High- binder, Dies at the Emergency Hospital. Gut Fong, the Chinese woman who | was stabbed by a highbinder Tuesday | night as she was returning to her home | at 19 Baker alley from a theater, died from the effects of her wounds at sun- exposition when it is thrown open to | tors who are looking after the health | the public on May 28. Many varieties of wood as hard as rock are shown in | the display, which is rapidly being put in place in the large nipa-thatched | buildings erected by the natives. The hard slabs, upon many of which ex- | pert American polishers are still at| work, look at a little distance like stone. Some specimens were lost through their dropping overboard and on the vessel that brought them to San Francisco. Among the specimens that people will marvel at and that will arouse the cupidity of the always absorbing syndicate are a slab of cedar 36 feet long and 6 feet wide and a slab of molave 10 by 10 feet square and 2% inches thick. The latter slab was 5 inches thick and it took two Chins in the Philippines a week to saw it into halves. James W. Maguire, for years in the San Francisco Custom-house, is here as special examiner of the United States Government and has charge of the appraisement of all World's Fair | He and his assistants are | having a merry time with the Philip- | their seats. exhibits. pine material, which is endless in va- Nothing goes with Golden Gate Coffee but satisfaction. And there is no coffee that gives such univer- sal satisfaction as Golden Gate. tried to gather up a few hundred thou- | the Rev. Father Garnett as prime of- sand square miles of our standing corn, | fender and places a price upon his thirking it was a sugar pine forest. | head. We never dare to feed it whole to hogs | The second scene occurs in the because they choke on the kernels, 1] | Tower of London. The Rev. Henry come over and talk to you later about Garrett visits Fawkes in disguise and of the school children were present and discussed the many phases of the work. The many problems that are continually arising were thoroughly into and the best methods of | rise yesterday morning. The police | have succeeded in learning the identity of her assailant and Detective George | MeMahdn exvects to have him behind | prison bars before he finds a chance nking during the effort to load them | your newest methods for curbing vege- | A¢ministers him the consolations of able growth t is so great as to be- religion. Father Garnett is recog- come a nuisanc nized by an apostate and captured. And the representative from Saline Fawkes is tortured upon the rack in | left Pearce sitting dazed on his cherry | the¢ hope that he will implicate the stump while he went dver to his own Priest, but to no avail. Cecil thea exhibit and superintended the erection ' forges documents and orders Father of a derrick to be used in elevating the | Garnett to be executed. The execu- ear to be used as the apéx of Missouri’s tion of Father Garnett in the church-, | eorn column. vard of St. Paul's, London, is the :‘ Pearce is going to invite all the St. theme of the great fifth act and pro- Louis youths who have an ambition to duces a wonderful climax to the play. | Ibr:- President to bring their hatchets e . ; around and take the initial degree. | MUST GRAFT SKIN TO | | Ex-Queen Liliuokalani is attracting | | some attention at the fair. On the first | day of her arrival her dark skin creat- | | ed consternation | the Inside SAVE WOMAN'S Lll-‘l-:i WALLA WALLA, Wash., May 18.— among the guests at Unless 100 Walla Walla volunteers | Inn, where she is stopping. come forward quickly with contribu- | When, with her party, she took a seat tions of skin for grafting purposes, | in the dining-room the Southerners Mrs. Wiliam Nave, who lies in hor- | | who saw her rose in indignation. “The rible agony at St. Mary’s Hospital | Hawaiian Queen,” whispered the wait- here, must die. One-fourth of Mrs. | ers hurriedly, and the guests resumed Nave's body is so badly burned that| the cuticle cannot be restored except! e e e by grafting. A public appeal for PHYSICIAN CHARGES volunteers will be made by her physi- WIFE WITH INSANITY |cian to-morrow. Mrs. Nave's frail little daughter has already volunteered fourteen pieces and | her husband has offered eighteen. Her doctor and her nurses are other con- | tributors and general public response is expected. It will be the most ex- | tensive skin grafting probably ever at- | tempted in the State. Eight weeks ago Mrs. Nave stum- ! bled upon the stairs with a lamp, suffering from dementia for the past | which exploded as she fell to the bot- eight years and that two years ago he | tom. She is the wife of Deputy sent her back to Fer relatives in Red | Sheriff William Nave of Wallula, | Oak, Ohio, in the hope that she wouid | Wash. ! recover. He believed that she was in e | Ohio until Monday afternoon, when | NOME'S GOLD OUTPUT i he was startled upon walking into his REACHES ENORMOUS SUM | office to find Mrs. Stone seated in a chair, waiting for him. She made the TACOMA, Wash., May 18.—This trip of several thousand miles back | season’s gold output at Nome is esti- to this State and gould not explain | mated at $7,500,000, says Dr. Cabel how she got here, except that “her |ywhitehead, a Nome banker and min- | enemies brought her.” ing operator, who is en route back to Upon inquiry Dr. Stone learned that | Nome. Within two years Nome: has she had been brought to this city by | dug about a hundred miles of ditches a man and woman. At the Southern|and probably seventy-five more will | be constructed this year. The gravel Says She Has Been Demented for Years and Has Her Sent to l)(-u-n'llon Hospital. STOCKTON, May 18.—Dr. T. W. Stone, a well known physician, yes- terday swore to a complaint charging his wife, Mattie Stone, with insanity. Dr. Stone states that his wife has been There is health and cheerfulness in every cup. Rich—Aromatic—Delicious. High grade grocers sell it. - 1 and 2 Ib. aroma-tight tins. : Importers and Roasters of Pacific depot they turned her over to through a large part of the district a hackman, with instructions to take her to Dr. Stone's office. The man | runs from $1 to $5 per cubic yard. This and woman have disappeared and Dr. | opens an immense field for hydraulic | Stone is at a loss to explain the mys- | mining when it is considered that Cali- | tery. & fornfa miners are profitably mmlnu{ Several weeks ago, so Dr. Stone | dirt which runs but 6 cénts per cubic states, he received word that his de- | yard. The conformation of the ground mented wife was getting no better, | at Nome is such that twice as much He sent back instructions to put her | gravel ean be handled with the same in an asylum in Ohio, but the Ohio | amount of water. Dr. W‘hlteheadl says: . i institutions would not accept her upon “Fifty years from now men will be | the ground that she was a resident of California. Mrs. Stone was taken to | mining gold on Seward Penisula. Be- the detention hospital. fore that time other discoveries will | —_—— probably have been made to startle The United States has 18,000,000 in- | the world as much as the remarkable candescent and 385,000 arc lamps in| finds on Anvil Creek and Nome's eoperation, { beaches.” E s é gone facilitating inspection were con- | to leave the city. sltarad | The murder of the woman was a Dr. Tillman was present as the offi- | most brutal one. According to infor mation received, Duck Gon, 2 notos cus character in the heathen distric cial representative of the Health| Board and advised the inspectors on | 3 doubtful points. Dr. Deane, the chief | wielded an ugly-looking dagger while inspecting occulist, explained the pur- | two of his accomplices held the vietim. poses of the report on the condition | Gut Fong was stabbed many times concerning the eves and edrs of the| and as soon as she was released ran a children, which the school teachers| few steps and fell in a pool of her own will be required to fill out. Gréat in- | blood. Death came a few hours later terest Is being manifested by the doc- | The woman was the proprietress of a tors in their work. bagnio in the alley and her husband is at present in China. For some time past tribute has been levied upon her by highbinders, but when the extortion became too severe she refused to meet with the demands of the blackmailers any further. When this decision be- came known her life was threatened and taken. William Weston was treated at the Central Emergency Hospital last night for an incised wound of the left hip received at the butchers’ picnic from | BT GRS [ Stabbed at Butchers’ Picnic. I a knife thrust by an unknown assail-J ant. ADVERTISEMENTS. FREE TO MEN! And Women, Too! Do you want to be a big, husky man, with vim and power in your every action, with courage. seif-confidence and ambi- tion to “do things"? Do you want to get rid of that feel of gloom, that weak- ness In your back. that nervous, worn- out feeling which unfits you for business or pleasure? ¥ you want to feel like a man all over, to hold up your head with the knowledge that you are the man that na- ture meant you to be? I know that no man remains a weak- ling because he wants to. I am sure that you want to overcome every indica- tion of early decay that has shown itseif on you. I don’t think the man lives who would not lfke to feel as big and strong as a Sandow, and I tha upon I can make you a bigger man than you ever hoped to be. I want you to know that, you who can’t believe it, and I want you to have my book in which I describe how I learned that stre: was el ity, and how I learned to restore it; also I want to tell you the names of some men who will tell you that when they came to me they were physical wrecks, and are now among the finest specimens of ph: manhood. I can do just as much for women as for men. I have thousands of let- ters from grateful women, who had spent yvears and money trying to get relief from drugs, and who came to me as a last resort and are cured now. Why should you be suf '3 when you know that your friends and neighbors are being cured? Why. the money you spend for drugs in a few months, if invested in m'i treatment, will assure heal fe. i and happ! for . Don’t you sen: for this book % 3 belleve it? Then with the proof that I can give you, and you will be con- vinced. Don't walt a minute. Send for is book now. If you will inclose this ad. T will send it sealed, free, apd will give you the names of our own neighbors who are cured. TOwill tell you whether I can cure bles. Call, if possible, for frese consultal 906 Market St. Dr. M. C. McLaughlin, 206 Market St |.Dr. . C MeLaugniin, 2 2iex | you or not, if you will tell me your tion. XOROROACRORCEC SROROICHOR: CHOHORCHON! CECHOHOBCRCI ¢ CUOECHONG! CHORDACHOND CHOBOCHOIOHCY CHORO QEOD © Sl QLLHC a0

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