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The Clinton News Record, 1923-10-4, Page 3rIl ESCAPED CONVICTS ROB 13 y M T R CLUBBING THE MANAGER • Four AArnved-Pesperadoes Whin Recently Broke Away From Kingston Penitentiary Stage ;Itolddup ' in OalywnostSt, Clair Branch of Bank of Nova Scotia, Securiog About $2,000 -,Matte Getaway in Waiting Car. A despatch From Toronto sage a exit from the cite. e men believed to lie Gordon Simp- Staged During Luncheon Hour. rope held -up was sta' oil durtug lunch , allele ,and l:ho g s ;Eked . -. Thomas n, r son 7 3'multi to u � he h 1L n Dank, w Arthni•- llrown, it¢nviats, who trade a l ;roar at, the j) eeneatlonal eseale'fiani the Kingston were locket;, which 'accounts: for the t1a • three weeps ago, staged I small amonLnt secured by the robbers,. a; 1 )1-1 ab The: three mon were armed, $o l a hold-up about one a;ciocli on Thurs- day in the Oakwood -St, Clair branch were members of the staff lathe banic, Of the Bank of Nova Scotia, and made , but the latter were ea -eget unawares good their °st lae'witli between $1,600 by the robbors wino had them c h ea and $2,000. I with their guns before they a d The manager of the bank, Percy 0, clisnce tc make a move towailis, the tern otarley:knocked out by Placed whet() rested the revoive1', a ke, was P a blow on tho'bead and the three other loaded mrd ready for tree. Manager members of the staff were herded, Intel Oko was clubbed over the head with the manager's odlee wlxlle the robbers a blunt instrument of some kind which took'pessesstau of the.telfer's cage. the police have reason to believe -was Three of the robbers entered thethe,butt•end oe a revolver. Mr. Ake bank and it is su'ppoeed that the fourth i recovered' consetousnees before the man, i3tyans,, remained in charge of trio left the 'bank, liut'`wes' carefully, ,the Ovele nd car iu which the guar- guarded by one of the men: - The entire staff was paraded into •' tette their' ORcape. ' Inspector of Detectives d to :'George Guthrie stated that the . nionager's office and orders bank'sCaff had furnished the"police '"keep their mouths closed:' or they the hot (Iowa. Powerless to act department witlh descriptioas of: ha would .be s and without, chance ofgetting outside men which tally with tirorie of the est ca,P ed convicts from Kingston, three assistance, as' the telephone wires had Of w Uom are 'well-known to the heal been discouneotedm , the manager.: and police. ' Within a few minutes after his ,staff were obliged to watch the t polies learned of the robbery, all ;robbers hurriedly, emthe e cash available detectives and plainclothes- drawefis. Following the coir,/ of the were scouring the city in search robbers to the' bank one customer ap- oftw of the fleeing robbers. Spec[al officers pearled on the scene , to make 'a de - were despatched to watch the railway posit, and he, likewise, was compelled stations and all avenues affording an to stand byand do as hewasinstructed. "FELLOW ALBERTANS" RENFREW'S GUESTS "Go as Fag- as' You 'Like," He Tells Guests on E. P. Ranch, A despatch from E.P. Ranch, Peki- sko, Alta., says: -"Fellow -Albertans, • you are welcome, and 1 hope you; will enjoy the outing. My ranch is open to you to -day. Go as far as you like." This democratic greeting uttered by Lord Renfrew served to put the 300 persons who attended the annual pia - lac of. the Alberta Shorthorn Breed- ers' ,Association at the E.P. Ranch wholly at their ease, and incidentally_ they took the Royal rancher at his word. They inspected the .buildings; the cattle, and: horses, talked live stock with the owner, and then concluded the proceedings by asking him to pose for snapshots, which he did with 'un- failing good nature. Those in charge of the picniccrowd ed enough events into the afternoon performance to satisfy even the most exacting person, and no one enjoyed' the afternoon better than the Bost himself. Sporting a brand-new Stetson cow- boy hat, and attired in a pair of khaki riding breeches, old grey tweed coat and a pair of army boots, he strolled aroundthe ranch grounds much the same as -an ordinary farmer. He dis- played his prize -whining live ,stock with 'pardonable •pride, and he flushed with pleasure when Pat Burns, West- ern estern. Canada cattleldng, remarked that the Prince's yearling " Shorthorn bulls were some of the finest he had ever eon. If possible, Lord .Renfrew will go to Calgary; at some future -date, to wit- ness a stampede. . Following thrilling rides on outlaw horses given by Pete Vandermeer of Calgary, Western .Can- ada's champion bucking horse rider, and other -rough riders, he expressed himself' as being delighted with thei miniature stampede. "That was a great performance -I never salve anything like it before," he. said. "I sawsome bucking Iii Saska- toon when I was there in 1919, but this is the first time I have ever seen wild horses ridden' at close range." Polncare Triumphant Germany has . surrehdered• uncon.di- tionally to"France is the Ruhr dis- pute, andPoincare's policy has scored a victory for France.' OPEN SAFETY PIN TAKEN FROM THROAT Op eration . Performed in New York Saved Baby's Life. August was by far the heaviest in many years. Business interests gen- A despatch from. Philadelphiaorally look on with very gteat satiis- says: A race of more than 800 ;faetfon, for --in addition to increasing miles and an ope>=ation by `Dr.: Chev- the productive forces he the country, it alier Jackson, professor of. laryng- has.robably. meant the adding of ology at Jefferson Medical College, in 17,000 or 18,000 to the number of con - removing an open safety pin from the sumers. A good feature of this new throat of a five -months- old baby saved REFUGEES LANDING IN VANCOUVER FROM JAPAN Women who had. beea victims• of the terrible Japaneoo earthquake ar- rival :in vanoauver with scant supplies of clothing, and !lad to wear ship's Manage. in place of coats and' to travel hatless, Canada fro Coast to. Coast fee FORGOTTEN WATERLOO A news despatch from Brussels der scribes the battlefield of. Waterloo as no longer important in the itinerary If tourists, The inn and restaurant keepers, the guides, the relic vendors; all of whom for nearly a century got 'steady satisfactory livingothe out f stream of visitors to' the scene of the great Napoleonic defeat, aro repra- eented es having given up in despair. Their business ,le mined. The inns and restaurants; are closed. The guides have gone elsewhere. The relic veri^ dors andtheir more or less authentic souvenirs have vanished.' Waterloo is a• deserted village, For, this the great war is respon- sible, That stupendous conflict tem. porarily overshadows all other great international collisions that precadod it, For the time being it has upset the world's historical perspective, Tho scenes of battle that wrought, radical map changes and left the impress of their.decisions on distant generations, to seconds; Weekly Ma rket Report TO1,ONTO. Man. wkxaab'-NQ, 1 Northern, $1.11. Man. Barley -Nominal, All tike above; track, bay Ports. Am. corn -No, 2 yellow, $1,99. Barley -Nominal. Bealtwhent -No. 2, nominal, Rye -No, 2, nominal. Peas -No, 2; nominal Milifeed --Dols, Montreal freights, bags included; Bran, per ton, $80,20; shorts, per ton, $83.26;, middlings, $40,25; food feed flour, 52.20 to 52.45, Ontario wheat -No. 2 white, 96e: to $1, outside, Ont, No, 2 white oats• --Nominal. Ontario corn -Nominal, Ontario flour -Ninety per cent, pat., in' jute "bas, Montreal, prompt ahia- ment, 25.50 to 55,60; Toronto basis, 56.40 to 55,60;. bulk seaboard, $cotton Man, • flour -let pats,, sacks, $6,70 pet. bbl.; 2nd pata, $6,20. Hay -Extra No. 2 timothy, per ton, track, Toronto, $14; No. 2, 813.60; No. 8, $12.60; mixed, $11. to $12, Straw -Car lots, per" ton, 59, Butter -Finest pasteurized cream- ery solids, 86 to 86c; prints, 86 to 87e;, ordinary creamery solids, • 83 to 340; prints, 331/4 to 34c: Eggs -Extras, $6 to 87c; ftrets, 32 aro"not now the determined points of Live poultry -Spring chickens, 81/4 interest to the casual traveler they lbs. and over, 24c; chickens, 22 to 3 once were. The 1914-1918 deluge of lbs. 20c; do, under 2'/a lbs., 17c; hens, slaughter and devastation, kept. up over 5 lbs., 20e; do, 4 to 6 lbs., 18c; in praotically one continuous battle do, 3.` to 4 lbs., 14e; roosters, " 12c; roar on "front extending from the ducklings, over 6 lbs., 18c; do, 4 to 5 North S a ren ' lbs., 15e; turkeys, young, 10 lbs. and North Sea to the Persian:' Gulf; has obscured the fmportanee of conllicts Smoked meats -Hams, med., 27 to of days gone by. 29e; cooked hams, 40 to 43e; smoked Of that £.ct'the .present eclipse of rolls; 22 to 24e: cottage' rolls,' 23 to up, 20c. • to 70 Doe., X13; 70 to 00 thee $17,60' 90 lbs, an 4 up, $10,00; lightwolgh vale, In barrels, $86; heavyweight rolls, `$88, Lard --Pure tierces 17 to 171/401 tubs, 171,4 to 18e; pails, 18 to 18y/ae prints, 20c. Shortening, tierces, 161/4 to 15/e; tubs, 161/4 to fee; pane, •16 to 101/ac; prknte, 1854, to 1.884e. Heavy steers, eboiee, $7;25 to $7,701 butcher steers, choice, $0,60 to $7; do,. good, 26 to 26.66; do, mod,, $5 to $5.76; e i f r do, coin ' $$.60 to $6' butcher l ei a s, choice, $6.26 to 26,7 ; do, mod,, $5 to $6; do, come $8.50 to $4.50; butehev' cows, choice," $4.26 to $5; do, med., $3 to $4; aannera and `cutters, $1,50 to $2,50; butcher bullet' good, $4 to $5; do, coin, $2.60 h $3,60; feeding riteot•a, good, $5.50 to $6,50; do, fair, $4.60 to 55,25; stockers, good, $4,50 to" $5; do, fair, 58,00 to $4; milkers and spring - era, $80 pringera,-$80 to $120; calves, choice, 511 to 12.60; do, rued„ $8 to $10; do, coma, $4 to $7; do, grasae too$ ,50 to 78.5°th; lambs, choice, $10,75 to $11..25do, bucks, $9.26 to $9.75; do, Com•, 58,50; sheep,light ewes, good, $6 to $7; do, fat, eavy, $4 to $5; do, culls, $2' to $2.50; hoggs, thick, smooth, P.W,, $9.35; do, Loa., $8.75; do, country points, $8.50; do, selects, $10.80., MONTREAL. Corn, Am. No. 2 yellow, 51,06, Oats, Can,, west., No, 2, 5811 to 59c; do, No. 8, 67' to 5711sc; extra' No. 1 feed, 58 to 6612c; No. 2 local white, 55 -to 55%o. Flour, Man: spring wheat pats., lets, $6.70;' ands,, $6.20; strong bak- ers',;$6; winter pats., choice,' $5.76 to. $6.86. $6; winter oats, bag, 90 lbs., $3,15• Bran, 530.26. Shorts, $38.25. Mid- dlings, 540,25, Hay, No. 2, per ton, car lots, 515. e Calves, good veals, up to $10; grass calves, $3 to $4.50. Bogs, thick, sm'tha, and ungraded lots, 59.50 to $9.75; do, select bacon hogs graded out,- $10.35. t interest in the Waterloo' battlefield is 27c; breakfast bacon, 30 to 34e;sp i l d�t N.S.-Another blast Earn- tide of immigration is that t s no f access Bial'brand breakfast bacon, 34 to 38p; Sydney, a striking instance So easy o ace is to be blo wn in at the : British congregating' in the cities but going so close to the beaten paths of tourist backs,' timeless, 84 to 40c. tion's- ;ant here,"dfreot to the land.- i Corpora three furnaces are operating, but not barrel oatmeal mill is being erected engagement ma er everyyear from all arts of the emorable Cured meats -Long clear bacon, 50 Empire Steel p r travel the scene of this m within the next few weeks. At present Portage La Prairie, Man. -A .. 2u0- s nt drew thousands of visit since the war has the Coporation op- here to replace a much smaller one ora p .grated four,:, It is apparent that busi- which was destroyed by fire some time world. From Byron's There was a ness with the steel company is at the ago.' Portage la Prairie oatmeal has sound of revelry by night" to Victor present veil, good, and a fairly large a market overseas and in the United Hugo s minutely vivid descriptive number of .orders are on hand. States and it is expected that with in- Pages the story of the great battle Fredericton, 4.B. --Practically un- creased capacity and better facilities which marked Napoleon's downfall. limited prospects of employment in the generally this export trade will be hasbeen told over and over again in verse- and prose, of which some is of lumber woods of New Brunswick dui increased. the "literary fibre that endures. The ing the coming season were predicted Regina, Sask.-Contracts received ' name Waterloo has been embalm - by A, T.,Mueehie, chief scaler of thevery to date bring the present estimated Dept. of Mines and- Lands of New acreage for which signed contracts are ed in many languages as a word more Iirunswicic, following his return from actually in the wheat pool office to all embracing than any other to carry an inspection of conditions in the 2,750,000, the meaning of overwhelming defeat. northern areas of the province. Mr. Edmonton, Alta, -The Alberta Car- For -the people of Great Britain, in 'Murchie estimates the cut on Crown bon Coal Co,, with authorized capital particular, the blood soaked Waterloo timber lands thi$.year at about 300,- of $600,000, is added to the list of coal arena has been for years the objective 000,000 feet, as compared with 220,- mining enterprises in Northern' Al- of pilgrimages as to 'a shrine dedi- cated000,000 'feet last year, berta. J. R. Patterson and F. J. Mite• °to British valor. To think of Quebec, "Que-A conservative esti- chef; of Edmonton and D. L. Seymour, Englishmen forgetting Waterloo is to mate of the amount of money. spent hi of New York, are the incorporators., think of their forgetting.Wellirigten; this city by tourists, made by the Victoria, B.C:-Thera was a.decided of their forgetting Trafalgar and r Quebec Automobile Club, reaches $2,- improvement in the industrial life of Nelson,in 1 358,750. - From the begin/ling of May British Columbia during 1922, accord- And yet the great war aeemgly until the first of September, 15,000 ing to the wahuaLreport of the Deputy has for the moment wrought this mir motor tourists had called for informa- Minister df Industries. This applies agile. Authentic information leaves tion at the'oftces of the Club. Taking to evereebranch Of. industry,: and there little doubt that Waterloois for the an. average of four people to each car was a marked renewal ofinterest time ignored. Its colossal lion broods this meant that at least 60,000 people shown in the immense row wealth of over a pilgrimdeserted solitude. It had come to the city by automobiles. the province. There are 432 different temporarily is amere neglected grave - Of this number there were approxi- articles manufactured 3n the province, yard of bravo men, victims, all of an mately 3,000 camping parties of 12,000 with 2,718 establishments operating. insatiable criminal ambition, their. people: ' Penticton,'B:O.-The general condi- few thousands swallowed up and lost Ottawa, Ont. -Immigration during tion of the apple crop' in the Okanagan in the swarming multitudes of millions upon millions of the victims of the great war's dead, they too victims, every one,of them; of a conscienceless crifninal ambition. Veteran Statesman Dies Lind Morley, the females British statesman and man_of letters, is dead, after'a public life tbat extended over. 'half a century, He was eighty-five years of agog nfant's life Little Wilham W. Johnson, 3r., iay U.S. WHEAT GROWERS pale and wan on -a bed in the hospital APPEAL TO COOLIDGE when Dr: Jackson entered the room. . Five minutes later he arae gurgling at Want (',pain CorporationRe- vived d' and Freight Rates Reduced..' his happy mother, while Dr. Jackson was receiving the fervent congratula- tions of the father, who is principal of Stonewall 'Jackson Manual Training: School, Concord, N.C. Dr. Jackson used thebronchoscope, his . own invention. No anaesthetic was required and the operation was pronounced a complete success. - Three U.S. Vessels Leave Fort William With . Grain A despatch from Fort William, Ont., says: -Seven vessels took out 739,000 bushels of wheat, 84,000 oats, 46,000 barley and 60,000 of flaxlastweek. Included among these were. three Un ited States boats, the Luzon, Cletus Schneider and the Lewiston, which all eleeted'f0r Buffalo with wheat. Seven boats are loading now, of which three are Muted States vessels, and - ten more boats are reported on their way up the lakes light for grain. It ie reported by grain men that there is plenty oftonnage coming to 1111 orders, and that even yet there is soiree trouble in picking up a cargo without moving from one house tou.another several times, owing to the variety. of grades and the snxallquantity as yet in store. Last British Post in. Constantinople ,Closed A despatch. from Constantinople district, outside, of the hail and scab injury, is above par and all varieties are sizing and coloring well except in isolated •-districts -where poor thinning and cultural methods will result in a high percentage of low grade fruit. Fortunately these districts are few in number, and small in total output.- • A despatch from Washington, D.C., says: -The United States wheat grow- ing interests of the Central North- west, suffering from low :prices for the grain, laid their case directly be- fore President Coolidge and other Ad- ministration officials, with a request that Congress be called in special ses- sion to enact legislation to revive the United Btates grain corporation. The President, together with Secre- taries Wallace and Hoover and,llfan- aging.Director Meyer of the War Fin- ance Corporation, received the pro- posal as presented by a delegation of says :-The Bo'itilh Post -office, the last of such establislurfents maintained by the Allies, closed last •iveek and the. Turks took over all, mails. Preparations for the lemma' evacuee tion by the Allies have been completet and the famous Turkish iron division is soon' to enter the city,. The exodus' of Greeks, .Armenians and Russians continues. a dozen :Bankers and farmers from Minneapolis Federal Reserve District, but made no promities. Members. of the delegation said, however,,that Mr, Coolidge showed •a deep interest in their proposalwith regard to the grain corporation and also in their re- quest for reduction in freight rates 'on wheat and flour. • New Yorker . is Held Guilty Of Slaying Valleyfield Man A despatch from Valleyfield, Que., says;-AC f dW Iter But tide is only temporary:., The. importance of the world's decisive battles of the past is undiminished. Their 'respective arenas - are of as great historical " end sentimental in- teieet as ever, Despite the het that the numbers efigaged and the weap- ons used in them seem pitifully in- significant .compared to the millions involved in the world war and the appalling destructive powers of the weapons with which that conflict made the world familiar, despite all, this, Hastings and Blenheim, Plains of Abraham and• , Queeneton Heights, Waterloo and. Gettysburg remain none the .less' crucial conflicts than were Vimy Ridge and the Marne. If - for a ; time the earlier fiercely fought engagements are overshadowed I To investigate Water -Power .Problem Hon. Charles Stewart, Minister of the Interior`, has been named the mem- ber of the :Dominion cabinet respons- ible for the Dominion's interests in international waters. He. accompanied a committee to Niagara to investigate the damage done to the lake levels by the Chicago water diversion. Children Were Injured. A despatch from Sudbury, says:-: What might have been a serious accident occurred at Naughton, when two small children: of a= Al- fred Noxreceived. painful in- juries as the result of playing with dynamite • caps. The father, who works on • the road, often kept- caps in his home, and the older children ar- ranged a box. with the caps to,which they set a fuse. The younger children were then dared to take the box out and set it off. In the explosion which' f ll d boyaged 7 lost thetipsf Boy - forehead. ® .Spanktn 0 owe a os o g Machine. three fingers on the right. hand and a 6-year=old. girl eeeived injur es n e y Natural , Resources Bulletin. • The. Natural Resources Intel- ligence Service of the Depart- ment of the Interior at Ottawa ..says: The American Inatitute of Mining_Engineers has just eom pleted a tour of the mining dis- trict of Northern Ontario. The editor of the Engineering and Mining Journal -Press, of New York, accompanied the visiting engineers. After seeing the gold, silver and nickel mining of that wonderful section of Ontario, he opens his • leading editorial with the following paragraph:. "Anyone. who may feel for the moment that mining is lan- guishing ought to take a trip through northern Ontario. You can't feel pessimistic up there. Prosperity is '' everywhere; everybody that wants one'has a good job. Enough good of gold and silver are be- ing found here and there to keep prospectors on edge; they. are busy. Shafts are being sunk and drifts are being run on dozens of likely looking pro- perties; and good oreahoots are being opened with sufficient frequency to make the "game" worth while. Borne of the re- ported strikes are exaggerated, of course, but, on • the other hand, the public does not hear much about some really import' ant devleopments;,the insiders frequently keep the information to themselves' for obvious rea- sons." forehead. • $20,000 Gems Looted y by Daylight Robbers Coroner's jury oun Walter s etch from Detroit mays :-A Muir, of New York City, guilty of the by those more recent and mote impos- ' 'A dedaylight gem robbery, the second slaying of Henri Laviolette, 50, of this ing as measured by' mere weight of within 24 hours, occurred here, when physical force involved -if for a time these epoch marking battles of long ago are obscured in men's memories they are not forgotten. Nor will their respective scenes remain ;unvisited. closet, eseeped with loot valued at When the world's •still disturbed between $18,000 and $20,000. The 'two' nerves are back to normal once more; town, who was fatally shot during an altercation over hunting dogs, El - ward Carroll, of New York City, and Joseph Plante, of Valleyfield, were also arrested and charged with being accomplices to the murder, EVEN WORM HAS ITS TURNING The price of foods in England is alleged to ,be higher than eireuriistancee warrant and palate opinion is beginning to.mako itself felt. -From The Liverpool Post. IN RABBI'I'BORO This WILL 13E A ' Oat Jnr MME.'S 1W0 CENTS \ / 1 DONI`I HeR ..'S A GOOD PLACE. FAR 111 AUEN'5; C70R 00 AN' BUY ( WAIV1 A '' NICK t uS To HAVE A L'IL S .. A1aaa HERt ' AN ALL-1AY SUCKER! .5UCKLW QC) AWA`( GO0►7By . SPOON, '' COMES DOiRA ! ��TANN Y ! / �. rtr two' armed men entered the ehop of the Detroit Gold Reflnere, 402 Capitol' Theatre Building, and having herded seven men who were in the store into, a when its, historical reading .glasses robbers were aided` by a third, who their former longer are readjusted to acted as lookout at the door: of the' range vision, little doubt that then the sh°P• Liner Breaks Record . on .Eastward Run. A despatch from. Southampton now deserted Waterloo will come into its, own once more. - HANDS SHATTERED says: -The White Star Liner Majestic By DYNAMITE CAPS arrived at Cherbourg from New York at 9.11 p.m., Thursday night, having Frontenac Mari Badly Injured crossed the Atlantic in the record time While Taking Them From Box. A despatch from Kingston says: - Edward Delyea, aged 56, Whose home is at Harlowe, met with a serious ac- cident. He was engaged in construe - tion work on the Addington Road, and while taking the lid off "a box of dyna- mite caps there was an explosion, and he had both hands shattered. He was brought to the General Hospital by W. Pringle, by whom he was employ- ed, mployed, and W. It head. Dalyea was about to "fire" a' hole and was getting the dynamite caps for thiswork when the accident oc- curredr 1-1)01a T"' Wh1NTA NICKEL!' offive days, .five hours olid 21,min- utas, at an average.,speed-of 24 knots 76 points, This is_ the fastest time ever done by a liner on the eastward Pun. ----.3 -'--- 67,000 Houses Per Year Be- ing Erected in Britain. Rouses are being, built 'in England and Wales -at the rate of 67,000 a year. About half of this number are con- structed under the .Government Nous. Ing plan, whereby the Government pare a percentage ce the cost, The remainder. are being erected: by- pri- vats enterprise. Shelter will be pro- vided for 840,000 people, • WELL, WHAT 1)0 -ITTLC,N? N Q-l-llN° 1 I'M 30.5T. LoNE.SCMR, reij rl, rr ar A spanking machine, which' would have instruments varying from a broad paddle to a eat -o' -nine tails, and so geared as to be administered with different degrees of severity,' was ad. vomited to take the place el jell: sen- tences for firstoffenders under the Crhriinal Code, by Crown Prosecutor 34, B. G'relani, IC.O., Winnipeg. Mr. Graham "le serious about the use of some sort of a machin instead of the indiction ofcorporal punishment by the human hand, and believes that each aai, innovation would materially reduce the crime record. The offend- er could be "machine" spanked and then sent bank to his work and the job of : supporting his family. Oely the incorrigible offender would be jailed under thee plan. ,Marching en Berlin Genera'l Ludendorff, vitro " , tow year:lenge bad hle face sot in courtlier (Weddell, is now reported to be mus. teringan army oe 40,000 to besiege Berlin beaause of the ,government's sisrreeiid,er; to Prance. 'TN report has been danced, however, by •tire Militarist f aa�lor'., . This little sentence ,niakee sense when; read either forward or back• w�,xdl lairorciso tato, eaeess beware: rice Gaily ,and breathe freely air; oak slowly; ttiouble,' drive away; foot WarmishYkeerip blend wont with play.