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2 ROOTIN SUBWAY | AS NEGROES FIGHT | INCROWDED TRAIN One White Man Stabbed as Cars Rush on Filled With Terrified Women WHISTLE BRINGS AID. Help Waiting at Grand Cen- tral Station and Arr Made There st Is A race riot raged on a crowded mub- Way express train as it sped without Stopping from Ninety-siath Street to the Grand Central Station at the rush hour this morning : While women screamed in terror and men fought to protect them, five Negroes aid a dozen white n ourged back and forth and battled amid the jam of passengers in « ewaying cor, A knife flashed in a Negro’s hand as he slashed at a small white mon he had cornered. The blade sank in the white man’s palm. Another man hurled the negro off, and he stood at bay in one corner of the car. With the motorman’s warning whin- tle shrieking for help, the express train dashed past the Seventy-socond Street station, while watting crowds of passengers looked on tn wonder, By telephone, word of the battle on the speeding train was flashed to Grand Central Station. And when the train arrived there five special guards and Policeman Hamiiton were waiting. ‘The five negroes who had begun the fight tumbled off the train and dashed to escape. Another fight between them and the policemen ensued on the station platform, but the clubs of ‘the officers soon did their work. Eugene Snyder, an electrician of No, 79 Cliff Street, the Bronx, the man who had been cut, identified William Wilson, a porter of No. 19 West One Hundred and Thirty-sixth Street, aa the man who had wielded the knife, Wilson was locked up by Policeman Hamilton and the four other negroes were freed. Snyder said he boarded the express train at One Hundred and Forty- ninth Street and Third Avenue. It was crowded when Wilson and four other negroes got on at One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Street. Snyder was standing in the centre of the tightly packed car, but the negroes crowded thelr way in until they were near him. One of them, Snyder says, took @ place direetly behind him, and as the train proceeded began to push Snyder against a woman in front. Snyder remonstrated, and the negro, he says, replied with curses. “If we hud you down South, where T come from, you'd get what was com- ing to you!” Snyder says be revorted, Instantly Wilson, who was several feet away, reached over and struck Snyder a stunning blow In the face, the latter asserts, pled beneath the blow other white men leaped to his aid and the minia- ture riot began. Guards soon found themselves pow- erless. ‘Terrifled women, unable to| escape in the crowd, were shoved and | struck by misaimed blows, and for| ten minutes the tube resounded with rieks, curses and the din of battle, which amazed men and women wait- ing at the local stations the ex- press flashed by. Wilson was arraigned in the York- ville Court on a charge of assault, af- ter Snyder's wounds had been dressed at the station house. FLUSH KIDNEYS WITH SALTS IF BACK 1S ACHING Noted authority says we eat too much meat, which clogs Kidneys. Take glass of Salts when Kidneys hurt or Blad- der bothers you. No man or woman who eats meat reg- ularly can make a mistake by flushing the Liven occasionally, says a well- known authority Meat forms uric acid, which excites the kidneys, they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the | then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidne The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi- ment, irregular of passage or attended by ® cone nm of soaldin meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a table spoonful in a glass of water bef breakfast, and in a few days your kid- neys will act fine, ‘This famous salts is nade from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has used for generations to flush and stimu- late the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes ire ritation, thus ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink, which one) should take now and then to. kee kidneys clean and ac blood pure, thereby kidney complications. the} serious As Snyder crum- | \corned beef and cabbage of the whole » the | thing.” THE EVENING WORLD, TUEBDA, New York Girl Is a Humming Bird That Flies Backward; She Should Go West, Says Arthur Stringer But Granddaughter of Horace Greeley, Who Gave Similar Advice to Young Men, Says She Wouldn't Go West if They Gave It to Mer. Author Asserts the Metropolitan Young Woman, | While the Luckiest Girl | ona Track That Becomes a Treadmill and Is | Too Overatimulated to Get Acquainted With Her Go West, young won Arthur | And he ts so impres @ritten a book about it dee pe and ¢ tally she fell tn women marry came” and every Now, I like agree with Its of New York, I to me. And that, Mr. Stringer told me, Is Arthur Stringer, born in Canada, educated at Oxford and for years and years a resident of New York City, very naturally takes a roay view of ranch life. And he thinks that we women of New York noed the vast spaces, the bigness and the splendor of existence forty miles from a mov- ing pleture show—or a new fashion or a new idea, 80 we would need them if such places were really big and splendid, but they are not, except in floor space, It has been my experience and ob- servation that ideas in this country flourish inversely as the square of the distance from New York. So [ say, go West, young woman, If you want big wheat crops, ble pump- kins, big earthquakes and Billy Sun- day—but struggle under the shadow of the Statue of Liberty if you want, bix Ideas, However, place to Mr, Stringer. It's his message, not mine. And there is really no reason why a young man, living at the Hotel Seymour should not feel utterly mellow about life on a ranch. Safely anchored tn West Forty-fifth Street, who would not feel | that a woman may find her soul by! learning how to churn or helping hus- band to save the wheat? IN PURSUIT OF PLEASURE N. Y. GIRL WORKS A TREADMILL. “The New York girl,” Mr, Stringer | told me yesterday, “ls the luckiest girl alive, But only in one way, for luck, after all, is not a matter of geog- raphy. She's so lucky, however, that) her luck merges into an actual mis- fortune. he is surrounded; as no other woman 1s, by all the machinery of what wo call civilization, the ma- chinery that makes life both easy and xelting. Life for her is a cleared track on which she can pursue pleas- ure for all she's worth, She pursues it, She goes round and round that track so fast that it takes her con- |siderable time to find out that her ltrack Is only a treadmill, “The New York woman, you know, is a victim of the tragedy of the ‘Thirteenth Oyster, some urban philos- opher having questioned the adyan- tages of being a millionatre since the thirteenth Blue Point never tastes good, For you can digest just so much city, just as you can digest so much meat and bread. That's why this metropolis is full of mental dyspeptics. “The New York girl ts operated on by too many stimuli, She is too febrile in her chase for impression. She 1s too ‘Hot-Foot Ike’ after emo- tional experience, She 1s too over- stimulated to sit down and get acquainted with her own soul. She imagines that she's getting every- thing out of life that life holds for her, But she's like the Duke of Clarence In his butt of Malmsly, She's like the darky boy who climbed into the sugar barre! and cried to be taken out, because he'd ‘Done et down to whar ‘twa'n't sweet no moh!" “The fact 1s, she can't see the forest for the trees, The cream of wisdom never gets a chance to rise on the pan of her soul, She basn't time for meditation, and without meditation you can't organize knowledge, and knowledge that hasn't been organized isn't worth # tinker's dam!” “But, Mr. Stringer,” 1 protested, “how can you really Know about oys ters until you have sampled the thir teenth? It's never a tragedy to find out that you don’t want anything—the misery is not to Know-—and until you have eaten down to where the sugar ‘ain't’ sweet no mo’) you haven't learned to be discriminating. You don't Know anything about nuance. C od caviar a Russe and chicken a la king, you can't get any thrill out of corned beet and cabbage. Very often you cannot even swallow it, And your soul sick- ens and dies, That 1s what would happen to the New York girl if she accepted the moral of ‘The Prairie Wife,’ It wouldn't be the lack of life's machinery that would kill her. It would be the dearth of ideas—the crudeness, the unsophistication, the THE FLEETING HUMMING BIRD THAY FLIES BACKWARD. ——¢2—__-_ —_ y Nixola Greeley-Smith. beginning, was merely Then she had » baby, and act fused to return to the moral ! Alive, Pursues Pleasure Own Soul, Stringer ways it to w York gir has just of his mewnnge ie Mr that Stringer’s vision of the villzing experiences which came to 4 daughter of New York who married Western ranch to grow up with the country i moved to a Inctden- her husband who, in the “the Other Man” that so many lly te East when “the ratlroed | © with effete dy got rich The Prairte Wife,” though T dua't Like many another daughter | wouldn't go Weat if they gave it the very reason wo all need to go, happy on a ranch? You feel that Western life is too crude and un- sophisticated for a girl who has gone to Biltmore muatcal mornings and fox-trotted at Bustanoby's and taxied from one big avenue shop to another ike @ humming bird hurrying through a garden of « hundred bloa- soma. Well, your New York girl ls a wood deal like that humming bird, for the humming bird t# the only thing in feathers that can be on the wing and at the same time fiy backward, “For with all her flying the city girl Is not naturally progressing. The fashions that she so madly pursues in all those big shops are really a sort of anaesthetic which life holds under her nose to keep hér from thinking about what she is really missing. For ie psychologista who stage-manage her hotels and shops and restaurants and these samo managers really are wonderful psychologists—know what | she is missing very much better than she does herself. “Bo they try to satisfy her innate craving for a more natural life, the natural life which the woman on the ranch finds always close beside her. ‘There's the ancestral craving for run- ning water, So the hotel manager puts a pool and cascade in the centre of bis restaurant and @ Croton foun- tain in his dining room, There's the dormant ache for open air and green- ery, for shrubbery. So the big avenue caravansary bas an imitation forest of tubbed trees on its roof. Popular supper resorts are manufactured by engineering @ background as rough and frontier-like as conditions will no’ allow. and county next yea pated ) year, It is estimated Why, even your Sixth Avenue! the charge to the city for t crowd succumbs to the rotisserie) approximate $851,306, ‘The where they can see fowl cooked In| charges for the sine purpose front of an open fire, just as the In-| total $14 dian does it in the foothills to-day.| york County, You can't grow flowers in the Plaza] ty, and Waldorf and Vanderbilt ___ ARTHUR STRINGER .. ALDERMEN WHET KNIVES TO SLASH NEW CITY BUDGET, |with exist to Defeated Fusionists Have 20 Days in Which to Make Appropri ation Cuts. session t t increase it, by 66, $43, Ki 9 yYOUland Richmond, $925, cut the heads off flowers grown some-| paid by the Greater City for rentals where out in the country and have} will be $999,636, them carrle& in on things on wheels and peddied about tables, for the acho NEW YORK SOPHISTICATION MAY BE APPALLING. ful, you say. can devour and does devour beauty. and galleries full of it in gilt frames, She gulps it down, imagining by this that sho makes her own Jife beautiful, which idea is really as quaint as the cannibal’s naive belief that by eating Th: you. enemy's heart you fall heir to his courage, ‘For the city girl's mind is apt to be a creche delightfully crowded with the Infant ideas of other people. You remember what Burroughs said when he found seven distinct species of songbird in the orchard of the lady who complained that she saw none there: ‘You must have the bird in your heart, madam, before you can ever find it in the tree,’ “There are too many quickly beat- ing little hearts in this city which if Although wholesale mended. and the Bureau of + will likely be attacked. new is {s Interpret The M Comptroller Prendergast on city debt, tux deficien- cles and rentals to be paid by the city at his afternoon, the budget divided as follows: Bronx Coun 069.2 ngs County, $: budget before lost to-day the that proper be ays lary Stan ——=___—. The Board of Aldermen met special mally received $212,956, for-| the 1916 budget 54, recently passed by the! Board of Estimate and forwarded to| the Finance Committee, whe the law, it may remain twenty days. During that time the Aldermen may cut the budget ag they see fit, but may Mayor Mitchel has the power to veto the cuts, but in turn the Board may pass the the Mayor's veto with sixty votes. Accompanying report under budget over was a Willlam: nals will county will New the defeated Fusion Al to dining room}dermen will have au opportunity to to see thing¥/act on the growing Is unchanging and insistent! | go out of office, they will not be able | to help their friends who have hail their salaries feduced or “phe city girl's life 1s more beauti-|Jobs. They have the power, however, It's true the city girl|to recommend elimination of bureaus or abolition of jobs. Aldermen who claim they owe thelr She gets it in windows and on coun-| recent defeat at the polls to the work ters, in showcases and on the stage,|of the Bureau of Salary St tion and the Mitchel policy predicted would retaliat they ndlard ii Administration time to mean that dur ing the twenty days the budget rv mains in possession of the Aldermen slashing mav ae 1915, FIRE TRAPBLAME POLICE DISCOVER NOTE 10 BRITAIN LAID TO INSPECTOR POOLROOM TRUST | CALLED IN BERLIN BY STATE OFFICER FOR WOMEN ONLY DECIDED AND FIRM —_—.— I r M LAW WAS NOT INVOKED M | { Com | Not Obeved Owne f Idings Found Faulty, why thing actually done " but proper fire es —— f Wor and Man Arrested After Woman Dete Un Widespread Gambling tw f an alieged “pect-room a ’ 4 lead vely for wore 1 at Potten Head ot when four “ A by Chief Magistrate Me Aa The five prisoners are charged with having porated the rust” They are: ty Himeon, No, 99 Hee ond Avenue, Kate Paterson, No. 200 Went ) Bireet: Rowe Btolte, No. #78 Kast One Hundred and Thir tyeninth Stre Katherine Gettings, ne quem No, TH) Big Avenue and Evelyn ! A ney 6 ' aeked Lit wood, No 12) Weat Ninety-siath " ' Commisa Janes Mot the Inque tothe) Most of the wil which twelve were five was worked up by aw Keilbedt. joe offeer, Acting ‘ ' tor Rosquist failed Ada Hrady t pliance to hiw a On Oct. 23, an the result of evidence pee Was th fr furnished by the woman Leaning agwinst back of | Lieut, “Honest Dan” © M Lynch wan th charred | hls squad raided a house at N. 107 trapdoor, which was 4 in the | West One Hundred and Twenty-ateth way of the flecing factors hands and|Mtreet and there found many women penned them In where they met death, | WO are alleged to have been playing | Wuist, If ho had followed the|horee races. During the raid Mrs. uld have reported the Dia-| Emma Caney of 260 West One mandy (or ciminal: Kelson Fob, | Hundred and nty-first Street, ono ‘did SEY: Liphen, of the women in the house, dropped Hio admitted that his department | dead. of A. The total to be| ™4 om ‘8 departments MISS TOMPKINS THROWN AND HURT AT HORSE SHOW Daring Amateur Horsewoman Un-| you turned them inside out would| | al = es show only a powder puff and an art} conscious After Fall from Maxi- catalogue. The New York girl is so- * Hl phistic I acknowledge, and her mum, Blue 2ibbon Winner, soph ion ts charming, I also ac- s kne It is even sometimes ra-| Miss Marjorie Tompkins, a skit ther appalling.” amateur horsewoman, who has ridden Se many blue ribbon winners in hors THE MAN-EATER! shows In and about Nev York, was ‘Tho man who wrote “TARZAN or] thrown and hurt to-day (n the H THI APES” has just written for ‘The| Show ring at Madison Square Gard Evening World a still wer novel, dur the morning exeret hour, Hk MAN-BATER" is the name! she had mount on Maximum, a of this now story by Edgar |nig chestnut horse owned by Harry J Burroughs. | ; Waa He dea It is @ romance of the Jung’ | Palas of No. 618 Bt. Mark's Avenu of wild beasts, Brooklyn, with which she has alread All the thrilling elements that made| won one blue in the Garden this year. RZAD so populur are found in ; MAN-BATER. “THE M. “EATER serial publication in World next Monday, will Tho | vov, begin | ‘The animal became throwing Miss 1 eo fei ou be was picked up unconactous by Read Clark, the r tho attending ¢ Bomb Plot » Cant Reduce! on the judges’ inc An attempt to redu the ball of five| she recovered con: of the men who were yesterday indicted] Dr, H. BP. Swi by the Federal Grand spiracy to blow up ships and munition Jury for con- ab “So you think @ city girl couldn't be rasion of the unruly and re ympking to t ared, ane Fr superintendent, yoms, and carried ure. In a short ft of No, 121 f she Twenty-sixth Street found she hu scalp where tage mee struck the packed tanburk, a |factories, was opposed by Assistant] Knee and a cut on ier head mur United States Attorney John ¢. ox |hatpin, Later she w uae when they were arralgned to-day be-|home, Ne. 120 We fore Judge Howe in the United States| Street, in a taxicab, Mi 4 District Court, Mr, Knox denounced | ix the daughter of an fr ary the quintotte as assassing, All pleaded | Officer stationed in Rermud. not guilty and were given a week in i" —>- — which to change tholr pleas, and the| Piles Cured in @ to, 14 De original ba of $26,000 held in each | al rece dtiane ited Kiteity BESasnvn cone, fog Puce, sppiicalion gives Fella, 60c,—adrin | has no system of checking up the re | porta of Inspectors and that quist pt the ease for a y would have been might have k and no one wiser “+ ment the w many orders of your depart- that have not been complie asked Mr. Crop: ay ney “I couldn't tell you within hundreds or thousands,” said Commissioner Lynch wearily “Could you tell within one hundred thousand?” =| . “No; I could not.” Mr. Lynch said he had nothing to do with fire prevention except to seo that scraps were removed, but that his b had charge of pro- viding sufficient: fire tories under the law which went into effect In November, 1914, TELLS HOW THEY FORMULATE! THE CODE. ‘The New York st Industrial Commission, Mr. Lynch said, formu- lated the Code after public hearings which lasted several months, Q. What orders did you give as to fireproofing factories before the Code was formulated? A. We gave orders, but we could not specify as to the kind of fireproofing Q. Do you r any ent such orders? A. No, air, Mr. ¢ y i from ¢ ly No relating to fire tulrways in factories, re to be et 8 for fac. attempt to sree an ro Code proofed Factory losed in walls, ter board, Portland ce- jath, finished with one-elghuh stairways of pli and metal tar, and thiek understand that that law does not one inches apply factory buildings just tive wrles lich," Was the astonishing statement made by Commissioner Lynch, “That vas the opinion of our counsel, since the law mentioned build: ings more than five stories high Nevertheless, we issued the order to owners of such buildings just as if the law did apply, Que counsel, Mr, Cun- ningham, thought there was grave doubt." |'NO COMPLAINT MADE To pis- TRICT ATTORNEY. Commissioner Lyne could not r member that he bad re od the de wey of the law to the Legislature, e thought he had mentioned it t Wagner Committes, Nevertte went on enfor the law five-story bulldin did you di tsned Distr \ factory ¥ failed order its t ir apes Why, the inspector was instructed ke a notation on the buck of the answered Mr ou complain to. the In these Canes?" Lyncn. ud from t Lyn Di 1 that he ith knew had read al Labor C 8 ord tine, Heb ti rick H. Cunningha rule was to take eriminal ng work was ! you or an {It up. nA ft 1 build A. | Did you know n issued at A. 1 found ! ssued J) Wt Cropaey reall i \ ‘ A. ftovg n Feb 1 order had not been obeyed, “Dad you let this case go seven Following the raid Sergeant Brady said she had obtained evidence that Simeon was at the head of a woman's ‘pool room trust,” and that the four jay worked under orders The plan, according to from him. the woman detective, waa for all four of the women to open furnished apartments almultaneously in differ- ent parte of the city. Theso apartments, she declared, would be used as poolrooms on alter- nating days, so that the police found it dificult to trail those who were operating tho places er the women who wore betting on the races, Magistrate Appleton, before whom evidence against the alleged “trust” first was submitted, decided that sep- arate warrants for the four women said to e been in the organization should issued and that blanket be charges of “maintaining and keeping poolrooms” should be made against Simeon, —_—_———— Sik Firm in Hankeuptey. An Involuntary petition In bankruptey was filed yesterday tn the United States District Court against Gudeb Company, Broadway. ly ati M. Hough tary of ceed the assets, whic’ estimated Judge Charles ebrod as re months without starting ution?” asked Mr, Cr Inspector did not repe * with tho order, fe did not follow the The omplian Lynch, Mr. custom of our-department Commissioner Lynch could not tell why Kosquist had not sooner reported the violation of the order to Super- or George B. Ash, How. soon, Khould he have. re- xked the Coro soon as possible,’ said Mr, that does not specify any Was It ten days or thirty days two months?" "Oh, he shoul as possible,” rily. “Was there any system of checking the Insp or? ‘0; there was none, I think there should be a most complete system of checking wy “How many factories are there in this distric “Betw 95,000 and 40,000 factories this First District, which includes ter New York and Long Island There are sixty-five Inspectors, Mr Ash sup ised Brooklyn with seven- n factory inspectors.” mis ner Lynch bell 1] custom was followed; that notified Mrs, Diamond on 17 that the flreprooflug was not ne properly, and that if it were not remedied ‘he would begin criminal action ‘Diamond came over to our office Sept, 28th,” Mr. Lynch coatinued told Mr. Ash that he wanted the have reported as said Mr. Lynch aa that hein) He nant to make the changes; for the ant could afford tt. Diamond r 1 tho order postponed unti Christm because he had on money, But Mr, Ash sald thore could any pouty neat, and he wed Ditinond and hia contractor ist how the work should be done. What did counsel do between Sept ", when wrote a letter threaten ution, and Nov. 6, when the ne burned?” asked Mr, Cropaey { “ I Mr. Lynch Then all smplished was sin pews und words? Well ed to the tn A f they had compiled.” ak no furt + | infiuential Morgen Post Hopes It Will Make the Desired Impres- sion in London | — | PPRLIN cf lendon), Nev 6. Norlin newspapers ae a rule make go Net wit indications in headlines of the significance attached fo the communication ‘The Morgen Tost makes (he following comment “It te to be hoped the jeason in in. ternational law which the Washing- ton Government gives the Gritieh Government will make impre nin London. The bare fact that American Government uses such decided and firm language hows that the discontent of wide and Amer circles with Great Hritain must be assumed to be very earnest in character t isto be hoped America will not content herself with a bare protest, but will proceed to energetic meas- ures if the case demands and Great Britain's gross arbitrariness does not se The programme for ‘protection of neutral commerce’ ta very praise | worthy and America, as the strong: noutral power, could thereby d kreat wervice to all neutrals tf the programme sbould actually be oar- ried out.” The newspapers generally give great prominence to the affidavits filed at Washington by Ambassador Bernstorff concerning the British which is said to have shot down fifteen members of the crew of a German submarine after they bad surrendered or while swimming in tho sea. MUNICH (via London), Nov. 9.— The Noueste Nachrichten, comment- ing on the American note to Great Britain, saya: “This sounds definite and ener- gotic, but we must still walt to see whether this condensed excerpt from the note sharpens its tone or whether the note as a whole is not, possibly, decidedly milder than appears here.” ACQUIT ADMIRAL LITTLE ON SUBMARINE CHARGE ?) = Washington Hears Court Martial Verdict Is in Favor of Re- tired Naval Officer. WASHINGTON, Nov, 9.—Acquittal of Rear-Admiral Richard N. Little, retired, on charges of accepting the submarine K-2 with defencts, is un- derstood to have been recommended by the Boston court marial court, ‘The transcript of the testimony at the trial was received to-day at the Navy Department, Because of the short time the board sat in consider- ing the verdict, the belief was gen- eral that Little will not be punished. The verdict was reached in a half hour. u —_-_—.—— -—- 100 PIGS ARE ROASTED ALIVE IN BRONX FIRE Over a hundred pigs were burned to death to-day on the farm of Au- gust Behrman, on Eastchester Road, when four buildings which formed an {nclosure for them were burned There were 800 pigs in the inclosure when the fire started, and many of them escaped and ran at large in the flelds and woods nearby, Nelghbors of Behrman formed parties to round them up and a mighty pig bunt in the iborhood was the result he fire started in a building used for rendering fat and was caused by an overflowing pot of boiling grease It spread quickly along a fence to a barn and two store houses, and the xquealing pia were being helplessly burned when employees on the plice opened the enclosure gates and drove most of them out SILVER CLEANING You no tonwer need rob and brush and sith monay Bolla he nas Gelling Agency, Hrowdway, New York, Inc, the desired | | MADE EASY, \ PRINCE INDIGNANT AOAIK, Tewebeteher ond Fricnd Fre Vasmtp toured The Py renee wrent mal em and 4 ma the Ff would es snd ieee Clogged Nos Neti hopin and Heed yx iit tl seman ot, Baty in have, iron clagoed tor temis 1 on ‘eo, | tered non evel 100 eal bee iar Alem, reyorta, that That “§ vit ban dro ihe vare, be opm bea left rettarning ARE YOU GOING DEAF? soigeras Ae ages Ry ‘not Boas a ne 8 Visits fo for $5 many people auffering. from, ca. tare See one, Prete, ies, Ss cannot afford to receive proper treatment tei Be tte! tn aemian tn mat 8 a ga ne take ge unity of ine gatarrhad Seseeat te va : ne A Aten ‘nostrils, ees Sie, a DR. 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