The evening world. Newspaper, February 2, 1903, Page 11

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ore pyEy THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 2, 1903. = Worl es AOUNME RR W « THE « MAN w HIGHER w UP. CAPT, LANTRY’S NEW SCHOOL OF POLICE DEMONSTRATION. APT. Lantry certainly handed a few jolts out to the wealthy householders of Fifth ave- nue,” remarked The Cigar-Store Man. “He jolted them until their shoe- laces strained,” replied The Man Higher Up, “but he didn’t go far enough. Instead of having his ama- teur burglars show down their hands when they butted into the servants he should have had them make good. What's the use of ordering a plain- clothes man anywhere unless he can carry something away. You remem- ber that vase that was carried away from Canfield’s? “What Lantry should have done was to have ordered his men to get into the mansions of the rich and le .» make each one of them look like a | lobster eholl attcr a soubrette has finished with it. He should have stripped “tue homes of the rich, carried the loot to the station-house and then sent out a circular letter something like this: "Mr. Henry J, Bankroll: “Dear Sir: Malachi Schmitt, a plain-clothes man atiached to my pre- cinct, passing your house yesterday tried the door, as is his custom when passing Iquor stores, and found ft open. Entering, he found your servants eating Paddy Poy Grass and drinking champagne in the butler’s pantry, By great industry he managed to gather up all the silverware and jewelry in the house. You can haye it by applying to the Wast Fifty-first Street Police Station. You can tell the place by the green: lights. Yours, vigi- lantly, JOHN J, LANTRY.’ “Talk about a jolt! One like this would have rocked the steeples on St. Patrick's Cathedral. They might have had Lantry pinched for burglary, but look at the advertising he would have had! “This new police innovation in police methods opens the door to re- forms as sweeting as the entire force of the Street-Cleaning Department. Why stop at serding plain-clothes men into private houses to show that doors are tert open? The Pretty Girl May Make a Very Fine Wife, But There Are People Who Do Not Think that Way. celted and selfish creature, much ad- mired by men, but seldom chosen for a wife. JOHANNA “Every once {n a while we read of men getting a soak on the knowledge box with a piece of lead pipe or a stocking full of sand, and waking up with a vacancy in the watch pocket. The police always say that such things are due to the carelessness of the man who got soaked. Why not send a few plain-clothes men out to demonstrate it? Let them cruise around some night and bounce a sleep compeiler off the head of every man they can sneak upto. It would be a practical lesson in the careless- ness of the citizen who don’t keep his lamps jumping like lightning-bugs when he goes through a dark street. "‘Scarcely a day passes that a man is not picked up dying with a knife excavation fn his anatomy or a round & hole in his head, At the other end of the hole the surgeons find a bullet. The police never find out who inserted tho knife or who passed the bullet along. They say it Is impossible to detect an assassin who works in the dark, but the neople don’t believe it. Why not gend out a trusty pluin- clothes man to give some poor guy a pass to the Morgue? The plain- clothes man could escape, and in a couple of weeks come out with a state- ment showing how easy it Is for a murderer to do a get-away in New York. “The police seldom catch firebugs. burn up come tenements just to show how easy it ds to do it and blow without anybedy getting Johnny Wise. Start a plain-clothes man in the rum bueiness to show how easy it is to dodge the Excise law! Place a few detectives on the front platforms of trolley cars to show that people who get run over accumulate all that is coming to them! There is no limit to the usefulness of Capt, Lantry's New School of Demonstration.” “Do you think Lantry's move did any good?” asked The C!gar-Store Mar. “I'll bet a cut on the forehead to a door in a Fifth avenue mansion to-day, Why not have plain-cléthes men lose shave that there {sn't an open replied The Man Higher Up. gare for the home and husband at all;/ing to do her own housework and tries for the simple reason that the prett¥|to please her husband by belng as eco- girl has too many ad *LBONARD HAHN, |Domlcal as ehe oan. Beauty je only Here are a few more of the countless replies to the question “Do Pretty Girls Make th Best Wives?” pies Beet Wy Fickle Beauties. The Evening World offered a prize of , akin deep. Usually if @ girl is homely, $10 for the best answer and $3 for each | 70 the Editor of The Evening Wor! Ai Altes itoMer ahe has nice, pleasant ways, which of the two next In merit, That the| IX my opinton the pretty girls are|To the Editor of Tue Bventeg World: often hides her Fnomeliness and gains more apt to be fickle, because they have| Talking about pretty girls for wives, I| her @ great many friends. juestion {s one of great interest and one whereon opinions are fairly evenly vided is proyed by the host of letters ved: Miss B. M. Thinks Pretty Girls Best. To the EMitor of The Evening World: 9 ‘The pretty girl undoubtedly makes the think beauty is only skin deep, although there are many pretty girls who make true wives and some one make pern!- gious wives, Homely girls go not differ ‘om pretty: girls, in a, By OplnICh, ion. more admirers than a homely girl. If there were fewer people to admire a pretty girl It would put her mind more to making her home a pleasant one, |, Veetty but Unappreciated. To Aug BAitor of The Evening Worid Not the Chief Requiremen I think some of the pretticat girls get| To the Béitor of The Evening World: As to arctry ati aerpeniel nti mican hushands, and do not deserve such| Beauty is not the principal thing 1N|To the Bator of The Bvening World of modesty, ees Sena husbands at all, Some of the pretty|this life, An old but true saying \s:| Never marry a pretty girl unless #h0| womanly agate combined with an xirls provide tae cosiest homes on pale “If you're born in a stable you are|is from New Jersey. For the Jersey] afrec ‘and 3) tion and a Scowiedes of the cook book. ¥. FT. “Marry a Pretty Girl Every Tim: To the WAltor of The Evening World: When you marry @ girl you should not girls cre all good and try to make every- body else good. But never marry @ pretty girl from New York, for all many of them think about before and after marriage is to spend your money fool- ishly going to theatres and Coney Island not necessarily a horse, and your man- ners can and often do exceed your good looks.” Prettineas often causes self-pride, followed py impertinence and stubbornness, but if rule an ordinary rands, but it the husbands do: re- Not all pretty girls fare triv- It Is sometimes the homely girl who. thinks more of herself than the pretty girl RAYMOND RIBETT, “Not Important Factors.’ ” fe ai $n je better amen, iy the Kalter of ‘The Evening World everday lope: Bubs pe Dena oe foe and other places of assusement. PP oie her for her beauty alone. You “Homelincss" or “beauty” is not an| together. iss G. LOORAM. 2 should marry her because she !a pretty, Better Housewives. To the Editor of The Evening World: T would like to say that homely girls good and eensible, and because she will return the love your large heart gives her. Marry a pretty girl every time. portant factor to making god wives. at ‘8 beauty of face or form com- “One a aca To the Editor of The Evening World: pared to the beauty of the soul? The} my tty girl is all right for society. i at can 0 m saident? band ;|make the best wives | ! first can be marred by accident; the! There 1s one good-looking girl out Of| cases, After pretty py Breer pay ei Pee Ren ery] a Nin Jatier never. Good health, amiability, | agiy that will make a good wife. ‘There ones aoe pray alle are | aged pari ‘And as for living happily, th will depend entirely pen "youred eel. T ‘i she should have any bad traits be ra gentlencts and the qualities w purity Of character aro ich go to make the best t are #o many different kings of girls! am pretty sure that if you marry a work for fear of gpolling thelr com- wife and surro! her with a halo that plexions. Therefore their husbands have | you never give her reaso h nto show ther ID TN HORe eu mater AI ROU RI AY A ARERY Bl [to strive. to haap nervants.” A’ nome | Hess aPpesrats her re ana wnat ; hand, a. “beauty” devoid of | majority. of the best girls are homely, /6!rl 1s not afraid of spoiling her com- more ‘and’ please you better OE OF pavice lites {s generally a very con- ‘i they are often the only ones that |plexton or solling her hands and {8 will- : ‘Marry a pretty girl.” Six of the Best | Jokes of the Day. LESS POWER. ‘Bay, maw," sobbed the boy who had just been spanked, “I wish you had married ‘that other beau inatead of paw. “Why, my eon?” asked maw in sur- the self-convicted steps forward and right, 1993, by Dally Storr Pub. Co.) T was a summer day—a blistering day I in Caracas. In the United States Consulate the American Minister sat at his desk #0 tually occupled with his official corre- spondence that he did not hear the woman when she entered, and she had almost reached his side before he be- came aware of her presence, Her face was pale as the dead’s, Weak as a child, man staggered a fe #ank upon his knee, “God! he cried, desperately. “The senorita, the beautiful senorita! I love her; T adore her! Bhe say. “it you love those papers. That will 80 Ido and I not see | prise. her again until now." ‘Because I can see by his picture he “Fool!'' cried the colonel, Your weak-| had emaller hands.'—Chicago Nows, ness has been your rujn, That ts not HOW COULD HE KNOW? “You may have till 8 o'clock to prove the man’s innocence. If by that hour you have not done he must die,” the | President said at length. Already the cathedral bell had struck the hour of 2 In the Amerioan Con- sulate the woman stood at the window Jooking down into the courtyard. Be- hind her sat the Minister, “You say the soldier was in love with Bhe was clad wholly {n yellow. this Spanish woman," he said, “How |the senorite you love. I will show you."| 44, rein n Th 198 Loved—Hetih hei Vell?” he said 0 you know?’ ie colonel placed his hands upon her| 9 Nes® er, when you re won," she sald, “I demand that | “I—I dare not explain,” she answered, drapery, then paula (an Ingtant he ae him consent to marry mo did |e eet op bie bande and knees and it is the truth,’ ‘hen we will prove his guilt, said, jeaping to his feet, ‘His love will betray him," he continued; “but you must play your part In the drama.” 1? Whet must I dot" “You must (mpersonate the Spanish he sneered, band’s life in Jeopardy?" “He is condemned to be shot a Spy,” continued the woman, excliedly, “They say he delivered important mes- sages Into the hands of the revolution- our hus- y hus Irate Bwther—How do ¥ know? 1 couldn't see where be lit!"—~The Punch Bowl, NOT QUITE CERTAIN, Crawfoot—So your son Zeke was in he pulled the vell from her head and whoulders, revealing the startled face of the woman |p yellow. With @ wild cry the miserable man threw himself upon the ground at her ists. But that ig a lie, Mr. Mason. He| Woman and stand up to be shot." feet, Jove for two months, Did you notice {§ innocent—as innocent as you, and you| Her face paled, “It 1s ehe!"’ he oried, “Oh, my God,|any economy? can save him. You will?’ "Oh, I dare not; I dare not, I am|!t is sh Stubble-It's hard to say. He didn't “And why should I interfere in the| afraid!" she cried, As one in a stupor the Miniwter ad-|eat as much, but he used up a powerful affairs of the Venezuelan Government?” | ‘Very well, then,” replied the other, | vanced to her side jot of sweet soap an' clean linen.— ould I raise my hand| “your hugband must die. 1 cannot save] “My God, Jennie!” he sald, “what Chicago News, Did he not| him." Goes thiy mean?’ IMPROVING, “The fellow is right,” ehe a d, softly, turning her large, frightened eyes vpon the Minister And the President snoke: "I will do as you bid," she sald calmly. “T will die, {f needa be, to save my bus. band.’ It still lacked Afteen minut: come into my home—Iinto our home—like #@ thief in the night and steal from me that which was more precious than life Mteelf? Did he not tear from my heart “Those German gunners are improving with practice.” “Indeed? “Yes. One of them at (00 yards’ dis- to the and my hearthstone the girl I was to|hour when the woman, heavily velled| “Hy the authority in me invested,” be|tance hit Venesuela thr: marry, who had promised to love and| from head to foot, was led into the|asid, 1 command that this senor and|five.”—Cloyeland Plain 1 to cherish me?" courtyard and placed with her back|this senorita—self-confes splenbe “You must save him!’ she cried,|against tho wall. ‘The Presldent and|shot to death. Do your duty, colonel.”’ i NATNBAG GENIVe, hysterically; “you must!" the American Minister were present,| With the old, old love throbbing In his} 4g arent—And Just think--ehe “Must?” he replied, disdainfully. | and all the soldiers in the barracks were|veins, the Minlater sprang in front of]? thatawey an! never tuck @ lesson “Must is @ strong word, madam.” drawn up tn line facing her. the woman and held up hia hand yore ie * “{ said you must," whe repeated, her| ‘Attention! We have captured a beau-| Bir,’ he said, “thirty mililon dollars coher Pali pay ae what'e the eyes blazing: “He ta innocent of any! tiful senorita, 8! of Venesuelan war bonds are held in AMATI AD offente against the Government ot | revotutionta and is known to the United States. ‘fhe interest on HOPE, Venezuela. A soldier, now in yonder! stolen certain valuable documents and| these ta long past due. #0 heip me God,| “Be you think whe could learn to love harracks, stole the papers and placed|to have delivered them to the enemy.|eir, 1f this woman dios at your bands,|¥OU"" wald the close friend them jn the hands of @ woman, sup-| She is now before you and you are to/ every one of thom "it en't impossle, She likes caviare | posed to be Spanish, who delivered them | fire the shots that are to end her life, | ble in two minut th BPS Gigs ond, SN Tae ate al! sorte You will notice that she ts veiled, ‘This was necessary that her great beauty t| might not prevent any of you from doing your duty, He then returned to the end of the Une and drew bis aword. leaves her body. Now shoot, Tho Prosident shrugged hi and laughed—uneaslly ‘Release the senorite,” he said, finally. For 4 momunt the woman in yellow] Ni Uncle & medical student Jone clasped the Minis hand and the i. @ things thrill of love, not dead, but awakenet| for mere When hip teacher, before after a long slumber, wont throbbing whom he wished to ghine, avked him to me some important parts of the body through bis veins. Then ehe turned Aame snine Fi {| pebe eeryy Johny smiled radiantly, “You don't, saw her clapped in her hus: band's arms, A volley rang out upon fin ica gery! pire di an t "inset You i ar — BIG WORDS. to the revolutionists. I know that to be true, Mr, Mason. I swear it." shoulders then Johnny weveh be sealed and handed to he Johnny “Boe thie te the Gecretary of War, ne sald. ‘Perhaps be will reprieve your| “Ready! Atm!” he commanded. hus) Every rife was raleed--save one, Mid- “Don't you think," she anawergd. look-| Way the line @ soldier stood with ashen ‘him straight in the eyes, “you had an ter The colonel stepped behind him and, ; bie sword to hie bask, com the pulseless air end tho soldier, who had no one to intercede for him, sen forward upon his tece, | elevators, father was a phyaloian, ang THE BUSINESS GIRL Is Told by Mrs. Ayer How She May Retain HEALTH AND BEAVIS, BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. HESE articies aro intended for all T working-giris Interested in the sub- Ject of g0d looks and good health, but especially aro they designed for the many, many girls who have lately writ- ten me bewalling the fact that they cannot be pretty or have pretty figures because they may not employ French malds, maseage operators and instruc. tors of physical culture. The road to health and beauty ts open to every girl If she have the cour- age, the persistence and the intelli- gence to follow tt. Nobody {n the world has a better right to be happy, healthy and pretty than the young woman who, in one capacity or another, does useful work for the world. Yet hardly anywhere else in the world are there to be found ®o many dipcon- tented, dyspeptic, haggard looking peo- ple as in the offices, shops and fll-ven- tilated hall bedrooms where young work- Ingwomen spend their lives. These two facts stare each other in the face. ‘The working-girl mourns over the evident discrepancy, but of all the people who long for the prettiness which comes with health and happiness Gho makes tho least right effort to #e- cure it. Tho majority of young workingwomen in large cities tive in a way that would soon fade the good looks of Venus and break down athletic Diana into a pale- faceada, anaemic nonentity. ‘They do not eat the right food, they do not sleep the right way, they do not dreas the right way. ‘They do not walk the right way, they do not stand the right way, they do not sit the right way. They do not work the right way, they do not rest the right way, they do not breathe the right way. And then they wonder why they are not healthy, happy and pretty, as ail of them wish to be. You girls who read The Evening World, you girls who ask me hundreds of. questions every week about ‘How to be beautiful,” I am going to read you a sermon. How many of you ever realized that you yourselves are your best beautifiers? How many of you ever,stop to think that the little dally habits you indulge in are doing & harm to your good looks which cannot be undone by cosmetics or by a few spasmodic physical culture exercises? How many of you know that all the gymnasiums in the world can never im- part gracefulness if awkwerd motions and postures are not only permitted but positively courted between exer- clses? You little typewriters, who bend all best American wife when she ts not too| day over your clicking machines in the conscious of her beauty and when it is| most tangled-up position your limbs can be twisted into! How can you think, dear children, that cone night a week of gymnastics will take out the twist and the tangle and leave you supple-limbed, lithe and erect? And& you brave young accountants, who balance your big books correctly on the deeks where they lie spread out before vou! |Letters, Queries, Answers|' Can Serve as Often as Elected, ‘To the Editor of The Brening World: If @ President can be elected three|the custom has practically lapsed. times could he keep on serving as President al! his life if elected every | 7, ine waitor of The Evening World: four years? 5 Cannot Vote Until Twenty-One. ‘To the EAltor of The Byening World: I will be twenty-one years of age Jan. 8, 1904 Can I vote at the 1903 election? J. SIMONS. An Odd Husband, To the Editor of The Evening World: I would lke to ask readers if a wife ja ever justified in striking her hus- band, I strike mine-and strike him hard—when he fails to bring home his pay, or drinks too much, or !# impl- dent to my relatives, Afterward he al- ways says: ‘My dear, while those blows of yours anger me at the time, yet they are making a nobler, better man of Hence 1 way Lam justified, His me. mother says I am not, Will readers discuss? Mra. ROBINSON, Marri Querte: ‘To the WAitor of The Byening World How much a a marriage license in New York and where do you et them? Is @ feo compulsory to the clergyman? A. B.C. No marriage lcense is necessary in New York, ‘The clergyman always re- celves a fee for performing the mar- rage ceremony, but the amount de- pends on the bridegroom's means and generosity. Apply to Warden, To the Editor of The Evening World Where can J scoure information con- cerning orivileces to inmates, visiting ya for friends, @c,, at the State Prison of Sing eng? Four Larwest Cities, To the Editor of The Kvening World What are tno four largent o of the world? What is the President pas full name . M London, New York, Paris, Bertin. ‘he ful} name of Cuba's President is Tomar Hetrada Palma Etlauette. vening World ls Ht op @ gentien. move hia hat when riding | elevator in which there are | Elevator To the Eat for In hotel, store or mpartme: & man always remov CASTORIA Yor Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bough! the Do you give any thought to a better balance of your bodies on the high stools where you squirm around rest- lessly? Most desperate offenders of all my «irl friends, whom most I pity, are the patient little sewers, you who cross one foot over the other knee and bring your own eves and the needle’s eye so close together! Do you wonder that your dainty work of making fairy-like garments becomes the dreary task Hood tells about in ‘his dirge-like “Song of the Shirt?” And if instead of hand-sewing you work with treadle and shuttle, you sit in even a more awkward attitude. Yet you tink you deserve rosy cheeks and bright eyes and all prettiness that good health produces. And all the rest of you working-girls— behind counters, at te! ones, wherever FLORODOR AL CASINO Brat #62 “vine ovo your duty calls you daily—when you are sleeping In close bedrooms and bolting down bad, breakfasts, eating ple and sinkers and calling such a combination luncheon, and never taking one half- hour's exercise throughout the most beautiful day, how can you expect to be pretty and healthy? How can you look to reap loveliness where you sowed nothing but seeds of disease and ugil- ness? I want every girl who reads The Eve- ming World to separate forever, in her Indiyiduai qase, the two discrepant facts with which I have started in beginning this series of talks. Remember your right to be happy, hat {f fadies are among his fellow pas- sengers. In office bulldings, however, Mitchell-Su) van Fight. Did John 1, Sullivan fight Charlie Mitchell for the championship title? If #0, Isn't John L. the champion of the world? JOB MACK, The fight was a draw. Had Sullivan won !t he could have claimed the cham- plonsiiip of the world. Xo Premium on 1902 Pennies, ‘To the HAltor of The Bvening World Is there any premium the 1902 pen- ) nies? N. ¥. WE KNOW HAIRINE ‘To be the best hair tonic In the world; however, don't tal word for it, bat get a 15 Cent and Af it does not give the empty bottle Could we make a rom your drags latectiow retur 4 Lottie perfect we will ref falrer peop tall could t We made te merits tiottie will and » une AR Eaanat HERALD Eves Hiatt RE. [¢ ACADEMY OF Mh Irving Place. ue Prices, 28,007 Bats Wed Sai a fist 8 BROADWAY ju we ae $ Bina i Ve | we Giher Slipper. N MATINGR THURS, PRD. 12 Harlem wit ALIS. Mat. Saturd Wiad 33S dof Gersidine. EDEN a “I cLYDe \The Boek Keeper \Baldinee 5 Her bea) Correctly Peg Jects Betta Balapoe For Fer Heal, a 4 you have formed the habit of dof will have to acquire some better h which may seem at first distasteful, You will have to eat wholesome ¢ instead of “trash” and sweetmeats. will have to take a daily brisk Wi even ff you prefer indoors and heat. ay You will have to ventilate bri ing room. You will have to ; corset lace. You will have to breaths of air and learn to take properly, You will have to keep in mind practice the physical culture given to you. You will have to the fhatruction each day and through the day—not merely on sional nights ata gymnasiom. A healthy, happy prettiness is natural birthright. Amusements. ‘ROPOLITAN OPERA-HOUSA. GRAND OPERA SEASON, 1902-4 au. GOTO PROCTOR'S # $ ToNiOhir Direction ot TUR, MAURICE GI = MAAS { Ton NIGHT, at 8. MONT and We i Ht Ny. {: Reed. it nie oe Wes) Rye, Wed ae 6 Pop. Pricos) Gainer? O7mnAaee aan Bae rue! ie biknds USED.” eee No WA CR | healthy and pretty. Remember how many of you fall ehort of this. Then steadfastly claim your right to the first fact and resolutely try to break up wrong habits which unhappily have made the second fact true. Every girl naturally wants to be Pretty. No girl can be pretty who is not healthy. ‘Health is the beautiful, normal condi- tion intended by nature for each created being. If wrong habits have become “a second nature’—what then? 6imply a complete turning round, a quiok geting back to the point where nature and natural, right living can co-operate with the gir! herself. If you want to be pretty you must avoid all beauty hindrances. Like everything worth having, this will need @ sturdy effort. You will have to give up some things Amusements. Bris Midoeta: 0 HEARTS ARE Te-Morrow Evening at 8.90. Ending 10 o/ Oech. MME, ROGER MICLOS. —THE WEBER PIANO USED. EAPIRE THEATRE, Brosdway ax Evenings, 8.20. Mate. ers SUCCESS arora THE UNFOR SERN. GERRI CET ANAT ED. ae . Br, way, Brenings, 2 ft, 215. ANNIE RUSSELL in in ‘Wek AND MeN, |= NEW SAVOY THEATRE, 34th oY at Bi way. 3 a WALDORF-ASTORIA BALL ROOM. Pratiy on wre 6th Tine To-morrow —HAN! ep Np 8.00. Mate Wed. & Sat win CLARA The Girt With the Green byes, susoscoce. CRITERION THEATRE, B'way and 44th St. Lam 2 weeks By'gs at 8.15. it Bat., 2.15, DALY'S wate ees viay, & Bta080" Thy BILLIONAIRE, snot Bila Rrter s Seasnon’ wee Rms “suephene a, Beane CS ies racerch Bad To-day, at 3TH LITT! GARDEN THEATRE, Hith 3. Madionn ar [AMLET Mat. To-morrow, Bertier Mle IPI SOTHERN «rk KNICKERBOCKER THEA. © wer oe ah Se Byenings at 6 de al, BL +2 ian, BLUE BEARD, PASTOR'S» oi x 10" AND Mans gan | f Ro. FISKH, Pate MAKY se MAQDALA. WIZARD ‘OF ‘Oz. WEBER & FIELDS)AL8 Brostnay «toa stew) _TWIRLY- -WHIRLY bry KINKeS OF UELATL tees | itks ia |Past ee mM "KEIN ee © STAR Fie Ave & ‘orth 6. HEAR iY) 7 New vee Lie view. 14th St, Theatre, nr Gos ay. Mate Wat a tat JIM BLUDSO “ Rh EMH, Uuiako ‘ANDRE AW! mack ia Tue ‘bots Souer bey, NALLACK 'S Hon © SULTAN OF SULU, 41h Mae & Sat Sot wei TER us WHEN nga Ra JOHNNY ” World in Baro ay ROUPS Kolta.s oe ab ae 20, Mais, Wet. @ Sat N N THE GAC GAGE ary W. Savage Brenoate v } iy Li UBTROPOLIS 142d $i. 4 94 a MJOU, Las 2 Wike By. 6, , THE BIRD IP

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