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SIXDISTRICT BLLS | Two Defeated and Two Oth-! ers Deferred at Session Yesterday. Six District bills were passed by the House yesterday. two were defeated and two w aken up for consideration owing ous objection that would v debate. passed were have meant The the fol- lowing asures the District Commission- settle by compromise suits e Pennsylvania Railroad re- om subsidence of First street, the railroad tunnel under This measure has already itting east. due that street he bonding busin 9 as to cure abuses t vet been considered in the the Distr bill has r Senate. A b with refe code artict- obli- as- been amending the District to Hability f ches of fidu cd bv the bankers No action has yet the Sen: Detention of Fugitives. g for detention of fugitives pprehended here. This tion was recommended the Gibson subcommittee irged this vear by the Police No action has yvet been the Sena ding the act University last and was incorporat- s to_grant ed to George and Howard ities. This measure was pre- passed by the Senate for the District health nfl'm to a permit to open the £, Richards in Congres- | Cemetery so as to allow her late to be buried in the same grave measure imposing penalties for of false or fictitious informa- iing the commission of es was defeated by a vote of 118 to 5 after an attempt had been made to amend it by inserting the qualifica- tion “konwingly, willfully and with in- tent to injure another. to give the corporation coun- assistants the right to ad- minister oaths and take affirmations was defeated on the contention that it would defeat tice. Representatives Gilbert, Demo crat. of Kentuckv and Stobbs. Repub- Tican, of Massachusetts argued against this measure. The motion bv Repre- American siste sentative Blanton to strike out the en- | acting clause was carried. Pay Bill Deferred. Owing to opposition of Chairman Madden of the Hous: appropriations committee and other leaders the bill to | Increase the pav of police and firemen was not called up. although it has been awniting action on the calendar. By agreement also the Police Wom- en’s Bureau bill was not acted upon. Blanton extolled Mrs. Mina Van in charge of the Police Wom- an's Buresu. and told the House that fsrmer Commissioner Rudolph has tes- fied that she had spent $60.000 of her mey in establishing this bureau Renresentative Underhill called atten- tion that there were many “injustices” in the bill as first introduced and served notice that he will endeavor to amend the measure. At the suggestion ;' F:l'x.kv Leader Tilson action was de- erre TRAIN WRECKER JAILED. Youth Gets me 10 Yflnrfl to Life in Reformatory. ERIE, Kans.. March 27 () —Admit- ting he caused the wreck of a Mis- #ouri, Kansas & Texas passenger train near Parsons on the night of Pebru- ary 24, Vincent Williamson, 18, yester- | Gay was ser years to Inaw *ho enced to serve from 10 life in the State Reformatory. tten confession. Williamson, escaped from a home for the -mindeé in Oregon. said his mo- tive was o rob and kill. One train- man was killed in the wreck Williamson already was under sen- tence for an attempted train wreck near Lenape Kans. _SPECIAL_NOTICES g yeca " ROSE Lawns FARTHE GOOD KEWS JFss SARYTY | Temple CITY BOKTON 0 i~ "R H N GOOD-N IGHT SLEEP TIGHT Uniese the matisess ia R_IGHT KOON‘" - Smi!h s Tra;fif:r/& Slymragc 3 You St (‘/).4 Kortp Mse Plumbing Heating FEDERAL "HEATING CORP. BYRON & ADAMS PRINTING IN A HUPVY Birt crane 'vX/t ;mp llvml lcah u/!)N! l Al) This M:Hiun Dollar Printing Flant The National Capital Press the fundamentals of jus- | | and Odessa, and in every other si | Brown sociation will meet, | an SPECTER OF MILITARISM TRAILS 'OBSERVER THROUGHOUT RUSSIA SSED BY HOUSE p.caracion Note —Th: b N Dreise thor of A which " he sa him' the cood i the ninth of ten articles 1y and an can iv. Dt features of Wle in Russia. He veturned | recently r 11w of ohservation that The Star Bresents (i ieton that there i : i the Rusain m' the BY THEODORE DREISE) In connection with the national as- sumption that Russia, as the head and front of the Communist movement, is called upon to sovietize the wor'd, is all that country's serious and gloomy mili tary preparation, which really to a large extent darkens the Russian scene. For since it 1s assured that capitalism and individualism are twin evils whicn must be crusned, and that Russia's is the duty 10 do the crushing. it follows that capitalism «in the minds of the Russians, at least) will prepare to d fend itself and, worse vet, very likely attack Russia with a view to defeating an enemy whose intention is to attack 1 And so—as in Germany before the war —all over Russia there is a constant nervous military vreparation which keeps one thinking all the time of | war and what will follow ir case such a | war breaks. And in consequence, spies and watchfulness on the part of Russia as well as. very likely, on the pari of her feared and hated enomies Surprising Militarism. Indeed. it 1s positively astounding to see the amount of rea! miliiary propa- ration. The general statement refterated |by all Russian officials and Communists is that there 1s only a defense army of some 520,000 men, with such equipment nd no more, as is necessary to protect he country. But if Russia has only an army of 0,000 it is the most effectively dis- tributed and active army I have ever seen. For in every city and tewn of any size. all over the great empire, but more especialiy where its borders reach | the seas or march with those of another nation, soldwers. soldiers, soldiers—in Leningrad. Archangel. Perm. Omsk, | Tomsk, Irkutsk aud all along the Chinese and Pelish frontier. at Baku end Tiflis. between the Black and the Caspian Seas, all along the northern shores of the Black Sea, particularly in Poti. Adier. Suchum. Sorchey, No- vorosisk, Feodosia, Yalia, Sfla‘(ng(;l e city and town. And well clothed and well armed. with barracks, machine guns, cannon gas masks, bombs, army trucks and trains, military airplanes and what not else. But worst of all, with all the additional propaganda and accessory prcplra'loxl vlhlch goes \\llh kr!])ll\z a “CURLY” BROWN FREE IN MANN ACT CASE! Indictment Retnmed Here Is Dis- missed—Defendant Charged Blackmail Plot. By the Associated Press | SAN FRANCISCO, March 2 An indictment charging H. D. “Curly” with violation of the Mann act was | dismissed yesterday, George Hatfield, United States attorney here, announced | after receipt of a telegram from Wash- ington. The indictment was returned | {in Washington at the time Brown was living on his ranch, in Shasta County. The complaint was originally made by a former Salt Lake resident. now Mrs. Willlam Welby McCune of Wash- ngton. She charged that when she was Miss Constance Clayton and 16 years of age Brown took her and three other girls from Los Angeles to Cuba, thence to Washington, D. C.. and later to their homes in Salt Lake City. { Decision to quash the indiciment was reached by Federal authorities aiter produced evidence tending - to support his charge of a “most gigantic [ | blackmailing scheme, which the com- ‘nmmn. witness and some of her rela- tives have organized and kept alive for three vears.” | CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Waneta Council, No. 6, will have a card party, 8:30 o'clock, at Pythian The TIowa-Thomas Circle Citizens' As- 8 o'clock, in lecture room Northminster Presbyterian Church. of The Organized Women Voters of Ar- lington County, Va. will have a ban- quet, with cards and dancing, 8 c'clock, at L'Aiglon Club. The Business Women's Council will meet in lecture room of the Church of the Covenant, Rev. Pred Coombs Rey- nolds, pastor of Wesley M. F. Church will conduct the Bible class from 6 45 to 7:15 o'clock. Topic: “The Philosophy of Prayer.” Ralph Poster, professor George Washington University, will yive lllustrated talk at 8 o'clock, on Oxford, the Great English University.” Dr. Elizabeth Rotten, educator of in- | ternational prominence, will addiess the | American Association of Universitv Women, at dinner at the clubhotise 1634 1 street, 7 o'clock. Bubject: “Wom- | en's Task in the New Age.” Dr. Simon Flexner of the Rockefelier | Institute for Medical Research, who lias been chos by the Assoclation of | American Physiclans as the leclirer of ihe Kober Poundation for this will deliver u lecture, B o'clock, in Gas: | ton Hall, Healey Bullding, Thirty-sey- enth and O streets. of Georgetown Uni- ersity. Bubject: ‘Obvious and Ohscre Infections of the Central b Bys- temn.” Selections by the glee club M. Luc Durtain will deliver an ad Aress, 4 30 o'clock. before the Alllance Francaise at the Lo Faye'te Hotel The will meet Trintdad Citizens’ Ass 745 o'clock, at ihe yeiation Wheatle Sehool The Georgetiown Civ meet, B o'clock sockation will n Phillips School The Delaware Blate Bocie vill meet Liie evening al the Chestiil Farms Ai- | divorium, Twenty-sixth and Pennsyl ante mvenie A playlel “He Who Hesitates will be presented by the OConnor School of Expression sné | There will be & musical orogrem Ie. freshment The mission service st Holy Fosary Chureh will teke place a1l 730 o'clock ( Dr ¥ Lardone of Catholir University vill presch Thomas Verner Moore will | 4730 o'clock, I auditoriom of N st Buresu. Procesas for b ne Gertrude s Bchool for Aris nd Crafis ubject tresied ho analysle of Francls Thompson snd e Hound of Heaven o The wuxilinry home bosrd of Joseph H Milens Chapler, No. 41, O F 8 il have w card party in Northeas! Temple, Klghth snd F streets Mye kdua M. Bush, chair ot hesst man £Ol‘ War Aqtounds DI‘EISCX' populace Taught That Ultimate Strife Is Inescapable. |great nation fn the mood and the faith | that must ace (and desiroy it a dinner-meeting lonlfhl at the Cosmos | Club. The gusst Brown. well known race horse owner. | tives Guy B Campbels I members of the {day. 8 pm | memnure THE EVENING that that such a war s inescapabla, and the very iniensive, infernal labof mpany all this is right and necessary, 00 Capitalism Attacked. In consequence, posters, posters, posters. showmg in A score of forms capitalism about to pounce on Ru And then more posters | and pamphlets and radio talks and lectures by the G. P. U. and others to | convince the populace that not only is |1t neceseary to have the army in ques- tion, but (worse or better, as you please) a large civilian population—in fact. all the able-bodied men and| women in the country who are not in the army. tramed to fight or to nurse | or to help m some other military | fashion, with the necessary equipment | to take up the struggle a'ong with the | army in case Russia is attacked | And so in every factory, every moving | pleture studio, apartment house, library. | office bulding or Institution housing the workers of some great burcau, hotel, theater and what not else, is a Red or | Lenin corner with always a picture or | a statue of Lenin and some of his most | ineniring communistic words And then nearby, or in an adjoining room, a rack or shelf for guns, bombs gas masks. first-aid kits. and I know not what else, all intended as a_part of | a school or class for war. a local or | neighborhood or industrial training in attack and_defense It is really astounding and of a'sinis- ter and most disturbing hu For one says to one’s self, and can scarcely help it “For heaven's sake, what & theory! And how mad a people! And how traight they are going toward some great {ll which fate has willed! Girls learning to shoot. to hurl a bomb, to adjust & gas mask, to render first aid! | And men_and women as well as boys and girls.” Depressing and Ominous. I found it intensely depressing as well as ominous. And it is all over Russia, | from Poland to China. from the Arctic to Afghanistan. The cntire Russian people made to believe and to feel that it is inescapable! Can you imagine that to be a pleas- Ing or anything less than a depressing atmosphere in which to move and & vour being? And along with it hunting. And rumors of secret trials | and executions. The G. P. U. seeking here and there for men and women who may not be loyal: who, perchance, are selling secrets to the enemy I could sense all of that and it affected me much more than does the knowledge of poverty or financial de- pression, or even panic. I never saw anything quite like it before, not even in Germany before the war. merican. Newapaper ADis North Corps will give an informal dance at the Willard Hotel Col. James S. Pettit Camp, No. 3 United Spanish War Veterans, will meet this evening at 921 Pennslyvania avenue southeast. The Eckington W. C. T. U. will meet 7:45 o'clock in the home of Mrs. Wil- liam C. Alden, 124 Bryant street Waneta Council, ! card party, Temple Spring No. 5. will give a 8:30 o'clock, at Pythian | The Washington committee of the National Presbyterian Church will Kold | be Rrepesenta- Clement C Dickinson, Albert R. Hall, Clifford R Hope and Henry W. Temple The anual public meeting of the Asso- clated Charities and Citizens' Reliof Association will be held 8 o'clock at the Y. W. C. A, Seventeenth and K streets Addresses will be made by Commis sioner Sidney F. Talliaferro and Dr. Edward T. Devine. Corcoran Thom will preside. A motion picture, “A Day | At Camp Good Will.” will be ss08'n for the first time. Subject of the evning “Does Family Welfare Pay?" No col- lection or solicitation of funds. Al welcome. FUTURE. ‘The Lions Club will have a luncheon meeting tomorrow, 12:30 p.m., iIn the [Mayflower Hotel. An illusivated travel talk by George S. Oettle vill feature the program There will be a meeting of the Par- ent-Teacher Association at the Bur-| lington Hotel, tomorrow The Al Smith Club will have a meet- | Ing at the Burlington Hotel Thureday Areme Chapter, No. 10, O. E. 8., will serve a dinner tomorrow from 5 to 7 pm_ at Northeast Masonic Temple, Eighth and F streets northeast ‘The Optimist Club will hold a lunch- eon meeting tomorrow, 12:30 pm., at the Hamilton Hotel The Treasury Department Beneficial Assoclation will hold its annual meeting | for election of officers March 30, 5 pm., in room 178, Treazury Building. | The Woman's Natlonal Demoeratic Club, 1526 New Hampshire avenue, wil) have a_program luncheon April 2, 12.30 pm. “Bubject, “Why 1 Am & Demo- crat” Speaker, Charles A. Douglas Treatv Oak Chapter, O. E. 8, will ve a dance and card party tomorrow § D, ar Chestnut FRimms Audiarium | Twenty-sixth and Pennsylvania avenue Mrs. M. Dell Sale, chairman. The Wilson Players of Columbia Heights Community Center will pre- | sent “Dolly Reforming Herself,” Thurs- | day. 815 pm ., in Wilson Normal audi- torium, Eleventh and Harvard streets Carl W. Bishop. assoclate curator of the Freer Art Gallery, will address the University Club Thurs on his four years' srcheo- logical research in China. Hiustrated FLOOD CONTROL BILL T0 GET RIGHT OF WAY Vote Jones Farm Relief Next | on Bchedule arly Benate Measure Been on Benate leaders plan to give flood con trol legislation the right of way in the Senate tomorrow with the pending Jones bill facing & fairly clear road to an early vote Mennwhile, the Norbeck bill 1o estab Ush migratory bird refuges s still be fore the Senate and apparently has cotntered the first flibuster of 1 seatlon — Senator Blaine, Republican Wisconsin held the floor against the for w second day yesterday condemning 1L ss an Invasien of Slale rights It 8 vole fs not reached today tor Norheck 1s expected o the fooa control n sre Discussion of the fisod bill 15 ¢ pected Lo consume more than s week, | although namerous conferences have erved move many differences over | s provistons The MoNary-Haugen 1 10 come before which tuin wird Bena yield 1o farm reltel bill | the Benste next, afier Norbeck hopes (0 wn o ngreement o bing up messure BgAIN b the Aphide are particularly deadly 0 house plante because (hey grow up wnd yeproduce so rapidly, a Cornell Dt | absence | member bank credit continued outflow | report added. | co-operation } throughout the world to the | of paper for member ban STAR, WASHINGTON, D €, TUESDAY, MARCH 1928. AIDS WORLD CREDIT s danilin |Board Uses Movement of Gold as Key to Guide Policies. Using the movement of gold in in ternational channels as a key, the Fed- eral Reserve Board during the past year had a definite, helpful effect on world credit conditions, according to | the annual board report published to- day, The international movement of gold was permiited by the board to have its | normal effect credits, the report sald, or it was offset by the purchase of securities in the open market. as the board believed trade conditions justi- fled The board did not confine its ac- tivities to eyedits. however, but through jts power as controller of virtually one- half of the world's monetary stocks alded foreign countries in stabilizing their currency and returning to a gold sis atlons represented changes in the Federal Reserve policy. As se forth in the report. “the Reserve Bank's policy in the carly part of the vear when gold imports were exerting an influence toward easier money. was to on | refrain from taking an active position toward the market Methods Explained. “In the Spring and Summer, in the of considerable net gold move- ments, the system'’s policy was expressed in easing the money market through the purchase of sscurities and the reduction of discount rates. In the earlv Autumn | when an outward movement of gold be- gan, the system offsst in part the effect of gold withdrawals through purchase in the open market and finally, in the closing months of the year, the system's policy, in view of the rapid expansion of was to permit the of gold to exert its customary tightening influence on credit conditions " “The gold flow into and out of the country, which was thus a majo tor in the credit situation in 192 “has exerted an important influence on banking conditions in the United States since the beginning of the Federal Reserve System. Between June 30, 1914, and Decemcbr 31, 19 the stock of montary gold in the United States increased from $1.891.- 000.000 to $4.376.000,000. an increase of $2.485,000.000, of which $2,071.000.000 represented reported net imports less amounts earmarked for foreign account and $414,000,000 additions to gold stock from other sources, chiefly excess of do- mestic production over consumption by industry and the arts Effects of Policy. The influence of the Federal Reserve System during the year, in so far as it has been consistent with the require ments of the domestic situation been exerted toward conditions or- able to the maintenance and further progress of the gold standard,” the re port continued. “The policy of main- taining easy conditions in the money market which was pursued by the sys- tem throughout a large part of 1927 has encouraged the flotation of foreign loans in the United States and facili- tated the exportation of gold to coun- tries undertaking monetary reforms “In adopting a policy of internation: in support of the gold standard, the Federal Reserve System has acted in recognition of the responsi- bility resting upon this country as the holder of nearly one-half of the world's stock of monetary gold and of the im- portance of sound monetary conditi prospe; f industry the United States.” By the congressional action in grant- ing indeterminate charters to Federal reserve banks, the board said the banks “are now in a position to formulate long-term policies to be pursued unde: mere normal colditions in a world that bes made great progress during the past year toward economic and finan- and trade in cial reconstruction.” Earnings Reduced. In 1927 the Pederal reserve banks ecarned $43,024,000, a reduction of $4.- 576,000 under the year before, duc lurgely, the board safd. to a decline $84.717.000 in the daily banks' holding of bills and securities and a decline in earnings of the hold- ings. ‘The banks handled 862,000,000 checks in 1927, compared with 823.000.- 000 in 1926, discounted $32.300,000,000 purchased $4.100.000.000 of bills in the open mar- ket, pald $55.000,000 of Governmeut coupons, collected $6.700.000,000 of non- eash items for member banks and han- dled new fssues, redemptions and e changes aggregating $10.800,000,000 for the Treasury Department. Mrs. D. A. Grubbs, 81, Dies. | Specyal Dispatch 1o The s RICHMOND, Va, March 27 D. A. Grubbs of Mineral was yesterday near Mineral, Bhe was 81 years old, and is survived by her husband, a son and a daughter and two brothers. She had resided in Louisa County all her life Mrs. buried . S. RESERVE BANK | Plans Atlantic Hop [ [ likpERWOODH LADY JUNE CHARLTON, Daughter of the Earl of Carrick, who will fly with her hushand, John Sills (Toby) Charlton. in an atfempt to make the dangerous Western trip to America. They will use a 12-passenger flying boat on this flight, which to date has always failed. CATHEDRAL RAISING FUND FOR WINDOWS Gifts and Bequests Received for Tenth of Needed Decorations. have b received nth of the total of 183 stained glass windows planned for Washington Cathedral, according o the preliminary report on the symbolic decoration” of the edifice, prepared by Very Rev G. C. F. Bratenahl, Dean of Washington, for anual meeting of the ca and made public todey The architectural style dral, fourteenth century gotnic, provides for three tiers of windows in (he nave and choir, especially large windows in the apse, and great rose windows in the north and south transepts and the western facade, it was explained Gifts and bequests for more than one of the cathe- The statues, carvi features w windo other decorati pictorial form of dvan Christianity ate its continuity from the beginning down to the pre the report sets forth There will be opportunity for choice of subjects. for, in addition to the many windows, the present plan jro- vides for approximately 4.000 sculj figures and and more 1.000 ulting keyston® Rether with a number of wood carvings, mural paintings and bas-re- liefs a wide Rose Window Pictures. ‘The rose win ws will represen pochs in the history of ma ernmost windows will Seven Days of Creation > north transept window will depict “The Last Judgment” and the south transept will have a ros» window d ed to The Church Triumphant.” In the nave windows will be pictured the historical characters who carried Chrsitlanity to all nations, together with scenes showing the development of Christian virtues and graces Richness of illustration in the clerestory windows of choir is con- templated by pictorial treatment of the many appearances of angels as de- seribed in the Bible. The lower windows of the choir will be devoted to the par bles, miracles and scenes from the life of Christ three nkind picture 'DENIES DISCRIMINATION average of the | | sued by Loulsa County. | AGAINST WAR VETERANS Civil Service Board Charge Made by Answers Member of House. By the Associnted Pre Denfal was made yesterday by the United States Civil Service Commission of charges by Representative Fish, Re- publican, of New York the com- mission diseriminates against war vet- erans It is the commission’s wish to atd veterans in every lawful way and it does 50" said a statement issued by the commission, which recalled that “the Executive order, allowing the addition of ten points to the carned rating of a disabled veteran. or five points in the case of a ve an not disabled as 18- President Harding in 1923 on the recommendation of the Civil Serv- fee Commission.” Coal miners of Germany are demand- Ing higher wages, shczter hours and bet- | ter underground working conditions. MOVING ¢ It so, arrange now to have your new home supplied with Thompson’s Dairy Milk Thompson's Service reaches all parts of the community, Just give us (please phone, write or drop a note in a bottle) your new address and tell us when you want service started. Your milk will then be ready for you, SURE., THOMPSON’S DAIRY Serving Washington Homes fo . W, Visie Washingron's Oldest Dairy 2012 ELEVENTH ST, 47 Years Phone Decatur 1400 I Washington's Newest Plant FRIEND Body of Senator Lies State at Former Mich- By the Assor BIG The body of Woodbridge N loved schoolmaster, maker, by igan Home. W Press RAPIDS, Mich., March Iay in state as final paid by State and Nation It was one of the distinguished Sena- tor’s last wishes that his body be guard- ed from the time it reached his home until laid to rest This cratic ity. Senator and former dreamed and founded the educ institution which was to give freely the advantage of cducation to young men women, hools and business places were closed, and GULDENS . Mustard" e - Me» He omam Colonial was plunged in Made from the world’s finest mustard seeds Wanted to Buy In 1st Com’l Zone Small Business or Residence Properties L. W. Groomes, 1416 F aay ar gyt On a Wid Chevy Shady Street, FRIENDS OF FERRIS - PAYLAST TRIBUTE Ferris counselor and law- today surrounded | the flowers friends had sent and guarded by a unit of the Michigan National Guard tributes where Michigan's Demo- Jovernor ‘lmd flags were at half mast, Activities of the State government were halted in his honor. Accompanied by a company of the 126th Infantry, Michigan National Guard and friends, who marched through the snow and in the face of a severe sleet storm, the body was taken yesterday from the special train which brought here to be placed in the library of lhr rambling house which the Sena- | tor had calied his home. | Today the catafalque was in the Na- tional Guard Armory. An escort. consisting of the command- ing officers of all Michigan National Guard units and five companies of the | | 126th Infantry was to lead the funeral { cavalcade to Highland View Cemetery where from the mausoleum can be sen the tower of the school ho founded " INVITES COAST GUARD. | | Fox ThM'rr Sends Bids to All Men Within 100 Miles. All members of the United States Coast Guard stationed within a radi of 160 miles of Washington have bee: invited to_attend the performance a‘ | the Fox Theater tonight as guests cf the management. The playing of the recently adopted anthem of the Coas | Guard, “Semper Paratus,” accompanied | by a drill by » detachment of 50 mem- bers of *he guard, is part of this week | program w New Fashion's changes a Spring Nature, knowi change, puts on a new Send your friends a graph for Easter. Portr 1230 Connecticut Avenue. s -t Yo - - jars - fows - s -3 - iz - we - YA 220 a dozen up. UNDERWQOD & UNDERWOOD HOUSEWIFE’S NAME FOR Granulated Sugar American SugarRefining Company UNFURNISHED % APARTMENTS All Sections—All Sizes— All Prices. Before Decidin Our Li Randall H. Hagner & Co. Ineorporated 1221 Connecticut Ave. NW. % Phone Main 9700. Inspect i Styles re not follies. Every ng the attractiveness of dress. new Underwood photo- g o - s 3 T - Y « B ot Quality Telephone Main 4400. J 2 Makes turdy Babies Glheatnut Jarms. MILK ¥ irdy little le He's a healthy, husky baby Chestnut Farms Milk, some milk Departme Sturdy ratings. 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