The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1911, Page 8

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ne Lh toe as cau Se RE PEORY WE TNT > RR ST RIN The Evening World Daily Magazine, Saturday, July 232, 1911. Sa sasaan ee nn ne __) sy br World. Build Your Own*Subway. yt Sunday by the ‘Preas Publishing Company, Nos. 68 to 68 {Published Dally Excop' fay by, Confessions aaiand Seay soos Peete ie. 35 AIF reps ana fess Dor By Maurice Ketten. Of a Mere Man | 63 Park’ Row. 63 Park Row. | ¢ Fs 7 ond ; Se Ry Matter. e an ) Ra tS Tolan For Pain wink ths (oantinen®, god ae CLUS ALA IG PLMOd) orld ford Canedee oaiflostat Union. STRAPHANGERS OF GREAT ABluTY® see 83.50] Ono Yoar.. + 30 Allo THE DIGGING. saciid hen inane ® Mave f THEATRICAL LANDMARKS. | Ane ITH the _ passing of the ‘ 4 il i One Month... The Ungentle Art of Swearing. HAVE promised to “give up" swearing for the sake of ‘the sweetest gtr in I the world"—by that, I moan, of course, the eweetest girl T have met this summer, I have noticed that !f a girl doesn't make you “sive up” eome- thing she makes you wear rubbers, or part your hase tn the middle, or read improving titeratur A woman MUST reform a man in some way; and ff she can't find anything the matter with his moral she turns on his clothes. The dear things DO so tove to “mother” us! One way or another, a fellow has got to do Qenance for the privilege of loving them, In the Middle Ages they tied And ordered him to go out and chop off somebody's head nowadays th merely tie a plaid necktie round bis throa and order him to go out and chop off his mustache his pet habits. Just why the “aw particular crime of mir ment I don’t know, unle spicuous fault. 1 hay traits into one. [ tok a ribbon round his erm \{\\\) AWN WWI, tt i puts out the lights for good and all. Tn Jess than a generation it had been left “downtown” by the northward rolling tide of theatrical and amusement down its final curtain and i est girl’ should nave selected this for the object of her reform move: it ie my most een my other sinful caring. Tam per | tectiy re that the ability to ewoar - y y plesure ely has many sites, Aloo, it-wed the lest PLENTY oF HAT PINS To DO PLENTY of ComHUTERS - times saved me from committing my 1 striking down old men aad . Also, THE DRivuing Te Do THe SHOVELING? LeT's flinging helpless babes {nto the fi 7 i gles or eotd theatre of first-class pre- ( Trey RNow HOw % SHOVEL QUARANTEE IT poigon to the office force; and even trom INT GESTION shane tolnw thao Wad T | Swearing Is the safety valve by whieh on Toman dete eff steam when hie tension. uying to d SNow) T OURSELVES emotions have become overcharged. It prove he from ness east of Fifth avenue. —— | going Into his system, festering, and perhaps devel nto a eur krouch The house was never pop- | [or chronio dyspepsia. When a man doesn noke ular nor prosperous for any continuous time. Managers called it unlucky. As a matter of |] fact its fluctuations of fortune were the logical ones coming to any_ i! spectiative enterprise without purpose or policy that is tried upon rather than invited by an intelligent public. over what worse crimes lie commits iy (ie brute nature out in some way, Women can an can only swear You know how it ts aft gone wrong, a ask for a half the baseball gam 1 hard hot day at the of we d the office boy comes ty woletling- WHISTL off because his grandmotier is dead and ne to eelebrate. You to throttle himetnt you d You merely. The closing of the Garden Theatre will not leave any noticeable HPRE, you-ee MeaecHa samenan as listed a gap. It cannot reasonably be chronicled as the “Passing of a' ve He t ih effect, and ntly ae etter. ‘The tension \ leved; the atmosphere has cleaved, and by the time atrical Landmark.” New York has no such landmarks, nor any cigar the rest of your grudge again a has gone Of course, I know that the “sweetest girl” does not v« WANT me to give up swearing. No woman wants a man to stop swearing entirers She only thinks that tt Is her “duty” to MAKE him stop. But she can't help admiring him for doing {t, even while she ts snubbing him about it Nothing relieves her feelings like hearing a #0 wrong about the house, It is a vi in addition he begs her pardon—-well, | superiority, her proximity to the ang: her PARDON for acting human in H A woman CAN'T swear—out loud—poor thing! She ang the door r throw someting down on the floor so hard ike a “damn;* or tear her handkerchief or her bouquet to pieces #o that it looks ke an due trated “swear But T have the theatrical history,:in the permanent and creative sense. The brief and uneventful record of the Garden typifies that of | almost any modern New York playhouse. It never had an individual manager, nor a stock company of players. It was always to let, like |] plenty of BABY the Madison Square’s mnin arena, to any old show that came down |] CARRIAGES To the pike. You never knew, in patronizing the place, whether you | oe Ui were going to see Barnum’s circus or a Greek tragedy. Against a | hundred failed or forgotten “attractions” there, only three or fouz | stand out in memory, and these are not three of a kind. One was aj] production of a weirdly translated version of Rostand’s “Cyrano | de Bergerac” by the late Richard Mansfield. Another was “Trilby” | «wear roundly when things f lett off steam. And if her feel her lofty having a man beg To Fino The BesT SuBway ROUTE To Buico Asis THe MAN WHO CAN Fin WH more keenly sgn ean 17 Per CenT GUARANTEED To ives “swear” at their hust Is across the table at a dinner § OURSELVES | Ss | party with their until the air was blue. Oh, yes, swearing IS an “art? 4 ‘ : , ‘ A SEAT IN THE [Jitsu don't believe it, listen to an amateur in the rhapsodies of nis firm “swear --enough said. One original American piece, and one only, scored Het a Hee fee al amaze you, my dear fellow - 4 bs re v2 : h, well! Why these fond reflections! I am going to give tt all up for at this dramatic old curiosity shop, and that was George Ade’s lucky EZ wake of “the sweetest girl—this summer.” 1 am going to learn to ‘ay On strike, “The College Widow.” \ dear!” when the waiter spills a plate of hot my trousers; “Tut, tut!’ NG when the office boy tips over the ink, and and “Jehoshaphat!” em tH rh \ r 5ann 6 PM all other exciting occasions. ‘ ; iN LET EE OCUt 4 F \ "|| That ts, 1am going to TRY—Dut tt will be an awful strain on my good natere, k OUT OF THE FIRE, INTO THE FRYING-PAN. " SELL TICIRETS FoR IE CAN FIND | T shall be grouchy for hours at a time, just for the want of @ good, atrong werd. | ete { AN HOUR, EVERY ANY THING: |My breakfast won't agree with me, I shall kick my dog and beat my valet—tut H HE die is cast, ed the TEN HONey eee AE dal my word, And I'll keep {t, so help me—Jehoshaphat \ Brookl ‘a Tene N e deuce! i rooklyn Raspic ‘ransit sts is Company gets the entire } new subway system, in- Sere ee ers | s s Fount 3 How Cupid Levies Ta i i with the ; Yr Tnterborough of Manhat-|} Extra! A Perfectly Good Bachelor Has Escaped t ‘ pon e ice Doss ig tan. It seems impossible F th J . . rom the Jarr Flat! And He Is Still at Larg ‘ > f to congratulate the city e a e C's as forced himself into the puts the marriage rate of the operas t upon an ntia! j onsideration of employers on the| tors tm the exchang : po y essential gain Govrright, 1911, by Tho Press Publishing Oo, (The New York World), xirl side of the labor market. | than one tn ttn or Mot eas Reete { through the Board of Fe- By Roy L. McCardell. moat unkind!’ cried Miss Mudridge. “I) looked hard at his arm and sald how) ‘Boo! to a goose. Especially if it 1s a) ‘The summer harvest of hearts an-|per cent. a year, : Hom awardee y yl. i hope you don't class me with those|rough the road was and how I was al- | marrtageable, respectable young git ' har anpicverd Ge Gwaue | Theta the GER TOW. you won't tell a goult bold persons?" waya afraid when riding over rough | Now if it—but never mind! bik alee tient | aan cried ee, eee bare. Brooklyn outfit of approx- Mise Clara Mudridge asked) “on, certainly not!" said Mra, Rangle {roads in an automobile that the door! “I hope vou do not think T woull™ Of replacing the girls who have) o6eh going into the training claws of the ' imately the li h the question of Mrs. Jarr and] quickly, She really meant “Oh, cer-| might open and I'd be bounced out, he | countena him in being bold or fore |S0Ne out from their work at the call of ep My ors school, preparing to sitp in Ma same lines that Mrs. Rangle 19 low | tatniy, yes!” But she hadn't heard|took his arm away ngle?” asked Miss Mud- ittle god. Bald cee ant the ewitchboands 60)0be, were refus e a tones. Those ladies | as yet how Miss Mudridge had man-| Here Miss Mudridge sished a# though a “Marriage? Shopeiriat’ ‘The man | °rides go ou ae drew thelr chat ist eae « bed Despite the fact that mmmer wed d elr c| aged the wary bachelor, and she was|she wished he hud not a a one t rua rke for one of tt fom: I~ borough on account of closer, holding] tactful “My gracious!” cried Mra Rangle FP Se ape ree ane oe Te dings are the source of many vexations stock-jobbing demands their tea cups Ce “T know It was only forgetfulness,” | What is the matter with the men tady t Wiel & acl waulanit(coamonswaasniared Me me ee tient managers in the shop, * e « ne “ ya? They se frac 0 ay have 1 . x n fact to all th fn joy - only a degree more exorbitant than the people are “up against” now 4) bade ee Pings Miss Mudridge continued, “for when I! these da i em afraid to 84) have ¢ driving—we didn’t have any ey are quit in flocks these | male iabor, no Karten te dake ce ; ‘ Sven i . ‘ er ean worrmme Lauton then—with a young man. days—lots of the best girls T had, t00. | seeks to one can. b in 1 on the part of the B. R. T. Even if Mayor Gaynor puts his threat- Wy — Ge yal who wouldn't try to hold me In. .And | Quitting good fobs to be married, Prob: aaa ‘i t eat ine ade . * < ‘s : yet I wa ever forward or bo y to ‘on the wife's ha e wld Matter if he ened veto on this award, euch action cannot affect the important lines $ tattiers! ‘The least Th B b da t ee Ree eee ee nee a iS Ubi tala Hai yi enti Sabra fie Cae ¥. Why let ‘em, wae ii i we for the rest of Suc y 5 already legalized, euch as the Lexington avenue route of the Tri-| # we thing eed Priest e usy ©) Ry a “I wouldn't lke to lose Mr. Silver's |cooienness! But it's no use to advise. the way one manager put it, waving his eae ‘ << 9 mal respe o ow," c ‘esignation as he ind! horough system, and the subway extension in Fourth avenue, Brook- y z peunceccn, (bey pe ea aad murmured Mles/T quit that long ago: | hana en Me - apr) ee \ Mud: NL lceergera 9 |long alsios where the giris we lyn, already under construction. 7H L blurt it gai Fisk the ummer Resort Res Fiddlesticks!" a Mrs. coe ii i. 1 Perse et “4 meeting tha trade. ton Day Raid 5 ut But Mr. arr) angst h a fear ab sass ‘ 4 as t e » be eroor wore Anyway, there is now to be some considerable new subway dig- MSCARDELE was deep tn a} “ tLe Udi rt ncn a pe me had heaviest Vy we rs " t ap rae than this, : 4 ; ’ ‘i a . se success ecren nal? rself 0} » come over only to «There's a reason,” remarked the tele- | That's what they take it for ging done without further delay. That is something tangible to go| deck and all the rem of the world was) By Sophie Irene Loeb. ollie baths eee vame| Rear the details of a tepid evening cippes des ate oneaton Evenfi¢ women are Invading the felé ‘ aa ; ‘ar away from lim, So Miss Mudrids jo say that there was @ WOM"! ‘tio ig there to,be any progres bay : ‘ris of men's labor and : on with, and the people’s official representatives will have time at Hh ip’ tan of the inciients of ner | 66 HEY WILL TALK ANYWAY!"|an at the bottom of it, THE wor _ ane rh te Progress In the mosts susceptible of — girls to Hy ae otal Q the vous “ ° ; } T " : : THE is ove a nless a young man shows pelircey of the bveadwinner © always he! least to think over what they have done, if not clearly what they are] automodiie ride to Brighton with Mr. POU antag ie ee Pedal matali tped to drive Gull{ some intereatt Te eee ora amolavadan tage (io. ON 1 that they Were made to : *, * " i ’ Jack Silver, the untrapped bachelor, the fe visite he sto hel cane away, but rather was a hindrance, Pie Abi CHeriahiiy wat 600 bg yt going to do in the future. Meanwhile the Interborough owns and| pent beto ! veranda of an inn | perhaps t sly but certainty Corl sagt Mew darren ot Perfect FIBRE” | phone exch: ie esp ereame fogs, . A Fame * Ja "i 7 cer require 8 nat © is yet another soure n . runs the existing transportation in Manhattan, and to that very con-|, “Yeu know how absent minded he | Seem te | ee ot sonic | in order to enc pone aie da uaa A Aa he ip Rab ‘, . i ; sh : fe? Miss Mudridge went on. "Well, sort near New) And, be it known, the night with ‘ts! SRE ENTTS ake thi a worker in i C siderable extent still holds the key to the situation. The optimistic | without thinking he put his arm on the York. It 9a hint| thousand eves cannot holt a candle t Meanie ee nd wive | of wh A “ t ‘ Pape f also to retain her Sem etl e telephone man calcu- | dowr k. suggestion that the Interborough may yet come around with new | Dek of the seat of the car ; that to the wise! the woman es to find of ialvace dracon cont, cee, 88 leph n Hig alcus 0 f it A hae Ah ‘ “Do you pall that forgetfulness? is an encyclopae- | something to talk about nl r y that only thr he voice of | strange 1m y varesr, proposals for extensions of its lines does not strike us as particularly |asked Mrs. Jarr. "That's what they* all aia 1 Oh, say, sister, it iwr't FATR! Char- soy a operator does sinpany come | S0es back to the oll hume to spend @ inspiring at the present moment—though poss eo titi do. They Just want to see how far Some of us are} ity of words may in at home, but Sead wie ralie abate, “onument ld ontact with t uublie; that] Week or two at the ex fa hard ‘igh Bf Pr 7 7 4 ough possibly the competition of they can go. T wouldn't trust a one of BORN with wis; should not end there. The dest place ae caiie A oi Pate cal et therefore, must be a pleasing contact, | kathered hoard, ‘he experience of the the new lines may stir things up a bit. eras matriad’ cr sinatal’ Beant ae Walter MEP IE A: at the. RGR’ ERY I never iked the man’s eaked Just so truly as the voice 1s an index | city's strive has taught her Just how “But it doesn't mean anything,” ven- AOHIEVE — wis-| Where it can in truth be most resource- Rangie of character and disposition, so cer- | much t career is worth, and how tured Mrs, Rangle, “men will do that | o dom and some| ful We talked about the plays ‘ve (tainly is the telephone girl Mkely to) 1 it to gain when thousands of when they are carriage riding or auto- | |, , ave =wisdom| For here ts the place that ts Seen and who were our favorite be attractive and capable of domes- | others are strucmling for a foothold, too. mobdtle riding with any woman, old or) soPpHit TRENE ‘MIRUST upon us.) FORWARD to, perchance, b rs actresse said Miss Mua- | ticity. She returns to the old home to see it in young." LOEB And thus has the, Work-a-day Individual (as in the « ; So !t ts that the telephone girl in|a perspective that was tmpossible be- “Yes, they are all promiscuous,” aald wise proprietor | of the young woman mentioned) as the Bosh 4 Mra. Sale, th talking the company into the good | fore The love and the man she put Mra, Jarr, ghancing at Mr. Jarry, a8] ae i aom on the passerby that| ONLY foyous time of the yenr, she!ix anything that drives me wild it is graces of the public also talks herself/ aside to go down to the hurrying town though ahe suspected he led the butter: | {rust his wisdoll of bie, | having Dut a little to spend and a hear people sit around and talk into the heart of man. pursuing the “career look better Drinking Fou je for Horses, |piness” Aren't the studying and solving | fly life too—when he wasn't watched. he whe. Pune. g mer resort, i¢| #0 While to at lasadt OIA aatarat Exact statistics {n the matrimonial | through the glass of experience—and she ‘Fe the Editor of The Prening World of pi ems which daily occur any| “But not Mr, Silver expoatulated | ne history of the summer if rt, ‘At least you and I need not be THE Oh, 1 guess there were persone) |mortality of telephone girl are not | stays, stays to redeem an error before Tread that @ philanthropist {sin favor }home sumictent to warrant a little time | Miss Mudridge, “He 1s so very care-| chronicled, would bid fatr to rival @9¥) thom in the long-looked-for rose, Sup-| topics discussed of more interest, were available, A conservative estimate It 1s too late-Chicaso Tribune, of having drinking water supplied for|spent in rest and in recuperation? ful!” soy | history of any war that Was ever) pose thingy do not just exactly ineet| there not, Clara?” asked Mrs, Jarr the hor: I will certainly sing bis] In looking at the jatter from another| “Huh! 1 should say he {8 careful!" | pugit, Phe summer resort ts the bat-| with our approval; will the cold glance, y slyly og Praise, and hope he will ve @ great nt, I think that a vacation for |#napped Mra, Rangle. “If 1 know Marl tlo ground of men and women on which) the touoh-mo-not attitude, the tattl “Wh really! you could not expect seeaeen w success, =I would like mpress on [ti family might be alo considered as | #itl Who has her cap for him, I jerchance, if it were not clvilized, to| word make ft any better? > to tell you EVERYTHING that was N Ss l N some ice-hearted drivers how important investment which brings ite returns | know @ dozen, But, as you say, he 1/114 victor would belong the cotls, That} Rather give the word, the encour-| said?" asked Miss Mudridge coyly. — | ew t yie 9 t es @ matter it Is to be kind to the horses, Not alone in dollars and cents, but in| VERY careful! , , It are spoils to be divided eeems| agement of cheer, the graciousness | ‘That w just exactly what 0 etna nnnn AAA AAA AAA AAAAAAAAAARARAARAA INE Miss M. K.C., Hoboken, N. J, jthe making of a happy family and a true] “Oh, Mrs, Rangle! 1 think tet {8 | evident, Just what form they take which 1s perhaps the SUREST m | HAD expected, And Mrs. Rangle sniffed UITE a few slashed skirts Ar®)of our prominent dressmakers was of a, ae eee lAmenaan home cm, | ne a las Mr. Kipling says, “another stor: of showing the way the erring one) sarcastically. Just then the door bell appearing, and since all’ the! Permo crepe in an exquisite shade of Te the Editor of The Evening World | A Summer Drink, His Specialty. | But one thing i certain, and that 1] should go, than any other. Aloo jrang. prominent dreasmakers are fea- lavender blue. ‘The adjustment of the ‘A Merchant writes that he seen no| 7? {he alitor of The Kvening World |the fact which we MUST recogntze) NEVER created anything but MISERY| “Go see who It Is!" sald Mrs. Jarr to qurtmg them these skirts will probably | fringe trimming was novel. Rieiee Riri civine his empiovess a eaann| © suminer drink can be made latter long expertence- tae popular sum Jana unbellef in the heart of the human hu: 1 f it's anybody with alte more favorably received than were| It had two rows of the plam wn- ton. He says he pays } ‘ mark, a pretty pink drink, mer resort ta certainly sy, nd 80 ttle Japanese, whoso| Mil, tell them yme to-morrow r, the harem skirt knotted fringe starting at oer res 6 tee rhubar retty pink drink, Holl t le certainly ¢) busy, hustling | And the little J | tell nt t Lrg ; ch ' 1 mat the lett ste don the work they do. 1 won. x t stalks in a quart of water, hive wondrous motto of a thousand y | But the caller was Mr. silver These skirts either have the foot hem) waist line and extending downward they do anything for him they are n ) the llquor into a pitcher with some | dt is supposedly t%%) APPY HUNT-| the aymbols of which are before us| "You're Just in time,” whispered Mr. | giacneq, in which case the pretty foot- | diagonally across the akirt about nine RSA. 40°40? Very unlikely, v ame gar. Tat it stand on the | ING GROUND of twe Ured, the weary, | of might stand us in good stead | Jarr to the caller. no's here wear ia set off to advantage, or the inches apart and ended at the bottom ployed by such a man. I won how . yor until cold, I don't like tee, the seeker of reereation. But oft especially during the whiling-a | “wh er neked Mr. Silver, overakirt 1s left open at the side seam | side opening, for it was « slashed skirt. { Dae iooktne cut are ig ne, | tt:40, atten lean, We have done [very often, sorry to aay, the specu; portod of the summer season—"SEH| “Your gith Clara Mudridge,"” replied | PYCMN The “anywhere from 10 to %| ‘The quaint bodice was covered with & terests, trying to get more buatness for | Niwout Mk for five years, A pottul of |iator who has cast his bread on the| NOT, HEAR NOT, SPEAK NoT RVIL| . oh late sites Ae tect chee him, or are willing to work “time Ceston tea with a clove or two is water LOOKING FOR RE RNS|OF ANY 0 * said Mr. Silver and “the slashing solves the problem of | tringe, and the’ chiffon undersleeves so that he might make money enouxh nd healthful, served in glasses, Tt JGENERALLY RETURNS = SPUd.| The truth te that @ thing, as @ rule |f Ebel Sees Carian Tae wearing the very narrow skirts, many | had the @oning to produce the new to send his wife und daughters (to {ks tempting BETTY ROYER | LooKINe ta never repeated as it ta started. And] “Who was it?" asked Mrs, cent lof which are still seen, ‘These skirts! balloon shape at the elbow whom he says he owes nothing), on a Water for City Horses. | Which, as you and Land all of us| the most powerful magnifying glass ts Tt was Jack Silver, but he thought (othe figure about as closely us they | Many of the new mideummer hat } vacation? To the Editor of The Evening World | know, Is NOT an it should be, There} ut a match compared to some of the] We had company and wouldn't come In, set and are worn over an under | of tha. Globune “Wyner One a i oe i look upon money paid io an employee | f New York during the 're-| home refreshed, ready to pick up he sonyeraas OP ee ae ana eon dat Ban ‘eo? Run after lim! | different material. | poke effect. The upper part of the hat for time epent on 4 vacation as money cent " Why? Many horse | threads of things where hey lett of SOMERS count / . i ssl as eae One m in navy blue has the under | was of shirred lace with tl roo} f bch Is the way-the ONLY way, But tt ts JUST as easy to say the —_ ’ he edge n= 5 Jost, or aH a xtft, Ather as some. | troughs had their water supply shut off. | waney ia the we malt eee ae 1 AT DIVID netticoat of white broadcloth with I4-|ing over the edge of the br f thing they owe th r for f t ater to horses But before me ts @ letter writ! by| NICE thing, No good ever came of THE GRE €. n ; a ‘tahna ae aE Aa im, The ‘e the employe of fait #% Water to horse 4 ies “4 Pe ah ogee} ole{ Reno. neh wide strips of the blue, stitched on | under brim was of ight blue, and @ ‘ el temk of pcarhace even as ap|where t . Lawn tennis a girl who came home @AD, ‘pies ed bogey Pare. raphy ae ed the harem skirt. vertically, giving the appearance of a| wide blue velvet crush band was draped investment, rightly expecting that the | courts ar water dally, | [snlerted. Ane. ne Tn eee| Forget the problems of others, We| ‘The tarift wail. wide, even blue and white striped skirt. | about the crown, from the top of which employees will repay him by the re n the streets on might read wie sats each can keep OUR OWN adding ma-| The fool and hie money ‘The overskirt comes to about two inches | a mass of white uncurled owtrich plumeg i newed strength and energy they der : : # must fall, and the | me + elles ens Wet ool ans A oe he pearly gates. from being full length, 90 that the|hung over the sides, The blue and } from ft. Ae to whether wife and | blame be up to the PCA, Al ny eon m A ay ore | ere Gere line. stripes are visible all around the bottom | white combination # @ prominent style { daughters are entitied to vacation or | low the horse troughs to furnish water ture ‘has chosen to make the girl's TER Jim Crow lawa, lena at the ake opening forme by | feature tn millinery ee in dross, t not, I would ask ow can @ man expect |to the horses instead of the taxpayer| “Ie your physician a spectalist?” | tife misorable by building a mountain! A BU BYBODY, FOR _ THE ONE] And \Soanch east x In bets, whether darge or ? f hig family to love ombonor him if he paying twice for it thr b the water “Sure! His specialty Is getting) out of a molelill that spread MAKES SWEET THINGS WHILE The Rio Grande.Fort Worth Rec. | %-in amen, thy Degsrudges a penny sent for gheir wap metere H. McC. | rich quick off mw troubles!” guming lava ¢o that it seared Bp, THE OTHER 18 EVDR A “LIMON,” | ord, ("Aa efferoesa que Gianlered ty gue high enemas ane grime daterting | i :

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