The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 21, 1925, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune’ An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 18 publish will be completed and published by Madame Flammarion. jike Madame Curie, Madame Flammarion was, ‘unheard of until the death of her husband, but lik Madame Curie she was also the collaborator in all} Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. 1., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, ag second class mail matter. George D Mann.. Ss Daily by es Payable In Advance per year... : rrier, Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) + 7.20 : Daily ie mall, er Gear North Dakota scored against Minnesota and South | (in state outside Bismarck) . 6.00! Dakota in value of crop production for 1925. The! Dally by mail, outside of North Dako! + 6.00) figures are imposing and will do much to attract at a of Cirealotion Member Audit B Member of The Associated Press The Associated Pr is exclusively use for republication of all news di tehes credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, anc the local news of sponiancous origin published here- in. All rights of republication of all uther matter! induced some farmers to return to t herein also erved. __ the production of corn and other forage crops was| Forelgn Representatlyes not as large as had been anticipated _— | G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Corn and oats formed the bulk of Minnes: | CHICAGO DETROIT | crops. ‘That reflects the rapid progress being made} Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg.’ in the dairy business. While n Dakota rankes | PAY? 1TH BURNS | .President- and Publisher |! + $7.20 ntilled to the | gration ‘her husband's scientific work during his life. | Madame Flammarion ig the descendant of Theo | yhraste Renaudot, known in France as “the father | of French journalism.” | Showing ' North Dakota ‘tention to the of this state. They should timulate a demand for farm jands and start immi- | this direction i however, that corn production will The resource in Ther | increase is hope, next year. attractive price of wheat crop and} with South Dakota in the production of oats, | NEW YORK - Fifth Ave, Bldg. ; ; pee so a ent e reReNP MRSS SEES =~} it fell far behind both? Minnesota and its neighbor | tate and County Newspaper) — | to the south in the production of corn, On all! oe KR | other Crops SUCH as Wheat, rye. bitrley and flay’ They Should Know North Dakota is far in the | A Los Angeles newspaper is telling Florida he booms react. Having witnessed several of the | Seience has performed many miracles but it has | hectic kind on the Pacific coast, a Californian can! yet to devise a formula whieh will persuade the| qualify meexpert on booms, their rise and fall) pawling household heir to eat prune juice or spin | The home of the 100°) boom has for sometime bees) ach when you want hin to. | on the Pacific coast. Hecently a rival for the hon | ors of precipitating a real nois uper he. 1 boom | | comes forward in Floris 1 98, A Fo Lise. ANeaIee "THe Pare Editorial Comment | trend of the tourist travel away from sun kisse | California to t Peninsular fate. It hastens to Smith and Tammany Win i zive some very good advices on booms and thei (St. Paul Dispateh) | reactions. Somination of State Senator James J. Walker for | As an expert opinion on boo gathered from | Mayor of New York was forecast but there is no | decades of actual expericnce, the editorial is here blinking the significance of the margin of his vie { with reproduced in hopes that some may find solace | tory. Politically the result of the New York demo | Me Avariing in its admoniuicns J cratic primaries may prove the most important de “After visiting Florida recently a prominent | ¥lopment in the metropolis in a decade, _| Omaha merchant, head of the Retail Asaociation | Tammany demonstrates dramatically the magni of that city, in an interview in the Omaha Evening | {de of its power; it is able to turn upon its own | Reo, warned the people of Nebraska not to inves: [eretture and throw him from an office he has held their money in the Peninsular State. ‘AI the (Jt Seven” years, overwhelming the personal ma | crooks, griaflers and reabestite sharks of the coum {Chine built up during that time | try, said this trustworthy informant, ‘have flocked | Bul perhaps choice of its candidate for one of) to Florida, If one does business with them he is {the mest important political posts in the country | likely to find that he has been trimmed, While |! less of a victory for Tammany, even in view of im n were crowded, it, wi possible to get accommodations on the trains Ie trains coming into Miami enumerated, than a personal triumph | cricumstance: | For the Smith-Hearst feud | | | | tor Governor Al Smith Miami, ‘There are more people leaving the eity than |RCt only overshadowed the Hylan ‘Tammany fight coming in. ‘The merchant said further that living; [17 New York. It possessed a potentiality for po- costs are high in Florida, land values ‘out of sighs | litical consequences which transcended local limi and work scarce. | tations The result, a personal triumph for Smit Fic Me bat Ge te HAMNER WE veuenE PepeNts ly can fail to affect the aspirations of th of the land boom 4n Florida, Felix lgman, one of | B°¥erner Who now becomes, more than ever before, the best-known real-estate. men of New York, had {the outstanding figure in the Democratic party. i an article in the Saturday Evening Post telling of] New York is well rid of the sorvices of May the frenzied state of affairs in which land specu: | H¥lan. His manager is quoted lators had ‘cleaned up’ millions of dollars at the| through with polities, That is well. oxperse of many innocent investors and) warning | Hes Will lose little by r the public against this method of land-buying. tirements JE indeed abs comes topes “It is extremely regrettante that Florida, a beau-| #8 Temarked that his administration was so thor-| titul State with a mild climate and splendid natural | OUShHly bad that even Tammany could not stomach | resources, should now be in the throes of one of| it # basis is provided for estimate of its worth. those demoralizing experiences—a land boom, For| Methods utiltzed in cltoice of their candidate it is the history of all such fictitious, ephemeral | fT the office which, in point of sala anks next and misteading indicationy of prospertiy that they | { at of President of the United States, were not react terribly upon the community, giving it a name! Mattering to the Democratic party in New York. for false promis: may not recover for many Victims go abroad spreading tales of deceitful lures and losses which put the locality the black-list the homeseeker and cause him to settle almost any where save in the place where so many have been badly ‘stung.’ for they reaction, years on the must live through parlous of years adjustment to lower standards and str faire. ous efforts to get back to a normal state of keenest of t Ine of the Angeles was the boom of 1887, which for years re | tarded the substantial development of the city in a way which the old-timers recall with a shudder There is as much difference between a and the solid develapment which Los Angeles has enjoyed during the last five years as there is be Robert Marion La Follette, Jr, the son of h tween a house of cards and a iouse of granite jfather, swept Wisconsin yesterday in the Republi “Wild speculation is one thing, stfe and sound | can primaries, winning the Republican nomination investment is another. The Wallingford stuff, with its florid prospectuses and its inflated values, is not the foundation upon which real prospe No community can afford to ri action that follows like a blight every soaring land hoom. Short of a far-sweeping tidal wave, one of the worst things that could have happened to Florida is the present boom, for, when it co is built. k the inevitable $US i lapse it must and soon, it will leave ruin in its [of Wisconsin are Republican. ‘The rest of the state wake and turn many of the friends of the State to | is just--La Follette, with the name borne by the tee son as powerful a slogan ats it was when it was af “Krom that sad condition of Florida will rally, rise and prosper. But there is bound to be a period, and probably a long and harrowing one, in which she will suffer the effects of the present in fation, Land values cannot be boosted to such aby surd level, $10,000 to $15,000 a front foot in a city like Miami, with only 50,000 popul ion, with out a subsequent collapse. But, after passing | "ame of La Follette, that is precisely the kind of through the purgatory of depression, Miami and the | Political and economic doctrine they are entitled other boom cities of Florida doubtless will return | to have. to their normal state. And this is as devoutly to | There is, perhaps, a moral issue involved in the ‘tbe hoped for as the present situation is to be de plored.” the present time a number of women who are carrying on the work which was left uncompleted to some extent by their husbands when they died. The same thing happens in the world of science. The outstanding example is that of Madame Curie who discovered radium by carrying on the re searches which her husband had been engaged in up until the time he was killed by a Paris auto. Now a similar incident comes to the attention of the world. It is announced that Madame Gabrielle Flammarion will carry on the work left unfinished ‘by the death of her husband, the great French tronomer, Camille Flammarion. She has taken over the post which he formerly held, that of director of the great’ Juvisy observa- tory. In addition she has been elected secretary-gen- eral of the Astronomical Society of France. ., Zen volumes which her husband thad planned to H ind unfair dealing from which it | grievous | It is injurious to those who remain, | ‘owing pains of Los | land boom | They provided ribald entertainment, sensationalism, | a few contributions to ultra-modern conceptions of | “practical politics,” but they did less than nothing | | toward elevating the plane of politics in New York. | | When Hylan seized the radio and other municipal | | appurtenances for personal political usage, opponents | | made a point of “fair play." Maybe he knew what} ; | they were talking about and maybe he didn't, For | | so long it has been dormant in New York politics. | | Of course the disaffection among the Democrats | will not be without consequences in the final ele But those, at this writing, it is too early to estimate. | tion, Young Mr. La Follette Wins (Duluth Herald) for United States senator to succeed his sire by @ | vote far greater than the combnied vote of his thr opponents, and more than twice as great as thai of his chief opponent, Mr. Wilcox, who was the of- ficial Republican candidate. It is no trouble to ana in the light of this result, "The fact is that only a few southeastern counties the Wisconsin situation | borne by the father. As for the Democrats, their vote was so slight that they may not even have succeeded in getting a | candidate for the election of September 29. Nor is there much use in bewailing the situation. It the people of Wisconsin want the kind of po litical and with the economic doctrine that goes practice of using the Republican label on a candi- date representing that doctrine, but apparently that lis legal enough under the Wisconsin primary elec- | tion law. Fortunately for the country at large, the |tagion of this doctrine is closely confined. country at large had a chance to catch it in the last presidential election if it were susceptible, ant it proved to be immune—strikingly immune. Possibly another story would be told by the voters who stayed away; yet if these voters had any story to tell, any interest in the welfare of their state and country, any id whatever on anything of any consequence, surely they would have gone to the polls. Last ‘November Wisconsin cast nearly nine hun- dred thousand votes on the presidency. Yesterday they cast lesa than 00 votes on the senatorship. So whatever label was put upon Wisconsin yester- day was put there by a minority. The majority, apparently, put upon it a label of indifference and neglect — which are far more dangerous than anything that any La Follette o> any Debs or Foster can offer, con | The | fea le Ns GREE UC RB CE eh etree | a very |W husbands’ private secretaries. She answered that she had been your father’s assistant, and you had ree- }ommended her for the place with ;your husband, She also said, with~ out ny circumlocution, that ou were much too good for your hus- band, although she qualified — the statement a little by saying that Mr. Prescott. was much above the ordi- na an in many way: I don't know, Leslie, whether she was trying to make me understand something by inference, or whether | Who ri THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | | | | \ i stock. | act | ter e tion. A j the also it ii BY DR. HUGH ‘Surgeon General, United States Pub- | lic Health Service | Every business importance of an inventory. good business principle to make an jinventory at regular intervals in or- | der to find out the true state of one’s | This principle of ascertaining the 1 state of affairs at regular in- Is is as applicable to the preser- jvation of personal health as it is to |the preservation and conduct of bus- ease, diabetes, hardening of the ar- teries and certain forms of heart di se are examples may begin unnoticed. | To your physician, trained to note | quali the slightest symptom of disorder. | early the beginning of these diseases once apparent if you present your- | self for an annual physical examina- d L_ EXAMINATION 18 ADVISABLE The practice of annual phys aminations is valuable not only for| detection of disease but important as a guide in the selection of suitable employment for | those with known defects. i MONDAY, SEPTEMBER ‘21, 1925 FABLES ON HEALTH HERE IS HOW TO AVOID “HUMAN SCRAP HEAP” If you subject yourself to a physi- », cal examination and discover that you have defective vision, heart dis- ease or Bright's disease, and are manifestly unfitted for the type of work which you are doing, it may be possible for you, with this knowi- edge, to change your work in such an appreciates the It is a to your health, Industrial firms have found the method of annual physical examina- tions exceedingly useful in the pro- per placing of employes and many have noted the reduction in accidents since this plan was inaugurated. considerably| your automobile to this extent: A care of your human mechanism. Take an annual inventory. Have a complete annual physical examination ied physician to detect the igns of any developing dis- of diseases that | s at | ease, If you follow these suggestions you will feel better, live longer and accomplish more. There is no use in our going to the scrap heap before your time if you will have yourself overhauled by a physician at least once a year. If you inspect your automobile four times a year give your human mechanism at least one-fourth of the attention you give your car. al ex- | THE -: The Tangle : M SAR- SLIE PRESCOTT = | —CON TINUED T have never heard a wor peak so enthusi wily of another, my dear Leslie, tula Perrier does of ow. Although she said nothing bout it, TE almost yot the impr sion that you brought back her faith not on n God but in man; that you, and no one else, gave her the | Strength to go on and do the thin h have brought her such great nsequent happiness. how 1 felt, dear ing Miss Perrier | self beside M entirely differ- | though IT should clever in her bly know, sand You can imagine when after le ppened to seat m: on, » woman 0 ment, 1 quite 1s, 4S you rol stie tongue. this as 1 heard her tal some one else; but when was mentioned, her conve the dove. told me that she was your hu private secretary, end T men- wives seldom liked their urn: tion wa like the cooing of Shi tioned th it was my guilty conscience. She looked at me Roth mighty qu omen spoke could see no diff uted and opted son I need not tell you, donna of the Snows, th entire evening with men. way! Mrs. Atherton e It cer these ueerly. of your love I for your children, and both’ said that erence in the med to care and your own my dear at LT sp two wo- her mpliment to any these two women, sod ite in taste, in live hments, speak so enthusiastic of a s they did of you. Ana now, my dear, I of your life, except by now and then, IT can m not strong ¢ y that I probably write to any other bei -; 1 would not write to yo our husband, me th I were \ seemed to nother womun am going out way of a let- not deny my- nough to deny f the exquisite pleasure of sit ¢ down and writing to you 1 would ing. Ci this w for it ha hat the closer I was bound to a woman, the harder it would be to be m If with her. ers hav ing kee and goi baking ; dough, it strikes it in the pocketbook. Bad news from the Arabs. Banking powers are London. - the edge of the face, so that is Why] toee it is more than eleven feet long as Coolidge dog bit another dog. So the ‘other dog can brag about it the| it really should be. rest of his lite. “That long iron - down in-the tower ha Must be awful to be President! the end that weighs one hundred and Coolidge’s doge and et your picture | fifty pounds in fhe paper every time you have a) (em ee aan going. - “By the way, my tee : has four faces exactly f iterary Digest explains how the] He isn't two faced, either, for he is coal strikes the public. We explain ‘ Lead- ve quit smoking. And smok- s you from getting restless ng to work. meeting in ly Banking powers are like{ lead pencil. powders, They raise the) “Now, e the bells. ADVENTURE OF BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON “What do you think of Big Ben That is the great pen- swings back and forth as honest as Old Abe, I'll take along this little ‘hallway and we can! ioe pass behind all of the faces. There! | Didn't I tell you? The numbers are all two feet jong and the space be-| tween each minute mark is fourteen inches. Look on your clocks at home = and you will see that the spaces are smaller than TWINS 1 emulate ake Tock, the) College terms are opening, and TO i n all the other clocks | With them the usual flood of com- ji BEC! era ss," | ment and advie ia Ane, orld Pue together, I guess") “The commonest delusion of the phagiwe sted ver| commentators is that the actua SIMS a has Inthe clo tower | knowledge gained in college ix a Or ee aneteing (were: Big Ben relatively minor part of its benefit. " 4 the clock there ne goes for the “life” or And was the name of the clock there. _| training.” but the “book knowledge” ~ member.” said’ Tick Tock. “Let _me| is, Soon forgotten, and is not very 1 You can’t tell w in a boy by| see—his face is twenty-four feet reitenien jor, he practical purposes looking xt him, Philadelphia doctor! across and his minute hand fourteen) °'phis’ may have had its justifica- got an iron boit out of one. | feet long. It sticks out a litle over Fae tion, once, when men went to a col- of Greek, Latin, and mathema- tics and then graduated into a world of farms, groceries and_ politics. Not that there was an.®sense, even | then, in forgetting Greek, Latin and mathematics, provided they had been really learned. The man who “forgets his Latin” is the man who never really knew Latin, And if Latin was worth learning, it was worth remembering. The classics that may have been a task in gollege are a joy in ma- ture life, after experience has given ;them meaning. But, when ed tion was remote from life a certain tendency to regard it as an episode in life could be understood. Not so, now. Education now is either that swings a weight on dears, Big Ben; ike this one. ou! the top of a directly | vocational, to learn things that are * ‘ome, and I will show you) going to be used, or it is a part of that general background of knowl- The Twins followed the clock fairy: edge without which the particular You see, Lestie, I don’t like myself | news from Albuquerque, N.| into another sort of room, and there’ things of practical life lack meaning very well, and T can't unders M., is that a movie star has won) hung Big Ben and all his brothers,| and relationship. why any woman should like me very] the right to remarr, from wooden beams bound with iron.; The vocational part needs no argu- weil . strange it may seem, | —— Great chains held the bells in place.’ ment. The engineer must remember many women have liked me much. ||, Be careful about w you pre-| | “Do they ring like dinner bells?) the technical foundations of his There, you sce, I am getting ego-; tend to be. In Columbus, 0., «| asked Nancy. “Does someone shake trade, the lawyer should remember tistical neain. At least Lam not ack- | SWord-eater accidentally swallowed al them? | some law, and the commercial grad- ing you whether you like me or not. | knife. “No, indeed!” said Tick Tock.’ uate has been taught facts that he Tam only arrogating to myself the) ee R “These betls never budge. Great) will use in business, right to love you as long as I skall| New vest-pocket battery will run} hammers strike them. Big Ben| But it is equally true of the “cul- live. a car 10 days. But what we need] strikes only the hours—the other tural” work.. Why study history E SARTORIS.| is 2 pocketbook that will run one bells strike the quarter and the half| unless, 40 years after graduation, MELVILL! NEA (Copyright, 19 Service, In: New York--One of Manhattan's geniuses is the fellow who runs the out-of-town newspaper stand at Times Square. He has a rare memory. Hel has two stands which carry several hundred newspapers. He knows just where cach one of them is and he knows when the copies of one are sold out without looking. Also he remembers faces for months. Last night Tom Sims, the para- grapher, walked up. to the stand./ Before Tot ad said a word the news vendor asked, “How's every- body down in Tennessee?” And he hadn't seen Tom for more than aj y There are severai of these out-of-| town paper stands in various places and the police keep an eye on them] to apprehend fugitives who buy pa- pers to learn the fate of their part-| ners in crime. ' You have heard of traffie cops on land and in the air and on the wa- ter in harbors, in Brooklyn ha ulate skiff: On Sunday afternoons as many as five hundred rowboats e rented in an hour and egress ingress to the lake is through a foot passage. Frequently it requires as much as half an hour to get through this pa A mosauito ance, “The marred the. per Enchanted April,” the other evening. One of the bits of business is a boiler explosion off- age. The cue for the explosion is given by a property man in the wings es his hand as_a signal. Five minutes before the explosion was due a mosquito buzzed in the property man’s ear, He raised his hand to swat it and the explosion followed. Elizabeth Risdon, who was not sup- posed to be on the stage at the time of the explosion, had to make up an exit line and depart, and five min- utes of the play was neatly clided. orm- Beaus of the upper west side of Manhattan are having a hard time keeping up appearances. Barbers, shoe-shiners and hat-cleaners of that section are on strike. Bootblacks who now receive $18 a week and, their tips are demanding a minimum of $22 a week and the fancy shiners who can play a tune with their pol- ishing rags demand $26. The bar- bers’ complaint is that while women have brought increased business to barber shops with their bobbed heads, they have not meant much They A pay their bills Qby the way, did y 000,000 is Spent in this country cach anity ? in price Eddie Foy’s olde has pulled an old ch storage. It about who took his son for a “Are those your new father asked. “Yes, take longer steps, then JAME is and fath walk out ‘ou know that n barber shops year?) What boy, Charlie, estnut out of & Scotchman Sunday stroll. shoes?" the “Well, SW. DEAN. ! forever, hen motion If we School’ tion has ended. tion has begun. his shoes, we soon would have enough of #hem to make us rich, hours. make Big Ben started. The kids’ vaca- And mother's vaca- in his voice. nearest approach to perpetual is a schoolboy wearing out profited by all our mistakes | EVERETT TRUE aliv BY CONDO Tick Tock. AHA, EVERETT, YOUR VACATION MUST BE DveR !— 1 SCE YOU'RE Back Acain$ going. to the barber in the way of tips. Yes SY properly. But. onds. hour,” Paris, Sept. — AND : ts clared, NBURNESD Lot! marked this winter.” keeping to the dres: dresses, which what they did J Precious stones Nearly one- Ce ee ee The hammer and cracked him. him around and kept on using him It didn't make any difference at all, Only they had to get] a lighter hammer. mer weighed seven hundred pounds. The new hammer weighs only four eight tons, three and one-half tons, two and one-half tons and two tons. Just babies, you might say.” The Twins laughed. “My goodness| e!” said Nancy. the biggest clock in the world!” t is the biggest of its kind. | “But there is a clock. in Germany with a bigger face, or dial.! But it has only one hand—the hour hand—and it is not so hard to keep “It takes two men five hours to] wind this fellow and he twice or three times a week. “In winter so much snow and ice get around the hands, that it is quite difficult to keep everything going, Only two or three days a year does! Big Ben lose as much as three sec- You children do not know how wot iderful that is.” said Tick Tock. \ (To Be .Continued) NO CHANGE IN WOMEN’S WEAR who have been -waiting for the in- formation, a leading authority in the! French dress-making world has de- “we need not change in women's shape The women of -Paris will persist in line so becoming to the figure. But as some change must be made, the -makers have hit upon the ex- pedient of trimming the backs of of designs will ke embroidered on the backs of gowns. Strange ag it may seem, re coming back into fashion again. Not in the quaint great grandmothers wore them, but made of thread or silk, or both, and as delicate as hair. in charming tints and have touches of gold thread, born population of New York state came from Russia and Italy. London passenger dirigibles charge Passengers according to their weight.| make her looks go over with a bang. that used to; ring was too heavy So they turne you are going to remember the his- tory you: know now, plus # lot more that you have learned meantime? ! Why study French, unle: life you are going to read French? Why study economics, unless ec nomic science is to be your continu ous interpreter of the happenings around you? And so on, through the The first ham-, nis ge ee ___| hundred pounds.” list. The girls are wearing evening! “Are ‘the bells heavy?” asked Nick.| You go to college primarily for dresses which | show the sunburn! «Well, Big Ben, the biggest of all, knowledge, and that means learning where their bathing suits stopped. | weighs ‘thirteen tons,” said Tick, things to carry with you, not merely Tock. “His little brothers weigh| through the examinations, but through life. ¢—_.__ | A THOUG aaa HT ! re | He hath not dealt with us after our sins; nor rewarded us to our iniquities.—P: “This must be said Few love to hear - the sins love to act.—Shakespeare. WANT NEW FUN PLANS Paris—Competition between hotels of the Riveria towns is so keen that they are offering rewards to any ‘one who will invent a new kind of fun for tourists. Fetes, carnivals and battles of flowers need to be strengthened by some new pastime. The more expensive and bizarre the new fun the better, it is said, and is wound his time is perfect.) ill GO-ING, GO-ING, GO- he bet ! ING eat a Wen, GOING: GO-| the competition is open to all nation- “My oh! We've been here an| #lities. | Flapper Fanny Says | 21.—(#)—For those expect any straight and slender is, quite opposite to st season, All sorts mittens form that our They are made pearls and small ‘woven into them. alf of the foreign- A girl doesn’t need gunpowder to Ageaenta cated te mesentery a way as to be of material benefit ° | iness. ("Phe earliest recognition of a health} — Your body will stand a deal of neg- liability will enable gou to take the| lect and bad treatment when you | Proper steps to arrest or cure the] are young but as you grow older. , physical liabilities which your health} you will certainly pay the price of !inventory may disclose. neglect. | .You know that many diseases be-} CAN'T REPLACE : | gin slowly or insidiously and may| PARTS OF YOUR BODY | ‘hot produce any disabling symptoms! Remember that you differ from | until the condition is ; advanced. By means of a thorough| damaged or a cracked cylinder may | physical examination at regular in-| be replaced, leaky valves may be | tervals such diseases may be recog-| ground, spare parts may be pur- | nized and their progress checked or| chased, but you cannot buy a new | cured by proper hygienic, dietetic, stomach, a new liver, or a new set | medical or surgical treatment. | of Jungs, a | Tuberculosis, cancer, Bright's dis-| Apply business methods to the made by a thoroughly * om Ms

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