Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 20, 1920, Page 8

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HOW TO LIVE A The''operation was made mecessary . ; -HUNDRED YEARS OR - |Decause of an injury received about . & two;'months ago. 4 _-J-QRE_ W LE TOPI W.-G. Cooper was a business flnit“.‘ At the servicé in the big tent last or in Bemidji Monday and Tuesday.. night Evangelist Chas. F. Weigle The farmers of Lake Hattie tow: 2 ship' are contemplating forming a preached on “How to Live a Hundred N Years and More” from the text “He towiiship telephone company.to serve. all the farmers.of the. community and that belleveth on Me hath everlast-| will link up with some long distance | ng lile, € sald men are eager I0r|eep¢rg) fn order to get communication CITY COUNCIL CONSIDER- " ING BIG WHITEWAY One.) — SPORT NEWS (Continued from Pate BEMIDJI CASH MARKET QUOTATIONS. GRAIN AND HAY Hoga, 1b........ e Oats, bushel +..........$1.10-§1.25| Dressed beef, pound. take care of tl;e interest on the.loan. Little Over Present Cost. MONDAY'’S BASEBALL American Association. Louisville 3, at St. Paul 6. <o 19e-20¢ oo R2C 140 ‘Under the present street lighting Turkeys, live, pouna Oc-- 5 b ¢ Columbus 4, at Milwaukee 6. ; s p il e e 0 s 4€ g b D ~=s+o.. 40c-46¢ | long life; if you go to the health re- ¥ el Tndianapolis 10, at Minneapolis 9. |COntract is provided a flat rate of g::cg:fivfizbr::‘“m" 1b e tue | Qld Toms, live, pound. .¥bc-30c |sorts you will find that out. If a :’ti'go:‘l:::&‘;g:d;::":;f’%;e:h;egx;:‘: Toledo 4, at Kansas City 6. $505.60 per month to include, lamps | APERL B0 #§2.10-52:20 | 39984, \ive, pound ..........3580¢ man could publish a reliable book|y, PRoCr ; 5 e L i of vanog:_ sm}els ang. | their mainte- Whent: sofh $2.00-52,10 gucka.‘ul'u. W ..........26c-18¢|on *“How to Live to Be 150" he could| ™" Si)ec.lal‘series of, xenbices. are hed o Chicagcmz-s,mat Nefl!w nY(;rk 55 nance. ith the addition of a white- bushel . .. 81,70 ens, bs. and Ovel...w .:...26c|sell millions of them. But Jesus ing held at the Lake Hattie town, way system similar to that proposed | RY®: a saving or reduction of the rates for the existing street lightning can be[Cabbage, ewt. .. affected by the ' abrogation of the|Unions, dry, cwt. 4,00 present contract. Then for the entire | Beans, ewt. ... $7.00-3 81, street lighting the Minnesota Electric|Butterfat ... gz Ged “362 Light & Power company offers its|E8! yesl, dOZeN .oy spigrsee standard lighting scale. On the sys- tem as exists at present based on ex- d W A act current consumption by me{;r for | Mutton ool, bright ... seveen.. 200 fl.‘;?m:c‘hf)j‘i,e,'{l’lf:{i ‘{fl:;,’“{{m ;:",‘l‘d The following prices were being paid- at Stillwater, Minn., affect a saving over present costs of | at time of going to press of today’s Pioneer: $482.40, or an average of $80 per Christ tells us how to live not only to be a hundred years old but a hun- dred million years. “He that believeth on me”—what is saving faith? . Saving faith has three elements. It includes, first, the thinking powers. Thought deals with facts and the greatest fact in human knowledge is God’s gift of His Son as the world’s Savior. Thought im- mediately asks, “Did He ever save anybody?” and ‘multitudes answer “‘Yes, He saved me.” Saving faith includes the heart. God wants our love. When one real- hall under the auspices of the Lake: Hattie Union Sunday school and are conducted by Rev. John Turnbull of Hubbard.. The services opened last : Sunday- night and will continue fog two weeks. The Sunday school has: grown in Lake Hattie until it now ' numbers from 75 to 100, Cleveland 10-4, at Boston 6-5. St. Louis 4, at Philadelphia 9. National League. Brooklyn -4, at Cincinnati 5. Boston 0, at Chicago 6. Philadelphia 2, at St. Louis 3. BABE RUTH KNOCKS THIRTY-SECOND HOMER (By United Press) New York, July 20.—Babe Ruth knocked his 32nd home run today. HIDEY . Cow hides, No. 1 1b. ... Bull hides, No. 1, 1b. Kipp hides, No. 1, 1b. . Calf Skins, No. 1 1p Deacons, each ........... Horse hides; large, each ... .« .12¢-13¢ .10c-11¢ MEATR teen veseduseneias eenlBe KKK R KKK KK KKK KKK * g HORNET x: 33k 2k 2k k2 ko % The I.adies’ Aid ‘society met on Beef, dressed . .............7¢c-14¢ month. Further consumption by the : DRY GOODS DISTRICT addition of the whitewn)Pwouldypro- GRAIN AND HAY Lambs ... ... 2 123%e]ly falls in love with Christ he quits|Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. An-. THREATENED BY FIRE| e for an amount which would make | Wheat, No 1... .. ..$2.565-32.65|Garlic, 1b.... .... . flirting with the world. The reason|drew Ertenberg. we have so many worldly church members is’ because they have never given Him their whole heart’s love.. Packing butter . .. eerst.a..330 Wheat, No. 2.... ....$2.46-82.65 Wheat, No. 3 $2.36-3$2.45 Rev. Cummings, an Américan Sun+ day school union missionary from Baltimore, July S0.—Entire retail all whiteway current cost a straight dry goods district was threatened by six cents per kilowatt with five per fire which broke out at 2:15 this ai- ternoon. GONVICK TAKES FAST GAME FROM BAGLEY Gonvick, July 18.—S8coring one run in the last half of the eighth, Gonvick defeated Bagley 1 to 0 here Sunday afternoon. The game was replete with good baseball, excellent pitching and brilliant fielding mark- ing the contest which was by far the ‘best exhibition played at the local park this season. But two errors were made during the game and both of these were of little consequence LIVE POULTRY Turkeys, 9 1bs. up ..... Turkeys, small and thin. Geese, 12 !bs. and up, fat . Ducks, fat ......... Hens, heavy, 4 1bs. and over Hens, 5 1bs. up, fat . ...........20¢c Dressed poultry, 3¢ per pcund over iive stock. . Oats . . . ..94c-96¢c Barley .. . $1.10-31.25 & iiele . $1.98-$2.00 VEGETABLES Beans, hand picked, navy, cwt..36.50 cent discount. = The total probable operating cost to the city for all street lighting to include the whiteway and|“Y® * * outlying district is estimated at about one aqd one-third times the present operating cost. i Potatoes, per ¢Wt. ...........$5.50 Would Include 126 Post Units. Beans, brown, cwt. The whiteway system which is pro-|Eggs, per dozen posed would include 126 post units of | Butterfat . . ,.60¢ L 400 candle power, with an installa- | No. ltclover, m S;ggg HIDES tion cost complete of $20,000. On|Rye straw..-..... 20-81.50 | Cowhides, No. 1 another proposition which has been|tOTR . ... .. .. prepared by the company and which |No. 2 Timothy hay ....... . .$23,00| Bull hides, No. 1 R IRy ./ was to have been submitted to the g;f.p:’nl:g'& SRt Bemidji Civic and Commerce asso- MEATS De%;cons b No. 1, 1b. . ... ciation provided serious considera- Tallow _' R The bridegroom at the wedding did not .see the beauty of the flowers nor the bridesmaids nor hear the sweet- ness of the music; all he saw. was the beauty of the bride’s face touched with love, and sweeter than any mu- sic he ever heard was the sound of her voice when she said she would take him for her husband. person must act on the facts present- | ed to his thought and the love that moves his heart. every soul the power to say *I will.” Knowledge that grips the mind and stirs the-heart will profit nothing if a man does not act as it leads him. 'y Bemidji, was in this locality on Wed- nesday. o Mr. Nilson of Bemidji. spent a few ‘days around here this week, tuning the school organs and the piamo at' * the home of Robert. Shaw. | J. D. Bogart and crew loaded a ‘car of cedar for Mr. Hayden at’' Shooks, on Thursday. S Mr. Hayden drove out from Black-. duck in his car on Saturday to the, Crookston Cedar spur. . Among those who were in Black- duck on Saturday, were Torste; Gronseth and his son George. The annual schioel meeting held on Saturday at the Murrayy Saving faitli includes the will. A God has given to 10¢ school in the afternoon. Valentine™ Angell was ‘elected clerk, while Mr. rg was elected treasurer. tion was not taken by the council, it|Mutton, Ib. .. .. was proposed that a syndicate of busi- | Pork, dressed .... ness men be formed to take over the|Veal filx;nnci;lfiz of thglst)'stemkand either allow the council to make arrange- v EVANGELIST WEIGLE ON THE SINGLE STANDARD ments to take over the system at the (Continued from Page 1) ', and had no bearing on the result. Rice and Indian Chase opposing each other from the pitcher’s mound, were in splendid form and both pitch- ed gilt-edge ball. Rice won his own game with a two-base swat to right field which drove in “Lefty” Law- rence who had stolen second after reaching ‘first on a pass. A large; crowd witnessed the contest. Service in the'tent, Fifth and Bel-t{ trami, at. 8 o’clock - tonight. Dr. Weigle will preach on “God’s Blazed Trail to the ' Heavenly Highway.”|: Meeting every night but Saturday. Friday night the theme .will be, ““The] Devil’s Bible- and the Dance of Peath." : . : Horsa hides .. 16°|Wool. bright . . e s h s 0160 never to do it again, and then she placed the best breakfast on the table he had ever eaten. 3 Be honest! Pay your debt if-you can, and if you can’t tell your cred- itors why. God won’t send you to end of the second year or to have the syndicate itself purchase the light- ing system at the end of that time by apportioning the cost among its in- dividual members. This apportion- County Agent D. C. Dvoracek and: family have as their guests, County PI‘ED——Chamber maid at the FIND INELIGIBLES ment could be made on the basis of - hell if you don’t pay, but still you|Agent Leader F. E. Balmer and wife| '‘Birchmont Hotel. Tel. 15-F-2.: . . ON CHAMPTON TEAM | front-foot division or any other meth- |his hearers that many sobbed aloud|are obligated toward the man you|Of Park Rapids. The Dvoraceks, ac-| - . 55 3t7-22 " Alma, Mich., July 20.—The ap-|0d Which the executive committee of [, qer his preaching. 8 owe. Some people get credit at the companied by W. A. Lloyd, federal ALE—Ford truck with cab county agent leader, of ‘Washington, D."C., motored to Long Lake, Park Rapids,.on Saturday and spent the week end-at; the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. Balmer. Mr. Lloyd left on the syndicate might decide. Subtits Completed Charts. Complete plans and charts were submitted by Mr. Culver for the con- grocery or shoe store and then pay cash at the movies. Some fellows who have lost their credit in town, smoke up and puff ouwt, and chew up, and spit out enough.tobacco in one year pointment of an investigating com- and, body." Almost new. A. A. War- mittee by the directors of the M. I. A. A. at the June meeting to look into the eligibility of athletes of tne field. e 7-20tt FOR SALE OR TRADE—For 2% \ cords green 4-ft. wood, one Singer e. Can be seen at We need preachers like that‘",t," day. Men who will dare to 'declare the truth regardless of the ‘conse- M. 1. A. A to settle rumors which |gijeration of the council. According i iresichi .| sewing machine. i 3 . ( quences.. The ordin v Sunday evening for Garnd Fork: N ) . ::adb b%en afloat for months, is said |to his plan the whiteway would eX-|will not arouce the ":I preaching|to pay up a h_mc};l of their debts.| G onq’ Rapi drff.“ Apinies Dvoricagll:i our_ office. in Markhamh Bldg. J. o be bearing fruit. . tend along Beltrami aveuue as far| . : e?p_;ng‘ con-| Pay your grocer what you owe him, returned to Bemidji on Monday ac- 1. Opsahl, Phone 197-W, Bemidit, Tlhe appointment of the investigat-| o Seventh street, along Minnesota | Science- When vice and immorality|and pay the milk man what you owe companied by Mr. and -Mrs. Balmer Minn. 6d7-26 ing committee has been causing the 17 various colleges to look closely into AR the eligibility of their athletes,' and AN in the case of Kalamazoo college, winner of all championships of the association the last year, the result wag surprising, judging from a let- ter written by President Stetson of Kalamazoo to President Crooks of Alma college, in which he states he had discovered that two of Kalama- %o0’s athletes h.d been found to be ineligible. . : The letter did not state who the two athletes are, so it is not certain what championships will be affected by .the discovery, but it is believed the ineligibles were members of the football, track and paseball teams, in which case Kalamgsoo college will lose alT of those titles. The direct- ore of the association at the June meeting withheld all championships | until the committee reports at the fall meeting. him, and pay the butcher what you owe him. Pay the dentist what you owe him—don’t sing, ‘“Come to Jesus” through false teeth you’ve never paid for. And' by the way, don’t forget to pray. God what you owe Him. Don’t try. to beat. your way to. heaven by trying to see how ¢heap-you can get through. Pay your - debt to the church as well as to, the merchant. . Paul-not only preached righteous- ness, he also warned of a coming judgment. He told Felix he was headed for the judgment-and. there he would have to answer for the way he .was living upon earth. T can imagine 1 hear Paul describing. the scenes and issues of the judgment FOR SALE OR TRADE—One three year old registered full blood Jer- sey bull, name. Prince of Redby, No. 160721. Sire Rosebud’s Roy- croft Fern: Lad, No. 122125. Dam, Fern’s "Mary Jane, No. 32§,052. Bred by S.' Currie of Park River, N.'D. Write or call Lep Opsahl, - Phone 177-W, Bemidji, Minn. : 6d7-26 avenue to Sixth street, and would in- |stalks into.the church and shameless- clude the intersecting streets as well. ly and bold-bloodedly covers wup its The charts have been turned over to(roitenness with the cloak of re- the water and light committee of the ... : bt city council and it is believed that a| !0, Someone is needed to rip it few. changes will be made in the loca-| off; as:Paul did and Savonarola did, tion of the proposedd lights; if the|and Latimer did in their day. | proposition is accepted. 3 2 i The proposed changes in the plans Paul knew what Felix and Drusilly would - include the same number of |"€eded, and he preached rightqeus- post units but would limit the extent|ness.” He didn’t waste his time ‘talk- ofdthe system 'og Minnesotge uveflfnet ]i‘n ing scignce-and philosophy, but. fold order to provide a number o €| them they had to get right and five lights for Bemidji avenue. right. That was h;: h:g:eni it Two Years to Repay Company. |mattered not to him that Felix \was Tl;e plan for reimbursing th‘:i elec- | the ‘gavernor. i tric: light company as suggested pro-| Ppay] ; i : 3 vides for an addition of $10,000 t%priv?l:]gel::ccfi"rlazé‘ifi 'il:xel;;e ;:ll.len ?);! the city budget for the ensuing year:gpiritual law, and so he refused. to with- impassioned -eloquence.’ So ter- for this purpose and a like 8m°“n‘i.wink at sin ‘because the sinner was|rible was the picture he drew that the following year when the total 5 governor. A man’s position in the| Felix trembled as he listened. .A con- cost would be repaid the company.! world don’t ‘make ‘any difference to|victed sinner, he-was about to-yield In this way all taxpayers of the city | God Almighty. He is no respecter of | to God when fe glinced at the woms would pay their share for the benefit' persons. He'll soak a millionaire as! at his -side, and it wa$ all o lrecelved, while under the syndicate| guickly as He will a hobo, or a college| she would not let him go:' ‘To become plan only the business interests would | professor as well as a bum. Clothes : go: ' :To beco who will visit -here for a short time. HRH O HKE KKK KK KKK K *. LAKE HATTIE * 60k % b % % ok % b O Miss Clara Knapp of Rockford township was taken to the. St. An-| thony hospital, Bemidji, recerntly for an'operation on her her knee cap. Th;wP;ésc_—x;ipvtion that’s Meapt-fgr You Alone When your doctor writes a pgescfipti't-!r for you, | it,means that he has considered ail your physical | peculiarities—your lieart, your digestive organs; the many things which make you different from some | -| other person. That’s why you canmot with benefit use a prescription:intended for-someone else. That’s .why we exercise utmost care im its: compounding. COAST NET STAR | : BEATS RICHARDS i < 5 a Christian would mean the ‘separa- Chiengo, Jnly ~ 20.—Battering a stand;the c0§t of mstnllatswn.' don’t make any difference—a man| tion from this sinful woman. who successfon of powerful forehand May Decide at Next Session. can be just as mean and devilish in|was not his wife. It would mean drives tol'the opponent’s court thru fhree well. fought sets, Roland Rob- erts of San Francisco defeated Vin- cent Richards of Yonkers, N. Y., in the final match for the tenth annual national city con“ts tennis champion- ship in men’s singles Sunday, 6—3, 6—1, 6—3. ; DEMPSEY WILLING ; . TO BATTLE WILLS New York, July 20.—Jack Demp- sey, world’s champion heavyweight, pugilist, is not averse to fighting a negro boxer, according nouncement here Sunday night by the International Sporting club. reversing his attitude on the colorvbridge. 3 line, the champion said he is ready presented at the next meeting. cussed at length by the members of | five times out of six he is worse. the council the plans for the pro-| Education don’t make any difference posed system have beeh submitted to the water and light make. the proposed chgnges in the location - of a few of t it is believed that the proposition |t a will be decided upon at the next;just one thing that can shut you out meeting of the city council on Mon- day evening, Au : other matters were acted upon by the to an an- ask for bids for making repairs on 1n'water tower and the to make a match with Harry Wills,‘ who is scheduled to meet Fred Ful- ton at the Newark Sportsmen’s club Monday. SWIMS FAST TEN MILES Philadelphia, Pa., July .19.—Bu- resenting Illinois A. <C., ‘and gene Bolden of Memphis,” Tenn., rep-l meémber of the 1920 Olympic team, won ‘the ten-mile national swimming | %0 on the wall of the “haunted gal- championship in the Deleware riv- er Sunday, covering from here to Riverton, N. J., in 2 Fovrs, 9 minutes, 11 seconds. Kiffe of Brooklyn was second, and Ralston of Meadowbrook club, Philadelphiz,’ third. . e e Eskimo: Inherently. Honest. ' . The Eskimo regards honesty as para- mount. . He will never misrepresent facts, and although he may want' to dispose of an article badly he will rather depreciate it than run the risk of over praising.. A man whe lles or deceives another is severely punished. An Eskimo will not permit a fellow man' to need for food or clothing, once he’ has enough ‘for -himself and his family. War, to the parka-hooded men of the North, is unknown. They de- cide differences by staging dance duels and' outsinging each other, and old men act as judges to decide winners. In. this way honor -is; satisfied. Bru- tality s unknown. In: combhating mna- ture, fighting the walrus,: the: whale and 'the ‘bear ‘with primitive ‘weapons, the Eskimo’ displays unusual ‘coelness il plans his way'out of danger with c’tnmq*ldf-msuslbn. B R Ve the distance| made in London. Shakespeare authori- 1 After being considered and dis-|2& tuxedo as in a blue jumper, and'giving up his life of sensual indulg- ence. It was too much for him and s0 he says, “Go thy way for this time, when I have.a convenient season I'll call for you again.” In other words, “You may go now Paul, it’s not con- venient for me to do as you say just now.” < 3 That’s-what many a soul says to God—it's not convenient. The rea- son some of you are not Christians is not because ' you don’t know enough, but because you’re not will- ing to do enough. You'e not willing to take the card-table dut of your home. There’s no power in the world can save some people unless they make a’clean sweep of the things that are wrong in their lives. Get a| new hitching post; leave. the triflling godless crowd, you've been training with, say goadbye to the old life and the dirty déeds of the flesh. - * The preacher = had délivered his message and ‘was-leaving the palace chamber. - When the door closed .be- || hind him another door.closed and shut | —the man whose noggin is full of committee to|mathematics and Greek roots needs God as much as the man who cannot tell the difference between 4 preposi- tion and a proposition. There is e lights and of heaven and that ig'sin. When you pass through the pearly gates they won’t look to see whether your trous- ers are creased or ask what university you graduated from. Listen! God has but;one standard of right, and everything outside of that is .wrong. Right is right and wrong is wrong everywhere, in, all parts of the universe, at home and abroad. Right is right and wrong is wrong always—every month “in’ -the year, in all seasons and in all kinds‘of weather,/ whéh the morning stars sang together, at the present time-and all down through the sweep of the infi- nite years to.come. . : _Who are you that you think. yo can do wrong and still have: the smile of God? Do you think that God ever winks at wrong? Never! The eyes of God’s spiritual law are open’ night and day toward every sin in-the uni- verse. God.saw the sins of Adam, and Noah, of - ‘David and -Solomon. He thought “a great deal of Moses, but refused .to wink even at the one quick" 8in of the greatest. human genius_that ever honored the world with his presence, and so even Moses h:d] to suffer the penalty for a violat- ed law. - gust 2. In addition to this project several council at this time. It was voted to the city jail, and for painting the Mississippi Bids on this work are to be SCRAWLED BY GREAT POET? Signature of William Shakespeare, Be- lleved Genuine, Found on Wall in Hampton Court. ‘The discovery of the signature of Willlam Shukespeare, scrawled years Felix out of heaven. . It was'the door of mercy. God had given him. the opportunity of his life and he had turned, it ‘down. A There comes to every soul a special opportunity to be saved. Should that opportune time be neglected it may never come again. During a series of meetings in a .southern city a young man was saved. who worked for his uncle, who had a drug store in the town. The next day that young man went to his uncle and with tears in his eyes begged him to also become a Christian. His uncle was greatly moved, but brushing the tears from his eyes he said, “George, I'm glad you’ve taken the step and some day I may do the same thing, but it’s not convenient just now.”” That was about one o’clock in the afternoon, and' at four o’clock tH® same day a man entered the store and started an argument with the uncle. - ‘Hot words followed and suddenly the man pulled a gun-and shot the druggist dead on| the. spot. . At one o’clock God called him.for the last time; at four. o’clock death called him. The door of mercy had . closed. - o lery” of Hampton court, has just been ties pronounce it authentic. The .-disclosure was made when Ernest Law, the court antiquarian, wnl: directi e renovations. On the wall oS it g Tom i fowmd, af ter cleaning it, the letter “S,” followed by flllegible Ietters, - concluding “ke- speare,” and beneath the rough sketch of a hand and the’date 1608. 3 It 1s a matter of history that the Shakespeare company visited the pal- : St;‘line rlrli:n wl;:) }}:ear me &r:;:ly’l wouldn’t live, with their wives i :ge at t.t‘lebdnte set d&‘"‘ l;?d "ézs were to cuss' and drink as they do, amlet” before the then King yet the woman ‘has to live with you. tian of Denmark. ‘The company dress- | heard of a man who used so' much ed fn the “haunted gallery,” near the | profanity around the house that his great hall where the play was enacted. | wife decided to cure him. She came The gallery, according to ancient down shim..ong morning and delayed tradition, is haunted by the ghost of.|the breakfast purposely. When he Catherine Howard, one of Henry VIII's | came down and began to fuss because six wives, who was imprisoned there, [the meal was late, she started in on History tells that she escaped from |him and said; ‘“You old blankety, confinement while the king was pray- | blank, blank fool! B?"’t you dare to Ing In his private chinpel,'and that her |talk that way to/met” he was sston; fiight was discovered . by -the: court :t;‘:h’:peg“:‘n R0 1 L ;. . i mIng t | him again, “¥on baldheaded bldnkety, | Lo L ' A 5 08 | plank mutt:you; I want you to; know| - And I'say to you, my friends, come It was long said that.Catherine night- | voy can’t:use any more of your dirty|while’ God calls and ‘mercy’ waits. walked the' galléry, shri \ ianguage around this house!” He'sur-+Cdine tonight snd be saved, for to- to Globe. B rendered ‘right_ there and promised morrow may be too late. . : B e e Y 217 Third Street . < Phone 34 CLARK JEWEL GAS STOVES LM et with'the rain Oven Heat Régulatp Is Now on Sale at the Office of the 2 o Jeoo ) ) | Bemidji Gas Co. A practical demonstration of cooking with these stoves will be given on ( . . WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 0 July 28th, 29th'and 80th " ° Between 10:30 A. M.(and 2:30°P. M. When it will be convincingly éhbfin how an entire meal can be placed in the oveniand all:covied at once without further attention, and x:eaidy,tp;vsérvve at a given time. J Gl b ’ - THREE HOURS WITHOUT ATTENTION

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