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Show AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN it r i - 1 1 Splrited Kittens on , Cross Stitch Towels ' A dull moment'! unthinkable with these seven, mischievous kit-tens kit-tens about I In fact, they've thought up enough cute tricks to give you decoration for a week's Pattern 5571 tupply of tea towela. Sit right down and tend for this pattern, and get started on your set The even simple motifs work up very quickly In a combination of cross stitch, single and outline stitches. Use colored floss. In pattern 8372 you will find a transfer pattern of seven motifs S by 8 inches (one for each day of the week); color suggestions; Illustrations of all stitches needed; material requirements. To obtain this pattern send 15 cents In stamps or coins (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle Household Arts Dept., 239 W. Fourteenth St, New York, N. Y. Write plainly pattern number, your name and address. Golden Anniversary According to an Insurance company; com-pany; the chances of celebrating golden anniversary depend entirely en-tirely upon one's age and that of marriage. Taking an average case In which the bride Is twenty-.two twenty-.two years of age and,,tha brido-. groom twenty-five years of age, the chances that they wiS both survive and celebrate their golden anniversary' Is 168 out of every 1,000, or about one In six. BOYS! GIRLS! Bead the Grape Nuts ad la another column of this paper and lean how to Join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valnable free prizes. Adr. Significant Period A'l -do-not- believe if teslmply the bias of a contemporary which makes me feel that the last fifty yeart- have been of -unusual significance." sig-nificance." Oliver Wendell Holmes. roleman AIR-PRIStURB r.lantlo LANTERN Use your Coleman tm haodradt of places wbtra ordlnry Ua tare U inlm. In it lor attar-dark eawM, aunt-inf. aunt-inf. fishing; r M ur at Cd pewwrair-prMiaraUrbt Karoaena andfaaoUBO nodaU, Tbafiaaatnada. Prieaa a lor H StaV Tear looal deJr Ma apply yon. fend po-Wrcl po-Wrcl for FREB Foldara. THB COLEUAN tAMP AND STOVB Ca fWcWUlTl. Wichita. IUm. Cktao, VLf lMaditella.rM Ua Aa laa.CaUI. itlUi fir FIRST AID Jk Common Skin Ailment or Injuries Resmo AGENTS At u Ban Waal ryla Bar. Tnaoa art. alaa mIL coamaUoa, lood prodoeUi aoUona, household natrtt. ata. Froa CaUtog. ImM WkalMBla Baa, IMS B, UU at, CkUaa. INSTRUCTION EAHH TO LEARN BAHBERING a SFKCLaX TCITIOIf a Approved by roar Sate Barber Board, ato totar Man " ImI H, fan law W Haft ' Openwg for FEMALE AGENTS Makers of a wall known, highly thloal comedo preparation are seeking iemale agents, either new or currontly engaged la almilar work, Highly ollectiTo now tolling angle makes it a raro-ilro seller la 90 ol cases. It will not bo nooeaaaxy to purchase aamplo mar-fhan't mar-fhan't If satisfactory credit rti-oroncoo rti-oroncoo are hunlslied with letter of Inquiry. Writ tUy, to DENTON'S COSMETIC CO. 4402-23rd It Ueg Islasd Cry, R. T. m ) x 8 tugn loo ... a ram lubt into Wind, rmia or snow mat pot it ant TJotoSOOeandla- si T BRISBANE ". THIS WEEK Fov the Pacific States A Good Example It Sold for $700 The Pacific atates should Interest themselves in air defense, apart from the national government J When a committee com-mittee of rich men from New York called on Abraham Lincoln, told him how much money they had, and urged that he send a good battleship to do nothing but protect New York city, his reply was that If he bad as much money as they said they Artanr BrUkaaa had, he would build a battleship tor himself. The west coast states. California. Oregon, Washington, co-operating perhaps with their vigorous neighbors neigh-bors of Vancouver, and other points above the Canadian border, might well have a few flying ships of their own, a sort of air militia. San Francisco, where they combine com-bine patriotism with plenty of money, mon-ey, and great civic pride and energy, ener-gy, might well start the idea of a Pacific coast flying force. That need not be very expensive. A hundred machines to begin with, a hundred .plucky., young fliers,.- practicing, the gentle art of flying at night, and dropping bombs, practicing especially espe-cially mimic warfare against other flying machines, would constitute an admirable object lesson to the rest of the country. ' Md' if California; cisco for instance, should start a little flock of one hundred machines, Los Angeles could be relied upon to hurry in with two hundred. Seat tie and other coast cities also. .. . Such machines need not be a. total to-tal loss. " In the first place, many young gentlemen with rich fathers, not knowing exactly what do with themselves, extremely anxious to find work worth while, and preferably prefer-ably dangerous, would delight In each equipping his individual machine, ma-chine, tor the service of the Pacific coast and of Uncle Sam, as the nobler in the old days-delighted-in equipping each his regiment, or his fighting ship, for the service of the Two hundred or three hundred high powered, swift flying ma- I chtoea, directed by quick and coura geous American Drains, wouia oe worth more to the safety of the Pacific Pa-cific coast than a hundred battleships. battle-ships. For the fighters that come, if they do come, will fly miles above the battleships. They would come less gaily, less confidently, if they knew that trained fliers awaited them. Hldeyo NogucbJ, who gave his life to fight yellow fever in Africa, win inspire many men. He was born of a proud, warlike race, Intensely self-centered, self-centered, tor 2,000 years a hermit people. The loyalty of a Japanese waa to family, clan, above all to the emperor representing his race. The rest of the world was nothing to him. r Born one generation after Japan opened her doors to the world, Noguchl No-guchl felt the new spirit of the times. He was loyal to family, clan, emperor, race; but he was devoted chiefly to all human kind. From boyhood to the last, through poverty and many perils, he studied how to wipe out disease. He discovered dis-covered the germ of yellow fever, developed serums to prevent the fever of cure it, led in the work that has driven it out of America and will soon put an ent to it throughout the world. Yellow fever killed countless millions mil-lions of all peoples. Noguchi's skill and devotion have saved the lives of millions, too many to estimate, most of them foreigners to whom bis forefathers would have paid no attention, calling them hei-min, or no-folks. 'Noguchi's self-sacrifice to human welfare sets an example that is sure to be followed. Perhaps, In time, most men will see that it Is better to help one another than to kill or even rob one another. It is said the Hackensack Indians sold to the white men for so many bars of lead, and some finery, worth altogether $700, land on which now stands the entire city of Newark, N. J., and a great deal of land beyond. be-yond. The poor Hackensack chief, with his $700, couldn't buy today enough land or a tight grave at the corner of Broad and Market streets in Newark. New-ark. Land goes up wonderfully. Doctors at Kansas City report that birth control information so much discussed docs little good to the poor, and has caused an "alarming "alarm-ing slump in child bearing among educated families." That is how reform works, usually. usu-ally. But since 90 per cent of human hu-man beings worth while come from poor families, providence may be working in its usual mysterious way. C Kin prtturet Srndloil. Ida. News Review of Current Events the World Over Senator Coiuena Defeated in Michigan Primaries-Maine Primaries-Maine Recaptured by Republicans Notable Gathering Gath-ering of Savants at Harvard Tercentenary. By EDWARP W, PICKARD Waatara Mawapaper Unloa. REPUBLICANS were highly gratified grat-ified by the results of the Michigan Michi-gan primary election for two reasons: rea-sons: First, because three out of Ave persons " who went to the polls asked for Republican Republi-can ballots; second, because Senator James Couzens, a p Republican who has openly declared that he Is supporting President Roosevelt for re-election, lost his fight for re-nomination. re-nomination. Cous-ens, Cous-ens, one of the Sen. Consena wealthiest members of the senate, waa badly defeated by former Gov. Wilbur M. Brucker, and there is more than a suspicion that he knew his fate beforehand. -Brucker, who Is only forty-two years old, has been in public life for almost twenty twen-ty years. The Republicans re-nominated Frank D. Fitzgerald for the governorship. On the Democratic side Representative Repre-sentative Prentiss M. Brown won the senatorial nomination against Lout B. Ward who was' supported by Father Coughlin. For governor they chose Frank Murphy, high commissioner to the Philippines and former mayor of Detroit Both Murphy Mur-phy and his defeated opponent, George Welsh.,.rca Roosevelt supporters. In the New Hampshire primaries Gov. H. Styles Bridges won the Republican Re-publican senatorial nomination, ending end-ing the effort of former Senator George H. Moses to stage a comeback. come-back. The Democrats put cp Representative Rep-resentative William 2C Rogers. Nominees tor governor are MaJ. Francis P. Murphy, Republican, and Amor r-'BIandinVrhrat",!w; Massachusetts will have for senator sena-tor either Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Republican, or James M. Curley, now governor. Democrat John W. Halgis, Republican, and Charles F. Hurley, Democrat were nominated tar tte-g&verrWrthip;v''' The gubernatorial nominees in Wisconsin are; Gov- Philip La Fol lette, ' Progressive; Alexander Wi ley, Republican, and Arthur W. Lueck, Democrat MAINE, the "barometer" state, is back in the Republican column at least so far as its state ticket is concerned. The G. O. P. captured the United States senator-ship, senator-ship, the governorship and three congressional seats. Senator Wallace Wal-lace H, White, Republican, defeated Gov. Louis J. Brann, who sought to unseat him. Lewis O. Barrows, Republican, won the governorship by a substantial majority over F. Harold Dubord, Democrat The vote cast broke all records for size and interest in the election was intense. The state had been visited by both President Roosevelt as he returned from his vacation cruise, and Gov. A If M. Landon, the Republican Presidential nominee, nomi-nee, who made speeches there only a few days ago. Colonel Knox, vice presidential candidate on the Republican Re-publican ticket also had canvassed the state. Brann, who was elected governor In 1932 and re-elected two years later, was the first Democrat to hold that office In Maine and was personally popular. White was elected senator in 1930 after ten years in the bouse of representatives. representa-tives. SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE WALLACE has approved the new $10,000,000 seed corn loan program pro-gram of the AAA. The government will advance farmers two types of loans on seed corn store! on the farm. Advances of $1.75 a bushel will be made to farmers on 1,000,-000 1,000,-000 bushels of selected corn. The government will have the option of buying this corn at $3.50 a bushel up' to April 1, 1937. The second type of loan permits advances of 55 cents a bushel on "good quality and properly stored cribbed corn which can be sorted for seed at a later date." On the latter type of loan the government retains the riht to purchase the collateral at $1.50 a bushel until April 1 next. It Is understood the Reconstruction Reconstruc-tion Finance corporation has agreed to advance up to $10,000,000 under the loan program. The loans will be made to farmers through the Commodity Credit corporation. . 'The interest rate on the new loans will be 4 per cent the same as was in effect under the old corn loan program. FEDERAL government help In controlling their business has been asked by two large sections ! of the tobacco industry. The Retail Tobacco Dealers of America, Inc., representing about 300,000 retailers of tobacco products, prod-ucts, requested the federal trade commission to authorize a trade practice conference with a view tor formulating rules for the elimination elim-ination of unfair methods of competition compe-tition and trade abuses. Representatives from nine tobac- 1 CO producing states wound up a two-day two-day conference in Washington with a request addressed to the agricultural agricul-tural adjustment administration to draft a model production control bill. TO THE sixty-sixth annual congress con-gress of the American Prison association, held in Chicago, was presented a report from the committee com-mittee on crime prevention in which it was stated that the tactics of s certain class of lawyers in defending defend-ing persons charged with crime have the effect of encouraging criminals crim-inals to repeat their offenses. The committee declared that 75 per cent of the prisoners now in penal institutions insti-tutions in this country had been "literally faced about into a career ca-reer of crime" by their experiences with defense attorneys. The coaching of 'the attorney tended to help the defendant find an alibi for his misdeeds and a sedative sed-ative for his conscience, according accord-ing to the report when public welfare wel-fare should have guided the lawyer to conduct "which would quicken the sensibilities of the prisoner and awaken hint to hit own misdeeds. The committee recommended more scientific methods in preventing prevent-ing and combating crime and it estimated esti-mated that the country's annual crime cost is $15,000.000,000 "one-fourth "one-fourth of the national income; half, of the war debt" FOR the first time In seven years the United States is to have a squadron in European Atlantic waters. wa-ters. It is known as "Squadron 40-teraporary" 40-teraporary" and Rear Admiral Arthur Ar-thur P, Fairfield was named as its commander. Admiral Fairfield hoisted his flag aboard the light cfuliser'Kileigh at tte NWttlk havy yard and sailed for Gibraltar. At first the squadron will consist of the flagship Raleigh, the destroyers Kane and Hatfield and the coast guard cutter Cayuga, but navy officials of-ficials expected its strength would The Hatfield, Kane and Cayuga had been on emergency duty in Spanish waters since the outbreak of the Spanish revolt until they were withdrawn to nearby neutral ports following the attempted bombing of the Kane by an unknown plae off Cadiz last August 30. IT IS pleasant to turn from war and politics and read of the doings do-ings at Cambridge, Mass., where Harvard university is celebrating the tercentenary of its founding. . In Sanders theater was held the academic reception for 554 colleges and learned societies in every state of the union and in forty foreign countries, and all of S wearing the jJ caps, gowns and n o o a s signifying their various de J. B. Conant grees of scholarship. President James B. Con ant greeted greet-ed the guests, accepted their credentials cre-dentials and delivered a simple address of welcome. He noted that the assembly was an impressive demonstration of the solidarity of the academic world, and saw in the greetings of the delegates "the continued con-tinued aspiration of mankind toward a universal fellowship based on human hu-man reason." Responding on behalf of the delegates, dele-gates, Prof. Elie Cartan of the University Uni-versity of Paris paid tribute to Harvard's Har-vard's contributions to education and declared that "no barrier, political, po-litical, religious or social, should be erected to stop the search for truth." When the delegates were called up in the order of the age of the institutions they represented, first to respond was Prof. Saleh Hashem Attia of Al-Azhar university of Cairo, Cai-ro, founded in 790. Then came the next oldest the -Regie university, Neglie Stuni Bologna, founded in the Tenth century, and represented rby Prof Carrado Glni. Third was the University of Paris, founded in the Eleventh century, whose representative repre-sentative was Dr. Cartan. Oxford, Cambridge and all the others followed, fol-lowed, down to the youngest represented, repre-sented, the Academla Sinlca of Nanking, Nan-king, China. World famous educators, scientists scien-tists and men of letters, including ten Nobel prize winners, were among those who attended the reception. re-ception. FRANCE'S famous polar explorer, explor-er, Dr. Jean Charcot and 59 of the crew of 60 aboard the exploration explora-tion ship Pourquoi Pas were drowned when the vessel foundered in a tale o!T the Iceland coast One petty officer swam ashore and told of the tragedy. Charcot led two expeditions ex-peditions to the Antarctic and a region re-gion there is named for him, Char-cotland. Char-cotland. In 1925, when one of Roald Amundsen's north polar expeditions was missing, Charcot searched the east coast of Greenland in the Pourquoi Pour-quoi Pas. .aj"". . 1 T7! " POPE PIUS XI may be physically weak, as recent reports say, but age and Illness have not lessened the vigor of his opinions and his wsy of expressing them. In greeting and blessing soma five hundred Spanish Span-ish refugees who wets " received at Castel Gandolfo, the holy father took oe caslon to denounce strongly the "mad" forces, of Communism Commu-nism which, he de- PopePiusXI Spln aQd ,t. where, "the very foundations of all order, all culture and all civilization." civiliza-tion." He urged the. constituted authorities of all nations to oppose "these great evils with every remedy reme-dy end barrier that is possible" and prophesied that there will be utter chaos if "those who have a duty in the matter do not hasten to repair the breach it indeed, it is not already al-ready too late." The pope spoke especially of the situation in Spain, but said the crisis there is "a .school in which the most serious 'lesson is being taught to Europe and to the whole world to a world now at last wholly steeped, ensnared and threatened by subversive propaganda, and more especially to a Europe battered bat-tered and shaken to its very foundation." founda-tion." For forty minutes the pontiff spoke passionately, bis voice at tunes broken with emotion, end his address was transmitted by radio to all the civilized world. Reichsfuehrer Hitler, too, took another hard whack at the Communists Com-munists at a ceremonial tribute to the World war dead in Nuremberg. Before 120,000 uniformed Nazis and 50,000 others he boasted of Germany's Ger-many's armed strength and shouted: "Our old enemy, bolshevism. Is vanquished within Germany, but still active around her borders. But letvh;6nr''' be' decervd'Welr ready at any hour. We all have one wish to maintain peace but with if goes-one firm "ffeeiilottf Never to surrender Germany to that enemy we have come to know so If Hitler, as some think, tries to lead the coming five-power Locarno conference into forming an anti-Soviet anti-Soviet alliance,' be- will- b- firmly opposed by France. Foreign Minister Min-ister Yvon Delbcs says , so, and declares de-clares France win under no circumstances circum-stances abandon her military pact with Soviet Russia. According to Pravda, authoritative authorita-tive newspaper t Mosofcw, Hitler plans to attack and partition Czechoslovakia, Czecho-slovakia, before .be embarks, on a war against the Soviet union. f Benito Mussolini and his cabinet appropriated large sums jo build up Italy's army, navy and air forces fto' greater strength and planned to carry on vigorously the campaign for self-sufficiency In raw materials. It looked as if the dove of peace was, preparing to leave Europe, and as relations between Japan and China .grew more strained every day, she probably will have to take refuge on the western continent THE Spanish rebels acored their greatest victory to date when they captured San Sebastian, capital cap-ital of Guipuzcoa province and famous fa-mous Bay of Biscay resort Santa Barabara fort dominating the city, was first taken and the city's war council then decided to abandon the place, despite the opposition of the anarchists. The more conservative Basque nationals prevented the reds from burning the city, only a paper factory and two residences being destroyed, and u defending forces retreated toward Bilbao, accompanied accompa-nied by thousands of civilians and foreigners. Insurgent troops, commanded com-manded by CoL Jose Beorlegui, marched in and were ceremoniously ceremonious-ly reviewed, and the bishop of Pamplona Pam-plona officiated at a thanksgiving service. The municipal governor, Antonio Ortega, and his staff boarded a yacht to go to new headquarters at Zumaya. about 15 miles west of San Sebastian. The new line of defense was established at Orio, about halfway to Zumaya. Government spokesmen claimed considerable victories in the Tala-vera Tala-vera sector southwest of Madrid and not far from the Portuguese border. OUR navy's Intelligence department depart-ment has discovered that a recent small Are on the cruiser Indianapolis while she was being overhauled In the New York navy yard was caused by the driving of phonograph needles and nails into in-to an electric cable; and other suspected sus-pected sabotage on war vessels Is being investigated. The work on the cruiser was being done by civilian employees and Capt Charles A. Dunn, Industrial manager of the yard, said the placing of the nails in the cables was "undoubtedly" "undoubted-ly" a deliberate attempt to damage the cruiser. SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE AGRICUL-TURE WALLACE is arranging a series of community meetings of farmers for the purpose of laying out the "agricultural conservation program" for next. year. He said the AAA planned the meetings in the farm areas in order to discuss crop insurance and possible maximum max-imum limits of benefit payments to each farm. He explained the program aimed at providing "greater "great-er abundance for the average American home," and should "help to check soil erosion, Improve fertility, fer-tility, encourage better land use and maintain farm Income." -,j - at u .v! V. S. Lags Behind. HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. What I saw at the national na-tional air races in Los Angeles set me to thinking. ' It's a dangerous dan-gerous thing1 thinking Is anJ nearly always upsetting to the peace of mind. . . . ,. Tm thinking that ho longer Is the navy our first 11ns of defense nor the army the second line. Tm thinking that the chief peril-and peril-and the chief securi-. ty from that peril-is peril-is in the air now. And of all the great powers, we are the most woefully woe-fully behind in the matter of airplane protection. It would take us two years to make our air force as strong as it was Irvla S. Cobb four years ago. It would take Infinitely In-finitely longer than that to make it as strong ss the present footing of any country which conceivably might attack us. Well, we could always lock the stable after the horse was gone if the stable hadn't been blown flat a a a Roles for Long Life. A- JAPANESE-doctor has landed with the word that, by following follow-ing a few simple rules, a fellow lives to be 240 years eld. He didn't say, but I figure this applies only to those of us who never go motor- The principal rules are to sleep on a hard mattress with a metal plDow, and learn to wriggle like goldfish. Whether, m time, the beginner be-ginner sprouts giHs Ud a fantail is not stated, but it sounds plausible. Tver already gpoien"td a tinsmith about a pillow and, on awakening this morning, made a few experimental experi-mental .wrlgg. les w My v ,.to!tentiqn; might fool some people, but I don't believe they'd fool a goldfish, unless he'd been drinking or something. Tm afraid my finning was faulty. Besides, I didn't feel any too dignifiedgreeting digni-fiedgreeting the dewy dawn by .behaving, goldjBshiqasftf,.. War Names Confoslng. NOT content with coining eighty or ninety separate different and confusing names for the opposing oppos-ing forces in Spain, the correspond ents nave gone and 'tnunlr5 up - a- yriJ "X "A plum bran' new one extremists. Maybe, though, the point is well taken. The dispatches would seem rather to indicate that quite a number num-ber of persons over there have lately late-ly shown a tendency to verge toward to-ward the extreme. And picking out the various parties par-ties mixed up in the French political politi-cal mess that's another tough Job. Only today I ran into this one left-centrist left-centrist It sort of suggests Ty Cobb in bis palmy days, covering the outfield. But that couldn't be because be-cause the French dont go in for basebaH They prefer dueling as being be-ing Just as exciting. I must ssy It's discouraging Just when, by following the news from Paris, Tm beginning to get the Reds unscrambled from the Pale Pinks, and the Mauves from the Heliotropes, Helio-tropes, and the Holy Rollers from the Merry Widows, to have this added add-ed complication bust right in my face. Looks as though rn have to start it an over again. a a a Bow to Redaee. EVER since the day when I was known among friends as Thyroid Thy-roid Deficiency Irvy, the human detour, de-tour, I've fought the losing fight against overweight I Med dieting and became the best friend the American spinach industry in-dustry ever knew, yet had only to turn my head to brag and I regained, re-gained, practically instantaneously, what Td lost I exercised until I had the Jitters, but when I'd taken off half a pound, it bounced right back while the doctors were reviving reviv-ing me. . '. .-.---r-v But now I've found the absolutely absolute-ly certain cure for reduction. It's working in a moving picture with little Jane Withers.- When she sets the pace you can track yourself back home by your cwn perspiration. perspira-tion. Another engagement with Janle and I could be rented out as my own living skeleton, a a a Has Memories of Valencia. . T TS hard to concentrate on pen- nant fights to the big leagues when we read of war-racked Spain, with 100,000 already dead. I hope the lovely old city of Valencia Va-lencia has escaped the common ruin. ru-in. Seven years ago I was traveling travel-ing around and about over three continents, and at every stop had listened morning, noon and night, to the song Valencia." So a friend and I made a pilgrimage pilgrim-age to, the town'in whlctr presumably, presum-ably, the thing originated, and Valencia Va-lencia turned out to be the one spot on the map where nobody had ever played that tune or sung it or, hummed it or .whistled W or even heard of it It was Indeed a relief. So we stayed a week. The aherry-and-orb before luncheon was also quite good all but the egg! IRTIN S. COBB -W.U sanrlca. l V sssa II VCtKrviniia i In D'hintm 1 atv. 1 in auch Why. I Jtrnn.l D.lil dot The largest English f the battle cruiser S weighs 42,100 tons andi battery of eight 1J.J However, the ship with" st armament is the 1 "Rodney," which W tons and has a mainl nine 16-inch guns, r United States battiest? "Maryland," wblchtt? tons and has a main I alght 16-inch gmuwOel r -tired -run-down -nervous -out of sort THHERE JsusnallTai A for such complainti.s .. season scastWjr,..,, Don't try to get wellhil Is asking too much of Nttni ber, she ns certain sstonl that just cannot be tarried Therefore, if you in lock a keen apptUt,1m 4md(Ml rtinla. ftrf that your blood-celli art ts tendency towards mi-S ta tbo simple, easy wty it lions approve by starthf t 8SS. Blood Tonic to led 1 self again. j SPOTS Cutkura reECTabarnL of pimples, rashes, as other skin irritstkw origin helps soothes, astonishing comfort I wide success. BffK? 25c. Ointment 25c SJ"Ok f ..... miMam KfJfflflKlJ too frequent vMlJ headache, diKin, k leg pin, twlliftg under the ey? Atsf ou feel til ift . know what ii wronj' f Then givt om , y for function! klcWVfi mils exce waits tottM"! and to poison and W kidneys only. Thy "2 (he world over, jjv io, tim-tea fc 'I ctreless V ( CLsrrsVJ - I'Uf VII L m i:fcii&jft' II uir I store. 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