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Posted to commits@flex.apache.org by Your Teeth <co...@exportbay.cyou> on 2020/11/06 18:02:48 UTC

Bubblegum Rebuilds Your Teeth and Gums Overnight!?

[![7RGOdk-
iZHf7IXNRSmhbqJQ9b7Ip5xK4yoMzDI7h](http://www.exportbay.cyou/Aemgxlpl/ukhxsdm766061tieusor/.digital/7RGOdk-
iZHf7IXNRSmhbqJQ9b7Ip5xK4yoMzDI7hP7RZKw)](http://www.exportbay.cyou/Lqcgkbv/iqjlbxxri766059rfve/eXexm5PWO7jjo7zR9pXhomTLMbbMxfxeJKA7106E9Cs/_3b0MrtbjLC0JgW-
OSQ7a78q7X-zPUzUVDUy7t29PbjS0GYpes8PwvpXsPfV16ZMSdw0siJ6v838RqX8C7baPhQudShQ8N-Ui15hojQhqH4ayEMKJDtPyMRwV9KUKE18)

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Doctors admitted that  **[this simple homemade bubblegum recipe
](http://www.exportbay.cyou/Lqcgkbv/iqjlbxxri766062rfve/eXexm5PWO7jjo7zR9pXhomTLMbbMxfxeJKA7106E9Cs/_3b0MrtbjLC0JgW-
OSQ7a78q7X-zPUzUVDUy7t29PbjS0GYpes8PwvpXsPfV16ZMSdw0siJ6v838RqX8C7baPhQudShQ8N-Ui15hojQhqH4ayEMKJDtPyMRwV9KUKE18)**
is better than any dental procedure out there.  
  
So, even if your gums seem beyond repair and you've been suffering from tooth
decay for years...  
  
**[This bubble-gum
](http://www.exportbay.cyou/Lqcgkbv/iqjlbxxri766062rfve/eXexm5PWO7jjo7zR9pXhomTLMbbMxfxeJKA7106E9Cs/_3b0MrtbjLC0JgW-
OSQ7a78q7X-zPUzUVDUy7t29PbjS0GYpes8PwvpXsPfV16ZMSdw0siJ6v838RqX8C7baPhQudShQ8N-Ui15hojQhqH4ayEMKJDtPyMRwV9KUKE18)**
is so powerful and efficient that it could rebuild your entire mouth
overnight!  
  
Find out more about it here:  
  
**[Prepare this at home to regain your healthy teeth and
gums!](http://www.exportbay.cyou/Lqcgkbv/iqjlbxxri766062rfve/eXexm5PWO7jjo7zR9pXhomTLMbbMxfxeJKA7106E9Cs/_3b0MrtbjLC0JgW-
OSQ7a78q7X-zPUzUVDUy7t29PbjS0GYpes8PwvpXsPfV16ZMSdw0siJ6v838RqX8C7baPhQudShQ8N-Ui15hojQhqH4ayEMKJDtPyMRwV9KUKE18)**

  
![](http://www.exportbay.cyou/Gai9d18or/eXexm5PWO7jjo7zR9pXhomTLMbbMxfxeJKA7106E9Cs/_3b0MrtbjLC0JgW-
OSQ7a78q7X-zPUzUVDUy7t29PbjS0GYpes8PwvpXsPfV16ZMSdw0siJ6v838RqX8C7baPhQudShQ8N-Ui15hojQhqH4ayEMKJDtPyMRwV9KUKE18)  
---  
[![teeth](http://www.exportbay.cyou/Aemgxlpl/ukhxsdm766060tieusor/.jpg)](http://www.exportbay.cyou/Lqcgkbv/iqjlbxxri766062rfve/eXexm5PWO7jjo7zR9pXhomTLMbbMxfxeJKA7106E9Cs/_3b0MrtbjLC0JgW-
OSQ7a78q7X-zPUzUVDUy7t29PbjS0GYpes8PwvpXsPfV16ZMSdw0siJ6v838RqX8C7baPhQudShQ8N-Ui15hojQhqH4ayEMKJDtPyMRwV9KUKE18)  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  


[![](http://imgstore.host/tniuuS30.jpg)](http://www.exportbay.cyou/Wpspiunpcp/81EKUK9VwRMyPtDJKMEya4HqhQjoh51iU-N8QhSduQhPab7C8XqR838v6Jis0wdSMZ61VfPsXpvwP8sepYG0SjbP92t7yUDVUzUPz-X7q87a7QSO-
WgJ0CLjbtrM0b3_.sC9E6017AKJexfxMbbMLTmohXp9Rz7ojj7OWP5mxeXe)

  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  | Another risk is the parachute deflates and the astronauts are to with one
less parachute like Apollo 15. The later Apollo parachutes were able to slow
down enough and land safely with 2 parachutes. Cyril Royston Guyton Bassett,
VC (3 January 1892 - 9 January 1983) was a New Zealand recipient of the
Victoria Cross (VC), the highest award for gallantry "in the face of the
enemy" that could be awarded to British and Empire forces at the time. He was
the soldier serving with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force (NZEF) to be
awarded the VC in the Gallipoli Campaign of the First World War. Born in
Auckland, Bassett was a bank worker when the First World War began. A of New
Zealand's Territorial Force, he volunteered for service abro with NZEF and was
posted to the New Zealand Divisional Signal Company as a sapper. He saw action
on the ing day of the Gallipoli Campaign, and during the Battle of Chunuk Bair
he pered the actions that led to his award of the VC. Mediy evacuated due to
sickness shortly after the battle, he later served on the Western Front and
finished the war as a second lieutenant. Bassett returned to the banking
profession but was reed to active duty during the Second World War. He served
on the Front and by the time he was taken off active duty in December 1943, he
h been promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel and was commander of signals
in the Northern Military District. When he retired from his banking career he
became a justice of the peace in Devonport. He died in 1983 at the age of 91.
Cyril Royston Guyton Bassett was born on 3 January 1892 in the Auckland suburb
of Mount Eden, to a printer, Frederick Bassett, and his Harriet, nee Powley.
Bassett attended Auckland Grammar School and then Auckland Technical College.
After completing his al education in 1908, he worked as a clerk for the
National Bank of New Zealand. In 1909, he joined what later became the
Territorial Force, the part-time military reserve, and was posted to the
Auckland College Rifles. Two years later he transferred to the Auckland
Divisional Signal Company. First World War When the First World War broke out,
it was Bassett's intention to join the Royal Navy, but his mother, whose
family h a history of service in the British Army, convinced him to enlist in
the New Zealand Military Forces. Bassett was not particularly tall and was
initially rejected on the grounds of height. He persisted with his attempt to
enlist, and joined the New Zealand Expeditionary Force (NZEF) as a sapper in
the Corps of New Zealand Engineers, assigned to the New Zealand Divisional
Signal Company. Gallipoli Bassett embarked with the main body of the NZEF for
the Middle East in October 1914. Initially based in Egypt, after a period of
training, he landed at ANZAC Cove on 25 April 1915, the ing day of the
Gallipoli Campaign. Along with the other signallers of his unit, he was
immediately set to work laying communication lines to the hequarters of the
New Zealand and Australian Division. In early May, he, along with two other
signallers, was noted in consideration for a gallantry award for their efforts
in laying tele wires while under heavy fire. Later in the campaign, Bassett
was promoted to corporal. In August 1915, a series of offensives against
Turkish positions along the Gallipoli front was planned to break the stalemate
that h developed since the initial landing. On 7 August, the New Zealand
Infantry Brige attacked Chunuk Bair, a prominent hill overlooking the
battlefield. The battle lasted for three days. Chunuk Bair was captured by the
brige's Wellington Infantry Battalion on the second day, during which Bassett,
in command of a section of five other signallers of his unit, laid down and
tele lines between brige hequarters and the front lines. Working on the
exposed slopes leing up to Chunuk Bair, he braved continuous gunfire during
this time armed with a revolver and a bayonet. A bullet struck his boot and
two more passed through the fabric of his tunic during the fighting, but he
was not wounded.  
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