The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 8, 1933, Page 4

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\ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1988 The Bismarck Tribune over the stricken man’s duties in con: nection with the case and the sur- gery was successful. The boy lived. But when the job was completed Our Severest Critic _ An Independent Newspaper é i and the two surgeons turned to their THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib-|{riend, he was dead. Immediate at- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and/tention at the time he was stricken entered at the postoffice at Bismarck| might have saved him. Did they do 8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- ai Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ...... seeeee Daily by mail outside of North Dakota see neeeeessscees seeee 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three YEATS ..cccersssseresecersrenes 2.50 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ......... seed ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year 2. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Prayer Against Repeal Mrs. Barbara H. Wylie, correspond- ing secretary of the North Dakota W. ©. T. U., calls attention to the fact that, at the recent W. C. T. U. convention at Milwaukee, a resolu- tion was adopted calling on allmem- bers of the organization and all churches to observe Sunday, July 9, as a day of prayer and fasting for the defeat of prohibition repeal. The proposal has more than ordi- nary interest for North Dakota, for it was Mrs. Elizabeth Preston An- derson, ® native of this state, who Proposed the resolution. The assump- tion is that the observance will be more pronounced here than in some other sections. The idea of prayer and fasting is @ good one. Because its power can- not be measured by scientific instru- ments is no reason to discount the effectiveness of this lifting of the mind and heart to the Almighty. If it does nothing else, an honest prayer revivifies the soul and gives it new courage. Theologians have held many and involved arguments over details of prayer, but there is plenty of ground for the popular belief that we should pray only for what is good for us. Judged on this basis, the storm of supplication proposed by the W. C. T. U. resolution may be ineffective. A prayer for defeat of prohibition Tepeal means a prayer in support of all the manifest evils which prohibi- tion has brought us. No one should pray for that. The good ladies of the W. C. T. U. who will heed this plea doubtless will feel that they are asking for the lesser of two evils, but the fact re- mains they need not do so. It would be better, instead, to pray that this nation will be given the .Wit and the heart to settle the ques- tion of liquor abuses intelligently, honestly and faixly; that temper- ance will rule the land, and that strong drink will be recognized for what it is, a good thing to be left alone or, at best, to be used only sparingly. It would do this country a lot of good if both wets and drys were to Join in a prayer for the dissipation of prejudice on this troublesome sub- ject. Questions of Ethics It is refreshing, once in a while, to turn from economic and similar af- fairs to purely ethical problems. Here are two which might be food for thought. The first is raised by the Polio magazine, published at Warm Springs, Georgia, where President Roosevelt recovered from poliomy- Jetis or infantile paralysis. It con- cerns the right of a man to make money on an invention designed to 50 | carriers and that this rivalry has not the right thing? Those Rate Reductions Sharp reduction by the railroads of intra-state freight rates in Minne- sota raises a well-justified question in the minds of North Dakota ship- pers. If rates can be reduced in our sister state, why not here? ‘The answer, and probably a justi- fiable one, will be that the Minne- sota rates were designed to meet the competition of truck and contract reached such large proportions in North Dakota. Some items are being trucked into Bismarck now from the Twin Cities. We have fruit delivered here by mo- tor and some other items now com- monly are transported by this method. But the volume is not large and the practice is not general enough to dis- tress the railroads. As a result, we Shall have to get along with the rates we have unless a way can be found to reduce them. The average North Dakota shipper wants no more than a fair deal. He seeks the best arrangement he can make without prejudice to either trucks or the railroads. He has rea- son, however, to look at the new Minnesota rate with wonder. He cannot help but speculate as to whether he will not be paying some of the costs of transportation in that state while the railroads meet com- petition. For the leading carriers in Minnesota also are the leading rail- roads here. Russian Trade Awaits Senator George W. Norris of Ne- braska issued a little statement on trade with Russia the other day which is worth close attention. “I have learned on reliable author- ity,” says the senator, “that the Rus- sian government desires to buy in the American market $10,000,000 of meat Products, 1,000,000 bales of cotton and $400,000,000 worth of machinery. She can make payment partly in kind and partly in money, but must have sev- eral years in which to complete the PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. GROW YOUR OWN ARCH PROPS A great deal of foot misery may be prevented or cured by the simplest means. Going barefoot at every op- portunity is one means. Wearing the proper shoes rather than the shoes the salesman urges on you is another. Walking always so that your foot-’ prints follow parallel lines instead of everting or turning out the toes when you walk, is another. Doing some exercises with the feet bare or in stocking feet is another way to enjoy foot comfort. Children in their early ‘teens or younger are quite likely to have pro- nated feet (weak ankles), especially when their physical education is neg- iected or left to chance. This is func- tional, potential or static flatfoot and if not wisely treated may eventually develop into rigid flatfoot which is a permanent deformity amenable only to surgical reconstruction of the foot. This common weakness in the child’s feet is largely ® matter of faulty nut- rition, poor general health, bad gen- eral hygiene. It is a serious mistake to subject a child or an older person with static or functional flatfoot or “falling arches” to any kind of prop, support or mechanical appliance on the feet, without medical supervision. If the family physician is not pre- pared to deal with this common foot disability and the general health im- pairment which underlies it, he will at least refer the patient to an ortho- Pedic surgeon—that ts a physician who devotes attention exclusively to deformities and diseases of the bones and joints and form and posture. Do not be tridxed by self-commended “foot specialists” who prey on gul- lible customers of second rate shoe stores. Besides the habit of walking with feet parallel or even toeing in a bit, which every one should cultivate, the Person with weak or painful feet should wear only shoes that favor this natural walk, that is, shoes having straight inside sole lines, reasonably wide soles or toes, and the lower the transaction. “She proposes to ship us products of which we import a large proportion of what we use. She proposes to ship these products and apply the proceeds upon her debt.” To a country which for years has been looking frantically for custom- ers, this sounds like important news. if Senator Norris’ information is cor- rect, somebody down at Washington ought to see to it that this deal is consummated. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, ‘They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, Toll the Bell for the “Old West” fee (Williams County Farmers Press) The old cowboy whose bandy legs now straddle nothing wilder than a rocking chair, who lives only inmem- ory of those glorious days of fence- less prairie, bucking, kicking bron- chos, and the great herds of bawling cattle when the buccaroos were hard- riding, hard-living men and the six- shooter and the posse’s noose was the law of the land, will be pained as severely as the calves he used to brand, when he reads about this, ‘The branding pen fire and the red hot iron that seared through hair and hide will soon be only a memory. Science has discovered a cold fire, a chemical, which painlessly leaves a neat, white brand where the cold iron, dipped in the mixture, has been pressed against the critter. In a few days the chemical painlessly eats away hair and turns red flesh to white, quickly, neatly and efficiently. The passing of the hot iron sym- out each evening and each morning will bring astonishing improvement and relief in many cases of painful feet. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS So Garlic Has Virtues? I wish to eat garlic for the health benefits. But even if I take it only just before going to bed, the odor and taste is present in my mouth late the next day. Can you tell me of a formula for some mouth wash or gar- gle to prevent the odor. If you don't help me some of my friends will help me OUT. (H. W.) Answer—I know of no such formula. Isn't it just a joke, about the “health benefits”? = Selly Kindly tell me what bland fruit juices are, and how to make ‘jellies from bland fruit juices. (Mrs. D. B.) Answer—I dunno. I should say the most palatable of all fruit jellies is made from a fruit that is not so bland —currants. But who cares whether the jelly is made from bland fruit juice, if the jelly is good to eat? Centipedes: Please tell me how to get rid of cen- tipedes... (Mrs. C. A.) Answer—Write your congressman or the department of agriculture, Wash- ington, D. C., for free Bulletin No. 827 on The House Centipede. Other free bulletins are “House Ants” for 740. The Silverfish or “Slicker,” No. 982. The Bedbug, No. 754. Methods of Destroying Lice, No. 293. Mosqui- toes, No. 444. The House Fly, No. 1. The federal department of agricul- ture also has a free bulletin about an improved fumigant for moths, but I haven't the number or name of this one. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) WHO heels the better. For children under 16 the shoes should have no heels at all. bolizes the passing of the last vestige of a day when the business of living was to sweat, and burn, and freeze save human life. It seems that one Drinker, a scien- tist at Harvard, had suggested to him the need for a better artificial breathing machine. He went to work on the matter and the result was the Drinker respirator, which causes a man to breathe even when the spark of life apparently is dead. The chest is compressed by ‘the in- troduction of air pressure into the apparatus in which the patient has been placed. It is expanded by elim- ination of the pressure and substitu- tion of a vacuum. As the chest ex- pands the patient, whose head is out- side the machine, draws air into his Jungs. along with the animals he raised. The iron was no slander against the cowpuncher’s gentleness. It signified the grimness, the reality and the roughness of his time. By the same ken, the care of his horse before tending to his own needs was the wisdom of necessity since a horse Following are some exercises which are beneficial for any one with weak, Pronated or early flatfoot: 1. Sit with bare or stockinged feet on floor parallel and six inches apart. Raise the inner border of the feet srom 10 to 20 times without rolling the knees outward. HORIZONTAL then often could mean life or death. They still ride horses, but the rider slips into a saddle from the top of a chute, out-of the way of those murderous front feet. They still ride the range, but it’s a short distance to a fence and from comparatively comfortable bunkhouses the nasal whine of @ drug-store cowboy tenor oozes out of a radio. They used to amputate a broken leg or arm, but in this effeminate age they merely patch them up as good as new. And the lusty voice of those baby cannons that used to give a life or death sen- 2. Stand on the edge of stair or a thick plank with toes protruding over the edge, in pigeon-toed position. Flex or turn toes under, with a hard pull on the muscles of the sole at the ex- treme point of flexion. Repeat this 10 to 20 times. 3. Sitting with one foot crossed and resting on other knee, turn the foot upward and downward 10 to 20 times. Repeat with other foot. 4. Stand with feet parallel six inch- es apart and roll the feet over on their outer border from 10 to 20 times. RI PI : lL OROP] le) IN NEW | By PAUL HARRISON New York, July 8—Broadway never knew much about the dancing As- taires, Fred and Adele. A couple of nice kids from somewhere in the mid- dle west who made good in the big city. Kind of high-hat, though, as for instance when the girl married Lord Charles Cavendish, no less, the second son of the Duke of Devon- shire. And Fred; a good guy, said Broad- wey, but with a strange un-Broad- wayish modesty and a peculiar aver- sion to the marriage-and-divorce rou- tine followed by most of his profes- sional associates. Never has mar- ried, ‘in fact, until now, at 34, he’s believed about to take the bridal path with pretty Mrs. Phyllis Baker Potter, who is a divorcee herself. Well, his name isn’t Astaire at all, but Fred Austerlitz; and he and Adele were born in Omaha, Neb., and their father was Fred Austerlitz, Sr. a brewer. The family had enough money, so the youngsters were sent to a dancing school. By the time they were 9 and 8 respectively (Adele is a year older than Fred) the Omaha papers were saying they surely were destined for a stage career. Mrs. Austerlitz believed this and packed them off to New York to go through their paces for the famous Ned Way- burn. Wayburn believed it too. *e * PARTED BY MATRIMONY Fred and Adele danced in vaude- ville until the Gerry Society objected; then they dropped out and studied for a few years.. When they returned to New York they were on the same bill with a man named Douglas Fair- banks. He was a hit, but tlie kids were fired. They kept plugging though, and scored a real triumph IS HE? ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 8 Small shield. Neither. VR] IST INE! A CIE MBE LAI MWIAT TL) AISIE| ANKILIEIS wit} TRF AIT ITI! AINAINATS | IN in a revue called “Over the Top.” Af- ter that is was easy sailing. When Adele married, Fred went it alone with other partners. He figures he'll be able to retire ‘after another season; wants to raise horses. Meanwhile Mrs. Austerlitg has been staying around New York ooking out for her boy. Right now, though, she’s on a flying trip to see Adele, having heard that there’s go- td to be a new heir to the Cavendish le, eS HR. A TOUCHING STORY One of the well-known revue pro- ducers, who is planning a new show, admitted a wild-eyed “Dr.” So-and- So to his office the other day and tilted an ear to receive the visitor's “big idea.” “I'm @ psychologist,” said the man, “and I have admired the way you appeal to three of the hu- man senses. You put on eye and ear entertainment, and you have even filled your theater with seductive per- fume. But, sir, you do not appeal to the tactile sense—” “The what?” “The sense of touch,” explained the nut. “Now I beileve your audiences could be put completely in tune with the most poignant moments of a pro- duction. For instance, during a love scene, I propose that attractive ush- “Swelll” said the producer, rising with purposeful mien. “And now I'll show you what the ushers would do, according to your scheme, while the comedian in one of the skits is getting to measure each others’ worth, why shouldn't the students fall in love?— Prof. E. A. Ross, University of Wis- consin sociologist. F cotaaica i mind It 1s utterly qotesque in my that anyone should preach the equal- lominan’ fo minant—Dr. Robert Clothier, presi- dent of Rutgers University. | Barbs | * “Midget Sits on J. P. Morgan's Lap’—Headline. Nothing unusual; numerous politicians have been sitting on Mr. Morgan's lap for a long time, and doubtless they now feel just about as small as the midget. ee & A. T. & T. statisticlans report there are 35,057,669 telephones in the world. Bet it’s the wrong number! se # Moths, says a scientist, are among the least aggressive of all insects, Af- ter getting out our last summer's bathing suit and looking it over we are convinced that they are willing to take a back seat. | fans in the Philadelphia National League park wouldn't be tempted to do likewise. e+e * Dr. Hans Luther, German ambas- tossed out on his ear.” Every person who consents to mak- ing terms with the Japanese is my in- veterate and eternal enemy—Feng Yu- hsiang, China’s “Christian general.” *% % I've been so busy living that I haven't had time to formulate a phil- osophy of life—Samuel Untermeyer, noted lawyer, on his 75th birthday. \ ** * Dictatorships are inevitable —Pre- mier Mussolini of Italy. oe All nations are marching to the battlefiekt with the dove of peace embroidered on their banners.—Lloyd oes former British prime minis- r. ee The university is a mating mill. It should be. With its beautiful cam- California’s mame comes from a Spanish word meaning “hot furnace.” Tribune Want Ad Bring Results fae ore fri Felations’ be- for more - tween the United States and Ger- many. Another case of Hans across the sea? (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) The jimson weed gets its name from 2 corruption of “Jamestown”; the hungry Virginia colonists once dined on @ mess of jimson weed greens and were lucky to escape with their lives since the plant is poisonous. General Lafayette formally obtain- ed title to a township of land con- taining 23,028.50 acres, near Talla- hassee, Fla., on July 4, 1835, as the result of a special act of congress. There are over 1500 foreign lan- guage newspapers in the United States. It costs the U. 8. government an average of $80.55 per capita in de- porting aliens, Carelessness is the cause of 1,387 of London’s annual fires. People who get into hot water, YORK | bus, magnificent views, adjacent lakes} A crocheted basket can be stiffened ‘and the opportunities students have! with diluted gum arabic. i Travers Lorrimer, son of the wealthy Margaret Lorrimer, broods constantly for Delight Harford, whom he claims to have married in England during the war. No trace can be found of the girl, and when Travers mis- takes Mary Lou Thurston, pretty, yor orphan, for Delight, Mrs. Lorrimer induces Mary Lou to play the part. Travers is told he must win “Delight” all over again. In the months that follow, Travers is more attracted to ‘Delight” than ever. Mary Lou Joves Travers and feels she can- are often caught red-handed. 4y FAITH BALDWIN _ Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Ine. AKE-BELIEVE” Copyright, . 1930, by Faith Baldwin between herself and her fate. She! was loved him so very much. It was as if, in a sense, she had created him, bringing him back from the darkness in which he had/f stumbled. He was not only her lover, therefore, but her creation, as if he had been her child. There was more in her love for him than the beautiful shallows of physical attraction, now warm and sunny, sparklin; and stimulating, now moving slowly, darkening, over the hidden rocks. tenderness and high hopes and that had really mattered. “I don’t want to force you,” he said slowly, “and you've already, mate me uw! all that happy. 1’ ite= beyond Hee ‘Take all the -and when you iting. IT were promising " aaa abruptly, “for a very long ie. He leaned near and put hir arn dont eke ead pitifully, ideals and a co! eshi «j poe sree ae paaaess ate. Just] grown all these weeks’ in which Pay GE seo Lael Cer Mitchell Mar Cbene, ed, Larry|they had been together; weeks in| 3041 will let ae a Feporter friend, locates the, real| Wich they had come to know one|*"iis the said nothing, There was Delight acting ‘i pias Mar another, not starting, as most peo-| nothing she could = ‘She war Low is stunned by the news, Maz, Pie do, trom a basis of absolute ig-| "ott itil in his eubreee. Lorrimer comfort +4 Fy ban aad Peccaapee oe 6 of the id but ze Surren plans to investis She attends | ‘Tom @ which was com ! ee of their supposed pre-knowl of each other...a b: |, as it were, of old loyalties and inti- macies, “So hard?” he asked again, as she did not speak. Well, it would soon be over. Margaret would have decided to- the revue while Jenny Wynne, Larry's fiancee, gives a party to keep Travers from getting suspic- ious. Mary Lou sees her castle of dreams crumbling about her. CHAPTER XL, HE avoided Lorrimer as much “Just—tonight,” he urged... pine Jenny and —and 2 lozen other youngsters, ha) love, hol Fecteau other cbse ite lids, kissed the curve er cheek, where it melted into the smooth, red satin of 8 i her li kissed, finally, witb as possible. But shortly be- mish: Wintavee ae teteaed BY tenderness, with passion, the quiv. fore supper he danced her| Tou must go, must lose this Eden. | €Fing little mou! right, ou of te big mon and into e indoor flower garden, which| off, evading...She couldn't. She was Mrs, Wynne’s special” hobby. looked Hy her, a little wildly, ‘This was a sort of modernized| The flowers sprang from their pots conservatory and perfectly charm-|and jars of colored stone, the ae ae 5 es infin anon hyacinths she had come to hate, = | a pee leon ng Pee al hla’ j the tulips, the narcissuses. Plants which in daylight caught all the| Soice cf (he roo ceeerance, | The indirec: uddenly she twisted in his arms -and, her hands on his shoulders, gave his kiss, abandoning herself to it, surrendering. .. yielding. The: with a little sob, she freed herself almost brusquely and rose to her eet ane iaeieed back into the great lis room, Lorrimer followed her, She couldn’t go on, putting him ‘The device was successful and is piace We one sper uare deeper ih dust credited with saving many lives, De-| than the calico dog. mand for it became heavy. Perhaps those were better days! Then 2 rival sclentist thought of| Dishonesty Was practically unknown, and the’ latch-string hung out for some improvements and designed a! every chance traveler. To thirst and machine of his own, putting it on|to hunger was an every-day experi- the market at a much lower price,|@nce but the hardy bodies of those Some said it was a much better ap- Paratus, too. Now the pair are engaged in a law- suit over patent rights and the price of the machines is being kept at a prohibitive figure, although they cost Attle to make, The question asked is this: “Is it justifiable for a man, whose invention will save human life, to put so large a price upon it that it is not readily available to all?” In another case, three doctors and two nurses were performing a deli- cate operation upon a boy in a New ‘York hospital. At a critical stage in the operation one of the physicians clutched his breast, moaned “my heart,” and sank to the floor. The other doctors continued the operation. One of the nurses took centaurs of the plains bore those privations lightly on their sturdy shoulders, Life was more simple, laughter was deeper, and the constant grinding of nature against man brought out the full lustre of char- acter, Perhaps those pioneers who now ride slowly down that long trail from which there is no turning, are justified in mourning the passing of the days of the spur and saddle. When the last branding pen fire burns out, and the last hot iron sears into the winching flanks of a bawl- ing calf, the old cowboy offers his final sacrifice, wafting upward a nos- talgic remembrance of the old west. A live lobster is green; due to a chemical change in boiling, the color changes to red. A platinum wire has been made with @ diameter of only one-thirty- thousandth of an inch. 5. Walk about first on your toes, then on the heels with toes held up eff the floor. ‘These exercises faithfully carried WHERE IS THE SHRINE OF ST-ANNE DE BEAUPRE ? Sey _f By WHAT NAME 1§ WHAT SIGN OF THIS ACQUISTIONOF ©THE ZODIAC. THE US KNOWN? 1S THIS ? ively. roice of the i feted ale aie [mae tet Boek sul soft, gelden, fattening ’ a] Half Truths ] ¢ floor was of broken fl: mons ene On ae ot Te age She turned sudden. Better a fountain tinkled into a stone basin. alt truth” perhaps, seg Flowers were everywhere, in boxes|trow the treuw’ ey coon ned and pots. Between the great win- Ener the aes and qrerything aoe F ne woul seem lies when he pide wy painted ist payee back. Better for her, however, grew upon it, rooted in great stone Pots. It was all green glamour, color, perfume and light, with the silver voice of the fountain speak- ing through it all. There were swinging couches in cool green chintzes, ash trays, curious modern ones, jp metal tables. There was in one corner a ve od. metal bookcase for the “4 inclusion of which Mrs. Wynne had been teased by her friends. “Well,”|¥ baad See, Names, ae a eu in...wi a ot then * 'y not a book- ttle Eden, Lorrim danced Mary Lou and a her oes withont corsair. ” he ou need a rest, informed her, “and dancing with you is not 80 good—two turns around, or a turn and a half, and some idiot cuts in! “Idiot?” she ‘asked. Risky, light give and take. But her swer was almost mechanical, | For the Asking | He sat in the corner of couch, leaning forward, | the Kent mit upon his eager, ardent face, his strong hands 4 hi fe os nt , clasped between | tan: fo. course not. Vi goung man. But, after au Y oka ave to lock 8 In that glass case, dearest,” said Lorimer, smiling. She said nothing. Her heart was greatly moved and greatly trou- “Can't you,” he asked her, heart singing. As he we in the curved doorway, he touch *l Delight?” he asked. . .and | “Pleaser Seaid Mi a ease, curious, esol little voice. cain ee] you, when the Fume “But why—why?” he asked, halting her there in the doorway. “Music,” said Mary Lou, “and BE hy Merl had at aw te e of the Wynne bo; up to claim her. i stapyed . that big brute “No fair letting t ie announced, hear, pesrrelise you ferent | for all th to "she danced“ -.. that she care “I do care for Lorry,” she said clearly, ey you have been In this ie, dragged until almost midnight, ‘as is way of first nights, out of Sad i the Tt had opened three times? Eo fore the New tock opening? pe after tonight." The audience tae as usual inguished — = guished, ‘that ig by the ee ittendance of critics and the late arrival of society People, and the early arrival of Various stage di; nitaries. There were enough jewels and. bare shoulders in the house to e the horseshoe circle at the been pres Hi in all at years. Someone she she cared Ae. "Siang fiat te ed never specu! i gently, “‘can’s you make up y. bility ates she had. pons mind? You—don’t dislike me, I’m|him, ough, God knows, it had sure of it, somehow. Some-|agonized him sufficiently before times, I think you care a little.|her retdrn. His heart ‘ached a Surely you must. For all my car- little, thinking. But how natural ing there must be some return.|—in those years, young and You loved me once. Is it so hard| lovely, many men must Kove found to love me again her beloved, indistinct she hed to tell him Ro difference. He him that very our She made a little, Whatever murmur, put one Pre, be tntbopes slender hand Teed aa erposed it, blindly, loved

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