HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1909-04-15, Page 7 (2)anrupe
ttebetwee
tt,P
aucabF
igriment emiflikt1y tifstor.y.
ult. A mztU,r of
t
'spNiat1yteM#A.
M lithith, they
after the etrike,.
This hes been conedet by the coin.
pany., :it has tti,$e been agreed that
*V of themeeltatece who struck
144 Bummer on the Western
d who have not yet been taken
back, sbafl be at owe re-1!ngaged
if ey,,,,,tlestre„ A number of men t
ione-Ifitt, end -several We
point$ will be benefited by. this.
As a result of the tenferetlee and
concilietory spirit in. -which-both
idei *pProaelted the conaideration,
it itt expected that * lopg-period of
_bazinoniuz eelotions bas been in -
o the peneion
were remove
S
41$
00411)*4
oua, et
or° t
eueeese-
01 in he tontention f.r epakrate
ancL distinct sehedules for the East-
ern and Weetern lines, but the
actual composition of the lieltedule
committee cOnduct the Esstern
negotettions las not yet been de.
And* settled, The Western Vales
desire repreeentation thereon, but
1,4f not likely. that this will be
reed to. • A .iteint Contmittee to
t -in Wicropeg-and_liforttreal,
ee-veveT, is by no means a fin-
e he Western unions
have secured the closed shop and
the integrity. of their organizations,
which was somewhat impeired lay
he result of the etrike.
i •
rt
•
a N*1845'111 the Einerald Isle of
men, "
England has 510 deaf rau.tes per
suni of $17
ka
F.{
One to Thr
A despatch from, Brandon, Man.
844/8: Ve
It • express was reeked beLeen
Elva and Pierson, on the Estevan
braneh-of-ties-ez-P,7-1ter and -the
baggage- and msil-care were smash-.
eel badly. After the_wreckage waa
cleared away the mail. matter wan
ittilion of her population, *gaunt, transferred, and between that time
770 in Ireland. I and the arrival of the train at Na -
'Sligo Cathedral in aid of Ca,stlebar ing between one and three, thou -
Gee Works for the sum of $12,000, sand dollars, consigned from /thank
• Four pike, weighing respeetively Oxbow to the head office in Win -
27, za, 9 and 4 pounds, were recent. nipeg, disappeared. When the beg
17 taught in the Barrow, Dear Oar- "3 taken eft At 114•Plukol lir."
1,01V, found that, the registered sack had
Miss Isabel smith, Drumereen, a hole in it, but it is inrpossible
,ceternine,,bles ben appinted je... to say whether it wia out, during
for the wreck or afterwards. The ex-
NstorrutchtrDetriin domestic economy• press eoumany officials and the
r. Georg; 'Ellis, said to be the, P tclconducting
e ee r are
'oldest Irish, surgeon, died at, his '1" raleK inquiry, hut so .fee hme
found no trace of it, . -
resiclonco, in Dublin at thef
age o
100 years. . ,
A bog slide oceurred near T.
was ecillected in. Pinks a paickage of money, contain
OLL'Elt TRIG4Elt WITH TOE,
ounty Arrn*ele at cotung 41f thetangs 'foramina Suletieeefoeld
Armegh,. lteady and Caetleblane Nat Vet -Welt:- -
,
In the _last 50 years while t o deepati'lh from lreetreal enytLt
'population of Scotland bas increses- Anoteer traguly in'tho Italian col
-
ed fiy two millienN-that of Ireland °fly, , wait revealed on Thureday
has diminished by the same num- morning when tho detective office
• ber, •wasenotified that theta had been a
Me -sr. Patrick O'Connor and shooting affray an Bis"41 stte4.t' a
'Terence. Leonard Luise becr, re-elect- side street' running nortli from. St.
eel-eltairmen and vice.chairman. re- -Antc.'instreeti-iust west of Wind-
• *Pectively„ of es'renard Rural Court- 0"- Detnetives ,hterried to the
house and 'found the body of *An -
ell, • .
• The collection initiated by: the toni- a lady about 16 years of
Most ROY. Dr. McIfugh in the *Res !sing *Iwo** b0, with a
erty, Diocese ari hehilf of • the: double.barrela shotgun bezedet hiet
sufferertie the Italian earthquake and a wound over' his, heart; One
tuts ainounta $1,093. harrel had been dieehergeir an
Mod Rev. tin% Sheehan has -pre-- there were mark3 " th° *4'5
though til4i shot hut gone through
tented over 50 volumes of lugh- trth hd h„,„„
eeseS literature to the library of ,11,111e;erv,rY"erk'''",i'seie"Im'''' ISSb itt-d; -47,27.4
the Catholic Young Men's Mociety
of Waterford isepposed he became deepondent
• °II 'the waY t° a funeral at ger of oshfa-thiedIngusenitwbiYtlfuhlitsill'fotth,'ittroigin-
Lough Egish, the hearse -toppled
• over and the driver, John car. Villich the hoot bad been taken, s
tagher, was pinned underneath
▪ anclieriotisly injured. COIL ti-EASTErtN ONTAlt10.
, -
•
cal Of ••
Acer of Xriocknaliswer Ditpeneary Itliigi"-}tillot Thrift ,,T0111110b1P
District, in Belintillet Union, hes tally-S*1d t� Carry 'tistal.
• resigned to take up im important 41e8petteh from•oeiemee $a374
appotratment in Westeeatle' c eni bas been found ot, the farm
IteYoCounty Council has eon- -ef Mr. George J. wino, gth toriceS-
•-.firmed its guarantee in favor of thc. sten of Enter township, and ae
nelmelleteeelleettel niallwaY Pro- result there.be eoneideratifs exelte.
ject, connectim with the pro. wont in the, community., Mr. Winn
feesed new All -Red Route. noticed strati; of what looked 'like
• The first 'farmers' bacon curing dark rock ''protruditig front the
factory ' in the United ". Kifigdom, earth on A path along° ,eidge of
started little. oyer 4 year ago at °laid running througi, hit; faxiii-
1toserea, eokinty Tipperary, is This formation' strougty resemble"(
stieces. noel, and .,piee f *hoe p1aed
• A Are- which destroy rtiorr a-tre,. lair eel; leasing ender
of the Belton, County Kit- similar to those produced by coal.
dare, occurred:recently« The por- The ridge in ,which the etial was
tem . deetroytd was operated by found runs throngh the township
Ifr. Ilegarty in the inanufacture of of Emily, to Mount, Pleassne,
food -stuffs of various kinds'. . gentleman who. visited this distriA
. Personal estate valued at $1.,- lest tunitiTerl, arta who was interest -
256,00o. was left Nicholas Jed in tire Pennsylvania goal mints,
Itutphy, of Carrigmore, Cor said to have held the opinion
chairmen of tile Cork Distilieriete thee tide ridges Of Was coal.
^ Company; At' bequettlied $4,000 beering,
for charitable, purposes. -
Eenroare RUild Council' b
been unable to"obtain.asinglt COLOYtADO ortv.
new railway.
4 oto4 4:4
1w for flat erection of laborer's tot- molt wiiittioilltlee Carried * PA,
teats under the 'hew scheme at a ,I 'I clan** .14011**'
r
price of Mo, . although ‘cottage .
were Imilt last time for $0. A deiipateh from 'Denver. Co
Tom Millthiatti Welloktit,Wr. in •ition won In ino
Ferinanagh, **tad pearly tOo r 1 municipal electioto
' Iwo found lying almost de1 in held in 'Colorado. '''' Colorado
sr.,workhouse in Innishmore. i t dry by i,000 majority.
died in t.he itrnbuistrice en its , never .had nt 010014
to the workhouse. ' on will prevent drag
The Lord Chief Justice of Ireland atorei n milliag liquor in the
'was Able to ,congratulate the grand future. T.a lutitar Canon 'City toad ,
Igo, atiVicklow Assizes/ gotth 1 . k all stoeed. *gaited ate
that thtre itas no vases to got hit* Cripple •Cres4i *Ad
. fore them, and waspresented wit
hut t
GO
NS
„
11011 AI
Long,
el le Briery Er
**4 ever Counirle
lkccutEve
,0 *
OU ne*t *
•ts, in • flogrrsi OvOr
rge pOrtiene '
attelaon euesleof Prirne 14404
et* will Vineettver .on'
May 25th. •
The. Ora Titink Teethe has let
ematritets for a let of new engines,
and steel rails.
great find of magnetic iron 1$
retorted on Campbell River, Van-
couver Island. .
A ,general advance in lumber is
announced in Winnipeg, in comae*.
tion,4 With an active building see -
Len.
Justice Gannon ball been ap-
ed vommissioner by the Quo -
bee -,Governmeret, to ineestige
Montreal civic affairs.
'Conductor Hervey, who wa$ in
theme of the train that ran into
the /Windsor Station, Montreal, has
been dismissed, -
-TeareM-daughter-of--4.
in la'
tcoimi
a .
wa king er s cc
Sask.
Wifliam Smith from Ifautilton
ora the bridgebeingv
b the C. P. R.
GENERAL.
our-men--wero-shote--elewn4
earbineers in Calabria while taking
pert in an anti -tax riot._
1Frernee will collect a duty of $120.
on foreign balloons „landing on
French territory.
The violent speeches of labor
leaders in Paris have stirred up
fears that a Woody insurrection is
imminent.
CZar, of Russia is plenning
an extensive foreign tour for the
summer, which may include Eng-
land.
Alicw naturalizatioe law promul-
gated at Pekin makes it impossible
for a. Chinaman to adopt foreign
eitizenehie.
GREAT' BRITAIN..
The kart of Carrick, who served
againet the renians in Canada in
• 7f)i-fii- dead.-
yraTED STATES.
Si hundred saloons and ten
breweries will be forced Out of busf-
neEs-in Michigan's nineteen "dry"
counties. • '
A proposal to place,barleyon the
free list was voted clown i
own n the
House of representatives at Wash-
ington. • It Will coMe up again.
By a majority Of eix the House of
Representatives Weehington de-
cided to retain the dollar a thou -
and duty on rough lumber..
tit
W1tThERS—
Rush Into the Wait This rear will
Break, all Records.
A despatch from 'Ottawa, •says
Reports received by the Inimigras
tion Department front agents in the
'United. Stetee indicate. that the
tush of Amerieratt tettlete to the
Canadian west this year will break
records. Onibursday Snverin-
t-Innulg
ceiyed A telegram from W.
White, Inapector of United Stattes
agencies, from Spokane, Washing-
ton, stating that the flood of
American laifa-seekers this
Papihe States to Alberta and Sas-
kateliewan is. beyond ,expects -
tions. The office it 8pokane is
crowded' With lionie-see era and
,their families anxious to take up
land itiVenada. For tho first three
months .'of thislyear 1,300 left Spo-
kane, an increase' of 50 per, cent„,
ovOr the torresporilling )period -of
list year. The increase in,earloads
cent.
of settlers effects is over tOo per
OflT8T
,r
riti
t
P
VV.
eb•
track,",
th'ern.
lt:11"1.:11,*.B°SY VOr
*11 alx1 Igo. 2 North.
ern, $1.301,4; ell rail.
•Oate---Oritario 47%
to 48e on traek„ TOronte,„and 4Woc,
S NireAtern 040140#
oats, 47eire, Collingwood, ,a,nd No.
:,1114,0clien,,a4Baapatior;taet,1;1 Nolext. eta. .West-
Peas---No.,2 quoted at 0$I4o. (Mt;
Corn -Ne, 2 American yellow 74
tol4X/c on track, Toronto, and o.
2 73 to 7314(to ort track; Toro t •
TC:os,r110410114,11 cern* TVA te 724 on tr cic,
_Shorts g.4,5,,g. A 1.4
Ute,$51Q 1. t$*
44.
0
0.
(fl
stcnt
1)14er
$
Mtra"
.50 to $5,50 for choice
qua ities,- and e3.50 to $4 for sec-
onds,
eans--Pri
hand-picked, $27.1.0 to
Honey--Cprabs, e2 to $2.70 per
eleeeenan,,,, and strained, 10 to lie per
port
Hay-No. 1 timothy, $10.50 to
$11. per ton on track here, and
lower grades $8 to $9 a ton.
Straw -,417 to $8 on track.
Potatoes -y:437% to 70c per bag on
track.
Poultry -Chickens, dromed, 1$ to
10e per pound; fowl, 11 to 12e; tut.
keys, -20 to 22c per pound.
THE DAIRY MARKETS.
Butter -Pound prints' 20 to 21c;
tubs and large rolls, 15to lio; it-
ferior, 13 to 14c ;, creamery rol $,
25e, and solids, 90 to 91c.
Eggs -Case lots 1.8. to 190 per doz.
Cheese -Large, *14 to 1414e per
pound, and twigs, 14X, to 143/4c
new theese-13Yle,_._
2.
*HOG PRODUCTS.
Bacon--Long_clear„ 12 to 121c
per pound in ease lotS4' mess pork,
$20.50,to $21.; short cut, $23 to $23.
Hems -Lieut. to, medinrn, 14 te
14%e; do., 'heavy, 13 to 13,141e,Lrolls,
ii to 11%e; shouklers, 10%c; bae
1034 to 17o; breakfast bacon-, 1.
to 16e. .
Lard -Tierces, 13o; tubs, .13X
13Y2e. • -
BUSINESS AT MONTREAL. -
Montreal„:Ap " 3 .
2. $1.05 to $1.04. Oats --Canadian
Western, No. 2, 51. to 5134e; extra,.
No. I feed, 5034 to 51c No. 1 feed,
AO to Ontario No. 2, 50 to
tiOXe Ontario No. 3, 49 to 490;
Ontario No. 4, 43 to 418%.e. Barley
No: 2, '00 to 67e. Feed -393i to
60e. Buckwheat -40X to 70e. Flour
Spring wheat patents,
firsts, $5,80 to $0; Manitoba Pring
heat iatent4, seconds; $0.30 to
rong-b
$5.10 to $5.30; Winter wheat
tots, $5.50 to $0.014 straight, roll-
ers, $5.10 to $3.25; straight roller*
In bags, $2.00 to $2,554 extra., in
bag, $2.10 to $220, Feed-414rd-
Whs. bran, $02 to $23; Manitoba
shorts: $24 to $25; -Ontario bran,
$23 tq $24; Ontario Shortie' $24,00
to' $2 Ontario middlings, $2$ to
00.50 puro gratin rnonille, $33 to
$35; mixed inbuilt% $2$ .to 30.
'Cheese -42'4 to 13e.::„ Butter -4-2.0%.
tc 210„4i fresh reeeipts, 10c.
liggs^-20 t 21c per dozto, .
• -1411TE STOCK MAItKET&°
•
Montreal. April 13, Prime
beeves sold, it-5414--40--z-littio,over
Oe per ,pound; pretty good animals
• 431i; to 5 '
Xe. common stock; 4 to
4t,-, per pound.Mitch cows sold at
1145 to $6$ each. CAlVt0 SOW At
$50 to $2$ each. or 3 to ogic per
Peehd. heep,sold about 5,44;
Jambes* ,I,v; ^to 7e per pound. flood
lots of UV/bog* SOW *tiro* "7,*
to near So per pound.
LOST. IN THE -WOOD
at Oat Wag, Given Up Last
r later* tMay - be Alile.
esp*telt .from, FM4'1,611410
There seems to hof'ss strong,
o ,thot Cardinal arni Xing
t Vito' wet* given up
1041 durin the winter, are
ve. They ost their wee* eoteine
our Smith's -tamp, but now the'
Sport comet in that *into they4lis.
*mitred two men Answering their
eleeceiption applied to * house out
there for a, meal,- saying they bad
Insest:wt.::: *tofu ktitwo
he bushoir fworitsattoitneut,
but
tansp..
Iorzicfo 'ty remain wet.
the customary white lijoves.' lifres* Milersusketi, %a:,
here hat been *.t *tallift vietiste ,election* ware held
• the disastrous hogslide at *l in * lsre MIub4r a eitiiitf iv)
4). (*Awe ----,3irs. eat Toted*
*
,.
T.
'fr
issued o
eetistred
id the en
say*:
Thurs.
r that
idiots
111 TO ENTER WINNIPEG
At Norther* Will he fler' by
September) /le Sayxo
A desPitelt from Winnipeg sera
Thr, ClreatiXorthern ItailwakY awl
n4 for its entry Into this city;
ind President Hill on Thursday
* positive 41easration that
his road would run into Winnipeg
br ptarcher t next. This is onef
o most important eommercial
dents that could- well into
ined if this new. Hoe afforits rot
titkrn. which now i3Of laeking tfli
the joint freight arrenitemc
big rrns will ave thous*
t4et*1k
emftrkzbt0',
0
.4
ter:
0
4,
e4t . pIendid targe tor ons
tOL (4'44
. ler some, thee. -
t this,MOMent the, tettlete, er the:
rmit.W.:14.axint could bt heard,
other r' Of the
:Heathcote having 'blow'
somt;itouses to. ietlieete " hie where -
about* to the Merman. eolenut,' dee
scolded' to the enemy itt the Open.
There' a ,brisk running fight wis,
maintained, and the,; enemy *cro.,
,finadly 'driven off. Meantime et
third force, 'under Lieut. llomam,.
which had ben • despatched front
Seawall*, became enpArd.,_
News of the German column ws.*
only received onthe rehire to
eamp, Lieut; von Stephani'report-
ed that at noon a. very large force
surrounded the German e041.01A in
the bushand opeoed a heavy at-
tack, In which, Lieut. von Stephani,
wounded in two,places, One of
his non-commisaioned Officers being
itlso bit an tbe wrist, ' and two num
being killed. loon over ap.hour -the
0 n. 0r.
. 000* 404*
aebesi oludouk 104*
*tion wax:that British. z an
troop* ;plight together to
rep o native Attar*,
'o'clock on Chrietmas Day
the combined Anglo -German force
marched out from Sonkwellee an
unuiapped place on the frontier,
mid subsequently divided into two
caimans, the German, tonimitelonm
Went; von t, Stephani (RetiOr'e
Ageney states) being in commandof one, and Capt. Ileatheete of
the other.
• Both forces -soon. became lost in
dense undergrowth and high
elephant grass. The British heard
the enemy hooting and calling in
the dietance. They encountered
the greatest difficulty, the track hee
ug eompletely isoeked with trees,
•
•
•
some mes. a ch as * hundresl
i I •
/ 16. 1
' eiY"
VQllt t dangerous
ePlees*whieheiereed theeolters
lettEventuiilythecolunmeme
to open ground, by which time two
he-tokliers-had_been. d
through the feet. The enemy t
nee-opeeed-firef but -were -rep
The column then marched to AU el-
evated position. The .ettenty _now
..
,
•Rr
itt
A econ erosion nott-eornimesiou.
ed officer was shot-e4firouglemet
sleeve while serving hitt Maxon. As
the teatime retired, the native*
made many attempts to rush it.
• Although dangerously wounded,
1_,;_ietit. von eiterthani brought the
column otit �f amen -with great
allantrmr-bciug--assisted-by--Capt.-
oore, E.E, who was at.tached to
the force, _
NATIONS ARE STRIVING
BRITAIN IN THE LEAD IN
DREADNOUGHT BUILDING;
No Reason for Pante, Says John
Leyland in, the TAMI011
• Chronicle.
- •
John Leyland, writing in the
London Chronicle,. says:
There appears to have bee it
good deal of loose talking and
writing on the subject eof British
and-Jilermart_jhipetibling- and
prombee of the future. No csiuse
for .0 panic or iminediate alarm
exists, but 26c -re is every reason
for vigilance and zealous prepara-
tion, 48 I shall endeavor to show.
We are not without some grounds
f ceitainty as toewbat Germany is
doing. That the Dreadnoughts
ett and Westfeleit w11 be cone -
'dieted in the, autumn of the pre-
sent year been announced. The
°truer* through. tOMe mischance,.
soak in the basin at Wibuthushaven
and men to the number' of 8,003
have View Working 'night and day
that eldir-snal--a-efster
make good the delay, aud there can
be. no doubt that both the Nassau
• and Westfalen will be ready at the
appointed time. The ,,Rheinland
and Poten, whichwere begun three
months later -Le., in the summer
.of 1907 -will be ready at about the
. . ,
tame 'time or * few Weeks later.
They Are being built at the Vulkitu
yard, Stettin, and the (lernmnia
liP,i4/444-1(3.1,-- *tit • "
-pacing the Government. doekyards..
Thus we nave four .Dreoinoughts.
TWENTY' TO SEVENTEEN.
There are three others. building
itt AVilhelmiletvee- the /lowland
yard,, (whielitlyik$ ,spi:Ung inkt
new miportauce in ste,sociation"with.
Krupp); and the \Weer yard, Bre-
men; and these, begun in the sum-
mer of-litst Year, will be 'completed
before the end of 1910. tails in
UALiis .certain
with regard t/1 seven German
Preaduenghts., Three others be-
long to the year 1909, stud there lets
been feverish activity' in accelerat-
ing preparation s for them. _
Thus we arrive At thirteen
men Dreadnoughts, being, pre
*urns* those referred' to by hitf19
mirokl von Tirpitx.But these ships'
aro/independent of the' GerMau in.
doraltables, I". 0, If and /,' hich
aij*o hitionw,to the Dretuin
gory. , in the
autiiinn of next 'teter, eor possibly
artier; G a few months later; ansi
end 1, Which belong to the y ars
1909 and 1910„, before the end of
1912. Isa'this way we arrive itt th
tetenteen Wow/nought. intlieated
Mr. Airqusth and lir. NeEentia
as to he completed in the Ittst nem. ,
year. Mr.. lestifour't estimate
of twempone ship% is 'based on
hypothesis Oar (our Additional
ships will be laid down in lett, 'end
*ill be so actelerated that they
so will be ready irsMit. The
point to he kept its view is
that if the German program*
should lee seetlereted in this- *V*
we_ tan_ oxpaito, out nn to keep
*et with it. It is ibiiois.Tv el If,
im. portenee fa keg.
for b.et trite tattiest)
„
domitables, making twelve in all,
and we are laying uown four more,.
and providing means to begin
another four, presumably on
1910 to be completed in 1012), mak-•
-
ing twenty Droadnoughts to op-
pose the seventeen of the German*, --
Meanwhile it will be possible, *IA
may be necessary, to lay down
other ships in 1910-11, completing
them also in 1912. Them is, there-
fore, good reason to trust the
Government and the Admiralty to
do what is right in the matter.
There is the less reason ay. give
way to panic and excitement, bo -
/muse we have also the Lord Nelson
and Agamemnon, which can well
_s , igns htsh,t
e linea era! tiiek vrtteD Ire ai ntIL-
superiority in pre.Dreadnoughil
1iip. • . m
BENEFITS 01? CONTINUITY,
The great advantage that the
Germans possess is the continuity,'
and certainty of the- naval policy
that results from the measured ex.,
pausion of the fleet, width -began
with the Navy Law of 1898, was
doubled by that of 4100, and was.
expanded arid accelerated by the
amendments of MO and 1908. The
onsequence of this definite and
ordered 'developments of the Ger-
aw-has-leen--'-an enormous-
inereare in tha shipbuilding tete
sources of the country.
The Germania yard at Kiel hat ,
grown enormously; the Howland
yard has begun t* build the largest
ships ire association with it; the ,
Valium yard 'at Stettin, which hast
slips for the building of four large
*hips 'at the Same time, is, opening
ix new ests,hlisionent on the Elbe,
r
'Acting: Blohin. and Voss, at Hanle
burg, are building the big cruiser*
battleships; the Wper yard at Br*,
men* has largoly increased its oisch-
comp:iodation within the last two'
nos, so that it can have on tho,
stpeks four large Wipe at the eitreS
timeseand Seideloot hal opened an
establiehment at 'Danzig for ,the
largest work, in addition to his
destroyer yard, at EIhing,
, ' anItUAN 'AXPANSION,
. 9
All these Steed 'apart -
great State doekystrde Kiel
at liVilheirnshaite, which at liatis
now being 'developed into tlio
cond largest shipyard in the world°.
It is for the Foreign Oleo OKI thst ,
Admiralty to luty with whet 'object
this prixligious expansion of Ostit*
nean.sbipbnilding resources
place. We find no perallel S. 4.
in this. eountry, whet*, the pawns,
shiphuilding *fter, the, 'match of *
Dresi*fonght lied,* depressing
'ffrit Upon- the/ tiriVater yards.
his 'cotinection 'some exeoutit Of the
teat Krupp establishments, Which* ,
building warships, make ell th*
gun*eran..mountinge Ana armor.atin*g for.the whole neva'', will
il-
Ittetrate the toeditieri nf iffiarit
with which we are confronted.
'Enough hex been estitt to *how
how serious ie the ,,effort heint
tnatie 11.,,,gerrnany to ,olteel in the
raze for navel supremacy. Thera,
is no inimediate *longer, hut w.
shall have to .,mitke iirt.*',Air
to bear letatvier burdens to
future,
Xpeot
-44
urrn clr
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a
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41,34
2,