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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 9, 1923)
The Morning Bee MORNING—EVENING—SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher. 1!. BREWER, Gen. Manager. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tbe A*sc*iute4 Proa, of wliicb The J\e* is a member, is excius’^eiy entitled to the use for rmiMic&Uou of all t.«ws dispatcher credited to it or not otherwise credited in tins paper, and also the local uewh published herein. All rtfhts n# republications of our special UispatCbea are also reserved, BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Exchange. Ask for tli«» Department (antic or Person Wanted. For Nitrht Calls After 10 P. M.: ... Editorial Department. AT lantic 1021 or 1042. *000 OFFICES Main Office—17th and Farnam To. Bluffs - - - 15 Scott St. So. Side. N. W. Cor. 24th and N New York—2SG Fifth Avenue Washington - 422 Star Dldg. Chicago - - 1 720 Steger Bldg. RUMORS OF NEW WARS. ■•Henceforth we nre to face u period of intense Anglo-French hostility. The two nations confront each other once more as they did in the eighteenth century. French supremacy on the continent, car ries deadly peril to British trade ami commerce, and therefore to British existence. Sooner or later it is well nigh inevitable that this hostility will lead to open conflict. Yet at the present hour Britain is in no condition to risk such u conflict, and the French action in Germany is daily reducing the British chance to find in Germany any ally to assist in tho restraint of France.’ This startling prediction of a new war is con tained in an article by Frank H. Simonds in the American Review of Reviews. The opinion which he adds, that it is no mote than logical and in ac cordance with historical precedent may be true, but the hope of Americans has been that after the war new impulses and ideals would guide the nations into which the world is divided. This observer, however, declares t hat the world war is not yet completed: “Actually, after a long armistice, France and Germany have renewed the war which began in 1911 and paused in 1918.” On the mighty question of what the end of the French advance into Germany will be few thoughtful per sons are willing to commit, themselves, and it is therefore more interesting to listen to his views. There must be an end, some day, to the deadlock along the Rhine. So far the French occupation has been a failure from a financial standpoint, yet Simonds declares that they can not withdraw without slip ping into the position of a fourth-rate power such as Spain. So vast are the stakes in this game that if France succeeds it will be the dominating power in Europe. Though Simonds has been all along a partisan of France, he must feel some misgivings as he ven tures the bold prediction: "AYe are entering a period of French supremacy on the continent which may last as long as that which came with the revolution and lasted up to the fall of Napoleon." France, he reasons, concluded that Great Britain and America were bent on the recovery of Ger many, a thing which it feared and hated. The troop movement into the Ruhr and beyond will not gain any reparations, he believes, but is designed to cripple the German nation, in both a military and an economic way. Germany won’t pay the i eparations and the continent, he asserts, won t pay its war debts to England or America. Each .step taken by the French he sees as a drive at Eng land's heart. If Germany is smashed, England loses its great market. If the German industries arc linked up with the French, England will suffer lrom destructive competition. Even so, Great Britain scarcely dares to inter fere In the Ruhr. That is evident in the careful " way in which the subject is handled in parliament. .Simonds sAys that if Britain moved to save Ger many the French would retaliate by stirring up a Moslem uprising from India to Egypt. Nothing short of force will cause the Paris gov ernment to call a halt. It is significant that as mat ters stand today France has a commanding lead over all nations in aircraft, an arm that is particu larly adapted to use against the British. They have ready for instant service more than 1,200 ma chines, with 3,000 trained pilots, while Great Britain has only 400 planes in active service. Only the other day the parliament at Pari- refused, to i ut the army or shorten the term of compulsory service. Thus in every way France seem.- now to hold the cards. Simonds declares that it intends to run the Ruhr for years, possibly setting up a buffer state there independent of Germany. If this :nten tion is carried out, he sees in two decades the pop ulation of Germany reduced 40,000,000 and that of Britain cut to 30,000,000, through the fact that so many will be forced by lack of food and work to emigrate. France in the meantime would hold its own numerically and reat secure in the aelf-suf liciency of Its agriculture and manufacturing. Such may he the aims of France. If so, the world may well shudder. There can he no peace on this basis. The moral sense revolts at such ruthMs theming. This is the twentieth century, not the eighteenth, and the rights of humanity transcend those of any nation—it is this modern spirit with which France has to reckon. VOTE. OR GO FISHING? Some interested citizens have been a little dis turbed by the fact that only 48 per cent of the qualified voters of the United States took the trou ble to go to the polls in 1920, even though a presi dent and congress were to be chosen. In 1922 the i umber was slightly increased, and 51 per cent of the possible vote was registered. Reasons have been sought for this, and in the perturbation of ; mind resulting from the fact, the patriotic com- I inentators have almost concluded that a sense of c ivic duty is lacking. Happily, a disclosure front California may re Ceve their souls. It now appears that voting may nterfere with aomething else the voter wunts to do. In this instance, a special election to choose a congressman has been called on the day the trout fishing season opens. An interested voter beseeches the governor to change the date, so that he can go fishing and yet not miss the election. / When voting interferes with fishing, cut out the vpting, seems to he the rule with this man, and it may suggest a reason why more than half the voters of the United States failed to signify a choice between Harding and Cox. Some democrats, probably, felt, they would do better if they went, fishing that day. Rome republicans felt that the general outcome was so surely known in advance that it would make no difference if they, too, went fishing. Wouldn’t it he better, though, if each accepted the duty a well as the privileges of citizenship? Have those who did go fishing on election day any right to complain that politicians are running the i ountry, and that an unintelligent electorate domi nates our affairs? People who take eriously enough the benefits of citizenship to vote ought not to be disturbed by the complaints of those jv ho go fishing on election dayy , FACING A FORESTLESS FUTURE. Presenting his case to the senate’s special com mittee on reforestation, Secretary Wallace of the Agricultural department, told the senators “the days of self-sustaining lumber supply has passed in the United States.’’ Persons interested in the sub ject have dinned this into indifferent or unbelieving ears for years. For at least ten years we have been j using our timber five times faster than it has been reproduced. There is but one answer to this. When the source of supply was not far away, i Nebraska did not feel the lack of home-grown tim | her so much. Now, when the cost of freight is more than the value of the lumber at the mill, the shoe is. pinching. It will pinch tighter each year. Not merely in the matter of fence posts and boards to build cribs and granaries do the people of Nebraska pay for the national folly of devastating the forests. < Bridges, school houses and similar public im provements all require lumber, and cost more be- , cause lumber is scarce. Complaint is made of tele graph, telephone and railroad rates, yet one of the items that enters into the base for those rates is the timber used. Telephone poles, cross ties and such material cost several times as much today as they did ten years ago, and the cost is mounting each day, because the supply is getting smaller. The users must pay. All the fence posts, <*ross ties, tele phone poles and lumber for cribs and granaries can be grown in Nebraska. Nebraskans paid $6,000,000 freight on lumber used in 1921. They will pay more in 1923. Yet the agricultural committee of the house has de termined to indefinitely postpone a measure that would establish a state forestry bureau, simply be cause the initial cost might run as high as $10,000 for the first biennium. Nebraskans fifty years from now will puy many times $10,000 because of this economy, just as the people of the state today are paying for the neglect of the past. Some time, though, Nebraska will wake up and set idle acres to the task of growing trees, work for which they are designed by nature. COURAGE THAT WORKS BOTH WAYS. Man’s dual nature presents some puzzling aspects, and now and then comes up an illustration of his capacity for doing great things under widely varying conditions. The soldier exhibits a physical courage that frequently surpasses his moral quali fications. Men who have lacked or ignored some of the finer points of life have shown themselves fearless and relentless in pursuit of the foe, and have won esteem for courage of that sort where they were despicable for other reasons. . Yet the soldier’s business is to destroy as many of the enemy and as much of his property as he may without being destroyed himself. It is war, and the world applauds the man who exhibits the great est of cool daring, accepting hazards with the least ■concern, and bringing to his side the utmost possi ble of advantage because of similar damage done I the foe. Here we have a little better view of this cour age. A' news item tells of a former war hero, now ; serving on the New York police force, who by r;sk | ing his own life in the smoke-filled halls of a burn i ing tenement saved the lives of eight of its inmates, six children and two women. He had won distinc 1 tion on the battlefield, where he was sustained by the presence of comrades and buoyed up by the ex- , citement of the fray. These stimulating elements j were not present to encourage him in his efforts i to get the unfortunate out of the burning building. ] It was cool, calculated adventure, pitting his own ' strength against that of the destroyer, sustained | by sheer moral courage alone. Is not this hero in the peaceful walks of civil j life deserving to be extolled, even beyond the credit I given him for his deeds in battle? In the one, he destroyed life, in the other he preserved it. Each time he felt he was doing his duty. Yet it is a won derful sort of courage that works both ways. Things in Europe seem to be quieting down. At least revolut ons have dwindled to revolts, and re volt* to “coup de otat,” and these in turn will de i generate into street corner discussions, and peace I will r* ign. Parents and teachers alike are convinced that ! the dope stories that involve the high school stu dents are exaggerated or baseless, but that will not I stop the sensation mongers. — If you speed your car on an Omaha street, you j get one day in jail; if you “jay-walk" and get hit by an auto, you get six days in jail. Who still insists justice is not blind? The senate committee finally has exonerated the J A. E. F. from sensational and scandalous charges, hut the country at large had given the boys a clean -bill long ago. It might have been the storm, and it may he due 1 to court action, but the arrests for speeding show a decided falling off. Looks like Mr. Hafding was going to give -ome home problems a little much needed attention now. i The postcard shower is losing its punch. - /_ Homespun Verse l>\ Robert Worthington Doric NIGHT. Harkee>.« l* on tha hill*— (keen hill* of wuoni g" Hark to tho whippoorwill* I > 111 the light of dawn! * II.irk to the mil* half null" iff wind and gurgling stream Ik hold tho »tara that ahoof I* It not nil a dream ' And yet what beauty Ilea In night * ahrewd dormant v 'in earth, within the akle*— nt va*i profundity! My tdood 1* atlrred with dm*. .Mv eye* with awe aglcmn I* this P coamlc has*. And I* ttie base a dream’ • Weird voleea pierce the Mark Weird ohjecta toward me gloat I hear thorn at my back. I feet them clutch my throat And hypnotised by fear. I neither move nor scream. I ran not *hed ^ iear. And yet—it seem* a dream What writ It It like witch*i y Hy el/.irdry imbued doth *,»olhe and frighten me III night’* deep enlltudl! What mee-O'ge *|)>llk* the \ni< nt wind, of bird, of alream' Bewildered T rejolee I Believing it a dicam Nebraska 's Poet JCaurea te THE LAST ALTAR. Krewhile beneath the lightning flare of passion I now huge visions flung athwart the gloom. I built rne altars after pagarf fashion And it my hours 1 made a hecatomb I wrought weird gods of night stuff nmi of fancy. I sought their hidden faces for iiiv law. My days and nights were filled with nccroniaiu y And an Olympian awe f* many a night lias seen my riot candies And heard the drunken revel of my feus' Till dawn walked tin the blue with burning sandals And made me curse the cast! For my faith was the faith of dusk and riot. The faith of fevered blood and selfish lust ,I .'util I learned that love is cool and quiet And not akin to dust. For once, in Apocolyptic vision. Above my smoking altars I could ace My god's face, veilless, ugly with derision The shameless, magnified, projected-—Me: And t have left my ancient fanes to crumble. , And I have hurled my false gods from the sk - I wish to know the Joy of being humble, To build great Love an altar ere 1 die -.-_ “The People’s Voice’’ idltoruu from roodora of Ttio Morning Boo. Roodoro of Tho Mornlsg Boo oro tmltod to uto thla column frcrl* for txpreiiioo no mattora or ouhlio Intcraxl. One Trouble With Main Street. Lewellyn, Neb.—To the Editor of l*he Omaha Bee: I saw' an editorial in another paper Commenting on the fact that the small tnsvn was losing out and blaming It on the automo bile. In my opinion. It is not the | entire cause. Take the average small town and let a man live in the com munity for years, spend his money with business men and help make the town. Let that man start a little business of his own, invest the mv ngs of a life time In property. Let him pay taxes, help keep up all pub lic services by contributions, and l hen let a "floater" come Into town to enrn peto with him, one who has failed everywhere else. The business men flock to patronize the n< w man, offer ing credit that they may get his trade. Is it any wonder the man with money Invested sells out even at a loss and leaves the small town and moves to the larger piece? And when the "floater" fails, as he always does, he leaves the business men walling for the debts he leaves behind. The tow'n i* started downward. The man with money gone to swell the large place • 1 a succession of "floaters coming and going, leaving the small town even poorer. No wonder: They linvo killed the goose that laid the golden egg." The true test of a man s w. ith to a town is not that he ran drink the , other man under tho tahle or that he I is a shark with a poker hind, but does he lnv**t the money he makes in tho town? Does he help build up public utilities? Doth ho help the j town morally? When the small town , • eases to let a sense of petty Jealousy drive away tho man that helps the i town, only then will it stop going 1 downhill. C. A. V. | — Admire* the Homespun Poet. Chicago.—To the Editor of The Dm*ha Lee: I uni glad to s-.• that you are printing Itobert Worthington Davies verse regularly. I have been Interested in this poet for some time and can see that he has not only de- I veloped a masterful style, but by his simple philosophies is broadening Into a true poet of the common people. Every piece seems to be based on some fundamental fact of Ilf. which gives US something to meditate on. In my opinion, the sncceseftil writer must have ability He pi.ikes ns think while the other entertains only le t more of us read Itobert Worth itigton Davies verse and we will be fatter nu n because of it I, |, B Dissenting Opinion From ■ Hunter. tirnnd Island NVb —To the Editor j of The Omaha Bee: I saw- sn article 1 In The Omaha Sunday Bee entitled "Hunters Cp In Arms Over the Blit j to Cut Big Bag Limits." Now-, in my opinion, the only hunters that wtil ; oppose this bill are the big game | hogs, that go out in the fall of v«ar Just to ace how many of the birds they 1 Daily Prayer j For know th»t If our esrthly f»h«rn»r|» worn dissolved, wo have . building of God. an hnuao not mole with hands, eternal In thn hesvstis.—II Corin thians k't. Our Fath»T t\'ho art In Heaven we thank Thee for tb.- menu* of life pant day and night; for food nnd cloth ing. for sleep and shelter; for the companionship of our fellow nu n. and for daily opportunities for u-. fulness. Tly our receiving these meri irs may wn also recogrilxo the duties which ! they Imply. May our love t Thee and our love to our fellow nu i ever I grow stronger hy their dully ex- relse. Hive us grace to face the fulur with equanimity. We profoundly 1 - lleve In the future Hft and that Thou hast not created the wonderful minds of the pnst nnd the present -minds so fruitful In senrchlng out the >■ frets of nature nnd of the human mind nnd body, nnd In devising the, many means and methods by which { man's comfort. Intelligence i d gen irnl welfare am so wonderfully pro moted—only to vanish Into oblivion hi the death of the body, which Is mortal We liellevo that Thou hart given to each of us an Immortal soul, capable of dwelling with Thru in ever lasting bliss. May we so order our lives In this, our temporary home, „ • to tie fill'd hy Thy grace to It.hibil our eternal home Help m lo pri rrpt. nnd example to influence our frl low men to accept .IrMIS Christ as their personal Havlor. and to enjoin this same faith In the future Ilf* All of this we ask In the Name and fo> the sake of our l ord Jimi* ChrlM Amen. Wtbl.IAW W KKF.V M P. I.t. r* I Philadelphia, I'« X > •in kill, regard Jo-of how many they I can line. The argument made against the hill has no foundation at all. fur if we keep the hogs out in a short time we can have good hunting nf home, or near enough home so that we can get at it. I have seen the hunting along the Platte river very nearly as good as anywhere years ago, and the only reason it is no go«»d now is the game hog and decoys. Until they went to hunting in th*- rivrr with decoys there was plenty of game* at home. Now, if this slaughter is kept up at the lakes they will have to go farther than they do now after them and will be* lucky to get a limited bag at that. E. J. BAKER. The World’s Way With Poets. Hastings, Neb.—To the Editor nf Th« Omaha Bee: I am submitting to you a bit of satirical doggerel on a question of moment in this state, whieh i wish yuurffcvould consider for publication, on the particular sub ject. BRASS BUTTONS T1 *»*, ma<l<* him ' Poet Ltureatf,’’ Tw.«* r unique thins to do. Which emblazoned in all the papers The zrats that "put it through Th'-y made h m ’ Poet I.aur- * It caused a debate or two Th**y forgot th*» appropriation That stats off!> ia!a drew. For s poet lie-* up !n a rarr*(. I And write* his line* ail day. He ha* ».> mu^h of rhythm i* r.d rhyme | He doesn't need clo’Mr and hay." Some men wor,. f r graft. th*v *•> ; But f -r hIr»■ ■ ? >- • *ii• >-. But poet's j ay i* fame «>one. To offer coin would be fuur.yf AI * ' • n v'li-n > * • dead f ■ cm For that » the war poet* should *cd — Th* *’«'•* on a inoriument to Mm Will fifty thousand spend \ VV. NEWMAN. Common Sense ] Meet New People and Enlarge Your C’irrle of Uie. Make it a point to mact gnmc- new people one© in a while*, You will gain new v1eH|iiints and different id*as from association with new people. Every intellectual person you meet, if you arc sufficiently Intellectual to bring out bis ideas, will give you much to think about. When you begin to think In new channels you will make discoveries. It Is so easy to let your train of thought stay on on© track and wear out that track. When you no longer add 10 your knowledge and experience by meeting different men and different minds you res*.** to expand « »ftcn association fir a time with persons mi laid* your * Ircle or y.mr home town gives you a greater p preclat ion of the one* with whom you •re better acquainted. At any rate, it is a good thing to broaden one's environment. B?ir often grows t.red «-f the - ip-.r fs(# * and th* same uood quatit:** ..s embodied In those one sees every day Bo ope is spt to forget the good points of daily nn*oriat* s. Old friends are best, but it Is es sential for you to mee* outsiders, not onlv to grow but to appreciate the home folks. Cop> right. IMS. The Spice o f Life 'Tell tre. laid th* lady to the old •©Idler. "*efe v«« «ool ih bottle?** ■*'roi* ' Mi<) th* truthful v«itran, "why I fusriy shivered —ChrtMan Regl*t*r > I Boston) The Aunt—*'Ym. Betty «f?h th* n*w though? on* nn •ivnitipllth anything For |n»l«n • I don't ••%*■» h«v>* to fOttg*' I ■ imply think * flow of ro]. r snt<* my chrsk *’ Th* Ni*o#— "f|r*rious' I'm g**d T don’t hsv* such thought* <u» that *"—'London Malt. S* loom an— A velour b»f madam— shat . r* would your huebsud take'* Jibs (buying Ms birthday ' proarntl — “Irfi m* »**—I rrailS don't knot*—but h» ■ ■ mi in ■ *. ♦<* l *ut • • h * list would 1*0 kt.oui nineteen or t s *«i j — Ijottdon (‘pinion. t_1 “b rom State and -Nation”-, Editorials from oilier news pa [ters. \ shocking Min. krotn Ilia Nebraska State Journal. 'What can 58 members of the legis- , la l ure been thinking of to vote, as I they did in th» house, against killing Governor Bryan's king bill? Such ' lecklesa rushing into autocracy we have seldom seen. The majority for Mr. Bryan at the , btr election, as every member of the j legislature has been told about 10,000 limes, was a mandate against kingly j powers for the governor. Sir. Bryan's uuarrel witthe code, as surely the legislature remembers, had to do with i lie awful powers whirl) is placed in I the hands of the governor. The code gave to the governor the liossing of t pretty much the whole administrative , | machinery of the state. Such power was undemocratic. Mr. Bryan was I opposed, as he printed on all his pic- ! ' turn posters, to making the governor I a king and the people his servants. He was going to scatter the powers of the code to the four winds of heaven, beginning, had democratic ftate officers been elected instead of republican, with the auditor and rang- j ir.g as fir as the commissioner of public lands and buildings * The people fell for Mr. Bryan's ex pressed Ideas about kings and voted ( for him. Hhall not the profile rule? Hut now comes Govei*nor Bryan with ! | a proposition so imperial, so reeking | with king spirit, that we cannot lie- , I lievo our eyes. Governor Bryan | wants the power to behfad. and with I out a hearing, officials whom the pro l pie have elected. Hoes a sheriff dis I please the governor, he asks the I power to suspend that sheriff and put j in place of that choice of the people a sheriff*of the governor’s own chocs i tnsr Same with a county attorney [ and. we presume, even a road over ! seer. Who could have expected to j sec Governor Bryan, the king hater. | thus reaching out fur the s epter and crown? As for ourst-lvi s, we have never shared Mr. Bryan - terror of guberna torial kings. We rather liked the power and the accompanying respon sibility which the governor had under iFe code. As long as we the people elected the governor, there sec-med to us no awful peril in giving him power enough to do a good Job. But this power the governor now asks of nulll ; fylng at his sweet will elections bv ihs people of oounty official* is cal culated to startle a little bit even suc h i onfirmed king lovers as the code I advocates. The code gave t be gov i ernor power In state administration “KING TUTS” WEALTH A Cent Worth Millions! — If the equivalent of only one cent of Tutankha men’# vast wealth bur ied with him had been left deposited in a sav ings institution like the State Savings and Loan Assocation, paying 6% nterest, compounded semi-annually, and left untouched—the amount of money now accumu lated would be worth mere than all the gold and silver in the world today. We have always paid 6rf interest on Savings. State Savings & Loan Association 315 So. 17th, Kfflint Bide. HI i: \\ \NT Alls IIKIMi KKSI LTH Dr. Burhorn’s Chiropractic Health Service Headache*, luirka he«, neurit*#, thiurne t*«*1* and neuralgia re#»*ard to my methie)* j» «•*!! a* *nld*, fever*, liver. stomach and kidney trouble* House call* made when unable to rente to the offi.c office adju*tioenta are 12 for $10 or SO for f?ft Office equipped uiih 12 private adjusting room* and com plete X-Ha> laboratory. Suite 414-26 Securities Bldf. Cor 16th and Farnam Sti. l*hone JA 5.147 l «d> Attendant* \l»> FHThl.MI NT \|»\ » •( riN| MI NT. For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, Bilious Liver Tht mi *ogthartlr buuitU *' in tin* i wot M tu phyMo \ oui 11 vt r ft ml bout In | w ln*i» you luiv** hi >4arhr. ci>!4*< bilujy*n« *«. mdigi Htluii or up#»et, *c!»t , Htomin !l. I* <*an«1\ Ilk#* 1 Unr or two tonight "III tnnftty voui OoweU «omplrtrly by morning, anti ' "II « II t-. I *■>:. ti.ii.l 11., . «... i. While > fin e.ei |. ’ <■„ nevfi siir you un i.r *it|>e like »«!(« |iHh- j < »l«'iiul or oil nti.l they . ii»t only to J .’elite * lux t'lul.lren love I'oererrt^ lot* , This Lion and Lamb Stuff <mW^ IMUJ JtOii » —■ where lio Is supposed to have power. | House Roll 451, the governor's bill, 1 adds tile counties to his imperial | sv - Isn't tb-*t going a bit too far? Maybe not. We might bo willing to git. ,n King tne benettt of the douht. I And yet, ought this republican legis lature, however fearle-. of kings it self may Is . give aid and comfort t«» Governor Bryan in such treason to his own most solemn anti-king prin cjples and pledges? Is not this legis lature its Brother Charley's k« per? Twas fcver Thus. Some South ltakota women are pro testing against the proposed law limit the workday for women to eig hours. They say It would re.-ult - the hiring of boy* and men to d much of the work now done bj women Their stand Is that of the nn'ional woman s j-arty. wr/h :« d‘ n arding absolute "sex equality." It apt tears that inre-t of the women nr testing in- riot working women IVhr• do the working women themselves sa; about It’—Sioux City Tribune. Down Place* a Guaranteed SchmoHer & Mueller Console Phonograph In Your Home > 0'ir own make of Sehmo'W 4 Mu*.l*r Console Phonograph, one of the fww !fi toned mases In. the world, is becon-in* more popu lar every day. Hundreds have he»n fold rirV her. in Omaha and there is one in r-ractitrlly every state in the Union. Get What You Pay For Only $110 In our Consol® model w® com. biD® beautiful tone with a • tractive appearance. There phonographs are large in sue and equipped with a modern motor. Just select ard pav for a few records and for $5.00 DOWN, the Consol® o' your choice will be sect at otce to your home. 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