HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-06-12, Page 37 TIE WINGIIAM TIMES UNE 12 1913
Are your feet. hot,
sore and blistered
If so, try ern Buk.
As soon as
Zam-Balk is Applied
It cools and soothes
injured sriticlrting
skin tissue,
rooL'e a',.;13 tc3''s^, sian.A>1;
t.i> all:':LE , . nine pro-
perties F,revent all
danger of festering
or inflammation
anion
from outs or sores ;
and its heeling essences
build up neva healthy tissue.
For stings, wurtburn, cuts,
burns, bruises, etc.—just as
effective.
Mothers find it tavaliiable for
baby's sores!
dll Drapyists and Stores. -50e. box.
A shaving mirror invented by a Mas-
sachusetts man is mounted on three
arms, which permit it to be moved at
any angle while. attached to a wall
bracket, and which serves as legs while
the mirror stands on a table.
According to the census of 1910 there
are, in the United States, the following
numbers of women engaged in various
lines of professional work: Women
teachers and professors, 327,635; women
physicians and surgeons, 7,899; women
M trade and transportation, 481,159;
women engaged in agricultural pursuits,
770,055; women clerks, accountants and
stenographers, 239,077; women clergy-
men, 7,30; women lawyers, 1,010; wo-
men journalists, 2,1971; women, archi-
tects, designers and draughtsman, 1,037;
women in the professions, 4.29,497.
About the same proportion of women
;a I are, no doubt, similarly employed in
this country.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
Cfit.STO R g A
CARTERS
LITTLE
ICER
.FILL$.
CURE
'Sick flcadacho and relieve all tho troubles incl.
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side &c. While their most
remarkable success has been shown in curing
SIC
Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pins are
equally valuable in Constipation, curing (mdpre'
venting this annoying complaint, while they also
correct all disorders of stomach, stimnlatetho
liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only
cared
HEAD
Achethoy would be almostpriceleseto tbosewbo
Buffer from this distressing complaint; butfortu.
Lately their goodness does notend ltcre,and those
who once try them will flndthese little pills vain•
able In so many ways that they will not be wit.
ling to do without them. Butafter all sick head
ACHE
ifs the bane of so many lives that hero Is where
Ivo make our great boast. Our pills cumin whilo
others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and
very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose.
They aro strictly vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by their gentle action please all who
,pec them,
VA INS OD= 00.. NEW 2088,
mall Edi. Small Z. Small NM
GARDEN IIINTS FOR EARLY JUNE,
To keep strawberries clean, mulch
the bed with straw. Tho mulch also
keeps down weeds and preserves mois-
ture.
Tho ground should be cultivated once
every week or ten days to conserve soil
moisture.
Now is the time when particular pre-
caution against blight and insects is
c ailed fur. Spray apple and pear trees
twice this month, allowing an interval
of three weeks. Use Bordeaux mixture
WANTED
A Curious Well.
That the Mexican farmer is not the
slow thinking, lazy person that average
stranger imagines is illustrated by an
ingeniously devised well constructed by
a farmer living near a little town in
Mexico. The natives seldom go far
away from their homes and they have
very primitive ideas and customs. This
well is about fifty feet deep and the
owner has built a curious device for
hauling water from it. If this Mexican
had been an educated man he migh
have been an inventor.
containing arsenate of lead or other.—A tree flourished near the well which
poison to check fungeous diseases and had two branches growing out of the
insects of the codling moth type.
Dust the currants with hellebore to
kill the currant worm. This is better
than arsenate of lead when the fruits
are advanced in size.
Spray the grapes also, using Bordeaux
mixture containing arsenate of lead.
Mildew on gooseberries can be pre-
vented by spraying with potassium
gulphide. Allow one ounce to two gal-
lons of water.
Thin out the young fruit after the
June drop in older So have bigger
apples, pears, peaches and plums.
The curculio should be jarred from
the plum trees by frequent shaking.
Look out for the potato bug! A treat-
ment with Bordeaux mixtures contain-
ing arsenical poison kills the bug and
prevents blight.
Transplant the May planting of cab-
bage, celery, and cauliflower, allowing a
space of three inches between plants.
Provide for a succession of lettuce
and radishes by making fresh sowings
once a week. Make two sowings of
peas (an early wrinkled variety) for a
late crop,
Stop cutting asparagus before the
middle of June. Late cuttings often
weaken the plants. Fertilize and cul-
tivate for next year's crop,
Sow seeds of cucumber, melon and
squash for a late harvest.
Dress the rhubarb beds with manure
as soon as the cutting is over.
A dust mulch to conserve the mois.
ture of soil should be maintained by
keeping the garden thoroughly cultivat-
ed.
The young tomatoes, peppers and
eggplants should be set in the open at
once. Wrapping brown paper about
the stems before planting will protect
them from cutworms.
Remember that the toad and the gar-
ter snake are the gardener's friends.
They destroy all kinds of insect pests,
with the exception of the potato bug.
Shake Off Your Rheumatism.
Now is the time to get rid of your
rheumatism. Try a twenty-five cent
bottle of Chamberlain's Liniment and
see how quickly your rheumatic pains
disappear. Sold by all dealers.
••••411.•••••••
C
s.—
Cause of Peace in Making Way.
Woodstock Sentinel: It is not to be
expected that the danger of war will be
immediately removed by any plan that
may be proposed but every little gain
is worth while. it is not so very long
ago since arbitration began to receive
consideration as a substitute for armed
force; but in:that short time real pro-
gress has been made. From a recent
work on the history of war and peace
we learn that from 1822 to 1900 there
were enacted 125 arbitration treaties.
In the ten years following,. 180 agree-
ments of very much larger scope were
signed. Duringthe nineteenth century
over 200 disputes were settled by arbi-
, tration, many of them quite a serious
character.
Even in Europe where war is still
regarded as a game of nations, it is pos-
i, sible for the student of current affairs
I to note a material change in public
sentiment. The outbreak of the Balkan
war upset many calculations; but it
served also to bring the great powers
'into concerted action in the interests of
peace, and to show the possibility of
such concerted action.
Dr. de Van's Female Pills
A reliable French regulator; never fails. These
pills are exceedingly powerful in regulating the
generative portion of the female system. Refuse
all cheap imitations. Dr. de Van's are sold at
Thisbox,
oC or Drug Cori, St. Catharines Ont.
trunk. These boughs separated into
four branches higher up. The Mexican
cut the branches in such a way that
they formed a perfect rest for a long
well sweep. He fastened the sweep to
a crossbar laid across the two upper
branches in the middle, using stout
thongs for the purpose. Then he fasten-
ed a weight on one end of the sweep
and a long rope to the other end. The
bucket is fastened to the end of this
long rope, and all he has to do is to
lower the bucket into the well. The
weight of the stone pulls it up again,
brimming full.
Los Angeles expects to in a few days
open its new ageduct, which is ..,35 miles
long.
A live repre.seIltativ('. or A silver inkstand ownedby Torque-
, mads, the originator of the Spanish In-
quisition, which, by a strange irony of
fate, formed part of the collection of a
and sun Otlntlnz l)i 'tr cot tosrtli ; wealthy Protestant family at Louvain,
hi` h-chtss '.tock for ; Belgium, was sold recently for $800,
The proceeds will be devoted towards
the erection of a Calvinist school.
A correspondent of London Tit -Bits
More fruit trees will be planted ; writes that journal that he recently
in the Fall of 1011' and Spring of , "sampled and enjoyed'' some eggs
1912 than der before in the history > which were forty years old. Tit -Bits
of Ontario, : replies that these were fresh fare coni -
The orchard of' the future will be pared with the food enjoyed a few
the best paying part of the farm.. years ago by some Belgian. antiquaries.
• The bread was made from wheat found
We teach our rutin Salesmanship. ! in a chamber of the Egyptian Pyra-
Tree Culture and how big profits in mids, where it had been lying for a few
' frnit•grow'nr eon be made. thousand years, ever since Moses was
Pay weekly, permanent employ- flourishing in the flesh., The dessert
ment, exclusive territory, Write apples were grown before Pompeii wits
for particulars, overwhelmed more than 1,800 years ago,
THE FONTHILL NUBSEHiES
t'en't Keel) 1t Secret,
This splendid work of Chamberlain's
Tablets is daily becoming more widely
known. No such grand remedy for
stomach and liver troubles has ever
been known. For sale by all dealers.
Farmers and Autos,
We have heard a good deal in interested
quarters, that is, in quarters interested
in the making of sales, as to the extent
to which American farmers have been
buying automobiles. Another aspect
of the question is presented by a cor-
respondent of the Breeders' Gazette
of Chicago. This correspondent says
that 15,000 motors were purchased by
Iowa farmers alone in 1011, and that
the total outlay on the same has been
nearly $15,0f0,000. That amount, he
says, would purchase 30,000 average
Iowa farms outright.
That Iowa farmers have gone beyond
their financial capacity in making these
purchases is evident from the fact stated
by this correspondent, who says that
only the exceptional farmer in that
State is making any more than a good
living and meeting upkeep of farm.
While the price of farm lands in that
State has largely increased in the last
ten years this increase has gone beyond
legitimate values, as shown by the fact
that these farms do not rent for more
than 3;S per cent on the selling price.
Even with the increase in selling prices
which has taken place the average Iowa
farmer, he says, is not more than $1,-
000 better off to -day than he was ten
years ago. This increase in farm
wealth has been offset, in the case of
15,000 farmers at all events, by the
purchase of a nonproductive article of
luxury.
STONE & WELLINGTON . and the wine, recovered from avault in
Corinth, was'old when Columbus was
traumao. playing in the streets of Genoa.
e» -
BROODING. HENS.
A CIffAT
If it is not the intention to set the
broody hens it doesn't pay to let them
remain on the nests without attempting
to break them up. If allowed to occupy
the nests as long as they are disposed
they will often sit for weeks and they
may not start to lay again for several
months. Besides, they breed vermin
and keep other hens away frcm the
nests.
Confining broodies in a tight coop
without food or water for several days,
as practi,e;l by some, will no donbt,
break them, but when they are released
from their prison the hens are nearer
dead than alive, and in no condition to
resume laying immediately. It is just
as easy to practise the rational methods
in curing the broodies and it pays to do
this, for the object is to start them on
the road to laying again as soon as pos-
sible.
When a hen first becomes broody it is
better to let her remain on her nest un-
disturbed for a couple of days, thus
giving her a rest avid allowing her sys-
tem to recuperate. Then take her in
hand and confine her in an airy coop or
pen, large enough to admit of exercise,
but free from anything of which she
`could make a nest. A coop with a slat
bottom makes the best jail when the
coop is kept raised -several inches from
the ground. A broody hen must.feel the
sensation of warmth under her body
when she is on her nest, else she will
soon give up in disgust. When confined
in a coop such as mentioned the hen will
speedily discover that it is impossible
to impart warmth to anything and the
brood fever will soon abate.
Feed the hen lightly and give her
plenty of water all the time during her
coofinment, so that when released she
will be ready to commence laying again
in a short time.
Weil Known Ontario
Merchant Hes Fal'h Eocutize
"Fruit-a-tive," Cured Hiss
nut. JAMgs 0'5...I.
BRON'ia, ONT., MARCIr Ist. 1912.
"I ruit-a-tives has imine • a complete
cure in my case of Rheumatism, that
had at least five years standing before
I commenced. the treatment. The
trouble was principally in my right hip
and shoulder, the pain front it was
almost unendurable. Not being able
to sleep on that side, if I chanced to
turn on my right side while asleep, the
pain would immediately awaken me.
This kept up until I started taking
"Fruit-a-tives". I started by taking'
one or two tablets with a large glass of
water, in the morning before breakfast
and experienced pronounced relief very
shortly. After a continued treatment
for about six month,;, I was cured. and
am now in fir,tciaas health. This, I
a:tribute to my p -'r: istent use of "Fruit -
;r -.ivies" and 1 heartily recommend your
remedy to any Rheumatic sufferers."
JAMES DOIISON.
pc. si box, 6 for .S2.so—trial size, 250.
At dealers or seat postpaid on receipt
of price by Fruit -a -tires Lim ited ,Ottawa.
HOUSEHOLD NOTES.
A BIRTHDAY IN MIDDLE LIFE.
Upon the road another stone,
Another hard-won boundary passed.
And youth's dim unimaginable goal has
grown
Instant and vast.
The end was far, undreamed of then,
In life's first clear felicity;
It was a fate that called sometime for
other men,
But not for me.
I drank thr' glr.dne's of the gross,
The rapture of he i•; cads in May,
I was immortal as they are, serene,
alas!
And young as the;
But now I know the years aux' told,
And those come not again that go,
And ever closer to me creeps the silent
cold
Insistent foe.
What in the hurrying hours remain?
What faded blossoms linger on
To mock, as they recall, the joys, the
joyous pains
That now are gone?
Ah! in life's barren, desert lands
This still may lift the heart, and be
A crystal ,Still amid the bare rocks and
the s'
Monotandsony.
This --that no agonizing dies,
No hoping that no strife is vain;
That in the garnered harvest of a man
they rise
And live again.
A. J, PERMIAN.
Coffee stains may •be removed from
table linen by rubbing with pure glycer-
ine then washing in Luke warm water,
11n papering bedrooms it is a good,
safe general rule to choose light papers
with scarcely any design at all upon
them.
Curtains will hang straight if a small
lead weight is fastened in the lower cor-
ners. For silk curtains use a weighted
braid.
Cayenne pepper is excellent to rid cup-
boards of nice. The floor should be
gone over carefully, and each hole stop-
ped up with a piece of rag dipped in
water and then in cayenne pepper.
When a tinlid is very hard to remove
instead of struggling to loosen it with
a knife just hold the tin endways and
give a few taps with a hammer, and it
will loosen immediately.
If great care is not taken flat irons
easily become rusted. The following is
a good way to clean them when this oc-
curs. Tie a lump of beeswax in a piece
of rag, end when the irons are hot rub
them with this. Then rub them with
salt on a cloth, and they will be quite
smooth and clean. •
To remove the deposit from the in-
side of kettles, fill the kettle with water
and add to it a drachm of sal -ammoniac.
Let it boil for an hour, when the fur
found on the metal will be dissolved.
and can be easily removed. Rinse the
kettle well, then boil out once or twice
before using the contents.
Copper kettles soon become discolor-
ed when they have been in use for any
length of time. Try cleaning them in
the following way, and you will get a
beautiful polish; Dip a piece of lemon -
rind into a little salt, and rub this well
all over the surface of the kettle. Wipe
it quickly off and polish with a dry
chamois leather.
Somehow a woman never has much
faith in. another woman who keeps
secrets.
St. Paul team owners employed by
the municipality demand $115 a month.
A new machine called the stenotype,
has bsen invented, which enables the
shorthand writer to get from four hun-
dred to six thundred werds a minute
upon paper in an absolutely correct and
accurate form,.,
There are nearly 3,000 ush ss gas
lamp posts in Providence, and itis figured
that it will cost $16,000 toremovethem.
During last year the suns of $30,000,-
000 was expended in New York City in
the erection of office buildings al
Suffered With Kidney Tronoie
For Ten Years.
Nearly 2,00,000 people are enrolled in
British co-operative societies, and the
business of these societies last year
aggregated over $600,000,000.
They Potter's Field of New York City,
where sleep 180,0311 men and women
who died unknown or friendless in the
great town, is no longer a bare or dreary
place. Ur.dtr the direction of a lands-
cape gardner, city prisoners have trans-
formed the cemetery into a vast and
beautiful flower garden. Let us not
call the world cold and thoughtless that
offers this tribute of flowers to the dead
of the Potter's Field, or that chose the
inscription for the one monument of
the place: "He calieth His own by
name."
Those who have never been troubled
with kidney trouble do not know the
.suffering and misery which those a$-
flictc d undergo.
Weak, lame or aching back comes from
the kidneys, and when the kidneys are
out of order the whole system becomes
deranged.
Doan's Kidney Pills go right to the seat
of the trouble, and make their action
regular and natural.
Miss Mary Daley, Pennfield Ridge,
N.B., writes:—"I now take great plea-
sure in expressing myself for the benefit
I have obtained from your wonderful
medicine, Doan's Kidney Pills. having
oeen a sufferer with kidney trouble for
the last ten years, and having spent hun-
dreds of dollar's in the so-called `Quack'
cures, from which I 'derived no benefit
;whatever,
and afterhaving been advised
to try Doan's Kidney Pills, I at once
purchased a box and from the first ob-
tained relief, and after having taken five
boxes am now completely cured."
Doan's Kidney Pills are 50 cents per
box or three boxes for $1.25, at all
.leasers, or rntiled direct on receipt of
price by The T. Milburn Co., 'Limited,
Toronto, Ont. •
When ordering specify "Doan's."
'irloku:, itYeiskllr n4Jlnal tu,/diIO
Popular Stallions
711e Imported CI, dee dale steno++, ;,lasent,
A o 4518, Vol 14, ('.H e , l anode, will make
the following route dur 'n, the season :—Mou•
dap—Leavt• U ". J. hobertt•on's sale s able
and prneet11 to 'Wesley Leggatt's near White-
church Pot• 71000: thence to Li'aek McGse's,
ens. 10, East Wawanush, for night, Tuesday—
To Robb. ' guiles, eon. 10, East Wawanosh for
17000; 1hmee to Itis own stable Win Cham, for
night• Weane'stluy—Ta dos. smith's, s. cun. 8,
'1`urnbsrry' for tit on; thence to lames T.
\'die's, ens !i Turnberry, for merit. Thurs-
day -7o Tl os.lvt•Mirhrnl's, 'V r' xeter gravel,
for toot; thetuw to King Edward Hotel stable,
NaughtoMc.
Nanto ht0t, font• night. I'e rifor,fo'ru John nee
n s, non. 2, Tnrnbe ry,for noon ;thence
l0 E. B It akin 's. Bluc'vale road, fort. Saturdayg
th
wence to his awn stable, w ingh +m, where he
i ill remsin until the followin>• !Monday morn-
.,
ng. Mascot EurOiemeut L o
1.1.28.
The imported '0 ydt' elale Stnlhnu, Gol'llink,
No. i1r,00, C.N.A., Canada. ('utarl( I+;nrolement
No 1310 raid will make the foliowing rt.ute
during the season:—Mt.Nf1AY.—Lo ve his
owner's stable, 81u vale, 10 Thos. ahyphen-1's,
con. 1, :Morris, for noon; then o 14' orgy War-
wick's, con 2, for night. o UtSDAY.-7o dos.
shcdtdon's, con. 4, for non, ; then to (leo, Me-
Parlaue's, con 7, Grew, Inc u>cltr ivifONES•
DAY.—After10..0 to Walter F.•rrest's ecu. 2,
Morris, for night. Tr1IJR4U?Y,--'ro Chris
Moffatt's,con. A, 'rurnbnrry, for noun; then
to King Edward Elotel stab::', Wroxeter, for
night. FRIDAY —To dos Moliatt's, con 1,
Turnberry, for noon; them to his owner's
stable, Iauevale. and relnatu until the follow-
ing Monday Morning.
The imported Clydesdale Stallion, Drum-
burlo Chief, No 3315, Vol. 14. (` H .A., ( ;undo.
Ontario Ifnroltmeut No 1311', will stake the
following route during the season:--M(1N11AY
—Leave his owner's stable, Bluevale, to Her-
niae Payne's, con 2, Grey, for noon; then to J.
DSe1n for nht. hnES-
AY1To AmericaHotel,, foro11; then to
Jas. Spiers, con. 1, Morris for night. WED-
NEBDAY.—To Jas. Nichol's, con. 0, Morris,
for noon: then to Norman Walsh's, Morava
gravel, for night. THURSDAY.—To John vic-
Lean's, con. 8, Bast Wawanosh, for noon ; then
to Jos. Miller's, con. 3, Morris. for night. FRI-
LAY.—T0 Geo. T. Robertson's stable, Wing•
hats, for noon; then to his owner's stable,
by way of B. Line, and remain until the fol-
lowing Monday morning.
T. W. KING, Proprietor.
NEWSPAPER
BARGAINS
60 cents will pay for the
TIMES to January lst,1914.
82,50 will pay for the'1'IaiE,,
and Toronto Daily Globe
to January 1st, 1914.
81 will pay for TIMES and
Toronto Weekly Globo to
January 1st, 1914.
82 will pay for Toronto
Daily Globe to January
lst, 1914.
Leave your order at onto.
It will reeeive prompt at-
tention.
The Times Office
Wingham, Ont.
MEN -YOU NEED NERVE
•
`i• 3
Wonderful Nervous System
'''''t Ill' 4IE HEDY
grug..1
Cor. l'i'ichig,an Ave, and Griswold
EARLY INDISCRETIONS AND
EXCESSES HAVE UNDER-
MINED YOUR SYSTEM
The nerves control all settees of the body so that any.
thing that debilitates then will weaken all organa of
the y to:n. Early Indicars0ona and Exowsas have
ruined tir'ueands of prolalubi; young men. Unnatural
Moira sa p ti:eir v:gor and vitslity anti they never develop
'0,.i,rn>ereon 3i°fnncf manhood. They rernain weak -
in %t.tally, 1,hy; fenny and sexually. How you foal?
Ar,- you r: rvnud and weak, despondent and gloomy,
s: ecl;a before the eyes with dant circles under them,
weak bat 1:, i;iducyc irritable, pal;dtatlon of the heart,
i.a ':ful, dcbi1tating dreams, assailant in urine, pimples
on the face, eyes sunken, hollow ci:eelu, careworn ex-
rresc 1w , Poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, Lack energy
a''•latrergth, tired mornings, restless nights, change-
a'tla moods, premature decay, bone pains, hair loose, etc.
Ths is tlto cg+:ditiouour Now Method Treatment is
GUARANTEED TO CURE
We have troatrsl Diseases of ?fen for almost a life.
time and 114 not have to experiment. Consult us
&PEE OF CHARGE
and wo will tell y. a whether you are curable or not.
We guarantee curable cases of
NERVOUS C1f 1^L1TY, VARICOSE VEINS, BLOOD
AND SKh4 DISEASES, GLEET, BLADDER '
URINARY AED KIDNEY COMPLAINTS
Free Booklet on Diseases of Men. If unable to call `
write for
QUESTION UST FOR HOME TREATMENT
St., Detroit, Mich.
°t Ni?n Fi All Ietters from Canada must be addressed
R ' Fi.rC LI ,a Oil to our Canadian Correspondence Depart-
tm=-sn+e-'e merit in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to
see us personally call at cur Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat ' •
no patients in ottr Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and
Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows:
DRS. KENNEDY esK iyi+lriDY, Windoor, Ont.
Write for our private address.
Wit.";'='9i.f.,.u'. '�?ii'"s+5 �:�2:lsa•w.r'S:•�'' e:.,.,"'�..;.""�"e:.�'..,.'�'..:ai�::..
4d'4•4441.4'44✓r�'+S�'i••i•-k %rFI•L; tan
+
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4•
4•
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4
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1.60
4.50 ,
1.65
1,75 •i
2 (;
2.'33 0
4.50
1.60
2.35
1,60 :
180
1.60
2.85
1.60 or
4.
3.50
2 00
3...0
225
1.(0
2.25
2.25
3.25
3.40
1.75
2.90
1.35
3.10
2.90
1.00
3.15
2.60
2.40
2 ;'O
9.50
2.45
2.00
2.55
1.85
2.40
w
4
The Times and Weekly Globe 81.60
+ The Farmer's Advocate (8.2.35 less 81.00). 1,35
4
•1' $9.95
4 making the price of the three papers $2.95.
4•
4. The Times and the Weekly Sun.... $1.80
oThe Toronto Daily Star (82.301ess 81,00).. 1,80
4 The Weekly. Globe (81.60 less 51.00) .... 60
�
83 70
the four papers for $3.70.
If the pub:icat on you want is not in above list, let
* us know. We ' n supply almost any well-known Cana-
* dian or American publication. These prices are strictly
cash in ad nonce •,,
Srnd subscriptions by post office or express order to
4•Tiie
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4
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Stone
W)[<NGHAM
4.
Block 4.
ONTARIO
4.4. 44+44.444.499momilit*F000+.+
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