Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 9, 1917, Page 4

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i ihy. “been b i i i s i b i £ i DUS THE PARSON OF PANAMINT By PETER B. KYNE g mmmmm-wr-fl-m-a dves A A Phetoplay ‘With' Punches. PATHE WEEKLY || CHRISTIE COMEDY AUDETORIUM | Today and Tomorrov 3 WILLIAM A. BRADY PRESENTS 6 REELS OF ROBERT_\'NARWICK N FRIDAY THE § 3th” WRITTEN BY THOMAS W. LAWSO N See the Wild Scenes at the Stock Exchange CLOUD PUNCHER, Comedy 2—Parts—2 Released February 5th 2—Parts—2 Sce an Entire Town Wiped Out by & Cloudburst e DAVIS T e Oklahoma Four n_a Whirlwind Novelty Western Comedy Fro ITY_MILES FROM WHERE” § i gf i BHECTE iy ;g;i § Hfl [ bl safds Bl E a‘m §7 Church St 5 fpst H viday, Feb. 8, 1917. i §5 i%g?i gk i : i ¥aad & 5 uated in the balconies at the hall. A new floor i £ i ; 8 i ; i ant credit is.due the 1 i silgd =5 Y R 3 at same c o) n re- eabs committes faced an entirely new |, The Vale University Catalogue has |state that the exccutive sees the need |gard to the fire limits, Contractovs task. Holding the prom in the din- 1ssued. m'flm‘fl"" and | for special precautions. The legislature | could put up cheaper Buil ing hall involved extensive modifica- | ChANges In the material published have | warmly indorses the pledge- of loyaity|were allowed to rear frame tions of previous plans. The lob. | Made possible a much smaller volume | which Governor Holcomb has sent {0 jin the aera now limited to fire-proof by connecting the university dining|that that of recent years. The number|the presideat of the United States, material. But nobody is 8o stupid as Pan and Woolsey Hall waa.decorated | Of " eseors and instructors has in-|with no qualifications such as Martin |to believe on serious _consideration With palms and flowers and furnished | CTeased from 378 last year to 390 this|iomasney has called for this state. It |that the city would be benefited, or its market fruit that attracts atd which |completely with chairs and lounges. m"“‘im’e“m‘%;’g:""‘ml‘"’:‘f;;!f: ! 2 things done decently and | housing problem materially helped by n’ order- can. 3 In perfect in appearance if not in fla- | Blue and whit was the decoratiof |{he" three professional schools—those " e e T vor, and while he aid not intend to of Relizion, Law and Medicine. The to- | The old notion of a hospital was of |of tencments.— Bridgeport Telegram.: convey the idea that there should be tal number of undergradvates in the |a grim institution where one ‘went to —_— an effort ‘made to resort to the de- PETROLEUM DISCOVERIES. outclassed Brown by a wide | university this year, including both the [have a serious operation performed, or ception of the buying public through | [Arein in the prom swimming meet: [college and the Sheffield Scientific|to die of a hopeless disease. But now roes out apples which look well|Deld TuesBay afternoon im the Car-)schodl is 2,403 one of the largest|we are coming to think of hospitals as | Biackfeet Indian Reservation in Mon- putting R e o Simpiy | ne®le Pool. The University swimmers | podies of undergraduate men in any of| pleasant, friendly, serviceable places, | tana May Contain Oil and Gas. but do not satisfy the SIMPLY | captured first place in every event, and | the universities of the country. Stu-(to be used readily whenever there's e I~ to promate a sale, he did mean that|took three second places out of & 'pos- |dent enrollment, necordinz to cities, |anything wrong with any member of | The wid e A B Connecticut grown frult can do both.|sible five. They scored forty-four|shows New Haven first with 507, New |the family that is easier to care 10T | volonmens ot tho oil cod tan roasuroes It can be grown so that it will look|points to Brown's nine. There was no| York and Brooklyn second with 257 |there than at home. We go to the hos- | of (ne conntry: Sives o> fortheoming aa attractive as any which comes |doubt from the start as to the ulti-land Chicago third with 3. Other cities |pital, we send our loved ~ones there, | raport on & Montans arca special vaiue — Eastern Connecticut has forty-§| from the near or the distant west, and | mate winner; and, consequently, Very lat some distance from New Haven |without gloomy forebodings o mis- | telen’ meoiporomietis Sres spect Wy aine towns, one humdred and sixty- | certainly the apples of the Nutmeg|litle excitement or enthusiasm was|which send a number of students to|givings. And because we thus avail| A report. on the Bisclfeet. Indian |same, so that the copper mines pro- |gan at Green River yo., five postofiice districts, and six tate cannot be excelled when it|Shown. The Yale swimmers not only | Yale include the following: Buffalo 39: | ourselves more promptly of the best|reservation Just issued the geolog- | duce large amounts of gold or silver, | 1369, and was notably succes Fural free delivery rToutes. - won all first places, but won them bY | Cincinnati 33: Cleveland 32; Denver | medical facilities the community has | jea; e e Bof 2Ea | or both, and copper sulphide is present | 8. Geological Survey.) B Balletin 4 s0ld In every§| 0253 to flavar. gencrous distances. The times wers|1s; Honolulu 7: Los Angeles 10; ‘Min- |to offer, we-live longer, enjoy Hfe | tnrerios o & reonit of Beld mori first | in smail amounts in many of the gold fown and eon all of he R. B D.§| More attention is being paid to fruit| rather slow, possibly because of thelneapolis and St. Paul 36; Pittsburzh|more and get more work dome—Meri- | iqrion 48 & result of field work frst| uarts veins. & growing in Connecticut than there|lack of keen competition. * The relay{se: Portl 01 % undertaken for the office of Indian af- " mines on routes in Eastern Comnecticut. . : Portland, Ore, 13: St. Louls 32; |den Journal Tairs describes the geology of the| The known productive was some years ago, and it is neces- | was_probably the fastest event won |Senttle 13: Shanshal, China 61 Wash. Southward extension” of the Calgary | Prince Willlam sound in 1915 include |enter in eivil life cmCULATIoN sary. This state can produce as good | by Yale in one minute, forty-six sec-|ington, D. C., 24. Students are en-| The sorry developments in the cass|foiq of Albertn Canada, The resctva. | four supper mines and five §oid mines. |freely with the grea i apples as any state if the effort is|onds. rolled this yeer from 176 colleges and |of the missing P. W. Johnson, tion is underlain by the same forma- | A much larger guantity of copper ore |clone Davis s one man whe TO0L, AVrage.cseerreiecees 4412 s 905, average....mcereseevs-5,920 g Comedy _8ket HE MONE TNNY BGHEM Comedy Picture CONCERT ORCHESTRA N, P A rica’s Youngest Boy Scout In the Screamin e Coras et ‘ Y“GETTING CIA T s H —IN— THE HOUSE BUILT UPQON SAND Five Part Triangle Feature Every Day Thrift Day for Him Now that he is able once made and that is what President Sta b univérsities. treasurer and trusted official of = _. " |than of goid gquartz was mined and |ford to laught at the inc Ples sought to improes upon his hear- | The University basketball team d —_ folk, which show that e i8 & default- | Hon of o ood ey Lx the Colpary fajd | treated, and the total value of the|price of linen collars and Zro when he sald ~Conmecticut frui: | feated Princeton’ Tuesday afternoon in |y FTTERS TO THE EDITOR | &, 15, 2, Soasiderable extont. Drove | The Teport points out the general sim- | metals produced {rom the copper ores |shirts.—FPhiladelphia Inquire Srust be well grown, picked carefully, | the annual prom game by a’ score of once more the danger of putting un- | giarity of the two regions and discusses | was about five times that obtained —— e hasty i Taola with good | 25-20. Althoush this ame does mot — essary confidence in the Individ- | the geologic facts upon which an In- |from the gold quarcz ores. The value An Ulterior Mo e i e . count in the competition for the sithful Service. . Saféguards must be placed around t search for oil and gas in the | Of the tofai mineral production of he public insistently business methods, if we wish to keeD |oaeue championship, it does count in ai ihe first contac- |those who handle cash. This is bu Tvation must be based. To this|Prifice William sound region in 1915 [youo” the alleged leak the enormous sums of money spent|the separate serles with Princeton.|ious and cevere iiness of one oniy |ness sense and the outgrowth of years p s o d about. 13| was $1,340 000 as compared wiih $1,- |matket thoroughly iny for fruit in our own sections to be|This series is at present a tie, inas-|little child we have of * experience. It is not a pleasant . 2nd structural terraces, | 200,000 in 1914 it wants to know wh used again to improve our conditions | much as both Yale and Princeton have | many other parents have suficred | thing to assume that men are Liable | noin s out favoradle or unfavorable able tips can be obta and that of our neighbors.” This of | won once. The final wame will be|here, vet few in . comparison with |£0 g0 Wrong, but while most men are | fentures in each. and indicates the Discovery of Grand Canyon. Democtal course applies to peaches and other |plaved here on March 14th. The game |other places, because of the conscien- |honest and dependable the exceptions |most advantageous places for arilling| The first white men to see the Grand - e repdez e b g essonag Was well fousht and swift on the|tlous efforts on the part of our local|are frequent enough to require Insur-|ana the depins at which the pessibly | Canyon of the Colorado were Cardena R whole, although Yale was somewhat |health officer in fishting these dis- |ance against the possibility. It Prolactrve Ganil Tite 6. vos had e 1) o mpeniaRE Wo yyere Fuid Borh o erable amount of interest in the mat- HELD AS HOSTAGES. eases. If ever such case were report- |tragedy for Norfolk to have its conf The sandstones in the lower part of | ed there by Hopi Indians from Tusa- “epr:sen i Aok B ter which is to come before the spe- e ed to him and he could insist upon [dence in and respect Yor a citizen 50 | tha Golorado shale and the underlying | yan. Cardenas was sent by Coronado [Dill before 4 gislature cial “town_meeting” tonight. It con-| Thers Tave heen many slarming |— = — T |the same quaranirb as has been ob- |rudely shattered by that person him. | Kootenai formation are believed to be | o find the wonderrul river of which (SR O Tl kednont not cerns stories eet afioat since the break in 3 3 5t | the only sources i nad heard from the Indlans. & B e o e e | totvesn i sounyand || STORIES OF THE WAR | [250550" 7 100 Shith Mot | oiolfs st ooty i i | ooy seircen of o and i i tnl | B Fover B Bt trom, g ndln, | 1 S —soh indicate ten | Germany. Some have already been and doubtless our little treasure |act of suicide assumed, but which 18 |curface indications of oil and gas with- | some point now unknown. looking in |¥at 2 . o amtin la tekin o i RIS hot Tve Dien g0 cxponnt probably untrue. Connecticut has beei{in the reserwation, recent discoveries |vain for g way to descond. It s al- R B No doubt cvery parent in Norwich |disgraced too oftén of recent years in |have demonstrated the presence of | ways interesting to recall the herolc Same In Other States. & realized the great biessing in es- |this way.—Bristol Press. petrcleum and petroleum residues in |trip made by Major J. W. Powell down | In South Carolina there is r ‘The purpose of the measurs which | made at the time, but there are others 1y in Switzerland where | S2Ping the fearful epidemic of last =S the lower part of the Colorado shale in | the Grand Canyon in smail bozts when |mere running for offic T has been presented to the legislature | Which have not as vet been cleared adder red” trousers of | Summer and appreciated why it was| An ordinance that will insist upon |an area adjoining the reservation on | practically nothing was known of its|ry and skeedaddle for it.—< #s to bring about a decided change in | uP, and among them is the position of | o famillar “madder rea” WOuSSrs Ol kept out of Norwich. Scarcely a town |the licensing of all peddlers has been | the soutn. There it was found that a | boares or character. His journey be- | 8. C. State the method of looking after the health | Ambassador Gerard at Berlin, the|uniforms are still to be seen. The ho- |2 C“";’*?‘*CL{;SC-?DEG- Yelf ‘;’e h:d prepared by the by-law committee of | hody of’shale about 50 feet thick, in of the community. It is sought to do | members of his embassy, the con- |rizon-blue trouser of the néw uniform (307 Of it ard creryone fefls the|the common council and will be pre- | the lower part of the Colorado, is | = away with four officials, who are not|sular agents in Germany and the|that date " e o |gented to the March seasion of that|petroliferous over a considerable area. TONIGHT’S TOWN MEETING. There cannot help being a consid- 3¢ represents the feeling of the people|shown to be without foundation, re- S Norwich. gardless of the good stories which they Madder Red” Trousers back from what may be| o, hy, 'ho that oths ight b in- ur o o are not tuat Oates DASK frem Wit e | Brophy, who that others mig ¢ | body and its adoption arged. We sin after the Marne and the Yser—are also seen, but the red trousers have a big majority among the 15,000 French sol- alers now interned in Switzerland through the reciprocity agreement with Germany. Most of them were taken prisoners at Charlerol and Morhange before the advent of the horizon blue. Consumption, aggravated by the fa- tigue of campaign and privations of prison life, sent most of them here, while about 600 are completing their education in Swiss Universities while the war goes on. There are also 250 Belglan and 15 English soldiers fol- lowing the college courses under the arrangement with Germany. There are 230 of these prisoner-students at Geneva, 350 at Lauserne, 50 at Neu- chatel, 120 at Fribourg and 10 at Berne. There are also about 10.000 invalid German prisoners of war in Switzer- land, some of them are following the courses of different schools at Berne and Zurich. “The influence of this mental occupa- tion upon_the state of mind of the prisoners has been so beneficial as to suggest the provisions of occupations for all the rest of the 15,000 interned French men that are capable of phys- ical efiort. One susgestion is to utilize them in work on the projected Rhine to Rhone canal, the favorite enterprise of M. Ador, President of the Swiss Red Cross, who has done so much for the prisoners of w ar. the work which they are doing con- solidated under the direction of an unpaid board, with the power to se- lect an official, whose salary is not _even ‘Indicated In the bill, but whose pay may be, for all one knows, two or three times that already received by any of the present office holding physicians. The hill has been under considera- more about it. It would like to know ‘what is to be gained by the change, the health of the town would ter because of the change, there is a lack of effclency under the present arrangement, what dissatisfaction really emists if there Is any, whether the real underiying purpose of it all is for the real pro- to get a life job at a handsome , Which may be a salary in ex- any pald either in the city or at the present time. These are which the townspeopls have imow and which ought to out tonight. CONNECTICUT SURVEY. In connection with all the efforts which have been made by the states throughout the country to ascertain B better idea of thelr resources rela- tive to preparedness for the defense ©f the nation, in case the break in di- ::.ue relations with Germany re- 4n a declaration of war, “which has been set afoot by Governor Holcomb stands out prominenty. The governor made it pain in his Rddress to the legislature that Con- has many ‘mamn F are bound to be of im- to the nation in case of will be relied upon for 3 i American members of the Yarrowdale crew who Germany agreed to release but hos not done so as yet. Conflicting reports have prevailed as to the location of Gerard. The story to the effect that he had reached Switzerland has been denied and the report comes from Berlin that he and the other Americans are to be held as hostages until Germany is sure of the treatment which is to be accordea to Count von Bernstorff and his par- . This implies that Germany mis- trusts that the United States will not treat them fh accord with the inter- nationsl requirements in such a sit- uation. .1t is possible that it is being Infiuenced by incorrect stories as to what is being dome by this country in his case, but the facts in the mat- ter ought to be readily ascertained through the Swiss minister Dr. Ritter who has taken over the German em- bassy. It is because of the many false stories that it is impossible to pass judgment upon Germany’s atti- tude towards Gerard, but If the re- ports are true concerning the holding of the Americans as hostages, it adds one more to the unjustified exertions of power, regardless of promises, that it has engaged in and its estimate befors the world is bound to be still further lowered. EDITORIAL NOTES. The Gulf Stream isn't the only thing that.is making the waters warm around the British Isles at the pres- ent time. The man on the corner says: A clear consciends is a great comfort, but much more progress results from a clear head. In the fight between the U-boats and the armed merchantmen the for- mer appear to be doing the most ef- fective work thus far. HEven the potatoés themselves must The Conscientious Objection Charges that conscientiaus obbject- ors to military service have reccived viclent treatment are believed.by the British army authorities to be ill- founded and it is declared by Brig- adier-General Childs, director of per- sonual services of the War Office, that if there has been any such violence it has now ceased. “Undoubtedly,” he sald, “in many camps there was yough treatment in @ degree at the ds of their com- rades but it is a matter of question whether it was actually violent, and the problem before the War Office was to put a stop to it. General Childs referred to resolu- tions which various Socfetles of Friends (Quakers) in Americs had spared the sorrow he and Mrs. Brophy have experienced, sacrificed his own interests and performed the duties of his office to the very best of his abil- ity, and honorably. In consequence of this the little Rosebuds of New Eng- land were spared one of the most ters| rible afflictions—infantile paralysis. raveling east last August, as was neflessary, we were not asked to show our certificate once. The epidemic broke out in the farther end of the town where vere and we returned instantly to W) under the safe protec: tion of Dr. Brophy. Passing through many places on our return we were not compelled to show our certificate until we reached Norwich. Apart from showing the certificate, we were ask- ed to remain quaraniined until Dr. Brophy heard personally from the town we left. It is to be hoped that Norwich may continue to have the intelligent, con- sclentious and faithful ces of Dr. Brophy. A MOTHER. Norwich, Conn., Feb. 8. Movies. Mr. Editor: Much has been said dur- ing the last few years concerning the “movies,” both for and against them, and while like everything else they can be abused I have found from ob- servation that_they have their ad- vantages, namely that they draw men who are, and have been, in the habit of frequenting saloons and other places equally as bad. If they suc- ceed in doing this, they are fulfilling 4 grand mission, even though they may be in the business purely to make money and not to improve men’s mo- rals, The disadvantages are = eye strain, mothers dragsing their chil- dren out to see them when _they cerely hope that it will be passed not only for the sake of the people who buy from these itinerants but for the protection of the men who are perma- nently in the peddling business here. There should be a list of all the ped- dlers in the city, there should be a ruling to make them carry their num- bers in plain sight on their wagons, there should be a small fee so that this may not bring an added expense upon the clty. All other cities have such licen: for it prevents irresponsible traders roaming the streets. It guaranteces that no bad fruit or vegetables will be sold because it is easy to trace sales and punish wrong doers. People in other lines of business are licensed and the peddiers should be as well.— Meriden Journal. . In a contributed article to the Her- 2ld a writer who used the nom-de- plume “Spirit of 17" set forth- some ambitious suggestions which can, and should, be put into effect. The salient feature of these was an “Old Horue Week” celebration to be held co- etaneously with the honoring of the Amercan flag. Flag Day, June 14, this year falls on Thursday. The plan su; gested would extend the celebration from Sunday, June 10, to Saturday, the 16th. The local lodge of Elks has already made arrangements to celebrate Flag Day this year in elaborate style. An appropriation has been made by the lodge, a committee is at work, and the entire city, through the various social, civic and ‘religious organizations, as- sociations and socleties, will be for- mally invited to participate. That is for Flag Day. The governor of the state, the mayors and officials of the citles, towns and throughout should be at home in their beds, so that they will be in a condition the following morning to attend school. ‘Women who are so selfish and thoughtless ana I may say headless, are not deserving the love of children and in the years to ¢ome they wiil see their mistake. Children cannot put their mind on their books if ex- hausted, especially those who are nei- ther strong nor healthy, so if a good thoroughly chaste and _instructive ‘boroughs Connecticut will be asked to lend their presence to what will probably be the greatest event ever staged in New Britain—New. Britain Herald. There is no_reason for letting the bars to three-decker tenement houses in Bridgeport down ,despite the peti tion to that effect before the board of aldermen. The present city administration put a stroke of good work to its credit i EQ for while others of elsewhere and still many ‘be converted to such use government might have for the Connecticut industries are equipped and engaged in the ‘business, and that their protection should be early consideration. It was with that end In view that asked for the authority maks a survey of the state and re- it from the legislature. Such ] i i be surprised at the high prices when their eyes stick out so that one could hang his hat thereon. The only complaint about the clear- ness of the German note, and the idea it was intended to convey to the neu- trals, has thus far come from Ger: many itself. From the way In which Villa,is following up the retiring punitive ex- pedition, it looks as if he was going to claim the credit of driving Persh- passed in protest against the way con- Scientious objectors were treated, and in reply he showed at length that all genuine objectors enrolled in the army not only enjoyed the legal protection to which the soldier was en that they also had the right to appeal to_the highest civil tribunal. d, movie appears in our cify why not take the children on Saturday after- noons when they are brighter and in better condition and are less apt to take a disease in case they come in contact with it. 0 Respecttully, § MRS, T. J. W. Norwich, Feb. 7, 1917, Belgian Relief Work. Mr. Editor: In view of the present your readers will be interested statement receiyved by nn. B. from W. when it bolstered the building laws, excluded three-deckers, and o reduced fire risk and improved hous- ing conditions in Bridgeport. ‘here is no more reason for repeal- Small samples of this shale ylelded on tion about two gallons of ofl to and thin beds of limestone ted in the shale are impreg- ted with a soft, tarry bitumen. These cts, together with the known occur- rence of oil and gas in the Colorado hale in Alberta and of sceps from_the same shale in northern Montana, Tead to the belief that oil and gas may foccur in some of the areas of most favorable structure in the Blackfee Indian reservation. Eugene Stebinger. the author of the report, beMeves that the chances for success in the reserva- tion are sufficient to warrant careful and eystematic drilling. Mining on Prince William, Alaska. The ore deposits he Prince Wil- llam sound region may be grouped broadly into two classes—copper de- posits “and gold-bearing quartz lodes. The miner associations in both gold and copper deposits.are in general the DARKEN YOUR BAAY Hi Have Beastiful, Soft Hair of - Even Dark Shade. T Not even a trace of gray sHbws In your hair after a few applications of Q:Ban Color Restorer io hair and scalp. Q-Ban is no dye, is harmless, but makes scalp and hair healthy and restores the natural color glands. If your hair is zray, streaked with gray, faded, dry, bleached, thin or falling, apply’ Q-Ban as on label. Soon all your gray hair and entire head of hair gradually turns to an even, beautiful dark shade, leaving all your hair healthy, fluffy, soft, rudiant, thick, full of life, fascinating; so even- ly dark and handsome no one will sus- pect you used Q-Ban. Also stops dan. druff_and falling hair. Sold_ on_a money-back guarantee. Only Bc_for a big bottle at Lee & Osgood's Dru Store, Norwich, Conn. Out people supplied by parcel post. “Drink Hot Lemonade N old-time prescription, and one your doctor will endorse today. Hot lemonade and a warm night's sleep are valuable precautions against grippe and colds. To get the best effects, be sure the water is piping hot, and use Sunkise lemons,—one for cach glassful. California .l Sunkist Uniformly Good Lemons ‘Whea you erder lemens, ask for Sunkise, the unifermly good Califorsis lemens. Sunkist sre wasy, tart and juicy. See that they reach you in the clean, crisp tissue wrappers stamped “Suskist” They will atay fresh much longer if you leave them in these wrappers until you use them. ways have at feast a Balf dogen In the bouse. Celtfornte Fraft Growers Bxchenge Go-eperastre, Hoo-Profis Grgen- B~y iy Commacticnt o Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Does the dread of the dental chalr gause you to neglest them? Yeu | Srowned or extracted ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN, ‘o fie CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATU! | STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICR . i STERILIZED INSTRUNINTS i CLEAN LINEN { ABEPTIC DRINKING cuPrs | LUWEST PRIVES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK b If thess appeal to you, oall fer examination and estimate Ne charge for consultation. DR. F. C. JACKSON uccessors to the King Dental Co.) A M. te 8P M NORWICH, CONM. ing out of Mexico. their work was miles away from d, director in Tela- mse of in case of necessity, and| With Germany planning to sink | 1t abs et Taomm i ko, the e wwm _time to secure it is befors any | everything that is visible, it may be | Lond emergency arises. The gov-|that Great Britaln will be forced to esiating. “They 3 “belleves in taking time Dy the | give greater attention to providing subsea merchantmen. (o Thet s of course a chance that kaiser has his mind set on spoil- ing the tourist business for the- allies :fi’ugflzfiyfi:‘zfit&h uisobediones and takes this way of telling Ameri- |and insubordination was deat with by cans to see America first. a Field General Courtmartial. The se- — sentence which that court Regardless of the action taken by | however, either branch of congress, President | General Officer has the satisfaction of know- ing that he A1d mot change his mind regarding the literacy test. It will be interesting to nots in connection the other events of the day er Colonel Roosevelt cancels that trip which he has been erranging to the Fiji islands. OR. D. 4. CovLa | - maire ST, Telephons

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