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THE ALAMANCE GLEANER
■~ - n
f()L. LIT
IyuEN WITCH FIRES
BLAZED IN EUROPE
-I
Nine Million Women Vie>
tims of Superstition.
It must have surprised, some people
to read of the Tipton case r where
men were prosecuted for threatening
a woman said to "cast spalls." For,
though, belief In witchcraft la still
prevalent In ports of France, most
Lople fancied it long dead In Britain.
There was a time when It was no
laughing matter for any woman to
possess a dark eye, a prominent tooth,
or a Wack cat, especially if she did
cot get on well with her neighbors,
says a writer In the Continental edi
tion of the London Mall. But the
law makes no provision today for deal
ing drastically with witches, nor are
they any longer allowed to roast un
popular old women on the continent,
as In the uncomfortable medieval
dusk, when no womtfn was safe, and
an elderly one needed to step warily.
It is hardly possible In these polite
and lenient times to realize that for
centuries Europe literally blazed with
witch fires. Sprenger tells us that
the total execution of witches in Eu
rope must have reached the incredible
figure of 9,000,000. Prague burnt 1,-
000,000 In one year (as did Como and
Paris), and destroyed 50 in one great
fire. We are told the smell of witch
burning was scarcely ever out of the
atr, and apparently the fires were
never out.
And that sort of tiling went on to
a lesser extent in most of the cities,
for the Bible said, "Thou shalt not
suffer a witch to live," and they had
a way of reading things very literally
then.
Witch-burning has gone, but super
stitions still linger with us. We fling
the spilt salt over the shoulder. We
touch wood —a reminder of touching
the cross. We avoid the third light
We don't go under a ladder—a relic
of Tyburn days. We shirk 18, and
dislike starting things on Fridays.
The fact Is that we still have deep
In our natures, as a residue of pre
historic times, fear of unknown pow
ers. In olden days people believed
in goblins, vampires and devils, and
the priests devised charms to exor
cise them. The psychologist says
many of our fancies originated In the
fears of infancy. Buried or sup
pressed Ideas persist In the subcon
scious element of the cerebral gray
cells, and in later life crop up at the
surface as mere reflections.
But It is unwise to seek for omens
and portents and to put dependence
on charms. The mind has so domi
nant a power over the body that if
we believe a thing too strongly it may
come about
Fever Serum Success
"Dochez," the name of the new
scarlet fever serum, has been used
with outstanding success it is stated
at the New Haven hospital, where 72
patients were treated with It and all
recovered but one. Dr. Francis G
Blake of Yale university school ol
medicine was In charge of the cases
and the success of It was iso marked
that the bureau of standards at Wash
lngton has authorized its use and I
■apply will soon be available.
A FAIR COLORIST
J* yonn & woman ascends a giddy
tonche, e , Vei 7v dar to pat finishing
> e« to Ujo "Rainbow City"—the
tod «L,?f nlnK 111 Philadelphia June 1
fclebS^v I k* nntil December 1, to
belaraH e 15 ®th anniversary of the
cace.oon. h ° n . of American Independ
trtl»u _v one °' an srmy of young
"Whan Two S Men
Stand Face to FaceP
men recognlle «*d respect one
another, even through the mists of
enmity. It la in warfare that we find
the moat striking Illustration of that
Str Frank Benson tella a de
lightful story of the sort which Js quot
ed in Joseph H. Oldham's "Christi
anity and the Race Problem."
A British officer had been sent for
ward in some fighting with the Zulus,
leading a contingent of men. The
Zulus sent oat a, messenger of peace.
By an unhappy blunder the Britlah
outposts shot Mm. The officer was
greatly distressed. So he handed over
the contingent to the second in com
mand and walked straight out, un
armed, to the Zulu lines. He was led
to the chief.
"I have come," he said, "to give my
self up because we shot your peace
messenger by mistake. It is a thing
brave warriors never do. I am very
sorry. To make amends I place my
life In your hands; do with me as you
will."
The Zulu warrior chief was silent
for a moment. Then he said: "You
are a man, and your people are men
and the sons of men; we, too, are men.
We will make peace."—Youth's Com
panion.
Insects Rank Among
Wonders of Nature
Insects are wonderfully constructed
creatures. Any part of their structure
Is truly remarkable. Consider the
eyes, for Instance. These are of two
kinds, namely simple eyes and com
pound eyes. The former are like
"small polished lenses." The latter
are divided Into minute areas, or
facets. Folsom says that these facets
are not necessarily equal In size, for
In dragon flies the dorsal facets are
frequently larger than the ventral.
Their number is often enormous. The
common house fly has 4.000 facets to
each eye; the swallow-tall butterfly
may have as many as 17,000." The
beetle of the genus Mordella has 25,-
000, and a hawk or sphlngld night-fly
ing moth 27,000. In most .species of
two-winged flies, In the wasp-like four
winged flies, and In other kinds of
Insects, the eyes of the male ar«
larger and closer together than those
of the female. The difference la at
tributed to the fact that the male Is
more active than the female, especial
ly In the matter of seeking ont the
opposite sex. The maggots or flies
which live In darkness have no eyes.
How Wool It Tested
Wool fibers are ahort and kinky.
They give a characteristic sensation
when drawn between the teeth, smol
der when Ignited, leaving an Irregular
lump of ash and giving off the odor of
burning feathers. Wool dissolves
when boiled for 15 minutes In a solu
tion containing one tableapoonful of
lye to a pint of water. Larger amounts
of alkaline washing powder may be
used Instead of lye. This Is an ex
cellent way to detect fabrics made of
both wool and cotton, as the cotton
will not disappear under such treat
ment
Healthy Appetite
Seventy-two buckwheat cakes, but-
I OeTCUiynrw uuv»n«v«»
tered and flavored with sirup, fol
lowed by Are cups of coffee, consti
tuted a breakfast for Louis Mart an, of
Wllllmantle, Conn. Marfan, who has
a local reputation for wholesale eat
ing, walked Into a restaurant with a
friend who had watered that Marfan
could not eat 00 buckwheat cakes at
one time. The friend had to pay the
cheek, which uaowted t» s4.9o.—Bee
ton Herald.
Practice Continuity
The more the art of continuity in
practiced, the easier it becomes. We
readily fornj habits. When a man
makes up his mind that he will not
five up, he jets Into his stride and
proceeds Just because that become!
part of his life. To be aimless Is to
flounder; to "ha*e nothing to do in
particular" is to get nothing done. To
continue in the thing that uplifts v»d
fortifies la to gain the victory. So,
get your channel and follow your
chart.—Exchange.
Mad at c March Hon
March Is supposed to be tlje month
when hares run the field spasmodical
ly in all directions, hence the frequen
cy of this phrase. As "mad as a hat
ter" is another common expsesslon. It
is supposed to be a corruption of "mad
as an after" when "after" means
"viper"—«o "mad as a hatter" really
means "venomous as a viper." In
dianapolis Star.
Tha ArtUt
An artist, then, is one, whobyiaeaaa
of some Instrument, such aa a picture,
transmits emotion to a responsive per
son, or, at least, evokes mm
feeling la him, though fhe wisp t»
transmit such emotion n*«d not b$
present And a work of i*t l£ th»
vehicle of this transmlsto—Fwqr
Moore Turner, In "The Apfl?«d*ao*
of Painting."
GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY.* MARCH 25,1926.
Serious Work of Diver
Hat Humorous Momenta
Diving la a very serious business,
but at the same time it had Its laugh
able moments, writes a diver In a
London paper. He continues:
I remember one day when I was at
the bottom of the sea an old lady
asked the attendanta if she could
communicate with me by telephone.
The permission was granted and the
conversation ran something like this:
"Hullo I What are you doing thereT"
"I'm Just sitting down, having a
rest."
"Good gracious 1 What are you sit
ting on?"
"On some rocks."
i "Oh, dear me I You are surely not
sitting on those damp rocks. YouH
catch an'awful cold!"
Here Is. a laughable conversation
which one of my assistants overheard
on a landing-stage.
Three old ladles were standing be
side a section that was being repaired,
and against which was propped a
builder's ladder.
I had not gone doiWn, but was not
in view, all the same. My diving dress
lay nearby.
Said the first lady: "Oohl Look at
the diver's uniform. I wonder what
he Is doing?"
One of the other old ladles cast a
glance at the ladder, then said: "Oh, I
up there repairing the
roof!"
My attendants and I have a special
code of signals. Three sailors, watch
ing, asked the attendunt If they might
hold the life-line for a few minutes.
I happened to give a signal soon
after, which they did not understand.
Receiving no reply, I repeated the sig
nal several times.
An old lady standing nearby became
alarmed at the movements of the line,
and ran over to the attendant In great
excitement, exclaiming:
"Help! Quick, attendant, your diver
wants a boat to go down and rescue
mm."
Brave Woman Scientist
Walking up to a Moro datto and
requesting a sample of his blood for
analysis looks like a formidable job,
when it Is recalled that the Moros,
warlike Malays with a reputation for
fanatical Mohammedanism, are usu
ally regarded as the most truculent of
ali the peoples of the Philippines. Yet
this Is tfnat Mrs. Ella F. Grove, an 1
American scientist, now on her way !
back to the United States, has done,
not once, but hundreds of times. Mrs. !
Grove has been conducting anthropo- ■
logical studies based on comparative ;
blood tests among a number of orlen
tal races whose origins are still a ,
riddle, under the auspices of the Na
tional Research council and the New
York hospital. In addition to her
large collection of data from the
Moro country, she has similar sets of
facts gathered among the more trac
table Philippine tribes, including the
Bogobos, Igorots and Negritos.
School Failurea
That nearly 28 per cent of the first
grade pupils fail to pass to the second
grade In due course is shown by an
inquiry conducted by the Interior de
partment bureau of education as to
the causes of children's failures In
school. Inability to measure up to the
requirements In reading and arithme
tic, unnecessary absences from school
and lade of general physical and men
tal development account in great
measure for this condition. Unduly,
large classes, placing children of wide
ly different age and mental ability in
the same class, too many Interrup
tions to school work and lack of co
operation on the part of parents are
contributing causes.
March of Oar Year a
We advance in years somewhat In
the manner of an Invading army in a
barren land; the age that we have
reached, as the phrase goes, we but
hold with an outpost, and still keep
open our communications with the ex
treme rear and first beginnings of the
march. There is our true base, that
Is not only the beginning, but thd
perennial spring of our faculties; and 1
Grandfather William can retire upon
occasion into the green enchanted
forest of his boyhood.—Robert Louis j
Stevenson.
Potatoes Once Cheap
In comparing potato prices, Richard
Oarr of Livonia, N. Y., says be remem
bers carting potatoes when they were
•old for 11 cents a bushel. And in the
fall of 1896 ft man took 1,000 bushels
of potatoes to PlUard to sell the lot
for ISO—a nickel a bushel. But the '
deal did not go through and rather
t|i«n take the tubers back home and
store them thq grower sold the entire
lot for HO— l cent a bushel.— Ex- J
cnanga.
A Mistake t
Didn't you see that notice which
says: *6oftd dosed' T
Cyclist (who lias fallen town kola
la the highway)— Yes, confound tt, and
I loand ltwftjg open. I
WHY
Milk b * Health Giver end
a Body Builder
"Svery boy should have a quart of
milk a day until he has attained his
growth; and every girl should have
a quart of milk a day. until she has
wsaned her last baby." Quoting one
of the wfrld's greatest scientists in
nutrition, H. C. Sherman of Columbia
university.
Further, we are told, If we wish to
remain young and have the best health,
wer may well follow the practice of
aalng a quart el milk a day through
out our adult life. Using It, mind you
—not necessarily drinking It Made
into cream scraps, bread, custards, pud
dings, scalloped with other foods, In
cocoa—who cares in what way, Just
so long sis the dally quart is there.
Occasionally, but very occasionally.
Indeed, we find a person who cannot
take milk, even when It Is cooked Into
or with foods. These persons are ex
empt, but we cannot help feeling sorry
that they go through life nutritionally
crippled in this way.
Why milk and why so much milk?
It Is the cheapest source of the
needed animal muscle-bulldlng food.
It Is the richest of all foods in bone
bulldlng substances; lime and phos
phorus.
It contains all three—or four, If
there are four—vitamins, if the milk
Is produced by healthy, rightly fed
and cared-for cows.
Milk is not a "cure all," although
when It Is used to replace a part of
our modern, white bread, meat and po
tato dietary, it is a "cure for much."
Not every wrong can be righted by
using more milk, but many of them
may.
The moral of our story Is to use
milk If you wish the happiness of good
health. Give it to children in the
abundance needed to make them
strong. Take a dally quart yourself.
Drink It raw if it Is clean and agrees
with you and you like it 801 l it, If
you need to. Learn to ihake It into
attractive dishes. Spread the good
news of Its value.
Why World Hails New
Production of Helium
A new way of getting helium has
been suggested in Germany by Dr.
Kurt Peters of the Physical Technical
institute of Berlin. It is to be dis
tilled from radioactive minerals used
in various Industries, and mainly from
monazlte sand, which Is used for
Welsbach mantles. Although it has
been known for a long time that these
minerals give off helium when heat
ed, the gas has never been recovered
commercially. Doctor Peters claims
Jt Is the largest source of helium In
Germany at the present time. He es
timates that a production of from
16,000 to 20,000 cubic feet is available
annually.
While this amount will not be suffi
cient for use In dirigibles, it is expect
ed to suffice for technical purposes.
Helium has been most difficult to ob
tain because the United States, which
ts the only country in the world pro
ducing the rare gas In large quanti
ties, has stringent export laws pro
hibiting its sale to foreign countries
except with the ssmction of the War
and Navy departments.
Why Dreams Are of Value
"Dreams," said a doctor, "are not
only useful symptoms to the psycho
analyst—they are useful to us doctors,
too.
Tor maay maladies have their own
peculiar kind of dreams, and Just as
Jaundice ts denoted by a yellow skin,
so heart trouble is denoted by dreams
of floating and flying high above tha
earth.
"The neurasthenic dream of trou
bles, anxieties, death and failures. The
consumptive have very happy dreams
—revels, dancing and feasting. Those
afflicted with liver complaint dream,
on the other hand, 1 of funerals, snd
the rheumatic dream of burns and
blows and hard knocks."
Why Rata Leave Ship*
Cats desert ships, as rats are sup
posed to do, but for different reasons,
according to the radio operator on
board the Cold Harbor. Ha ssys that
they leave If they do not like tha gal
ley or the cabins, and when they look 1
over another ship as a prospective
home they Investigate as carefully as
any newly married couple examine
their first apartment Is it true that
rats really desert a ship because of
premonitions, or Is It a sailor's super
stition, of which there are many?
Many tales are told of rats scuttling
down the ropes when s vessel Is la
harbor, and the vessel going down on
the next trip. Bat we have our doubts.
—Baltimore Sun.
Why It Is
1 cannot understand." mused Pro
fessor Pate, "how It Is that women are
almost Invariably regarded as supe
rior to men." .
-Because they say they are. of
coarse I" promptly reeled old Gsustnn
Grimm.—Kansas City Star.
THE SESQUI FROM THE AIR
HE»
Ep*' - la
Immmmammmmmmmammmlmmamm in 111
An Idea of the -size and scope of the Sesqul-Centennial International
Exposition, which will be held in Philadelphia from June Y to December 1. to
commemorate the 160tb anniversary of the Declaration of American
Independence, Is given In this photograph. In the foreground Is the great
Municipal Stadium, which seats 100,000 persons North of the stadium eaa
be seen two of the vast exhibition The flrst is the l'alace of
Agriculture and the second the Palace of Liberal Arts. Opposite ihe latter
building is the big audltoriam, which seats 20.000 persons on a slsjie V»or.
To the left of the stadium can be sees the world famous Indian butting,
the Taj MahaL
No Partner of the Devil
One time Servala Le Roy, the Illu
sionist was playing in Milwaukee.
He ran out of rabbits—a serious situ
ation for any magician. Le Boy
found that an old German who lived
outside of the city raised rabbits. He
immediately went to the farm. The
rabbits were there—plenty of them—
and the required number was soon
bought and paid for. Le Roy was SO
pleased that he pulled out a pad of
his personal passes and wrote out one
for the farmer and his wife. The Ger
man took one look at the pass and
his eye fell upon a picture of a devil
that adorned the slip of paper. Then
he seized the rabbits and threw the
money back In Le Roy's hands. He
would have nothing to do with any
transaction hi which the devil was
concerned. —Howard Thurston In Col
lier's. _
Doctor«* Heart Detective
An experimental model of the first
portable electro-cardiograph, used in
studying the electric currents of the
heart, has recently been demonstrated.
The cardiograph itself Is not a new
device, but never before has there
been an Instrument which Is portable,
nor one commercially developed In
which vacuum tubes are used for am
plifying the heart voltages.
Records of a patient's heart may
be obtained now at the doctor's sur
gery or In the patient's home. A doc
tor can easily learn to operate the
portable device after a few demon
strations, says a writer in English
Mechanics, and It is expected that the
apparatus will be producible at a cost
and in quantities that will permit of
its wide use throughout the medical
profession.
Fish Marketed by Radio
Five minutes after a fish is caught
in tha North sea, a man sitting in a
London office, 400 miles away, decides
exactly where it will be eaten. All
of the trawlers belonging to a big
London fishing corporation are now
equipped with wireless, and a report
of every big catch is flssbed to the
London office so that marketing ma
chinery starts working at once.
Sometimes'the fish are advertised in
the London market before they are
on the way back to port Fish that
are rarely caught arrive Jult in time
to be prepared and served for special
occasions for which they have been
booked.
Stinging
At a dance a certain girl had made
herself rather conspicuous with a
young married, man.
At the end of their fifth tax trot to
gether the man's wife approached the
flushed and breathless girt
1 say, Miss Bmarte," she began.
I've got s last year's costume th*t
Is really quite good. There's plenty
of wear in It Would yon like to hat*
itr .
"How dare you I" ggsped tha gM.
"As If I would dream of using igy
thing belonging to your ***■
1 thought perhaps yon might/ re
piked the wife, coldly. "Yon seem
anxious enough to get my husband f*
How Buttasrmilk Cure*
Broken bones that have stubbornly
resisted all efforts to make them knit,
have been found to respond to a treat
ment of calves' liver and buttermilk.
The experiment has been carried on
at Johns Hopkins hospital, In Balti
more. It Is reported that literally
scores of patients who have been suf
fering for a year or mora with ma knit
bones have been cared snd disc hogged
after the liver and buttermilk diet.
Stranger Than Fiction
"Restaurants," said a restaurateur,
"used to depend on their kitchens.
They depend on their dance floors now. j
"My new dance floor, like £ll the '
latest dance floors, is suspended on
air cushions, steel springs and rub-.
ber buffers. This gives it elasticity.
We tune It up every few days like s
piano. Springs and air cushions snd
rubber buffers must be kept in per- '
feet hsrmony st Just the right pitch.:
"In the old days floors were polished.
Ws Iron them now. Two men with [
electric irons go over my floor every'
morning. The Job takes an hour, snd
It gives the floor a touch that tha
old days knew nothing about"
World's Hardest Lack
Tha scene was the dreus tent
where the freaks held forth. I
Evidently the armless winder had .
something on his mind.
"Why the preoccupied atr, old
chapT* asked the living skeleton. j
The armless wondbr sighed.
"Trs this way,"* he said. "Here 1
sit day after day, autographing cards
with a pen between my toes.
"If I want a character reading from
a specimen of my handwriting I sua '
the one person In the world who esn't'
get It I have got to wait until a'
footwritlng expert comes along."
The living skeleton's jymps thy was
profound.
Can't Cross Vegetable*
There Is no danger of getting a
"punklny" flavor in watermelons, even'
if the two plants are grown in the'
same field. The belief that natural'
crossing occurs, damaging the market
ability of melons, has been proved to
be erroneous. Dr. El F. Castetter of
lowa State college ssys. He made 290
attempts to get a cross under tha most
favorably controlled condition} poe-'
slble, and In no case was there any
Success.
Brains in Brass
The "brass brain," a device that can
predict what tha tides will bo in any
port in the world st any time. Is in ose j
to the laboratory of the coast and geo
detic survey at Washington. The ma- 1
chins Is said to do the work of 00
mathematicians. Its name Is derived
from the fact that practically all of Its
10,400 parts are made of brass. Flfteea
years were required to perfect ther ma
chine. —Popular Science Monthly.
Mound Builders Distinct
The mound builders are generally
believed to have been a race separate
and distinct from the Indlsms. since
there srs differences In the formation
of their skulls.
Matches Always Strike
Matches which are not harmed by
wetting have recently been Invented
by mixing the milk of rubber with the
fulminating material and then vulcan
ising It
Yale Riekeet University I
The holdings of Tale university are
worth over 140,000,000, making It the
world leader In the matter of college
ownership of realty.
Gets Na Chance to Fly
"Riches bab wings," remarked Uncle
Esra, "but da sensible man knows how
tar hvlld a pretty tight coop."—Bos
ton Transcript.
Always Walks Them
As last time "the ghost >valksT is
when the wages of sin are collcstod*-
Toroato Telegram.
NO. 7.
CHICKENPOX
There were reported In 1*24 tpprosi
mstely six thousand CAMS of chicken
pox In the State and in lttt approxi
mately fonr thousand. The death rate
from this disease la very low bat
there are nerertheleae connected
with It posslbiiitiee of danger (ran
complications.
Furthermore, becanee Inanffldently
informed persona have mistaken small
pox for chicken pox, smallpox has been
spread. A better understanding of
the nature and cause of the diss—s
will reduce Its prevalence and avoid
' frcqaently Its
The specific virus causing chicken
pox has not been isolated bat it baa
been definitely proven that such a
virus does exist and that the pas from
the eruption carries this germ and
spreada the disease. Persona of all
agea are susceptible to the disease and
It Is moat common among children
only because children have oppor
tunities for contracting it before they
reach maturity.
In the case of thia disease nature to
aMe to very promptly manufacture
within the system an efficient anti
toxin and the disease is acldom per
aitted to become eerioas. 1L some
; cas«« this, however, to not tree. Gsa
ally no symptoms of lllneaa are noted
until the appearance of the eruption,
which occurs in twelve to fourteen
days after exposure. In these rare
cases, however, it la noted that there
Is a general redness or i?nahing at tto
skin one or two daya before the typi
cal eruption. Where this in i Tiialnai j
flashing is noted the case —«»«y
proves to be unusually severe. Na
ture has not been able in such an in
dividual to make an antitoxin an ef
fective aa uanaL
The smallpox patient is usually foal
ing quite 111, perhaps, thinks he hag
grippe, two or three daya before the
eruption appears. Chicken pox erup
tion appears in "crops" and a wed de
veloped case will show pox la all
stages, some Jut beginning, while
others are drying up. la «—VT ell
the pox appear to be the same age.
Chicken pox looks ae if it were am the
surface of the akin end to often com
pared to glaaa beads on the
Smallpox 1a deeper in the
Chic ken pox nasally has only one
pocket and the blister can be drained
with one puncture. Smallpox has
many pockets and requires several
panctnrea to drain it
Vaccination protects against small
pox. Alwaya look for successful vao
eluatlon scars In suspicious rasns
Solved Harem Problem
His 86 wives foiled to accord Ua
proper respect, so a Turkish aristo
crat. Ahchram Bey, undertook to di
vorce the whole bunch. Finding that
his three ta te dissolve his harem met
with strong opposition from the au
thorities he donned his gain robes sad
Invited them all to a sumptaooa ca
past While the banquet was proeaed
tag he surreptitiously sprinkled belle
donna tn the food and drink. On the
fotl owing morning tKe M ladles of the
harem, and Achram Bey hlmaeft were
lying deed in 1m banqueting room.
Famoa» European Canal -.v j
The Marsellle-Khooe canal is a
notable European project executed dur
ing the war period Involving an artificial
waterway 51 miles lung and extending
from the Rhone river at Aries to the
Bay of Marseille- It is also notable la
that It Includes a tunnel 4ft miles long
which pierces the mountain ridge north
of the city and affords direct access to
the harbor. In addition to the tunnel
there wns Involved a breakwater coa
st ruction between Marseille and Tort
de Bone.
Why One Feela "Blue"
The scientific reasons for the onm
mdn feeling known ss "blue" are that
during damp weather we do not per
spire normally and our bodies retain
the waste products which, are other
wise thrown off. A nonenergetic feel
ing follows. Also during this kind of
weather, the air does not contain an
ordinary supply of oxygen. Oxygen
to the body's fuel, and we cannot fully
assimilate oar. food without a foil sup
ply. Hence the "henry* feeling.
Why Snakes "Rattle"
The vibrating of the snake's tall
was a common characteristic of most
seakas before the rattlesnake evolved ,
frgto the common ancestral stock of
Kt Vipers. The habit of vibratlag the
tip ef the tail at a high rate of speed
to believed to be an eacnpe of nervom
force brought about by immediate con
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wit