The evening world. Newspaper, March 21, 1903, Page 3

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IRL SAILS 8,000 | MILES 10 SUE. Seeking $50,000 from Son of William Stumpp as Balm for Alleged Breach of Promise, She Comes from Germany. “INFATUATION,” HE SAYS. Simply a Childish Affair of the Heart, of Which He Does Not Think Seriously, but Evidently She Regards It Otherwise. Miss Mathilde Wagner, a daughter of an influential family of Goenningen, Germany, after travelling more than 6,000 miles in pursuit of @ recreant lover, has just served papers on the sweet- heart of her childhood and demands $50,000 for an alleged breach of promise to marry, She caused the papers to be served on George KE. M. Stumpp, the young son of @ wealthy florist, at No. 761 Fifth avo- nue, She says that he promised in August, 1901, to marry her in two years and that he again promised on Jan. 21 last, but that he has denied both pledges. In her affidavit, drawn by At- torney August P. Wagener, No. #9 Chatn- bers street, she says that she attended school in Goenningen with Stumpp and that they were fond of each other as children, Later @he says that the fath’ George M. Stumpp, who, she learns, 1s ‘worth between $5,000,000 and $5,000,000, brought his family to Gemany in 1898, and her affidavit continues: “As the defendant gazed much and lovingly at the plaintiff the young girls began to tease her, saying, ‘Mathilde, they are talking about you.’ Stumpp then came over, sitting down next to me, and all the girls remarked, ‘See, he is going after you.’ Stumpp did not leave my side all tbat evening, and after the ball he took me home," During the remainder of the stay of the Stumpp family in Germany Miss Wagner says that George was very at- tentive to her, but she heard no more of him until he and his family re- turned in the summer of 190L They met in the market place and she thus de- scribes what followed: “The First K: “From this day on/we saw each other every evening, elther at a friend's house or at the relatives’. We met by ap- poiniment. One evening going home he gave me the first kiss; this was in July, 1901. After that we kissed every day. His relatives scolded and attempted to make trouble bteween us, but he did not care. My mother forbade me going, out with him, saying that if he wanted to go with me he must oume to the house, After that he came to the house ‘every evening. He talked of his love,’ saying I was gotting him crazy. I did love him very much at the time, I love him still. Promised to Marry Him, “After I had promised to marry him I received an offer of marriage by let- ter from a very rich hotel keeper in Mannheim. I had to promise him not to accept the offer, and I tore up the letter in his presence, and I said to him: Two years is a long time to walt. 1 may get other proposals of marriage, and you had better consider well what you are doing.’ But he always insisted that he loved me more than any one in this world. When we were alone he had got into the habit of calling me ‘Mrs. Btumpp.'" Followed Him Here. Ou vet, 25, 1901, she says she received r her first and sast letter from him, ij though she had written several, Then eho wrote telling him she was coming to New York unless he should direct her to stay in Germany till he arrived, Not hearing from him she came here on Noy. 1 iast. She telephoned to Stumpp's home, she says, on landing, but was treated with disdain, Then she turned detec- tive and traced her lover to Washing- ton, where, she declares, she found Stumpp drilling some young women in & drama entitled, “Because I Love You." Here she declares Stumpp was arre! 1d om an alleged charge of swindling, She raisea money, she says, and secured bis release, BABY DRINKS FROM VAPOR LAMP, DIES. Absence, Swallows the Drug Used for In- halation to Cure Croup, ” To the two-year-old Intellect of Al- fred Gray, of No. 283 Wyckoff street, Brooklyn, there was no distinction be- ween breathing a vapor and drinking the liquid from which the vapor was generated, This accounts for his death, which happened to-day, The Uttle fellow had croup, His mother had been using a little lamp which caused a thick smoke or vapor. This the child breathed with beneficial results, He knew that the lamp hel bim, but did not understand hows When left alone to-day by his mother be was with a@ ‘At of coughing, waa on a table by his side alight ; ched over and drank Bale r Tiaula, ‘and wan deta got Back te tbe room he GOWNS TO GO UP IN PRICES, Dressmakers’ Convention Will In- erease Charges from 15 to 20 Per Cent. on Present Valuations, CHICAGO, March 21, ‘Dressmakers throughout the country are to make at once an increase of from 15 to 20 per gent. in the price of all gowns, in ac- cordance with @ decision reached here apat Blab’ @t the National Dressmakers’ Eaaveat Di, ‘ileine Seah As Well as GIRL WHO SAILED 5,000 MILES TO SUE HER OLD SWEETHEART MISS MATHILDE WAGNER. SAYS HS WIFE SA ICAMIST Capt. Healy, Known as the Dis- coverer of the Klondike, Ac- cuses Her of Most Serious Offense. YET SHE SUES FOR DIVORCE. Capt, John J, Healy, known as the discoverer of the Klondike, accuses his second wife, who is suing him for di- vorce, of having had a living husband when she, married him In 1887, The Captain, sixty years old and white haired, occuples a magnificent sult at the Imperial Hotel, and when usked about his wife's sult he said: ‘Mra, Isabelle Finley, whom I mar- ried in 1887, was then the wife of a liv- ing man, I had known her and her husband in Montana, and when I met her in Juneau, Alaska, she told me her husband was dead. We were married and lived together for seven years, She was @ good woman and a good wite until seized with @ mental affliction, “I took her to London for treatment bx Sir John Baxtow. He told me she could never be cured, and that she would have to be humored a great deal the rest of her Wife. I then took her ¢o Southern California and was about to build @ home for her there, where wo could both apend the remainder of our lives, when she accused me falsely of loving another woman and left me. Since then she has ayolded me entirely. “I settled upon her stocks from which Inat year alone she drew $20,000 in divi- dends. I have been her free business adviser since we separated, although she never came to see me personally. Two years after our marriage I learned that instead of being dead, her husband, Fin- ley, was alive, and that she had caused him to be incarcerated In an insane jum in Montana. I never told her 1 knew this, nor have I tolda ny one else, and have kept the knowledge a secret with myself untll now, but I feel that T must use it to protect myself." Capt, Healy 1s credited with being many times a millionaire. He Is now engaged in wbuilding a rallroad into Alaska. ———— RAN THE GANTLET. Seven Meu and a Kennel of Dogs Did Not Stop Greenwich Thieves (Speolal to The Evening World.) GREBNWICH, Conn, March 2.— Burglars this morning entered the real- dence of Dr, Lander P. Jones; Town Health OMcer, and stole several hun- dred dollars’ worth of small table sil- verware, m Five men were asieep in the house and two in the barn and @ kennel of doge was close to the house. Betwee midnight and daybreak a win- dow on the west aide of the house waa opened, the burg) ne | dining-room. They lett several large i | ltohers and trays and did not leaye the firat flood. Upstairs were a half dozen ised Pa watches and other valuables. No vee man ‘obtained, getting Ipto the] MAYBE DOUBLE DEATH MYSTERY One Man Dead with Bullet Through His Heart and An- other, Shot in the Left Breast, May Die of Injuries. HAPPENED AFTER A FIGHT. ‘The Brooklyn police have what may be a double murder mystery. Carlo Pastighoni is dead at his home, No. 2,368 Atlantic avenue, with a bullet through his heart, and John Masseri is in a critical condition In the Bradf-rd street Emergency Howpital, shot in ine loft breast, Detectives are looking for an Italian known as “Tony,” with whom the men had quarrelied a few minutes before the shooting, Pastighoni, Masseri and “ony” were Playing some Italan game io @ salvon in Adantic avenue near Sack! n street. A tall rolled against ‘Tony’ leg and a@ fight followea. Uthers in the saloon put an end to the trouble, however, and Pastignont and Masseri started home. A few minutes jater John Carter, the flagman of the Long ‘Island Railroad at AUantic avenue and Sackman street, heard two fall a short distance from his shanty. 8a) @ man running| aa Avey. pull clutching @ revolver in his while two men were stretched out in the street. He notified the police and an ambu- Jance was soon on the scene. It was found that Pastighoni had been killed instantly. His body was taken home and Masser! was removed to the hospi- tal, where the doctors tried In vain to find the bullet. It is thought that he cannot live, Captain Gardner caled out all the re- serves, Men in the saloon described| t! “Tony as being ilve feet nine inches in heighe a slender, with dark gray mustache and dark slouch hat, ~Ai- though ® thorough search was made, no trace of him could be found. | Maaaer! has not revived eufficiently to tell who did the MADOH NB TS SHE USED A HATPIN TO RESTORE PEACE Miss Loretta O’Brien Drove the Sharp Point Into the Face of Her Brother-in-Law. In an effort to act as peacemaker be- tween her sister and her sister's hus- band, John Brooks, who were quar- velling, Mies Loretta O'Brien, of Brook- lyn, thought herself justifed in using her hatpin last night. @he inserted half the length of \t Into the face of Brooks roke it off, It took the surgeons at Boney Thosvital @n hour to drag out the pleces, Toe home of Miss Loretta O'Brien is 4t No, 542 Atlantic avenue, The Brookas live at No. 245 Sixteenth street. During 4 visit paid them by Loretta they begau to quar When Loretta went into the game with her hatpin she says that both Brooks and per eister turned uy; her had tao in self Weapon entered below the left eye, roof of his mouth tongue. The young woman was arraigned in tne itlere Btreet Court today and V '@ Mae LABORER 13 A PROVED GENIUS Hugo Bertsch’s Long Years of Toil May Be Rewarded by, Fame for His Accepted Work | as Novelist. WRITES ECONOMIC WORK. Recites the Doings of Tom Pratt, an American Worker, and Is Said to Be a Masterplece of Fic tlon. Among the ranks of Brooklyn labor- ors is a genius whose long years of toll are to be rewarded by fame and wealth. He 1s Hugo Bertsch, a poor furrier who lives in a few small rooms at No. 60 South Eighth street, Williamsburg. A book which he has written at night after the arduous duties of the day has been accepted by Cotta, the great Stutt- jgart publisher, and termed by Adolf Wil- brandt, the noted German writer, the equal of the works of Gorkt, Brother and Sister Play. “Brother and Sister” is the name of the novel that according to critics wi!l stir not only Germany, but every na- tion that is interested in the social and economic problems of the day. It re- cites the events in the life of “Tom Pratt," an American laborer, whose struggles against starvation after be- ing disabled in an avcident are told in & sertes of letters to his sister, the wife of a poor Western miner. The writer has Uttle education aside from that which he hes given himself by studying when others were asleep. Born in the Black Forest of Germany be went to the village school for a few terms when his labor could be spared from the field. At the age of twelve he went to England, where ‘he learned his trade, working diligently the whils to learn the language. Wandered the World Over.. When he became of age he returned to Germany and served the reculation three years in the army. Since then he has beaten all over the world as sailor, miner, brickmaker, farmer and lumberman, While enduring the drudg- ery of these occupations the was ac- quiring an intimate knowledge of the workingman that was of great value to him in his Mterary work. Thirteen years ago he came to Brook- lyn and was married. Two children Formal Announcement of His Marriage to Miss Neilson Is Made by Her Mother. Formal announcement that Miss Kath- leen Neilson will be married to Regi- nald C, Vanderbilt in Newport on April 15 was made last night by the bride's mother, he wedding, which will be held in Gt. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, will be a quiet one, Only a few gues will be invited and fewer will ceceive invitations to the Neilson home, which 1s at present the Newman cottage in Catherine street, The house is too HAD MILLIONS AND ONE CENT. Joseph Norris, Member Wealthy HUGO BERTSCH. WORKMAN WHO RIVALS GORKI are now in the home, and he goes to Harlem to work each day. He is now forty years old. Wihen the evening meal is over and his wife and children have gone to bed, he sits for hours at the kitchen table ana by the light of a kerosene lamp does his work, Several months ago the manuscript of hie frat completed work was sent to a’ playmate’ in his native German Vilage’ He has walted long and patient. ly for a reply, and was beginning to grow sick at heatr when word came the publisher had accepted the work, and that It would doubtless bring Rim fame and fortune. Deals with Big Problems, The book contains between 300 and pages, and beneath the story of the poor man’s struggles Is a powerful pre- sentation of the problems of the church, labor movement, the kindergarten system and other questions which agitating ‘not only America but. the World, Ils work shows great research and though Mir. Bertsch will continue to, work at his trade until the returns first book enable him to enjoy the le! ure he has earned. In the mean th he is working patiently night after night on a second book, which, in his opinion, is stronger than the first. He talks Engileh with « broad German his nativ accent and writes almost entirely in THIEF GRABBED _ HIS DIAMOND PIN. Hopped Off the Car with the Spark- ler, but Was Caught In a Race with a Sleuth, A thief grabbed a $250 horseshoe pin set with nine diamonds, from the scart of Otto Danitz, a Trenton merchant, who was riding up Broadway on @ crowded street car last evening, The car had stopped at Fourteenth street when the theft occurred, Danits felt the pin going and Jumped after a man who had hurried from the car. The man ran toward Union Square, and Detec- tive Joseph Rothschild, of the Mercer etreet station, gave chase. The detec- tive overtook his man after they had raced almost across the park, and then after a fight succeeded in collaring him A search over the route they had traversed resulted in finding the pin where {t hud been thrown by the f tive, The prisoner gave bis name as Lewis Wagner, but {t was learned at Headquarters that he has been arrested for similar offences before under the name of Jackson, Wagner was arraigned in. Jefferson balites Court to- an, heli ls 1,000 randt, whom he remembered t, Philadelphia Family, Is Sent to Bellevue for Inquiry Into His|' Mental State. ASKED POLICE FOR HELP. Magistrate Pool, in the Centre Street Court to-day, committed Joseph Norris, forty-eight years old and a member of one of the best families in Philadelphia, to the Bellevue Insane Pavillon, Mr. Norris {s under the impression that he cannot spend any money, though he has millions, He walked into Police Headquarters and informed Capt. Hodgkin that he had been ejected from the Waldorf-Astoria and the Imperial Hotels, He was dressed like a fashion plate and had three diamond rings in a chamolg bag, and one cent. He had checks drwwn by himself to the amount of about $17,000,000, “Look here," he sald to Capt. Hodg- kin, “mine is a most distressing case of poverty. Though I hawe millions I cannot spend a cent. If you will con- duct me to the Astor House and se that they put me up there I will give you $3,000,000,"" He said he lived at No, 127 South Twenty-third street, Philadelphia; that his father, Frank Norris, built all the railroads in Russia, and that he had a brother-in-law who was a Count, Lawyer Mayne, of Philadelphia, told Magistrate Pool that the man's state- ments about his family were true. He asked that he be detained in Bellevue until his relatives could be sent for, ADIEU! ADIEU! TO THIS OLD SCHOOL Boys’ Department of No, 15 Will Be Abandoned on Monday with Speech and Song. The boys’ department of Pubile School No. 16 will take its Inst farewell of the old school bullding at No Fifth street, Manhattan, in which {t has beer located for sixty-one years, on Monday morning at 9 ck, and public exer. elses to mark the event will be held in the svhool-house at that time. The exeroisea will include three ad- dromes, as follows; "Fare by the Principals and Teachers,’ by Nathan P. Beers, who has been the principal of the 00] for Afty-four years; “Farewell by the Post-Graduate Associa Deputy Attorney-General Maurloe Blumenthal, one of the former pupils of the school, and “Farewell by the Board of Kducation,” by Gustave Straub muller, district superintendent of the Seventh District, Patriotic songs and recltations by present pupils of the de- pertment will make up the remainder of the programme. The boys department Is to be located rarlly inthe recreation pler at the Hoc ot Third street. wish has bea Bited up for school purposes, MISS KATHLEEN NEILSON, “THE WORLD;. SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 91, 1903, REGINALD VANDERBILT TO WED AT NEWPORT APRIL 15, | small to accommodate a large wedding party. ‘The decorators are already planning for the event and Miss Neilson is in ‘New York to make the final arrange- ments for her trousseau. The couple will go to Burope immediately after the wedding and remain unt!l the bd ginning of the Newport season. They ‘Nill then occupy jandypoint Farm. fayand workinen are ‘busy’ propeniag the place for their recepti tion. = ef “DEAD” MAN SAT UP AND LOOKED. In a Trance at Police Station, Pronounced Dead by Surgeon and About to Be Sent to the Morgue. HIS HEART ON STRIKE. A chance remark dropped by Ambu- lance Surgeon Beecher, of Seney Hoe- pital, Brooklyn, saved the life of James Robinson, an orderly in the hospital, ; Who is the victim of periodical trances in the duration of which he has the ap- pearance of being dead, A conference of specialists was held at the hospital to-day to study his case, which is con- sidered remarkable. Policeman Maher, of the Fifth avenue station, found Robinson at Fifth avenue and Fourteenth street. Maher thought him Intoxicated, arrested him and placed him in a cell. Soon afterward the door- man saw Robinson prone on ths floor. He investigated and found bim cold, The police concluded that he was dead, There was no apparent respira- tion, no pulse and no distinguishable beating of the heart. It wae decided to ind the body to the Moraue in a pa- trol wagon, ‘but, as a precautionary measure, Dr, Beecher was sent for, He agreed with the police, after varl- ous tests, that Robinson dead. He also recognized the man as an orderly whose services ae un asalatant in opern- tions made him valuable at the hospital, On bix return with the ambulance happened to mention that Robinson dead at the police station, The person to whom he made the re- mark remembered that some time ago Robinson was thought to be dead In the hospital, but had been resuscitated. Dr. Beecher hurried back to the station- house and after long, hard work su:- eeded In restoring life to the pactent. Me finally sat up and looked’ about. Then he was removed to the hospital Everything head been in readiness to take him to the Morgue when Dr. Beecher arrived at the station-nouse the second time. MGR MOONEY TO GET THE MITRE. Vicar-General of New York Quite Certain to Be Chosen Bishop of Buffalo Diocece, ROME, March 21 At a meeting of the Congregation of the paganda at the Vatican to-day it was considered cere tain that Mer, Joseph F, Mooney, Vicar- General of the Archdiocese of New fn As Bishop of Buf cceasion to Bishop ly appointed a TAG FOR HETTY GREEN’ S$ DOG} License Taken Out in Daughter's Name and Animal Won't Be Shot, Hetty Green's skye terrier Dewey was equipped with @ Icense to-day and can now run at large in the atreets of Jersey “ithe license was taken out by Charles ea in the name of Mia Bylvia HER HONEY MOG ONLY 2 MINUTES When Brown’s Newly Made Bride Wouldn’t Give Him $300 He Left Her Without Any More Ado. BUT NOW HE REGRETS IT. Arrested for Abandonment, He Is Ordered to Pay His Wife $4 a Week or Go to Jall—Was Married by an Alderma' Abraham Brown has not found mat- rimony the monetary success which he endeavored to make it. After a honey- moon of two minutes’ duration, during which he learned, so says his bride, that she would not give him $300, he left her, tho declares, and she was forced to in- voke the ald of the law, They were married on Dec. 19 last by + After Twenty-three ¥: Excruciating Agonies Sufferings Mrs. Welcher Is Cured by Paine’s Celery Compound : The Life-Saving C Compound Is The Trusted Spring Medicine ix Millions of Homes Thror~h- out the World. iu From time to time adventurers speculators without conscience or actuated only with a desire to make money easily and fast, resort to the com= pounding of worthless and dangerous preparations, and advertise them as cures for the common diseases that afflict men’ and women in springtime. Would to an Alderman at City Hall, she told Mag- istrate Zeller in Essex Market Court. Brown lived then at No. 9 Ellery street, Brooklyn. On leaving the place her husband sald to her, the wife declares: “Have you Rot the $30?" "'No,”. ghe replied, “I didn't bring it with me. I've got it In the bank." “Then,” sald the newly made husband. “you go your way end I go mine. If you want me to live with you go and get the money.” The wife said that since then she asked him over a hundred times to pro- vide a home for her, but he refused unless she complied with his request, Finally she got a warrant for his ar- rest for abandonment. Brown was made a prisoner to-day by a trick. The wife wrote to him to come end get the $90, and he was promptly on hand. He cursed his fate when the policeman placed him under arrest. “What?” he exclaimed, when ar- raigned in court; ‘wam money? How ridiculous. Why, she left me.” “I belleve the woman,” decided Magistrate Zeller. “I witl place you under bonds to pay her $4 a week.” ——=>>_—_ BRUTAL THIEt BEATS WOMAN. Rifled Till in East Side Candy Seeking to Escape. CONFEDERATES GOT AWAY. John Daly, fifty-two years oli, who 1s known to the police of every big city in the country as a@ ¢ill-tapper, and who ‘has served dozens of terms of {mprison- the candy store of ‘William Mfound at No. 5% East Twelfth street. He also was charged with brutal assault on Ors, Sarah Mound, wife of the proprietor of the candy etore, Magistrate Flammer ‘held him in $2,000 batl for the Grand Jury. Early to-day Daly and two pals broke into the candy store, Daly tapped the til of 620 in small change, while the other two men stood guard. As Daly was crawling toward the door on his hands and knees Mrs, Mound, who had ‘deen awakened, came in. Daly shouted and his two companions held the wom- an while he beat her in the face with his fist unt ehe became unconscious. ‘Then all three fled, going in different directions. Detective Joseph A, Wasserman, of Bast Fifth street, who heard Giound’s cries; enw Daly turning into gaught him, brief struggle Joo! hase, ‘and after @ ‘ked fim up. The other men got awa: DOCTOR LEARNED The Power of Pure Food. Sometimes a physician who has ex- hausted medical skill on his own case finds that he has to look to pure food to cure him by its simple and homely yet natural and scientific principles, A well-known physician and sur- geon of Crowley, La. has spent a great many years in this profession. “The services of my lifetime,” he says, “have been to try to better mankind; to help them preserve health when in possession of it, and to help them to regain it when lost. So {t is with great pleasure I recall my first introduction to Grape-Nuts, I had never investigated the food un- til 1 came to use it in my own case. I had suffered all that a man can suf- fer from dyspepsia; had tried to heal myself and hed had the services of many other prominent physicians, Then I clutched at Grape-Nuts as a drowning man clutches at a straw, and to my great gratification I found that I had dis- covered something besides a broken reed to lean upon, for the food began to recupel extent that I have returned to my old habit of eating everything that I de- sire, and can do so without distres: “And I have not only found a good friend in sickness, but a most de- licfous dish as well, It is (he most nu- tritious article of diet I have ever found, and I notice its splendid ef- fects more particularly at night time, fora cer of Grape-Nuts and milk is always followed by a most refresh- ing sleep and perfect awakening, My only regret {s that I was so slow to jenn, Hetty Green's daughter, and ite, pumber te 17h, look into the scientific merits of this wonderful food.” Name furnished by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich, Store and Savagely Attacked Proprietor’s Wife as He Was ment, was arraigned in the Yorkville Court to-day on a charge of robbing stonishment and ate me immediately, and it! has now entirely cured me to such an| Heaven that the cry of danger! dang could be sounded in the ears of all unthinkingly buy and use = tions and frauds. Fortunately honest druggists. such worthless remedies and refuse sell them. They will tell you with dor that Paine’s Celery Compound is iB spring medicine they can hey know its composition, are ac quainted with the facts of cures effected by it, and have seen its py_results amongst their personal Can you, dear sufferer, hesitate sei ‘ this disease-curing medicine? It has stored to health and the full i ale vyinient ‘of life tens of thousands whom doct were unable to cure, Mrs, H. A. We er, of Kingston, Tenn., says— “It gives me great pleasure to tell world what Paine’s Celery has done for me. For 23 years Suffered with chronic flux or ee the bowels. I have had eij ne of the best physicians of the ‘State a different times to wait on me, but ne had any relief. 1 was treated by of Knoxville's best x Coe seeing so many estimonials many that I + boi H was as inne son to ye ea and before» used the could feel q es difference—that I eae getting st rer, and I enjoyed my food more, ind taking four bottles 1 was l only wish that the medicine placed in the reach of all suffering Tobias’ DERBY CONDITION — POWDERS ‘WARRANTED SUPERIOR TO Ald phy reine were, ot DISTENER Fob.” FOOD, ac., in it on Homes: tS wo eo cup fn CATTLAL H. Zeitz & Tarshis, CLOTHING MEN, WOrIEN AND CHILDREN ~— on the Most Liberal Tero CREDIT, ‘3d Ave., ar. NEN YORK | 7ate-74sath Avaneggih se 535 Fulton St, opp. Elm PL BROOKLYN } {68 sth Aver "er tun Se WHEN YOU MOVE EQUIP YOUR OFFICE WITH Modern Furniture Aud the Best Facilities for Com» ducting Your Busiusss. |] Most comvbaie Assoaiaaat OF OFFICE VFURNITUSE EVER OFFERED, CHAS. & |] 275 Camas st, 3 Dow Telephae, RIGGS DISEASE (in ame, DH. COLTONS ‘Aacringeai—Ankieepth (it cleanses, Reals Kast of gabe 1280 Goring. Werte Want ads.” have” And seh fo wealth Bak 1

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