The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 29, 1922, Page 1

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For Bismarck and vicinity? Snow probably tonight and Thurs- day; colder tonight. THE BISMARC ESTABLISHED 1873 FORMER FORD PARTNER GOES TOU.S,SENATE Mayor of Detroit Hears News Of Appointment While j ful for at this Thanksgiving season, ‘ i In New York namely: : j = Seattle, Wash., Nov. 29—The Safe Rifled of Cash and f That we weathered the most dis-/ Mr, Turkey Witnesses Heavy "0% °% James E. Mahoney who was Securities TAKES HIS SEAT SOON under the appalling shadow which vi |hangs over so many of the carth’s North Dakota | bidder, according to a dispatch from | : : less fortunate peoples, | Walla’ Walla, Wash. The pri Secured H Has Nation Wide Reputation That we have come again into an : Uae Hanae age ie eater ait nM | Official i "AG Kaveibate GE Madigial '\era of general prosperity and stabil-/ BUSINESS TO; CEASE Physicians says the dispatch, has of- | sindbis esti unicipal ity out 6€ titonteped: chaos, ‘fered the glands, setting $1,000 ajSTOVE STARTS BLAZE Until They Open Doo: Ownership ‘That the principles upon which| la minimum bid and declaring them ‘ | Ps ors the United States was founded—aiOnly Doctors to be Busy in,°,Déresin because the doomed man In Morning (By the Associated Press) Lansing, Mich, Nov. 29.—Mayor James Couzens of Detrojt today, was appointed by Governor Alex J. Groosbeck as Onited States Senator from Michigan to fill the unexpired term of former Senator Truman H. : i rel . 3 —presages a time when all nations; to, fill orders, the telephone was | dead and 38 injured was th toll hii Negerty cuno rerently, resigned. | Cornelius Cole, who celebrated will live in amity together, jangling and here and there a plain- | ERRY W A |taken in the burning of the High cashier. opened the bank, Both the ap Naver Cousens has accepted the) nis one-hundredth birthday re- |” ‘That there are no more laws than/ tive last gobble of a turkey in the Point community school house near been! forsed abe Sateen ae ne mee pentane mor said. || cently, was a distinguished and | already pester us in attempting to jhands of a high executioner was | here yesterday afternoon when the Been: forced a: Fiat ote cafe had” Gants haw” been -tdvwarded tn ML| am ective figure in the public | dictate and regulate our thought ‘and| heard. And Bismarck folk have a structure in which 99 children were whieh: the sebbane 7 pacha) torch, Couzens at the hotel Belmont in New| life of the United States for 60 | conduct. (Goddness knows there are! far different | reason for being lengaged in studies, was destroyed Skluzacek said he was ¢ Wy ree Fone Cle Thy epee a ia New | 08> sed Catitornta im» |120,A0Y,alveady, and that our gor-| thankful than did the Pilgrims who.) by fire. A. careful check today show ho one ‘wan about the back: tilde aus ide ran 5 le represente falifornia in) | i i. e at all the others had bi ac- York to’ spend Thanksgiving Day with P a ernment should be far simpler.) | centuries ages Bscaioe' fieae the | Ganted Ibeiant hdentifiad een ac AC nia when he, in company . i his daughter, a college student. The teers d Mr. C s,| from 1863 to 1865 and in the | doing better than I, for one, expect-{ B who has gained’ nationwide Cwomi,| Senate from 1867 to 1873. He ed, in using their responsibility of et then was sufficient to make M fmt the eight-year-old son of Charles noe eerbaale : nence through his municipal railway} WS 9 law associate of William | franchise for sound, constructive | the hardy’ Pioneers’. hearts. bulge Measure Aimed at Bachelor. ed nae into: towns look venture here, would take his sedt in| H. Seward, President Linccin’s | policies. pA rain Ars The big problem South ; eile i tha direction of the bank i ” hie Di ‘taf. secretary of state, an’ a close F hat thie coun aaciaeth ii _| then was to get the turkey before an \ Covington, -Ga., Nov. 29.—Search ing and did not notice anything. the senate as soon as his Detroit af- ¢ f om young and sometimes be-! Indian got fou, but the citizens of th i ‘ 4 out of the ordinary,” he said. “Wh fairs could be arranged. friend of Lincoln himself. wildered nation is developing such! this modern day has only th among the debris of the High Point Poche ae rene aa en Announcement of the appoint- | rom his long. political ob- | sound common sense, in the main,) p= sReanee ASSAIL LEGISLATION | community; gene) s Houde | near here oleh Te Bail eld Maras aertec 2 v servation he scts down here for | x sy 7 = : i |was continued today for the bodies is morning, the bank offices Hey cane SAP ee oa A eee a sacle soproacaent aiges OF mituritys| - |of twelve children reported missing, were upside down, and a hurried the more than half a hundred kinds. “Mr. Couzens becomes senator with not a single string attached,” the governor said. “He made no promises; I exacted none.” Appointment of the Detroit mayor to the senate is seen in political civeles as expleding the belief pre- viously advanced in some quarters | that the governor himself would be a candidate: for the’sehate-for the full term at the 1924 géneral’ elec- tion. Mr: Couzens, the full fare Pas A SBA. CONVICT BACK IN PRISON, it is generally be- | lieved here, will be a eandidate for the lower house of Congress the Bismarck Tribune the things for which he thinks the country has fo be especially grateful on Thanksgiving. Day, 1922. POLICEGET FAST ACTION ON GUNMEN Crime, One Bandit Is Kill- | ed and Others Arrested | WHY WE SHOULD BE GRATEFUL | |Less Than 24 Hours After; BISMARC. ~ By Ex-Senator Cole. ! Having lived in this land dedicatea | to -life, liberty and the pursuit of! | happiness for,more than 100 years, j I am rerhaps entitled to say what I believe the nation has, to be grate- }astrous of all wars with so little | real distress, and that we are not | government by the majority, built ; upon the rights with which all hu- ; man, beings are endowed—have not ORTH DAKOTA, WEDNES: BIDS$1,000FOR GLANDS OF MAN WHO IS TO HANG (By the Associated Press) FOOD APLENTY | HEREFOR‘DAY OF BIG FEED’ to b ehanged Friday in the Washing- |ton penitentiary for the murder of his wife, are for sale to the highest Casualties in Western was in pertect physical condition. [It is stated that the glands, if so will be - transferred immediately, ~ City on Annual j been shaken by recent internal and external events. ( That the spread of these principles | throughout’ the world—a spread| which is sure, though slow in spots| Holiday after deathde Wowie | er cae SENATE-FACES The day of the big feed is,at hand. | Housewives were scurrying to and fro today, groceries were striving , | That the women, bless them, arc} in both domestic and foreign rela-| tionshins. | That, summing it all up, perhaps! the fathers of our country would not! need to be alarmed or ashamed if they could see how nearly we of to- | day have followed their vision in real- | izing their splendid ideas of a free} goyermment. | j bay his turkey before Someone else tomahawk or arrow’ of a lurking In-| Filibuster Continues on Dyer | , Administration Forces Sute E Of Passing Ship Sub- | sidy Act. (By the Associated Press) | Washington, Nov. 29.—The senate e foced another merry day of filibust. | blem, of getting the cold dollars _to| fgets theni . TIGER TAKES REST BEFORE NEXT SPEECH ' (By the Associated Press) | Chicago, Nov. 29—-Georges Cle- menceau halted his appeals for Am- | ierican friendship for France today |For three er today, the Democrats ;frankly proclaimed a determination ‘to continue their ways of obstrue- tion to prevent action of the Dyer |anti-lynching bill, while the, Repub- | [lican’s held the threat of a Thanks- giving day session over their heads iif necessary to: break the oppositior:, These. were the tactical positjons | upon which the two sides entrenched | yesterday, with the Republicans yot- ling in caucus at the close of th The turkey is a remarkable ‘bind centuries he has’ with-{ stood the annual Thanksgiving at- tack and another at Christmas, and’ this ycar, the dealers report there are turkeys galore in North! Dakota. True, the act that turkeys don’t thrive on pavements or meager | rear lots in the. big cities of | the east has caused sharp-eyed buyers | to turn their eyes toward the great turkey centers of the west. But even | having | - NOVEMBER 239, 1922 BANDITS LOOT BANK OF $25,000 COUZENS| SUCCEEDS SE SENATOR N EWBERRY Many Ai Are Burned in Schoolhouse Fire Leased Wire Wire of Associated Press) [12 REPORTED MISSING IN SCHOOL: FIRE, PIERCE BUTLER Nominated for Supreme Court, but He’s Just Plain ‘Pierce’ to Hundreds of Old Friends in Home Town. Georgia Community School ' Burns—Three Bodies Teacher Drops “Kiddies” to! Ground from Upper Floors (By the Associated Press) Covington, Georgia, Nov. 29.—Two The dead were’ James Steele, and following a fire yesterday afternoon|/ which destroyed the building and/ cost the lives of at least three chil-i dren, burned 15 seriously and in- jured 35, according to school officials. | One teacher was also seriously burn- jed. i The three bodies already recovered | freee the ruins have not been eal MR. AND MRS. PIERCE BUTLER | la ai; eer etnae saehers nd © by NEA Servi ily, three daughters froma second, St: ‘Paul, Nov. foo ites, Butler, may soon be an, associate justice of and three sons from.a third. One father sought his two sons, another| the United States. Suprethe Court, {his daughter. ‘but he'll al “Pierce” s all the, childcen, ie ova | eri nea eave Deeg? teres fe hu | dreds of people here. | Practically There are few men in St.,Paul as | said, ‘most seriously burned are un- | der ten years of age. Two of thos; \ . Z ¥ ie ° c+ | widely known by their first names‘as! jis Pierce Butler—und there are few |who are belioved to have lost’ their who know so many men by theirs. ilives were eight years old, The season, Butler is St. Paul's | When the fire which is bglieved to session to continue the fight in be-!have started from an overheated PRICE FIVE oe eae ress) i PRICE FIVE! CENTS TS ‘YEGGIEN Go G0 THROUGH BANK COMPLETELY Lonadak Minn., Institution ROBBERS UNDISTURBED Lonsdale, Minn., Nov. 29.—Robbers entered the State Bank of Lonsdale last night, rifled the safe and es- caped with $7,000 in cash and $18,- 000 in liberty bonda, The robbery was discovered this morning when Thomas Skluzacek, several other men returned check af the loss, places it at $25,,- 000 inj cash and securities.” The, robbers apparently worked quietly, for early morning reports were that no one had heard noises which sroused their suspicion. Mem- bers of a family living near the bank said they heard a slight noise in the vicinity of the bank, but it wos not of such nature as to cause them to investigate. The “usualprecautions of cutting off the village from outside com- munication were not taken. The 1ob- bers, according to the theory of the local ‘police, forced the rear window jof the bank building, after finding that the town was comfortably lasleep. Instead of using explosives a flame torch cut its way into the strong box, the men taking plenty ° ftime to pick out the negotiable se- jeurities and cash. lfor a day of rest in preparation for | 8° ere ate. plenty, in. or negr Bis- ~|marck fi JURY Shy seneuaiion eine ne Thurs-|Ylready probably four or five car- Last night he remained: up for. an | loads! of turkeys, a total of about | {hour past his usual bed time, or un- til nine o'clock, despite the strain of his speech at the auditorium and «the greatest ovation he has received sincé~his arrival in America, best known and liked attorney. The only clue which the police have Born in a log cabin near here 56 /to work on is the totch which was |years ago, Butler has always 're-!left in the bank building. The fact tained the ‘democratic manners! that the robbers left this behind learned early in life. leads to the belief that they worked He -received his first“education inj slowly and left torical just be- rural schools. : ‘fore daylight.“ ; His cdllege education was obtained | at Carleton College, Northfield, halt of the bill after the Democrats | stove, was discovered the hall way had plainly announced their leader, | was in flames and the stairs had al- Senator Underwood of Alabama, that! ready crumbled, blocking the only! the object of a rentless program of! door to the second floor room in| obstruction was to compel abandon- iwhich were 40 children. i a of the Dyer bill. Mrs. Oscar Grant, the teacher, 0. | { at senate attaches characteriz- | dered the children to line up and be-| ed as the “most scientifically con- gan dropping them to the ground, | Conscience ‘Hurt Floyd Carter ‘And he Voluntarily Returns iCALL SPECIAL (By the Associated Press.) Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 29.—Less than 24 hours after four gun men had engaged in a pistol fight with The conscience ‘vf Floyd Carter, talk over the agenda in efforts to|that the work was gradually taking j i Seattle, Wash. Nov. 29.—Dis- aneeth tue Han oes thorny prob- sas and that there: was tot cause Froglaniation decreeing |the minimum tonnage for sailing] proximately ten wecks ago. _ | Episconal Church of St. John the/of offices for which no candidate conte, Was coil near Point lems which might endanger the sue. |for anxiety as to its successful out- || lhanksgiving Day as |) vessels eligible for government aid.| Detectives and state troopers, indi-| Evangelist, was uttered by her law-/was named in past elections, this ae Soe Has, been reported |ceas of! the’ conferonce. Cons national. -holiday, The ————_———- cated this morning that they were at} ver, Timothy N. Pfeiffer. He said’ probably would be the method of ; by Alexander Malcolm Smith, an ex-| Correspondents find great diffi-| “We are here to sign peace,” said || Tribune will not be issued it is not true that New Yorkers) present without orders. , Mr. Mott,| he sincerely hoped the authorities | strengthening the vote of the new plorer of Arctic regions who has ar-|culty in getting. the facts and this]one delegate, “and peace must be}! Thursday. sleep in the alors 22 they will be] after the jury filed!out, deciding to; would continue their search for the| party, delegates declared, should x ready when fire breaks out. lay the matter over, expressed him-! guilty. such a party be formed, convict, ,who left the state peniten- tiary yesterday morning, began to bother him during the day, and, late last night he went into Mandan, called the prison authorities and a little. later was riding back to the prison in an automobile. “I got to thinking it over,” he said. “I didn’t have sp long to serve and it seems like sort of a raw thing to do after you folks placed me on my honor. My conscience got to bother- ing me and I came back.” Carter, sentenced from Wiiliston, had reached the “trusty” stage at the prison and .was working in the dairy barn when, early yesterday he| decided to escape, the city where two. of the men were] ‘AUSED DEATHS Jindividuats, quietly have been |Senator Underwood leading the de —_______ (By the Associated P. taken, belsved: his seapturewas' im: | searching: out the needy. bate with ‘his statement that th city" charter commission, and on the; gio. Falta 8. De Won minent the city where two of the OF 6 PEOPLE) ‘The day is preminently the day of [Democrats were not “disguising | University of | Minnesota, library 's35ch the proposal’ for “imasdicts { men wefe taken, believed shis cap- the big feed. The day was created that their purpose was to prevent |board of regents. However, he has! 2000 ie PI a desmaptlece tee ture was imminent. \ Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 29.—Irving|as one'of thanksgiving and medita-| considérgtion of the measure, which [retained ‘a keen interest in’ politics, je tie : i segine as a Democrat, and has done’ much i" South Dakota was rejected at the. ISSTILL OUT Los Angeles, Nov. 29.—The jury that heard the th; ae trial of Arthur ler of J.\Bel- ch fi hi i i ! i ace lea ndaking the case wrouriges. in soe \nead by bullet the viscera of the adult Hender-! rin when the house proceeds to 4. action and scrapped their quota, ac-| to organize at yesterday’s session. at 3:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon |- (Continued: on Page | son’s. final vote on the measure not later! cording to the assurance given aj| World War. Four of his sons served This, it was declared, means only ae ee ciate eet aelibecke malts = than 4 p. m. today after a final ses-/ questioner in the house of com-jin the army. Two of them are now that actual formation of the new van expe o ; . sion for consideration of amend-| mons today by Eyres Monsell, finan-, associate with their, father's lav : party will be delayed until after the ions today. LAUS ANNE CONFERENCE EXCITED | of a big dinndr. There will be union |ments. Although several more orl cial secretary to the Admiralty. | firm. national meeting in Chicago on De- When it retired at 10_o’clock last night after having been out for six and a half hours without reaching a verdict, court room rumors that jts ballots had varied from 9 to, 3 for conviction, to 6 to 6 deadiock. NOT CANDIDATES FOR JUDGSHIP Two Bismarck attorneys who have been frequently mentioned as pos- sible appointees to the position of @ judge of the fourth judicial district to succeed Judge Nuessle when he steps on the supreme bench today said they were npt candidates for the position. C. L. Young and E. B. Cox, in answer to inquiries, both stated they were not candidates, either ac- tively or passively, for the position. REPORTS FINDIN' LAKES OF COAL rived here by way of Japan. two policemen here early yesterday, killing one of the‘ officers and | wounding the other, one of the gun {men had been killed, two others captured and one of these bound over to the grand jury ‘on a cHarge of first degree murder. Before night a special grand jury called for noon today, was expected to dispose of the case and establish what officials believe will be a re- cord for swift administration of justice. The fourth member of the bandit gang -remained at large today, but posses who were searching wooded country side 20 miles south west of The dead gun man remains un. identified. He was known only as “Bill” hig "companions declared. The mani held forthe grand jury gave his name as Loomie C. Cum- mins, 26. The second man under ar- rest who said he was James Martin, alias “Slim” Brady, lies in a hospital © (By the Associated Press.) Lausahne, Nov. 29—The Lausanne conference sensitive to any political or economic happening elsewhere in Europe, is greatly excited by news of the execution of the former Greek ministers in Athens. The informa. tion generally cast a gloom over the various delegations. The great importance of the ques: tions to be decided here is testified to by the tense atmosphere sur: rounding the activities of the con- ference. The delegation are living under a nervous strain similar te that experienced at the Paris treaty- making gathering. Heads_of the dele- gations hold frequent meetings to [inevitably results in the wildest spe- OVER EXECUTIONS IN GREECE; | DELEGATIONS IN NERVOUS TENSION Nevertheless he was up shortly after dawn broke today at the Rot- ter Palmer home where he has been housed. Although no formal program has been outlined it was expected he| would spend the day receiving a) few callers and in making an auto- mobile tour of the city. He also read with much interest | comments on his speech of yesterday | in which he declared that , while} France was seeking only peace, war was being forced upon her. GAS, NOT POISON E. Henderson, his wife Florence and their four children, whose bodies; were found in their home at Lan- castef, died as the result of carbon monoxide gas from a defective stove | and were not poisoned, as was first | believed. state chemists reported here today following an analysis of } culation. The official communiques issued by the secretarial bureau are meager. They are confined to routine statements concerning the meeting| commissions and names of speakers. The salient facts are carefully omit- ted. | The question of the frontiers of Tyrkey have been held up because the leaders of the discussion are endeavoring fo sidetrack dangerous land there will be no daily paper at jtunate often turn to the unfortun- j unfortunate probably will ducted filibuster” carried on in the! senate in years started immediately! after the chaplain’s conclusion of | the’ morning prayer yesterday when: Senator Harrison of Mississippi, who! jled the minority fight from the! been ;floor. objected to the usual course have 20,000 pounds dressed, shipped from this territory to east- ‘of dispenging with the reading of! ern marketg. The biggest ship-' the journ: ments, however, will begin a little | later, for the Christmas season. Perhaps here and there it will be a wild duck or goose, or perhaps some venison, that will’ grace the table on @hanksgiving Day. Many a household in Bismarck will have good things to eat that they didn’t buy, for several organizations and Usually disposed of inj a few seconds, the process of ap-| proving the journal yesterday thus} required about four hours and form-; ed the business of innumerable roll calls and other parliamentary time | consumers, After two hours of the filibuster had passed the Dyer bill itself came [in for discussion for the first time, tion, and meditation and quict are|he ‘said’ would “never become the natural complements of ‘a whale law” and would “threaten the very {, fabric of our government,” if it did. Predict Passage Republican leaders were predict- | ing passage of the administration j; shipping bill by a comfortable mar- j » less radical changes in the bill were adopted yesterday, all of these were offered by Republican members and the rejection in quick succession of nearly two score more amendments offered by Democrats hostile to the Thanksgiving services at the Metho- dist church at 10:30 o'clock tomor- row morning, | The activities 6 the day include special programs at the theatres, the annual firemen’s ball at night, other t parties and dances tonight and to-| measure had sustained confidence morrow night. The public buildings | among its friends of a safe margin and mbst of the stores will be closed jin the final test today. Important among the changes vot- ed yesterday was an amendment ne cessitating the authorization by congress each year of payments from ‘the merchant marine fund to opera- jtors of American ships, this being generally viewed among members not only as doing away with a per- manent appropriation but also as af- fording a check on expenditures. Other amendments added to those the door tomorrow evening. The thoughts of the more for- ate on Thanksgiving Day and at! Christmas. time. But many of the consider themselves fortunate tomorrow. Prisoners in the state penitentia- * (Continued on Pagé 6) altercations in the official sittings by, seeking to arrive at the general | lines of an agreement at private talks. | Ismet Pasha, head of the Turkish | delegation, expressed the opinion to- day that the conference would in- evitably meet. with difficulties but previously adopted would exclude from receiving government aid con- cerns operating ships for their own benefit except where they transport- \ed cargoes of other shipeprs, with- hold government aid for all voyages on which liquor was carried, and reduce from 1,000 to 500 gross tons NO TRIBUNE TOMORROW In accord with the signed.” thirty feet below, her own child among them. The flames ehtered the troom and engulfed the teacher and three remaining children. Mrs. Grant said she tried to save the children ‘but failed. Wher she jumped her clothing was in flames. : She was seriously injured. The school house was ‘a two-story iframe building., Authorities say the ‘ building had been condemned as a fire trap more than a year ago and | funds had been provided for a new ! fireproof building. The erection ‘of | i ip the new ‘school was delayed because | PQHONS one ony ct county att of a dissension. among residents as to its location, ‘SHIPS HALTED London, Nov. 29.— 29,—Great Britain will scrap no more war ships undey. the Washington disarmament. trea:y until. the other nations have taken Minn..gunder utmost difficulties. The college was five miles fromshis home, | necessitating a aily 10-mile trip. Lack of funds made it necessary that he miss every other year, that he, might, by manual labor, earn) funds to continue. Despite these | | handicaps, he was graduated at the | ege of 21, with a highly credible] record. ~ Butler has never been a secker «| publie office, and has refused many }times to be a candiate for various sitions. The only offices he has lharuey, county. attorney, the city library board, member of the; member of active campaigning for his party. ; Butler attributes much of his suc- cess in ‘life to his wife’s influence and help. ter is now studying law at Uni- versity of Minnesgta, and another died while serving as a nurse in the GRAND JURY IN HALL-MILLS CASE REFUSES TO INDICT; CRIME INVESTIGATION TO 60 ON (By the Associated Press) New Brunswick, N. Whether the invéstigation of the Hall Mills murder case is to be pushed or to be dropped, at least for the present, apparently hung today on a confet- ence which Attorney General Thomas F. McCran ‘has indicated he will hold with Special Deputy Attorney Gen- eral Wilbur A. Mott, who yesterday failed to obtain from the Somerset county grand jury, indictment of! three persons whom the state indi- cated it. believed responsible for the shooting of Rev. Edward Wheeler} Hall and Mrs. Eleanor R.yMills ap- J., Nov. 29.—! self as being in a state of suspended animation. In New Brunswick, how- ever, there was evident a strong dis- inclination to permit the case to fall into the class of unsolved crimes. Persons who wish the investigation continued point hopefully to the fact that Mrs. Jane Gibson, hailed by the state as its star witness, still was under close obervation at her farm. This, they speculated, indicated that the inquiry was ‘to be puifed fur- ther. The only, expression coming from the home of Mrs. Frances Noel Hall, widow of the slain rector of the Of their seven children, one daugh-| REJECT PLAN | ' FOR NEW PARTY TEMPORARILY | South Dakota Delegates Delay Farmer-Labor Or- ganization jconvention last night, the project iwas not defeated but merely tem- |porarily delayed, delegates to the meeting said today: Having voted to go on récord as favoring formation of a new politi- cal party as soon as it is expedient, the delegates rejected the proposal cember 11, Yesterday's meeting disclosed that there is a division of sentiment among the labor men and also among the farmers, although the, latter group are more nearly united. Dele- gates intimated that formation of the new party would mean, not a race in which four parties would di- vide the vote, but a closer union of the voters now allied with the non- partisan league and the Democratic party in the state. It was pointed out that should the coalition be com- pleted ‘there would be a sufficient number of ballots in the party to control every office in the state. However, delegates said that some of the voters undoubtedly would be slow to change from the older par- ties and this would necessitate co tinuing the older parties through the 1924 elections. Under the state law, each party holds its own pre- liminary meetings and may nominate }a candidate for every office to filled or may leave the nomination vacant. As there have been a number

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