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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 8

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE SUN, JULTDIORE, WEDNESDAY MORNING, 'AUGUST 11, 1937 LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE By Harold Gray A Gamey Guy What It Takes To Be A Star Observations On A Few Of The New "Discoveries" Now Being Rushed Into Production Hy The Film Studios All That One Needs To Crash Hollywood Is No Experience On Stage Or Screen How To Be Beautiful YOU SEE. ANNIE. CHANCES YEAH- ANt IT'LL BE A GREAT INVESTMENT FOR YOU-THATS WHAT LOOKIN' AT, AS A' BUSINESSMAN- WHY, BY THE TIME YOU'RE OLt OH. NELSON WO.1 ABSURD A ARE YOU WONT EVER GET YOU ARE 6WEET- I'M JUST NOT GEE MAYBE I HAD HURT" BUT IP VOU SHOULD YOU'D BE ASSURED THE BEST ANO I WAS SO SLOPPY NOW. TUAT r.

IV CICRCDCN All AFRAID YOU OF COURSE, WE WRONG IF THEY WERE RICH ITD BE DIFFERENT-BUT TO HAVE OUST A LITTLE, DOCTORS. HOSPITAL. EVERT DIB NT REALLY CANT AFFORD ANYTHINQ VERY BIG. BUT I'M IN HELP TO 15 WELL ENOUGH TO GO TO COLLEGE" LOVE OUR ANNIE KND TO WANT TO SPEND IT ON ME I FAVOR OF GETTING ALL WP 1 Weil-Proportioned Figure Is Held To Be More' Important For Average Woman Than Perfect Dimensions 8 i I i til Bjr ELSIE FIKKIE rCopfrisht, 10371 Hy DONALD KIUKI.F.T THE GIDDY HUNT (or new faces goes merrily on In the odd town of Hollywood. Almost every day ome palpitating press agent submit statement about a girl or boy who has been "discovered" by a talent scout or studio big ihot.

The publicity boys, however, are beginning to show the strain. Their HAROU) 8-11-37 I WT.fcy ol desperation as they try to think up The American DOROTHY DIX By Kathleen Norris CopjrWbt. 1037 Elderly Persons lave As Much Right Married As Do Younger Folks, Know Happiness When They In Own Age Class Good Morning By THE BISNTZTOWN BARD (Folcki McKinsiy) It onlf lid "Good momlor" it Kwd ilon th Bui It itfrud tlit morning' lorr Orr th lltelont djl Crlom Tint. SOFT CRABBER He has gone out with early tide To catch it at the crabbing time When shedders on the flotsam ride And the wavelets breathe in rhyme, lie stands upon his batteau's prow, His eyes bent down upon the shore; His net in hand, and there's one now; He's landed him, and goes for more. All round the cove he'll push his boat.

Slow, steady, watching, sure and keen; Watching as sound a vireo note The edges of the sea's grass green. A sudden plunge of net, and low, Another crab; he drifts along In the sweet magic of the glow Of morning with its whistled song. Bare-legged and shirtless, all intent On watching movement through the grass, He goes with his eyes forever bent Low on the water where things pass: A patient and devoted soul, Through the long morning strong and free In his meek place In that great whole That is the shore, the shoal, the sea. B. B.

Round About Maryland The Cumberland News issued a for ty-page tpt ial edition on Friday, in honor of the Cumberland Sesqui-Cen tennial Celebration. Lots of historical and descriptive matter in It and many fine contributions about important Cumberland people and industries The Bel Air Times says that the most frequent quesion after every jumping race on the new racing grounds there has been: "Well, how many fell this time?" The Queenstown Record- Observer nominates for a reward of some sort the name of an inn down at Grasonville "Last End Inn" The Eastern Shore Times tells of the Ger man railroad information office in New York making the mistake of thinking that Berlin, Maryland, is named after Berlin in Germany. Berlin, in Worces ter county, gets its name from Burley Inn, by which name the first settle ment in that section was called The Rambling Reporter of the Oakland Mountain Democrat celebrates the opening of the golf course there by advocating the introduction of a public swimming pool. A CANDLE IN THE WINDOW Abhor that which evil, cleave unto that which is good. Romans xii, 19.

Maryland Celebrations While the people of Western Maryland are helping Cumberland to celebrate its sesquicentennial the folk over on the Eastern Shore are all excited about a fishing fair which is to be held at Solomon's Island in Septem ber. Although Solomon's is in South ern Maryland, the idea eminates from Preston, in Caroline county. Hagers- town expects to entertain a quarter of a million visitors at her Antietam celebration in September. Another Another day, we cry; Another day to try; Another day to struggle on Toward the impartial dawn. And so be glad, be true, That each day brings to you This glory of chance and liberty To be what you want to be.

-B. B. The "Now" Books Some of the books of the "Now" are "Mc scow, 1937," by Lionel Feucht- wanger; "Pastoral, by Eleanor Green; "Small Talk," by Harold Nicholson; "Either Is Love," by Elizabeth Cragin. Filduzer Park The new wing Aunt Petunia has had added to her preserve closet is already overflowing into the woodshed. Ambition So many to the heights aspire But to be meek and low Is also of the eternal fire Lit by the spirit's glow.

B. B. Flaggs INSTALLMENT IT WAS after dinner that Tom came for her; she jumped up from her place in a fireside group with her face whitening "Aunt Margaret and Uncle Mark want to see you," Tom told her, in the nau. "Why, rcn, dont so frightened!" he said, smiling. "It's going to be all right.

They can't eat ms!" "What do they say?" "I don't know, my dear. I know Jell talked to them practically all after It really doesn't matter what they say, Pen, except that they may influence him to refuse a divorce. But even if they do we'll not give in, and after a while they'll see." "I hate this," Pen said In a whisper, as he put his hand on the knob of the upstairs sitting-room door. IT WAS A small room. Jeffs grand mother much of her time in it, writing letters, resting, having special conferences with this member of the family or that beside the Are.

She was there now, in her great winged chair, an imposing figure in the black-and-silver brocade with the lace lappets; her stern eyes went for a moment to Pen and Tom as they came in, re turned to the flaming logs. The Flagg emerald glinted on her soft, fat old hand. Opposite her, in the companion chair, was Jeff's silver-headed grand father. He did not look up, to Pen he seemed aged since last she had seen him; he looked broken. Jeffs father was standing at the hearth, a puzzled, angry expression on his face; Aunt Margaret, sitting next to old Mrs.

Flagg, eyeglassed and knitting fast, had evidently been crying. Her eyes were ringed with red; her mouth was trembling; her lashes wet. The only other person in the room was Jeff, who stood at a window, looking down nt the winter night, his back to the room. "COME IN, Tom; come in, old Mrs. Flagg said.

She indicated seats In the circle, and Pen slipped into one, Tom standing behind her with one arm across the h'gh back of her chair. "Jeff told us what your plans are last night," his grandmother went on. "It's been a great sorrow and a great shock to us." She stopped short. Nobody spoke for a moment. Then Pen said falteringly: "I've been very unhappy, too." "Yes, I know you have been!" Aunt Margaret said, sharply, nervously, as one who will be just at any cost, and there was another pause.

"I had no idea that the boy was- was worrying you again," his father said, impatiently. "I've seen you often been up there to see the baby four or Ave times a week. You never spoke of it." "THERE didn't seem to be any use in speaking of it," Penelope said simply. fighting a maddening inclination to cry. Tom's hand came down and touched her shoulder, and she felt her courage come back.

"I'm not blaming Jeff," she went on appealingly. "1 don't think he can help it. We were married you all remember how wc were married! Perhaps we didn't love each other enough; I don't know. But we're we're not happy!" She began cry on the last words, and took out her handkerchief and blew her nose and wiped her eyes, not looking at anyone. "But surely," Mark Hagg said, "after so short a trial you've been married only two years surely time might make a difference? Young people make up their quarrels; that's part of marriage." "We don't quarrel," Penelope said, "It's not that." "PENELOPE," Jeffs mother said, in a broken voice, "if you can't forgive Jeff and he has tried you terribly, we all know that for Buff's sake, for all our sakes, won't you give him another trial? This is this would be such a cruel blow to us all! To have the baby on er to go to a I Says: Coprrlnht, 1987 AN EMINENT divorce court judge de clares that marriage of persons past 60 years of age should be prohibited by law.

Oh Ac, judge! Nonsense! Have a heart. Because one rich old man has married a flapper under the fond delusion she loved him for himself alone, or one old woman has invested her late husband's insurance money in a gigolo, don't doom all the aixtyish to lonely old ages. Your own experience must have taught you that neither age nor brains nor previous condition of servitude seems to have the slightest effect on an individual in picking out a mate. We see senile grandpas and schoolboys making the same mistakes. Shrewd men of the world and learned college professors display the same lack of judgment that morons do.

Men and women who have had two or three divorces apiece keep on being repeaters. There is no especial period of life when men and women are marriage v.ise and exempt from making mistakes in choosing their partners, but if there is going to be any time limit put upon wedding bells they should be forbidden to ring out for those in their teens, not for those in their 60s. Statistics show that a hundred boy- and-girl marriages go on the rocks where one old man and woman marriage suffers a like fate. Puppy love peters out oftener than does congenial friendship. Sixty In These Days Not Regarded As Old THE JUDGE who believes that all people of 60 should be prevented from marrying also forgets that 60 isn't age now as it used to be.

It isn't the winter of life. It is just Indian summer. There was a time when men and women of 60 were supposed to be senile and doddering, with no further Interest in life and nothing to do but to sit in a corner and reflect on their latter end. But most of the sixtyish you know now are as frisky as you please; up on their toes going places and doing things, and they haven't the slightest intention of dying for the next fifteen or twenty years. Half of the men who run the country and carry on the big enterprises are 60 or over, and they are just as capable of picking out a wife as they ever were, which may not be saying much, but what man at what age knows what kind of a package he is going to draw out of the matrimonial grab bag? Personally, I am strong for elderly people marrying, provided they marry in their own age class.

For an old man to marry a young girl, or for an elderly woman to acquire a boy husband is a fatal mistake, because in such cases they are inevitably bound to miss the one thing for which they married, and that is companionship. To have that, two people must have the same background, the same traditions. That is impossible when one belongs to one generation and the other to another. There can be no greater bar between a man and woman than not being able to say to each other "don't you remember?" Holds Old Need Marriage More Than Do The Young YOUNG PEOPLE find something ludicrous in gray-haired old men and women getting married but, in reality, it is the old who need marriage more than the young, because they must find their happiness in their homes. The young can go out and hunt up amusement and diversion, but the old must spend their evenings by their firesides and it is a dreary and a lonely thing to do if there is not some one to bear one company, and to listen with unabated interest while one re tells old stories that he or she has heard a hundred times.

Particularly should there be no bar raised against the marriage of widows and widowers in their sixties, because no man and woman who have ever been at the heads of their own houses To Get And They Select Mates LXXXVIII. taken out of our lives your uncle Mark and 1 are so fond of her" She stopped short, her throat thick ening, and knitted furiously, her eyes her needles. "You forget, Aunt Margaret," Tom said, from behind Penelope's chair, "that I'm in this." His grandfather looked up, benign silver-headed, quiet. "No, no, no, Tom," he said in an un dertone, looking down again, "no happiness there, my boy. No woman could ever give her a fai, trial while she was thinking oi anoth man." PENELOPE looked from face to face; her gaze stopped on that of Jeff's grandmother.

"What would you have me do?" she demanded. "What do you think a woman can do, when she has had nothing but neglect from one man, nothing but kindness from the other? I've tried with ueff you know I've tried! I've made mistakes, but I didn't mean to. We have a baby. Do you sup pose I wouldn't do anything in the world to save uff what she'll have to know some day? I didn't want to come care for Tom, but he was like a big brother to me, always helping me- always helping us both. How could 1 help caring for him? Now now am 1 supposed to say, 'I'm sorry, Tom.

We love each other. But because the fam ny nates divorce, ana because you happen to be Jeff's cousin, and be cause your people love Buff, you're la away to Rio without me, and I'm stay on here Worrying!" Pen broke off to ejaculate bitterly, "About money, and gambling, and where Jeff is at night, and cards, and whether Jeh's driving the car when he's been drinking! I love this family," she finished, crying nov, but keeping her chin up, and speaking in angrv bursts through her tears, "but I can sacrifice everything that makes life worth living because this family thinks I ought to!" JEFF HAD COME over from the window. He sat haggard and weary on hassock at his mother's knee; she held his hand as she said tremblingly "Pen, Jeff and I have been talking all morning. This would be different, dear. This would be different! We'd all help.

We'd all be with you in trying to make it a success. Don't let an angry mood now undo everything Mark and I have tried to do for him. blame myself, Pen! I am bitterly to blame. But he tells me, and I believe him" "Don't, Mother," Jeff said gruffly, looking away. Margaret r-iagg was silent, her face wet with tears.

Mark Flagg began to speak, stopped abruptly. "I don't know," old Thomas Jeffer son Flagg said mildly, looking1 from one to the other, "I don't know why this couldn't be adjusted. Jeff's in earnest now; Pen isn't Ling to be hard on him." "And what about me, Grandfather?" Tom said. (Continued Tomorrow) Aunt Het By Robert Quillen "I reckon you'd call Sallie a neurotic. When you ask her how she's feelin', she thinks you really want tr know." fCooniitut.

1937. Publishpn Syndicate) By Sol Hess FROM tlmt. to time 1 have letterij chiefly from very, very young thingsi WiMu what the ideal dimension are hat should one's bust measure ment be, and one's hips, and ankles5 and so on. I usually hesitate to give the so-' called ideal dimensions. First, because-they vary from time to time.

Second, because there is too much danger of''! their being taken too seriously. I can't see that it matters very much if the waistline is one inch more than it should be or the ankle a half-inch less. The general impression of pro portion, the picture you flash as a well-molded, well-made figure that's far more important than perfect di mensions. Then, too, remember that one's build must be taken into con sideration. THE short, stocky person naturally will measure more about the hips, bust, waist and ankles as well as wrist than the tall, lean individual Again, the matter of good proportion enters.

So long as you are easy on the eyes of most people, so long as you dont bulge here or crotruda there. you don't have to be too concerned about the tape measure. As a matter of fact, many women who are actually twenty or more pounds overweight don't look it, or at least don make people very con scious of it, because they "carry it so nicely meaning that it is dis tributed so evenly over the entire body. Were I to ask for a dispensation from Divine Providence I would call for a well-proportioned body arid leave the perfect dimensions to the show girls. IN ORDER to satisfy those who have repeatedly said, "Give us the informa tion anyway," here they are for what they are worth.

Take your tape measure in hand, play with it, see how near perfection you are. If you are perfect. fine. My advice is: try to keep the sylphlike, lovely lines. If you don't measure up or down, don't let that down your spirits.

Perfect propor tions and perfect posture will give the lie to any lack of perfection in measurements, I assure you. Here are today's standards as called for by a noted illustrator: The ahklei 8V4 inches; the calf (largest part of leg below the knee), 13 to 13; the knee (just above the knee cap), 15 to 15; the hips (at the widest point), 35 to 35; the waist, 25Va to 26; the bust, 33 to 33. Five feet six nd a half inches tall is the preferred height, but if you are taller don't hide your head like an ostrich, and if you are shorter, don't hang it in shame. Adopt the proper lines and look your loveliest My bulletin "Lovely Lines" is yours for the asking. Please include a self-addressed, stamped (3-cent) envelope.

Good Taste By EMILI POST tOowrteht, 1937 Cards, Leaving Cards And Re ceiving Visitors Dear Mrs. Post Will you please give in detail the uses to which man can put visiting cords. I would like to order some for my brother at 1 know he lias only his business cards on which the name of his company appears, but as he is a bach elor living alone my husband feels that such a present will be utterly useless to him. ANSWER A man uses his card when ever he pays a formal visit. For ex-l ample, at the house of a hostess uponf whom he pays a party call, or at a house where there is illness, or as an expression of condolence where there is mourning.

He also sends his visiting! card with flowers to a woman, or toj any sick friend, or with -a weddingf present to a bride. He also writes anl introduction on his card for some one going to a distant city where he has friends. He may also write an invita tion to a cocktail party or a small informal dance or any other not too im portant party across the top of hit visiting card. Dear Mrs. Post When calling on people who live in a hotel, how is one supposed to present one's card? of course, am referring to people who are simply acquaintances on whom I have never before called.

ANSWER Write in pencil the name of the persons upon whom you are paying a visit across the top of your card and give it to a clerk at the desk either to be sent to their room, or to be put in their letter-box to tell them that you have been to see them. Dear Mrs. Post What is the customary length of time one is supposed to wait before returning the visit paid us by new acquaintances? And are we supposed to leave our cards if we find the people at home? AWSWfcK Within the week is considered most polite. Yes, leave your cards unless they left none on you. In this case it is best to leave none unless they are out.

Band Concert Park Band, Newman C. Holmes, conductor, Wyman Park, 8 to 10 P. M. the meantime, last year's highly touted the victims of audience apathy. Noble Actor MICHAEL BROOKE Under this name the Seventh Earl of Warwick was signed to a film contract by Paramount.

A unt Priscilla's RECIPES Fo' yo' crab krokets, Miss Mame, try dis: CRAB CROQUETTES Take 1 qua't ob crab meat, 1 cup ob milk, 2 heapin' tablespoons ob flour, 1 rounded tablespoon ob butter, salt an' kyan to tas'e an' bread crum's to cober. Make yo' bery thick re a saus, se'sinin' it to tas'e, den sined crab. Mix stir in de se'-w 1 1 togeder, Hab yo' saus-pan re'dy wi'd lard or other grease bi'lin' in it. Drao a spoonful ob de crab mixchure inter a dish ob fine bread crum's, flop ober so's to cober well. Den drap inter de b'ilin' lard.

As soon as de under side browns turn ober so's all de outside will brown quick an' keep de grease om so'kin' inter de crab, Drene on 'sosbent brown paper. Serb bery hot wid tartar saus' on de side. Community Fund Starts Checkup Of Addresses Special Corps Of Workers Over 45 Begins Survey In Advance Of Fall Campaign A survey to bring up to date the addresses of donors to the Community Fund was started yesterday by fund officials in preparation for the fall solicitation for funds. It will be conducted by a special corps of workers over 45, recruited through the Community Placement Bureau from the of the able- bodied unemployed. The will check the records of employers to obtain their employes' most recent address.

Charles H. Roloson, president of the Community Fund, has request ed the city's employers to furnish the information required. THE NEBBS C.I.TVOMM, OSKA.LOOSA.,1UW WftNla LUTKEK TO MARffV EMMA. 000 IB1IS B.HERR1KJG16U, p. of pos good Old POTTS FDR MIS PiWAlOOAL AMD SOCIAL SECURITY ROBECTAOOiSCWA1 wARSMA.u,Miiay MAX.

CHAS.PlXUlAft passaic, mj picks potts fh' i piilpllll tJSms TP? Awn fur VlAST LAST A t-ll announcements are showing a quality tiew ways of dishing out the pap. In prodigies keep falling by the wayside, If half the prophecies made on behalf of fledgling stars come true, the present situation will be reversed. Instead of there being not enough stars to take care of all the pictures, there will not be enough pictures to accommodate all the stars. WONDERFUL ARE THE WAYS In which these newcomers crash the mystic portals. Let the press agents peak for themselves: "Because she 'acted like a lady' and apoke the King's English in a well-modulated voice, Evelyn Keyes today is under personal contract to Cecil B.

DeMille. "Without stage, screen or other professional experience, Miss Keyes, who comes from Atlanta, was given a contract following an introduction to the producer-director, who was Impressed by her well-bred manner, beauty and speaking voice." "JANE DALE was tested as a dramatic actress. Not until after she was signed to a Warner Brothers contract did the atudio know it had got a great little torch singer and tap dancer as well as an actress Jane deliberately kept secret the fact that she'd held forth sensationally in select night spots in New York and Florida "After slight seasoning in minor roles he plunged into leading parts. MARLA SHELTON, new screen And, who makes her debut in 'Walter Wanger's Vogues of 1038, is the 23-year-old goddaughter of former Secretary of War Patrick Hurley. Her toddling days were spent in Oklahoma where she became a top-notch swimmer, golfer and tennis player.

Today he concentrates on oil painting in the Rubens manner." "A SOUTHERN ACCENT, as sweet and thick as cream, is responsible for starting Margaret Early, 17, of Birmingham, on a screen career. Fresh from appearances in the Birmingham Little Thpater Ml. TT 0 tame xo Hollywood and enrolled with Bliss-Hayden Theater group. Here she was seen by Director Gregory La ava. wnen her tests were shown to Pandro S.

Berman, the producer, Miss Early immediately was signed for the part of a girl from Dixie who is hunt ing stage work in New York." "CHARLES GUY FULKE GREVILLE. Baron Brooke, the seventh Earl of Warwick, known on the screen as Michael Brooke, today signed a term tock player contract with Paramount, under which his title may never be used. "Brooke, world traveler, author and linguist, has had no stage or screen experience prior to coming to the United States. He is a graduate of Eton and Sandhurst and spent four years in the British army in Egypt, He has taken extensive travels through every continent but South America and the Antipodes." In subsequent press releases, this noble actor is referred to, contract or no contract, as "Michael Brooke (the Earl of Warwick)." SO IT GOES. Mary Christine Dunn, the 2-year-old chilu, whose intelligence has been widely described in the newspapers, gravitated to Holly wood.

Universal is all agog over one Joy Hodges, who "is going to loom large in the motion-picture world within a short time, and you can take B. G. (Buddy) DeSylva's word for that." Miss Hodges has been sing, lng with orchestras. Frances Robinson was cast in a nic- ture by the same studio the day after she took a film test. Her preparations lor stardom to date are these: She was graduated from the Hollywood High School, and played the role of little Henrietta in "Orphans of the fatorm when she was 5 years old.

Betty Louise Atkinson will make her creen debut in Warner Brothers' "Varsity Show." She "holds a four-year scholarship at the University of Southern California and frequently leads the college band." She can also throw a baton thirty feet in the air. And that's how film stars are made. Hold Over "ew theater Yo'i Can't Have Everything," musical featuring Alice Faye, Don Ameche, Rubinoff and the Ritz Brothers, today goes into ils second week. VISITS STATE INSTITUTIONS Gov. Peery And Budget Commission Stop First At Fredericksburg Fredericksburg, Aug.

10 JP) Governor Peery and members of the State Budget Commission opened a tour of State institutions today with a visit to the Fredericksburg State Teachers College. Tomorrow and Thursday the commission will visit industrial schools for Negro boys and girls in Hanover county, the Industrial School for White Boys at Beaumont, the White Girls' Training School at Bon Air, the Eastern State Hospital and the College of William and Mary at Williamsburg. re ever contented in anybody else's home. Nor can they keep from being pests In any one else's home. They want the freedom, the sense of com-mand, the privilege of doing their own ways, and this they can only have under their own roofs.

Never In their children's homes. And It makes for the happiness not only of themselves, but of their children and grandchildren when they team up with some other lonely old widow or widower and start housekeeping again. It ii a long, dark road, that last lap of the journey of life. Happy the old man and woman who can find a companion to tread it with them. FASHIONS LACBA I.

BALDT, A. M. 2941 YOUNGSTERS can't have too many little washable cotton frocks like this easy to launder pinafore. The pantees make it such a complete and cool outfit. The buttons right up the sides and on the shoulders afford smart trim and are always amusing to tiny girls.

Sleeveless, too, to show off her chubby arms. Price, 10 cents. Address orders to The Baltimore Sun Fashion Bureau 119 WEST 19TH ST. NEW YOKK CITY Print name and address plainly. PImm Put a Cirel Around Siza Winted.

Style No. 2941 is designed for Sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Street Attdrea Citj Sut Note Do NOT send clirpiuc of this pattern with your order. Keep the clipping for reference an to number and size of pattern desired, in case your order goes astray. Annual Reunion Planned The Junior Order United American Mechanics and the Daughters of America will hold their annual reunion Saturday at Pen-Mar Park, Pennsylvania.

Concerts by the Balti more Student Band, under the direc tion of G. Riemart, are scheduled William MacKubbin is chairman of arrangements. To Present Historic Flag Richmond, Aug. 10 (Py The flag which Col. Fitzhugh Lee raised over Morro Castle on January 1839, marking the official surrender of the port of Havana, Cuba, will be presented the State cf Virginia Friday at 2.30 P.

M. in the museum of the State I 1 A Smart Dumb-Bell TMeTA 1 WANJT TO IC 1 COULD THimN es -q r)i imr I fl MATTER -IS HE BET MONJEY DO VOU TWIWK I'D XfwE Gtt lY1 OT ASin VOOAVM? DO VOU TMIMK 7am' DOVUM TWE ROAD aShiiJ ROUKJD VVOU CAjvl VUHiP UklE THIS. 1 WORKED ALOKJ3r5lDE OP vam. mi indicate) I iv3i I'T S. Vv Library Building..

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