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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-01-21, Page 6LIBERAL GOVERNMENT WEATHERS CRUCIAL TEST BY MAJORITY OF THREE Conservative Amendment of Non -Confidence Lost With 120 For and 123 Against -`Five Progressives Supported Meighen. Ottawa, Jan. 3. -The King Govern- then to witness one of the decisive rent was sustained by a majority of nights of Canadian history. Half an three on the division this morning, the hour later the Dominion Po:ice were , vote being 123 to 120. Only fivo Pro -;obliged to ease the strain outside and giessives'voted with the Conservatives unlock the gallery doors. The wild; for non -confidence. They were Camp -1 scramble for admission that ensued' bell, Lucas, Carmichael, Boutellier and ;might have been the prelude to a world ,1 Faucher. 'series game of baseball. The two Labor members and the two From the general galleries probably Independents, Bourassa and Nellie three hundred waited patiently out -1 supported the Government. The only; side after the seats were exhausted,' absentee in the House was Alex. Chap- bending their heads to catch moment - lin; Conservative member for Kent,' ary snatches of the debate as a door Ont., who is i11, was opened. Even Senators had diffi- The vote was taken just before one culty in gaining entry to their own re : i o'elocit. served seats in the east side gallery, The House adjourned till Monday, and here and there an ex -Cabinet Min - when the address will be considered. ister of one persuasion of another One hour before the night sitting vainly sought admission, When the of the House began, at 8 o'clock, two other galleries could take no more the queues of people five abreast lined the, keeper of the door to the Press Gal-' two sides of the corridors in the Par-, lery was besieged, that siege .continu liament Buildings waiting for the un- ing from 8 o'clock until the momentous locking of doors that would admit division. CANADA OWNS HALF GREAT LAKES WATERS Chicago's Theft BStterly At- tacked by Speakers it Detroit Conference. A despatch from Detroit says:- Chicago's persistence in diverting 10,- 000 cubic fest of lake water .per sec- ond and thus lowering the level of al the lakes to the detriment of shipping brought that city in for blistering at- tacks from speakers at the protest meeting of the. Great Lakes Harbor Association in the hotel Saltier on Thursday. At the same meeting other speakers took a broad view of the I1-1, linois city, and called its actions "hu- man but illogical.." Newton D. Baker, former secretary of war, whose offi-1 dial duties brought him into the water diversion controversy during his term 1=. E. Meredith, K.C. of office, ,vas the principal speaker, of Quebec, has aeon elected Chancellor and it was he who termed Chicago's of the university of Lenmoxvi1lie, determined effort to continue to steal the lake water as human and natural. But he went further and condemned ADAM BROWN PASSES the city as injuring the nation as IN HUNDREDTH YEAR much as if it were "removing the rock ballast from -a transcontinental rail- road to build a cobblestone pavement: PYOmme&3t in Mercantile, Fin - for ox• carts." : ancial and; Military • Circles 4,vh are using our natural resources ' D • U f 1 C at a prog diious ra, VICTIM OF TRAGEDY te" the former sec- Ening se u areer. BRUTAL TREATMENT TO'+' attarysaid' "The time is not far d}s- Hamilton, Ont., Ian. 17. -Adam tont when our coal will have to be Brown, "Hamilton's grand old man," -- conserved and a distinction make be- died at his home on Aberdeen Ave, Sydney Thomas is Held' Re- ;ween its use fn those industries that sponsible by _Coroner for Killing of Toronto Boy. A despatch from Toronto says: - are essentials and those that are con early Saturday morning just three sidered as luxuries. Neither is the months before his 100th birthday. He Man. wheat -No. 1 North., $1.68%; day far distant when every.�tream }n slept peacefully away shortly after his No. 2 North., $1.64%; No. 3 North., thick smooths, fed and watered, the country that will tarn a wheel will, family was called to his bedside whets t1M n, oats-, No. 2 CW, nominal; $13,35; do, f,o.b$" $12:75 t$ $18; do; to' k d the ` rear country points,.$12:50 to $12.75; do, MANY LIVES' L ' 1 CHATEAU FRONTENA C PARTIALLY DES- ( IN TERRIFIC TORN; ADO '�'ROYED VJITD 5 4F. 2 000 000 age` R g out C tin Dam" A despatch: from Quebec says.-' This, aided by the force of the wind,' Belgrade, Jan. 17.=1VIaiiy lives have With a loss that is unofficially esti- which swept the flames rapidly been loss a terrific tornado which mated around two million dollars, through the building, made the task, awe t the' country yesterday and to, with five firemen taken to hospitals, of controlling the blaze an uphill job. ewep Huge damage is .,reported and" and a commercial- traveler named No lives were lost as the portion of communications and public utilities Boyd, suffering• from partial asphyxia- the building in which the fire` began are completely disorganized. The ex - tion, the Chateau s'rontenae Hotel, I had not been occupied by, guests fo tent of the losses cannot be determined , ono of the premier hostelries it Can- some time, having been given' over to tenteveral days: la was the victim on. Thursday night servants', quarters. But five firemen Late this afternoon the storm was ada, Of a conflagration that raged for were injured and had to be sent to still raging. five hours before it was finally hospitals when a ladder which theyoldest nearly London, Jan.;17.-England's c controlled.' The principal damage was were rearing to combat the eonflagra- weather 'in many years tipscv; the sustained by the older portion of the tion toppled, crashing them to the launching program -yesterday- of the building, that wing which overlooks ground, first torplege boat destroyer Uu'tt since the co Lawrence River and which con- The section affected was immediate- the war. Lady t destroyer wnc of ince in the newer portion of the miral sir Alfred Chatfield, broke a the o'ld tower. Tho new portion the buildings bottle of champagne ever the destroy - hotel proper,'Whieh houses the guests hotel baffling thever,th. For.nearly era bows and•. hristened the craft and in which 18• Situated, the lofty, two hours; `however; the fpart ofre ganed theAmazon, but the' Amazon would not eighteen storey central tower, be- rod consumed the upper The budge; she was frozen in the slipway, saved and did not suffer damage be- rotunda, facing east. three up fro weather reynis in yarious and that of smoke and water. per floors fell;prey -to the blaze and' p yarts of the country; highways are 'Tho north and south wings were were consumed with all their contents. Q° Y; Y a lin in. The All the guests were moved out of 3mPassable`owing to snow drifts, and destroyed, the roof falling iailway traffic is also impeded, Many blaze' started around 5.30 Thursday . the hotel, and emergency arrange- London coal dealers, re ort their eveningin the old tower and made,ments made for the night on their be- , P' stocks exhausted •and from -those deal great headway, fanned by a strong half. Later on it was learned that the. ars where fuel was to be;had, lines of ihad rushed wind. The entire fire -fighting forces Canadian Pacific Railway ars ws, firmed of the city. were, called into play, but a Special train consisting of 25,sleep , .,with donkey carts, fora time little progress utas made, ing-cars and 3 dining cars to.the city wheelbarrows 'and, perambulators. due to an apparent scarcity of water. for, the benefit of the guests. Paris, Jan. 17.-A heavy snowfall covers most ,of Prance, especially in Cold in Britain and France. Ad - twined the great drawing -room and ly isolated,' the steel and concrete TIIE MARKETS do, good, $11 to $12; do, grassers, $5 to $5.25; 'good light sheep, $6.50 to $7.60; heavies and bucks, $14.50 to $14.75: good lambs, $14.50 to $15; do, med., $ 2. to $. o, bucks, $ to $11; ,do, culls, $U to $12. hogs, the south and east, where numerous deaths are reported from the cold. Telephone and telegraphic communica- tion is interruptedana the roads are; TORONTO. d 1 60 ] 3 60 d b k l0 blocked. • In the Paris section the heavy fall of snow Was succeeded by a thaw and to -night most of the' streets are cover- ed with slush, causing traffic acci- dents. The prevalence of a warm wind in districts heavily snowed under; has caused some fear of a recurrence of the floods, but experts express the opinion that the' rivers are now so near normal that they. can run off without danger. According to the opinion of a jury pre- have to go wor an g it ;vas announced that life was near -No. 3, 523/4c; No. 1 feed, 60�4c; No. 2 off caxs, $13.76 to $14; select prem - sided over by Dr. George W. Graham; streams of the country will be con -£sed 48 ic.. Western rainquota-sidered our principal natural assets. ing its close. The late: Mr. Brown was s gs ium, $2.62 to $2.67. "I understand that the volume of tions on track bay porta. widely known throughout Canada and Am corn track,Toronto-No: 2 MONTREAL. William etc an water diverted at Chicago would pre- the , , fourteen -year-old W h 'f in 3, 59c• extra No. 1 feed 66c. Flour on found Young Merchant's s body fallas well as many other countries of the Millfeed-Del.. Montreal frelghes, , , Kos a must a Hydrotpole on the heulf the ..Lawrence That world. He was more than a national bags included. Bran, per ton, $30.25 Man. spring wheat pats., firsts, $9.10; gto the Gulf of St. .Lawrence. That to $31,25; shorts, per ton, $32.25 to seconds, $8.60; strong bakers', $8.20 to King Street, near Shaw Street, short -water is immensely more valuable go - figure• $33.25; middlings, $39.25 to $40.25; $8.40; winter pats; choice, $7.80 to ly after six o'clock on the evening in ing down the St. Lawrence than it The late Mr. Brown was born on 8good 38.25eed flour, 1 er bag, $2:30. 1$7 .40. Rolled oats, bag 90 lbs., $3.40 question, and Thomas is the 18 year- would be descending the Mississippi. April 3, 1826, at Milnetown; Lang- Ont. oats -43 to 45e, f.o.b. shipping to $3.50. Bran, $$0.25 to $31.25; old youth who was later placed under "If the lakes were solid blocks of holm, Dumfries; Scotland, and his points. shorts, $32.25 to $33.25; middlings; arrest by Detectives Hill and Hutchins coal, would it be just for Chicago to Parents were Wiliam Brewin and ' Ont. good milling wheat -$1.45 to $39.25 to $40.25. Hay, No. 2, per on, son, of No.' 3 Police Station, and who tunnel to the shores of Wisconsin and Elisabeth Johnston Brown. He came $1.47, f.o.b. shipping points, according car lots, $14.50 to $15. - is being held on a charge of man- d and take the. to Canada in 1833, crossing the ocean -1 to the shores of Canada `.< "` -- :slaughter on bail of $20,000, which coal from the very doors of the cities before steam power was in use. Set - Major N. H. Thompson j has not yet been produced. Thomas there? The answer to that is appar-1 $ling at Montreal, he attended a school Who officiated for the first time he was in charge of the truck which the eat. The immediate interest in the conducted by the late Rev. Dr. Edward gentleman usher of the black rod -the police traced through a hub -cap left The of the water ie its effect on Black. minister of St. Paul's Church, the chief coroner, Sydney Thomas was responsible for the death of M h t 1 7. he British Is yes and United States,yellow 95c • No. 3 yllow, 920. Oats, Can. west:, No. 2, 68c; do, No. duce 500,000orsepower t 'utilized office long filled by the late Col. Ernest' at the scene of the accident; and Cor- the lake shipping which is being seri- Ohambers-at Ottawa, on the opening ones Dr. Graham's jury, after finding, ousiy crippled" of parliament. : Thomas "responsible for the death of • There was an outburst of hand - i Dr. Frankish, who performedthe; clapping when President Bruce, in his . WITH DEEP WATERWAY Coroner from a new standpoint The! declared: "We must remember that ' _ • th to Canada. Congress on officials of • ]the unfortunate youth." WILL NOT PROCEED I autopsy, aroused the interest of the opening address Thursday morning, bay's head, he stated, had been fright- half the Great Lakes waters belong fully crushed, and, judging from the United States Government cannot Delegates Declare nature of the wounds and the street; give away what does not belong to this time organized the.athenaeum 47c No. 1 creamery, sec; No. 2, es "Steal" is Effective Barrier debris found inside the scalp, young them." Then he added significantly, Debating Club, which was ,very silt- to 45c. _Dairy prints, 41 to 42c. to St. Lawrence Merchant must have been dragged „This fact may be impressed lllini] us cessful. It is interesting to note that 1Jggs, I resp extras, in cartons, along the street for some distance. r some of the members of this club were 50o fresh extras loose, 4Se fresh •• before the zohlems ha a been settl d. firsts 45c• storage extras,48e• .tor• Canada's to freights. Barley -Malting -65 to 67c Buckwheat -No. 8, 70c. Rye -No. 2,' 90c. Man. flour -First pat., $9.10, To - Cheese,. finest vests; 20 to 20%c. Butter, No. 1 pasteurized, 423/4 to 42efic. Eggs, storage extras, 48c; storage firsts, 39c; storage seconds, 32 to 33c;'fresh extras, 50c; fresh ionto; do, second pat., $8.60. firsts, 45c. Potatoes, Quebec, per bag, and at the ago'of 14 years he' left Ont. flour -Toronto, 90 per cent. car lots, Quebec, $3 to $3.25. school and started. out on his business pat., per barrel, in carlots, Toronto, Med. bulls, $4 to 34.50; do, coo., career. He was a bright boy and it 36.40; seaboard, m bulk, 36.40. $3:50.; do, very thin, $3 to $3.50; can- Straw-Carlots, per ton, $9 to 39.50. nets, $2.25 to 32.50; cutters, $3; -good was predicted that he would be sue- Screening -Standard, recleaned, f.Iveal, 311.50 to $12; fair vette, averag- cessful this hasbeen full 1 . . in life, and t s y o.b. bay ports, per ton, 320. ing 108 lbs., 311; tom. veals of lighter justified. His first job was that of a Cheese -New, large„ 21c; ' twins, weights, $9 to $10; grassers, $4.50 to dry goods - clerk with the firm of A. 213,a c; triplets, 22c; Sttltons, 22c. Old, $5; good quality hogs, nixed ,lots, Laurie and 'Co. He transferred to large, 28c; twins, 29c; triplets, 30c. 313.75 to $14; selects, 314.25. other firms in Montreal and diving Butter -Finest creamery prints, Canada Invited to Red Cross Conference in June • Washington, Jam 17. -Canada and Development. r The hack of his coat was covered with P • later heard leading their respective age firsts,�41e storage seonds, 32 to sixbeen other nanous were invited to - despatch from Detroit says. 'street dirt po itical polites in the Parliament of 33c day by President Coolidge to attend man who found Victim Canada. It was then that Mr. Brown i Dressed poultry -Chickens, spring, the second en Jan. 13th, this year, a total of 10; he it as lying on his face, Coroner; developed his talent 'as ,an orator. As •Ib. 30c; hens over 4 to 5 lbs. 24 Co pan American Red Cross the St Lawrence development so long Graham recalled, And yet the back, FOund by I I1S Brother - a'speaker he was tveIl k sown, and his 25e; do, 3 to 4 lbs., 22c; roosters, 18c; conference, held under the auspice's of 289 cars had been delivered to Van- es the Chicago water steal was per-' of his coat was covered with mud and remarks were always of •interest, and' ducklings, 5 lbs. and up,- 311 to 32c; the League of Red Cross Societies; is Montreal, Jan. 17. -Last since Aug, iturke 3'5e eese 22 to 25c.: ex mated to continue, was the es sif um dirt. And you say he must have been 1923, with the sole clue furnished in advancing years did not interfere. It ' geese, expected to act definitely on two major dragged along the street. Exactly, will be recalled that at the 'Toronto. Beans -Can. hand-picked, lb., Go; ,.subjects: concerted' relief action on delivered by representatives of the „ March, 1924, when his abandoned.primes, 5 to 53<c: the part of as nations in the event how was the boy lying? Natloial Exhibition last' fall he was Dominion at the final meeting of the The Crown produced Charles Lad=', motor ear was fished from the Lachine Maple produce -Syrup, .per •Sap. of earthquakes dr other major dims - The• Canal, Leslie Grant has been found, the chief speaker at a dinner there, gal., $2.40; per 5- al. `tin, 2.30 per • convention of the Great Lakes Har- low, the teamster who found the boy, a victim of amnesia,but taking what his address being a notable one: gal.; maple sugar, lh., 26 to 26c:" •tete, and partictpatioi of theaisooieties tioniil to Vancouver were only 2,093 bots Association here nn F`rida •. Con- and his evidence was to the effect that was his favorite awalk sten Sher- I Hone--50-lb, tins, 113Fa to 12c er represented in plans to r e the ., y • Senator McInnes offered Mr. Brown Y cars. provi io a grave injustice, under the the boy's body was lying straight,' brooks St. to Montreal West. g, . ; a. position in 1850, :and he came ficin lb.; 10-1b. tins 11',f, to 12c; 6 -Ib. tins, health sbandards of the cubits Went, stretched out between the ace and Montreal to the McInnes Co. Later 12 to 123ac; 2jy lb. tins, 14 to 14%c. ;et+n Hemispfieze. provisions of international treaties,' The circumstances of the finding 1 -Smoked meats -Hams, meg 27 to she abstraction of 10,000 cubic the sidewalk, in a narrow space about were dramatic, On Wednesday night he accepted a post with the W. P. 29c cooped hams, 40 to ANNOUNCED FOR 1932 That Canada would not proceed with, "Thef nd the boy says 1J t of Amnesia Co MOVEMENT OF.GRAIN BEATS ALL RECORDS Deliveries at Port of Van • couver Increase Five -Fold. Montreal, Jan . 17. -The movement of grain into Vancouver continues to break the records of all previa es years and is going ahead as rapidly as ship- ping facilities at the Pacific coast port can absorb the• offerings, ace I :ding to statements from the headquarters of the Canadian National Railways this morning. To date the movement over the lines of the National system to the Pacific port is more than five times as heavy as that of the same period of 192.1-1925 and deliveries are only tim- ited by the ability of the port facil- ities to handle the grain consigned there. Prom August 1st, 1925, to midnight couver by' the Canadian National Rail- ways and with the majority of ship- ments hip ments now being loaded in Alberta this totalis being steadily increased. On Jan. 15th, last year, the total de- liveries of grain by the Canadian Na - 42c; lsmoked United States Places. OrdersTOTAL ECLIPSE OF SUN for Coal in Britain a foot wide, with the head up against a McLaren, wholesale grocery firm, and rolls, 22c; cottage, 23 to Loc break feet ger second through the drainage #Grant was seen by a friend of the g r , the Hydro pole. I i later he became a artner, continuing leans], they c alae 1, w ,a had such • family taking a stroll along that Choi- P fast bacon, 82 to 86c; special brand physical ffeo, as to _oaks improbable' , "How could he be left in' that Po ; oughfat a and the latter immediate0.y 1 until the time of Mr. McInnes' retire -breakfast bacon, 88 t 89c; backs, p f th the accomplishment •-r the akc• -#o the- s>tion if the body was dragged along informedh Atex Grant, a brother. On. ment, and then he became the head,bonelesp 30 to -3'7c •A despatch from London says: - the street?"the Coroner asked. i Thursday night Alex Grant coalbed of the first of Brotivn and Gillespie elicit tCured o 70 ibsm $2 70 tu'9Q lbsr bacon 60Considerable activity prevailed on the sea route. Before the adjournment of the con- "From the nature of the injuries,"t vention, the delegates decided to makesuggested, the Notre Dame de Grace Highway for ; Co. The name was changed some 20 lbs, and up, $19.60; lightweight Cardiff and Swansea coal exchanges n hour and a half and then canis face time after to Brown, ;Balfour Co. I rolls, in barrels, $43.50; heavyweight following the receipt of heavy orders Dr. Frankish tt }cols to a concerted attack. upon the Chicago me as though the body had been pick -la to face with his m}s.}ng brother rolls, $39 50 per from • roposais to ;egalize a "steal," on p the ground that the 10,000 cubic feet flow is required for the operation of a barge canal from Lake Michigan to the Mississippi. An appeal will also be taken to the Attorney -General of the United States to obtain "immedi- ate action," on the part of the Gov- ernment, to stop the diversion, "There is nothing that has' done more to create ill feeling between Can- ada and the United States," declared 'Francis H. King, IC.C., of Kingston, a delegate front the Dominion Maritime Association, "Chicago, the unruly 'child of the American nation, would now go to Congress- to override the treaty guarantee of the United States to Canada. That is another way of doing what Germany did to Belgium." ed up from the street and placed! • there." The balance of the evidence had tot Wheat Crop of Australia do with identification and 'locating the position of the boy and the bicycle,; rapidly, not only for. the routes to the of revisions of approximations made May be 110,000,000 Bus. He took an interest in militaryaf- p r barrel. the United States attributed to fairs and was a major of the seden-1 : Lard -Pure tierces, 18 to 3.83,ac; the failure. to settle the anthracia tary militia here, but, was not con- tubs,.18% to 19c; pails, 19 to 19%e; strike. noted with the non -permanent active Prints, 20 to 20%c; shortening, tierces, There -is an exceptional demand for militia, as it has been since Confedera-' 13,a to 140; tub's, 14' to. 14%c; ails time Ham}ltonians knew him as the' 14% to lac; blocks. 15 totl6c. Will be Visible in Canada and New England in Afternoon of August 31. Albany, N.Y., Jan. 17.-A total eclipse of the sun, observable in 'Can- ada, New: York and New England States in 1932, was announced to -day steainerd; and 'freights are advancing by the Dudley Observatoryas a result i , father of the waterworks system, and' Heavy steers, choice, $7.75 ftp $825; when found. A number of witnesses i A despatch from Ottawa says;- ' 'United States, but also those to South by. Dr. Egan Von Oppolizer, of_ the el ' cod 7.25 to • $7.75. butcher agreed that young Merchant was lY ; The International Institute of Agri- ho turned_on the system when the late steers cli ice 7 to 37.'15; do, good, Amric• Vienna Academy, which for half a ing with his hoed against the pole, and, culture has just cabled the. Dept. of King Edward, then the ' Prince of 36 to 36.65; butcher heifers, ' choice, ' ';- with his body stretched out between Agriculture that the. wheat crop of rWales, visited this city. Adam Brown' 36.75 to $7.50; do, good, .35.75 Two Killed,One Injured t 1 p f. ssi the curbing and the sidewalk, while,.Australia may reach 110,000 000 bush- presented the Prince with the address, to $6.25; do, med., 35 to 35.50; do, ; Injured, his bicycle was anywhere from seven' y , in Level-CrossingSmash ( els. The first estimate of this crop, for at that time he was chairman and tom., $4.50 to' $4.75; butcher cows„ to thirty feet beyond him, an the issued in November, placed it at 100,- commissioner of the Hamilton water-? choice, $5. to $6.50;' do, fair to good, - clear space between the sidewalk and Goo 000 bushels against 161,000,000 works. $4 to 34:50; butcher bulls, good, $4.75: Winnipeg, Jan.' 17. -Two persons To -night the members of the con-) to : $5.75; bo.ognas, $8.25 to 33.50; are 'dead and the third seriously in- g Churchthe Ascan -'canners and cutters; 32.25 to, 33; jnred as the result of a level -crossing gregat}on of the of is ringers; choice, $85.to 3100; geed Mon stood with bowed head's while the enalch cows, 370 to 380; medium cows, accident when the Vancouver Express Dead March in Saul was played and 345 to . 60; feeders, good, 35.76 to of the Canadian .National Railways tribute to his memory was paid iiiO.GO; do, fair, $4.50 to $6; st.ockera,, educt: an automobile at Pembina wain out of its mouth and digests the poria, 2,503,000 acres compared with practically all the churches of the city, i ood, 34.75 to - 35.66; :do, fair, $4 to Crossing, on rho eutsltirts o.f thx+'city, morsel outside, 2,384,000, 1 including all denominations. 1$4.50, calves, choice, $12.76 to 313; to -day. the Massey -Harris fence. A Stomach Outside. If a starfish finds a tidbit too large for it to sswallow, it extends its atom - last year. It is also stated in the cablegram that the area sown to winter wheat in Italy is 11,0.85,000 acres, compared with 11,673,000 last year, and in ...13u1- • UTT AND JEFF -By Bud Fisher. Luckily, There's a' Law Against Absinthe iitSIS SAINT- VIJceMT•4E-PAVL� L15CEN: WKAT' S 15%G WITIt,•. - A ,�� FLEA•, NOT DOGj ; - -1 �n tots; ut2, Tlll; 1S �puG1-IING , S MAT CER. o"FIIEPV h5 z NoPPEp ovcRC oN A Fox AND Too(< A JUICY 131TC L ASf<cO THE art -Seta FLEA Tie Jowl MC IN A GFlMe ofG `GQLF;. NE rr<c�AftHCD .. E of i�tiKe� Fa(2 Tii;1'‘CILRLIFt ?1 WFIC-REW"GONNR1N (°LAY " wl1Y, •'d '"- --S AI p r; oVE 1P. ON \ z l 1F I4''� 9�1 f \off Cole Sc-: !r''.‹,,, ---.-V-, if v WELL, IT MAUE� WHAT me BREAM; OF a? T Djze-AnnGD T WAS AFLEA . 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