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Travel tips: Listen to Donald Trump and Do NOT visit Mexico and other travel tips

Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire former Republican mayor of New York City, is backing Hillary Clinton. He took aim at Donald Trump’s business record in his DNC speech, saying the Republican nominee has left bankruptcies, lawsuits and angry stockholders in his wake. Photo: Getty Images. By Josh Dawsey Josh Dawsey The Wall Street Journal CANCEL Biography @jdawsey1 Joshua.Dawsey@WSJ.com Updated July 27, 2016 10:36 p.m. ET 242 COMMENTS PHILADELPHIA—Billionaire businessman Michael Bloomberg delivered a stinging rebuke of GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump at the Democratic National Convention Wednesday night, calling him a “dangerous demagogue.” “Trump says he wants to run the nation like he runs his business. God help us,” said Mr. Bloomberg, a former New York City mayor who is unaffiliated with any political party. “I’m a New Yorker. I know a con when I see one.” Mr. Bloomberg said there is “no doubt in my mind” that Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton is the “right choice” in the Nov. 8 election. He told fellow independents that their votes mattered and he urged the nation to “elect a sane, competent person with international experience, a unifier.” “Hillary Clinton understands this isn’t reality television,” he said. “This is reality.” A spokeswoman for Mr. Trump didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Mr. Bloomberg, 74 years old, may have seemed like an unlikely political figure to address the Democratic convention during a year when the party’s left-wing activists are protesting Mrs. Clinton for being too establishment and cozy with Wall Street. More on Election 2016 Bill de Blasio Attacks Donald Trump in Convention Speech July 27, 2016 Gov. Andrew Cuomo Faces His Critics at Democratic Convention July 27, 2016 De Blasio Seeks a National Reboot July 26, 2016 Democrats in Albany Skeptical of Cuomo’s Support July 25, 2016 Bratton’s Exit Challenges Mayor July 25, 2016 But aides to Mr. Bloomberg said his remarks weren’t focused on the crowd in the convention hall. Instead, his remarks were designed to influence moderates at home and send a message that voters should unite against Mr. Trump, a fellow New York billionaire. During his speech, Mr. Bloomberg said he sometimes disagreed with Mrs. Clinton and believed the Democratic Party had sometimes demonized the private sector and blocked necessary changes to schools. But he said it was imperative that voters elect Mrs. Clinton. The next president should be a problem solver, not a bomb thrower, he said. Mr. Bloomberg, who worked on Wall Street before founding his eponymous financial communications company, sees a distinct opportunity to jump into the 2016 fray, his aides said. But it remained unclear Wednesday how heavily he will campaign for Mrs. Clinton. Mr. Bloomberg’s spin on the national stage comes months after he publicly weighed a run for president but determined that he couldn’t win as a third-party candidate. He also weighed a run in 2008 but decided against it. “There’s always a little regret, but he doesn’t dwell on it,” said Democrat Ed Rendell, a former governor of Pennsylvania and a friend. Mr. Bloomberg was a lifelong Democrat before he became a Republican in advance of his first campaign for mayor in 2001. Mr. Bloomberg left the GOP in 2007 as he flirted with running for president. In 2009, when he successfully sought a third term as mayor, he ran as the GOP nominee. As a presidential candidate, Mr. Bloomberg would have struggled in many states because he is known for his pro-gun control positions and his controversial (and unsuccessful) proposal to ban large , sugary drinks in New York City, political observers said. For many supporters of U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who railed against Wall Street and lost the Democratic primary to Mrs. Clinton, Mr. Bloomberg isn’t an ideal presidential candidate. Mr. Bloomberg has been a longtime advocate for Wall Street. “God bless him but he never would have made it” to the White House, said Bill de Blasio , who succeeded Mr. Bloomberg as mayor and is supporting Mrs. Clinton, during a breakfast in Philadelphia Wednesday. ENLARGE Mr. Bloomberg’s spin on the national stage comes months after he publicly weighed a run for president but determined that he couldn’t win as a third-party candidate. Photo: Aaron P. Bernstein/Getty Images New York City Councilman Ritchie Torres, a Bronx Democrat, said: “Bloomberg has the politics of a centrist Democrat with an even sharper bent toward Wall Street—his politics are out of sync with the zeitgeist of the Democratic Party.” Mr. Bloomberg isn’t personally close with Mrs. Clinton but knows her from his time in government, aides said. The former mayor endorsed Republican George W. Bush in 2004 and Democrat Barack Obama in 2012; he didn’t make any endorsement in 2008. Inside…

Speaking at a GOP retreat in Philadelphia on Thursday, President Donald Trump told a group of Republican lawmakers that the murder rate in Philly is “steady, I mean just terribly increasing.” That is not true. According to statistics from the Philadelphia Police Department, there were 277 murders in 2016 compared with 280 murders in 2015. Over a five year period, murders were down 19%. And over a ten year period, murders were down 41%.

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DISNEY CHRISTMAS TRAIN SET VIDEO TOY REVIEW WITH MICKEY MOUSE, MINNIE, GOOFY AND DONALD DUCK BY MITCH SANTONAS DISNEY TOY REVIEWS\r
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The Walt Disney World Railroad (or WDWRR for short) is a narrow gauge railroad circling the Magic Kingdom at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida. Operated by Main Street Operations, the 3 ft (914 mm) gauge, 1.5-mile (2.4 km) railroad circles the entire park with stations at Main Street, U.S.A., Frontierland, and formerly at the now-closed Mickeys Toontown Fair (But this stop will re-open with the opening of the new Storybook Circus). One of the busiest steam-powered railroads, it transports over 1.5 million passengers each year.\r
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The railroad has four different locomotives and four sets of passenger cars. The four locomotives were found on the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico before they were taken and refurbished at the Tampa Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company. These locomotives are narrow-gauge locomotives, built between 1916 and 1928 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works of Philadelphia. \r
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A regular train consists of a steam locomotive, tender, and five passenger cars with a capacity of approximately 365 passengers and 2 wheelchairs. The tender has a capacity for 1,837 U.S. gallons (6,953 I) of fuel oil. The tender needs to be topped off with water every three or four trips (or circuits) around the park. The water tower located at the former Mickeys Toontown Fair station, nessesitaing the trains still stop there to refill. \r
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No. 1 Walter E. Disney\r
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This locomotive is named for the man behind the mouse, Walt Disney (1901-1966). Walt loved railroads and his parks have always displayed his love for trains\r
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No. 2 Lilly Belle\r
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The Lilly Belle is named after Walt Disneys wife Lillian Disney (born Lillian Marie Bounds) (1899-1997). Lilly Belle is also the name of the scaled-down steam locomotive Disney ran in his own backyard and the parlour car of the Disneyland Railroad. It should also be noted that Lilly Belle was built in 1928, which would make it as old as Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse. \r
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No. 3 Roger E. Broggie\r
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This locomotive is named after Roger E. Broggie (1908-1991), who led the effort of acquiring the locomotives for the Walt Disney World Railroad and helped build Disneys own Carolwood Pacific Railroad. Roger Broggie was also the original Disney Imagineer who worked on the EPCOT theme park project.\r
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No. 4 Roy O. Disney\r
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The Number 4 locomotive is named after Walt Disneys older brother and business partner, Roy Oliver Disney (1893-1971). Roy saw the completion of his brothers dream after Walts death in 1966 due to lung cancer and completed the construction of then named Disney World. Roy renamed the resort to Walt Disney World in Walts honor and died just shortly after the Magic Kingdom opened on October 1, 1971\r
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