1
v
--
""'5 i
m
4P
Witt Hit
ft
flfikfl
II II I I III III II I -II I
ESTABLISHED IN 1878.
T: ,e growth of ih" movement in favor
-!;'i'i. -liiu'r working gitis clubs was
:.'-ii'-tr.!!".l t'.-e oth'T i.",'Miin;r by the
W
tc:v. aemulcd m Tieinont
on. La-t year there ;net in a
i i'.-f clubs, representing 850
'' meeting was attended
T
':. club-, representing 2300
aud their friends
T'ndcrtheitatutesof the Dakota a
man
who robs :i stage can be sent to prison j
for life. Jt he attacks but fails to get j
any plunder, he -ari.be sentenced f0P i
,,,,,, . - . . , j
had :i hf.ti::". In a case where a judge I
t'r'W'l that fiftd-a ye trs was half. a life, !
the Supreme Court h is up et the sen- J
tciirc, figuringdhat nineteen ea.-s seven I
,. , . i t, l
tuo.'iT.)-, u-. l lour days is t.e correct
term.
"An in -A ituti : peculiar toXew York,
whi -h has be -n recently established,"
lllf'Ci
tii': Atlanta- (jint'dit.ion' "is a
il i;r j:i-f.j contract bureau. If you
nt to gt married very quietly, with
i v-:j the newspaper finding it out,
. -) to this bureau witli your girl, pay
:.' i " which is i5, and a civil mar-:'-
';)( ra' t is prepared for you to
!, an i the affair is guaranteed to bo
'i:itct. N re'tor 1 of these marriages
i", an 1 they are not, strictly
legal, b it a lawyer who was
, 1, s.id the courts would no
1'- ili.e th-;m, if any legal question
is;- i " b make it necessary to test
.: ,. lit v in the courts."
T E'Uiu-Amcriean department of the
Columbian Exposition is very
i .; :- to obtain information concern
!. a -.ipy of a little quarto published in
; Mn id l EW, containing the important
n l' ii" Alexander VI, by which ho
; v: !.-.i fiie New World between Portugal
i.i S;.tin. Only two copies of this
, i'u ;h!-L are in existence, so far as can
) i r i ( lined. ()a is iu the ltoyal
.'''fir; at. Mutiicli. The other was sold
it ha:i:lf)a at auction by Puttiek & Simp
:n: .-tioneers, on the 21th of May,
1. a j l was bought by Obadiah Rich
n '- it puuiids eight shillings, for some
rf.va'.e library in the United. States
i d . !ei'' I to nanio. It his cer-
;iy app hi' 1 from the knowledge
! ' ' ' ' ' " !
!'!: i!'p.'lii'.
a id no trace of it can bo
..i:ta
A ny person, having knowledge o
y-i -v !"'"'"ib u!.-- of this historical treasure
J .'!:' !;iu d c.ough to notify, the De
",ui:;a -M .f State, Washington , D. C.
''''.. DLymteh: Some wit
hat tic sewin-' inacUitie and
ar rapidly miking one people
i i d v -IS on the fjtee of the earth,
r !.! roying the national pecul
"f t':'' dres of in thr coun-
!; r, n,' by giving them the 3tyles
: day c':othiu i from Lomlon, which
. r echtri" of tra'.Uc for that part
world, i If. i iy-'iiade garm"ats
b:i arc sold iu the sh "ps of
Urn, li.'.-iiu, Vienna, (Joprmhageh,
v. i, Stockholm and St. Petersburg,
i t my of the smaller cities, which
V-:r supplies from the great ones
r from London direct. Eorm
: 1'. t sailor could be readily
i. h 1 from a Danish or Swedish
i I'M of these from the other by
live eo-itume, but at the pres
. i of them are tlressed alike,.
os;ib!y their garments cam
--m.' factory. Fifty years ago
::i---.iu garai m'ts of New "England
:. f: ;n tlv.)e of the Western and
States an i those again from
''.'('iuada, but nowa lavs the home-
h'-:: largely driven out by
' ;-," whic'i hive found their
;:r.'U m.ijority of the towns
a'.l e.-erthe land. Thebusi
;:i'.i4 clothing on the
a i
"' "y ';vi:e:it that i-s made
' ' :' 1 t:ad a customer is
i-n.; y,- a- oy
a:
r. I though the
a:,' sold at a
' ci iu the pirt
.r :: rt, ,T.. -.
' taat 1 1:' :'; S 0 f.il Of
' '. caver ')t h ;U'
t be a pro.'k-dv
"a, the trade
ae for all con
' lar;:e estihlish-
In m ny of
' t r.tin ' is do
with reat
e.n.U i-.-m
i ::i tuicx-
d' lavr?, wihen are cut
ut follows a m-tal pittern,
band of a si a -de otvn.-
i .V
the aid of
i -
maenmerv.
- ' ' c in , t::e
work of if t v in
- -i g ir.u .-a'.s; the so wiug m ichine
V - ':''"''" 1 rapidly, and in this
l- w.r..i is clad. With
our
irtern, and the telegraph
every d y all the news
u-
Wi
are mt oai
y "iressing
t,4:-':'iri-? 'I'l talking of the
" the aui . titue.
BROTHER, AWAKE!
Brother, the dawn In the east is arising.
Sparkling and bright from wild ocean's
' embrace.
Bee Low her blushes new beauties awaken;
See what a tender light beams from her
face!
Eos, fair Eo, her fleet steeds are waiting.
Eager to speed in advance of the wind,
Longing to bnar thee away on thy mission,
Cheering and blessing the hearts of man
kind.
t
Brother, awake, for the sun hath arisen !
dazzling is he in his gorgeous array;
(:o,(jen hls PaIace, and goHen his armor-
Wilt thou not welcome the kin of the
dav?
Helow, Helofs, thou art majestic!
Daily thy duty is patiently done;
Brother, toy duties demand thine attention
Wake, ere dav endeth and night is begun.
Brother, awake! Awake, O mv brother!
Moonbeams are gently caressing thy brow;
Ve?, the moon peeps through the darkening
jhadows;
See her sweet smile r.s it lights on theo
now.
f-'tl'Tie, Selene, stars round the3 glimmer;
Host thou ne'er linsjer to gather a gejn?
"Why should I tarry, or tura fr-jm my jjath
way? While I have peaco, I've a rich diadem.!'
l'rother, ( brother, awake from thy slum.
ler,
( pon tliine eyes while 'tis yet called to
day! Vis in is thy dreaming, for not it availeth;
List to thine impulse, be swift to obey.
lli;;h b.i thy purpose, aye, heavenwar.1
reaching;
Eirrn thy endeavor, p-.Tsist.mt and true;
Eaith be thy watch word, and hope thy com
panion, Ecace will not linger but hns'.en to you.
Lillian SWe.i Istcr.
A POINT OF HONOR.
r.v axna ini:i.Ds.
It is a fact too well proven to need
comment here that mental excitement
will produce upon the human counte
nance a change m re rapid and lasting
than even physical pain. Hut it would
have scarcely seemed possible that one
hour could have made a beautiful,
blooming face so pallid and-deathlike as
that of Isaura Gardiner became in that
brief time one June morning, when ail
nature was in jubilant mood.
She was young not more than twen
tyand had been Julius Gardiner's wife
a little more than one year. They had
been married at a time when the firm
employing Julius had wished him to un
dertake a prolonged Southern and 'West
ern trip to collect outstanding debts,
and the vouu ; counle had made this
business errand their wedding tour.
Eaidy in. 'March they had returned to
their homo, and a few weeks Liter a wee
blossom had come to bind the parents'
hearts in yet closer bonds of mutual
love, a little daughter they named for
Isaura's long dead mother, Eerth a.
After the baby came I gladden her,
c .
Isaurti found her time so filled with ma
ternal cares that she had never availed
herself of her husband's permission to ex
plore the old homestead, until the June
morning already mentioned.
It was a very large, rambling old
country louse, the legacy of three gen
erations of Gardincrs, to the la-t survivor
Julius !'njl Laura was sure that it was
tilled with treasures of past occupants,
though its owner laughingly assured her
that he was quite sure she would find
but little to reward the thorough ran
sacking she threatened to make.
When she was first engaged to Julius
Gardiner, Isaura had thought she would
bring him a fortune erpial to his own
patrimony. She had been from infancy
tho supposed heiress of a maiden aunt,
who had a moderate income under her
cwn entire control and r.o heir but her
niece. But, front foaic unexplained
freak, the venerable maiden, upon her
death-bed, left her home and money to
fouud an asylum, bestowing upon her
niece her clothing and jewelry, the one
much the worse for use, the ether of but
trifling value.
Isaura had been sorely disappointed,
but Julius bad laughed at the long face,
assuring her he had ample means for
both; his private fortune aud Large salary
combining to make a handsome income.
So Isaura had forgotten the temporary
trouble very quickly.
On tho June day, already referred to,
she had at last explored some of the long
closed rooms, and entered one early in
the forenoon, her face bright as the
June sunshine pouring in at the open
windows, her checks rivaling the blush
roses clambering over the wide porch
roof to nod at her, her eyes as clear and
blue as the summer skies arching over the
old homestead.
In one brief hour she came out again.
But the pretty pink fiush was gone from
her cheeks, leaving them as white as new
fallen snow, her eyes weie heavy aad dull
HILLSBORO, N. C. SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1891.
w lead, gazing vacantly forward with an j
expression of utter misery; her step was
slow and feeble,and she trembled as if
unable to support her own weight. Sue
seemed to have aged years in that one
hour of anguish passed in the room" en
tered with such a light step and happv
heart.
Slowly she went to her owa room.
Baby Bertha lay in her dainty cradle
sleeping profoundly iu a morning nap,
aud the young mother, sinking upon her
knees beside her, found some relief from
her agony in a pa:ska of tears and sobs.
Again and again her husband's name
mingled with the moans wrung from her
white, quivering lips, till tho violence ol
her grief wakened the sleeping child,
who broke into wailing cries. For a
moment the mother forgot her own grief,
as she soothed the lit.tle one with all
love's tender caresses kissing the velvet
cheek, and whispering soft words of af
fection. But when the chtl 1 lay quited in hot
arms, the shadows fell again over Isau
ra's face, and her tears dropped fast upon
the little face nestled against her bosom.
The burden of grief wa.s not -lifted,
though the fiiM wild paroxysm was over.
Isaura Gardiner was a fair woman, b-'d
but slight, and possessing much beauty,
of a purely blonde type, rippling, golden
hair and blue eyes, with a soft, delicate
complexion. Her disposition was genth
and loving in a remarkable dcgre, suit
ing well" the exquisite beauty of face ali
form. . . f
It is no exaggeration to say that she
actually lived iu her affections, and these
were centered absolutely in her husband
and child. Orphaned when only ten
years old, she had been under the guar
dianship5 of her aunt, passed from one
boarding school to -another, spending
even her "holidays in the care of her
teachers, unless invited to visit a fellow
pupil, t -
It was during such a visit in the vil
lage that was to become her future home
that she met Julius Gardiner, and her
heart, starving for sympathy and com-
pansionship, sprang at once to answer j
his warm avowal ot deep, sincere i.ove
She had never known what it was to re
ceive such affection as her lover gave her,
ahel she gratefully returned it. And in
her love she had found only happiness.
It was Julius who had consoled her when
her aunt died, leaving her alone in the
world. Julius who had urged a speedy
marriage, that he might have the right
to comfort and protect her. Julius who
had made a bridal tour of his long busi
ness j"ourner and given her every leisure
hour to explore all the sights of the many
new places in which they sojourned.
Julius who had watched her tenderly
when her life seemed going from her,
after baby came, and gave her new life
by his loving voice and gentle caress.
She had thought their love perfect
us strong in his heart as in her own. But
on that June morning, all this happy cer
tainty had gone from her," and her heart
seemed breaking at the loss. She took
no further interest in the exploring ex
pedition through the old house upon
which she had .started so merrily, but
rocked her baby in her arms, and Hiusc.d
over the one appalling discovery she had
already made.
Julius found her so when he came in
to his elinner, and acxiously inquired the
.cause of her woc-begone lace and red
eyes, fifut for the first time his tender
sympathy met a -repulse: not an angry
one, but one that was equally puzzling
to him, it was so full of mute reproach,
and no entreaties could give him any ex
planation of the cause.
For days, this atmosphere of gloom
and mystery hung about Isaura. She
neglected all the little household duties
in which she had delighted; she would
sit for hours in silence and idleness, her
face white, her eyes fixed mournfully
on vacancy.
Julius was distracted. Loving his
wife with all the fondness of a tender,
triic heart, he was grieved and angered
to see her fretting constantly, yet refus
ing to gie any reason for such excess of
sorrow. :
la vain he tried by every tender de
vice to win her confidence. She only
kept a more profound silence, while yet
most evidently doubting "the sincerity of
his professions of love and regret.
At last, the result Julius dreaded fell
over Isaura, and she was prostrated by
low nervous fever and became very ill.
The physician hinted at some mental dis
turbance, and prescribed quiet; and the
husband, dprp ughly aroused by fear, ex
erted his authority with some show o!
harshness.
"You are nursing some chimera," hi
said to poor, pale Isaura, -and I irsis!
upon knowing what it is." -"Oh,
Julius, don't le anrv'"
she
moaned, pitifully. "Perhaps I may die,
and then you can marry Magdalene."
"What upon earth are you talking
about? 'Magdalene" Who is Ma"-
i dalene?"
"The woman you love. I am sorry,
.Julius, that I have stood in the way so
long. It would have been better to have
been frank with me and told me the
truth before we were married."
"She is insane," thought poor Julius,
bursting into a cold sweat of horror;
"she has been nursing some delusion till
it has turned her brain and made her a
monomaniac !"
AH an-;er was gone from his voice as
he -bent low over his wife.
"Darling," he said, "do not think of
such things. You cannot doubt my love
for vou!"
The blue eyes that had growa Uirr.
with excessive weeping searched his fac
eagerly. Then, as if nerved to a desper-
ate effort Isaura took a folded paper
from the drawer of a table, beside her
bed and handed it to her husband. '
"Read that," she stid. "I found it in
the foom upstairs that vou told me was
your roeim while vour parents lived. It
was in the drawer of a bureau there,
with other papers. You told me I might
overhaul anything I pleased, and I read
that." -J
Wonderingly, Julius opened the paper,
while Isaura scanned his face, watching
for the coftfusioa of detected guilt. To
utter amazement, Julius, after reading
thc paper, burst into a fit of laughter,
clear, ringing and hearty.
"Oh, Isaura," he cried, when he
could catch his breath, "the sins of my
youth are being visited upon my head
with a vengeance. Oh, it is too good !"
And another paroxysm of mirth fol
lowed. c
1 don't see anything funny about it,'
said Isaura, crimsoning with anger.
Julius read aloud, with mock em-
phasis:
"Deap Dick: -Vou utterly mistake bnt-ti
my heart and principle if you imagine for
one moment that I will avail myself of tht
pitiful excuse of Isaura's loss of fortune tc
break our engagement Darly as I love
Magdalene, bitterly as I regret the tie that
binds me, I will never, never so disrac;
my manhood as to desert the fond heart that
loves me
"Isaura knows nothing of my mad infat-
nation for your sister Magdalene, my hope-
less love for one I may never seek to win.
She trusts the professions of love I made be-
loves me: And I who sought her ttJipt
phe was a supposed heiress, consider it e
point of honor to kejp my faith with her '
"Guard rny secret from your too faseiu-
ating '-Ur. from m' promise.! wife
llere'the paper was torn and the con
fidences of the lover brought to an ab
rupt conclusion.
"Oh, Isaura, " said ,TuTu:s, who had
1 ecu interrupted by frequent spasms of
laughter, "have you really been fretting
vemrself sick over this balderdash?"
Then, looking into the pale, win f we,
Julius became grave again.
"If you hf.d only looked further,
dear," he said, "vou Xvouid have dis
covered ' page after page of just such
stuff. For you must know that one of
the delusions of my. youth was a settled
conviction that I .was) a great literary
genius, a Wilkie Colling and Charles
Dickens of America, born to astonish
the world. And this is part of my first,
last and only novel."
"Oh, Julius!" Isaura gasped. "I
thought I was sure " .
"There, don't cry,yflove; don't! Never
doubt me again, dear.. I cannot imagine
new how you could have taken this for a
genuine letter. I never knew a Dick or
Magdalene."
"How -did I know that? And Isaura is
such a very singular name."'
"So it is. But you see, dear, just
about that time this singular name stood
in my heart for all that was charming,
good and. lovable in womankind, I was
desperately in love with an Isaura, and
as my heroine was to embody all female
er.1ction, I gave her the name of thc
woman who had full possession of my
heart."
"And then the loss of fortune niy
"Bless me, yes! I forgot all about
that. It does look oddly like truth, now
j don't it? But if you will explore the
" , rawer
still further vou will find a
this precious document you so unfortun
ately selected."
The doctor, eoming later in the day to
visit hi3 patient, was astonished at the
wonderf ul effect of the simple remedy he
i had prescribed, and still more at the
rapid recovery that fo$ wed. Ia less
than a week Isauri was singing about
the old house, a busy iittle .-matron,
NEW SERIES - -
happy in her husband love, her baby 'a
beauty.
But-she has still one regret: All hex
entreaties have failed to persuade Julius
to complete th'at beiutiful novel, "A
Point of Honor," which lies unSuished
in Isaura's care, and which she is firmly
convinced would, if published, place lir
husband at the very pinnacle of , literary
fame.
But Julius will uot agree with her,- de
claring that that precious composition
has already made sufficient mischief ia
the world, since it caused his wife-H?ks
of misery and a tit of illness, aad there
fore it is with him a point of hondr to
it consign to oblivion as speedily as pos
sible. Tlx IxJger. '
Why an Amputated Limb Pains.
A very singular form of' neuralgia is
ttuit affecting the nerves of amputate
limbs. It not rarely happens that after
aa amputated stump lias healed the
nerves of tbc stump, being compressed
inthe scar becomes exceedingly painful,
Curkuslr enough, the pain is not felt in
thc stuml. but seemingly in the extrem-,
il' of the limb which, has probcbly been
buried for a -vear or more' In one cas(?
coming under the notice of the writer a
,naa whosc :irm hatl beca aml)Utatd:
abovc the clbow ofteu r'rr(?d to the
Pain he felt ia tbe littlc fiutr of the
vcreu memuer lur jcam aner iu opt-r-
ation. An old, one-legged soldier, ap
plying for an increase of pe-isiorj, said:
"I have more pain in the foot that aint
than in the one that are." This was hisj
terse way of saying that he continued to
have pain; m the foot which was lost on
the battle-field years before.
The explanation of these curious phe
nomena consists in the fact that the ter
minal filaments of a nerve are its most
sensitive parts; they are the "feelers," the
points from which the sensations start on
their course to the brain, where they give
notice that something is wrong with the"
outlying districts. When the nerve is
injured in this. continuity the sensation is
often referred to the terminal ends.
Everyone who has struck his "crazy-
bone" the point above the elbow,
where the ulnar nerve is very superficial
.ami easily injured must have noticed
J
how much the sensation was affected in
t i-. '
tbe "tt'c linSer- tbe pam being often
greater than that at the point'where the
. ,
J.D,ow rucu. .-. imt-t wpuotic.
A Child S- Twelve Grandparents.
Elsie Chase, daughter of Charles ami
,
Clara Chase, of armouth, has more
grandfathers and grandmothers than . any!
child in Massachusetts, of whom are ;
now living. I give below the names.
Edward and Mary Chase, grandfather
and grandmother.
Charles and Emma Ellis, grandfather
and gn ndmother.
Charles and Jane Ellis, great-grand-'
father and great-grandmother.
Jerry arid Cordelia Chase, great-
grandfather and great-grandmother.
Matthews and Kuth B. Gray, great
grandfather and great-grandmother,
Adeline Niekerson, grcat-great-grand-mother.
Jerry Walker. great-great-grandfather.
This is very remarkable; six grand
fathers and six grandmothers, and all
living, making a collection that has no
equal inihis country. G.ipe Cwl Muss.)
Kern.
Soidiers Not Anxious for War.
A party of infantry reserves were seen
at the r riedrichsstras.se railway station
the other day. They were waiting for
a train to take them back to their homes.
J::e if their number, an elderly man,
was indignant with tbe ncwspap-irWor
talking s glibly about the coming war
and the aggre.-sive policy which it was
Germany's duty to adopt. "I fought at
Koeuigsgratz and Sedan," he said, "but
that was mere child's play to what the
next war willbeX That new rifle which
we have just- been testing is almost too
horrible a weapon to use against any
enemy." Thc old Landwehrman Raid
the new rifle, carried a" bullet, which is
scarcely an inch long, and about thick
as a good-sized cigarette, which will
pierce earthworks of seventy centimeter
thickness at a distance of 150 meters.
At IT'J meters distance it made a pa.-.iag':
through five full knapsacks placed in
echelon. Fired from a distance of 20
meter thc bullet will penetrate a human
body. Chkajo llernll.
It ss' suggested m the Ji'tral Neut
Yri(T that "if the Legislature is to do
icy-thing for the no !e: them begin
vy ie ri-daling the narro w tires off the
ieavy lumber and truck wagons."'
VOL. X. .NO-36.-
CURIOUS FACTS.
The oldest reigning dynasty is that o!
Japan.
A horned rabbit is the curiosity of th
day et Akron, Ohio.
A gum-moistening apparatus for post
ajje stamps is also an invention.
There are within the present city "
limits of Milwaukee 30,000 lots which
are unoccupied.
Hay thirty-two years old has been
found and is said to bo well-preserved,
bright and sweet.
A Liberty County (Ga.) man has
found oysters growing at the bottom of
his sixty-foot well.
Indiana's building at tho World's
Fair is to be constructed of all building
materials found in the State. .
A resident of Parkers' Ford, Pcnn.,
is said to have a ring dove which is
twenty -one years old, and has been in
one cage all its life.
A large fox tried to steal a goose from
a barnyard near Butler, Pcnn., the other
day,, but the fowl fought so bravely that
she killed the would-be thief.
A cow being driven through the strecte
of Hannibal, 3Io., charged on a red coat
hanging on a post, entangled her horns
in it. gave a bellow and dropped dead.
Sine it i.s rumcred that marble mantel-pieces
arc coming into fashion again,
these pieces of interior decoration which
have been criticised as vulgar and inar
tistic are now called "perfectly lovely."
A monument will be erected shortly in
Tutliugen, in thc Black Forest, to Max
Schnec kenbergor, author of "The Watch
on the Rhine." The fund for this pur-
pose is 9000, and contributions are still
solicited.
The father of shoemaking in this
country is said to have been one Abraham
Lovcring, who came over in the May
flower, bringing with him a number of
pelts to be worked into footwear for the
colonists.
A prisoner escaped from the Browns
town (Jnd.) jail by cutting a hole
through the roof, after which he walked
ten miles to his home. Failing to secure
a bail bond, he returned to jail. He was
not missed by the sheriff, anel he re
entered by the hole through which he
escaped.
While an Indianapolis citizen was rid
ing on a street car in that city the brake
handle slipped from the driver's grasp
and struck a pistol in the driver's breast
pocket. A" bullet from thc weapon killed
the passenger -instantly. His wifo has
recovered 5001 .t damages from thenar
company.
The hump: of camels are mere lumps
of fat, and not provided for in the frame
work of the skeleton. "When thc animal
is in good condition the humps are full
and plump. u a long journey where
food is scarce the humps are entirely ab
sorbed, the skin covering them hanging
over thc flank like an empty box.
Gold, whib' in circulation, is handled
less thim any other medium. It is
usually kept in vaults of banks for de
mrtml rarely made, ait4! for this reason
the lose by abrasion Is but one-half of
one- er cent, in twenty years. In a $20
gold piece, the standard weight of which
is grains, the Government allowance
for loss by abrasion is 2.5 grains.
A blv k water snake, which was dis
sected at the Michigan Agricultural Col-b-ge
the other day, was found to contain
the bo lies of four fishes. One of these,
which was about foul inches in length,
had partially swallowed another fiih
:two-thirds its size. It w.aa, however,
not quite equa! to tbetaik, and the snake
had captured both. This curiosity will
be preserved in alcohol a a muscua
sj "Crimea.
Sdng'3 Eye.
In a case of cyclopia, or single eye, re
porte.f by Dr. A. Bruce s to the Koyal
Sock-ty of Edinburgh, there was a single
lozenge-shape 1 socket for thc eye itrtdie
rui Idle of thr base of the . forehead. Tbe
socket had two paii s of eyelid, and the
r.oH- -ww reprinted by a hort process
of tUsue and ttktn attached to the fore
head above thc eye. A microscopic
section of the socket showed two rudi
mentary retinae atparcntly springing
from a fcingle optic -aic!e. Trenton
i X. J. ) AtTiSTican.
The trr.gration from Great Britain to
f..:
h Usi xeur wa? 31,930. The year
eire it '.v is .j,ao. mr aane tap
hV5 that Canada must spend montf
ut :::c'.t "attention to the couixtrj.
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