Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 24, 1915, Page 11

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— T HI-? BEE: OMAHA, H(ll‘\\ SEPTEMBER 24, 1015 REAL ESTATE FARM & RANCH LANDS FOR sALR REAL FARM & RANC STATE REAL ESTATE NDS FOR lu.n} FARM & RANCH LANDS FOR SA Panama. Government The government of Panama is that of a semi-soveriegn and dependant state. The terms of the Hay-Varilla Tready making it such. By this tready the United States guarantees and agrees to maintain the Govern- | ment of that Country. Life, personal | liberty and property rights are as safe as in the United States. The same Military force protects both. Climate No country has been so grossly | misrepresented as to climate condi- tions as Panama. As a matter of fact the climate has become one of the greatest factors in attracting settlers in preferance to other tropical sec- tlons, Panama's temperature may be discribed as warm during the day and cool at night. The country is a long narrow strip of land with great seas of coo] water washing its shores which with its location as to air ana water currents gives it a wonderful equitable climate. The average temperature 'is eighty-five degrees and there is very little variation. There is an abundance of rainfill. The seasons are fixed and invariable variation in temperature and rain- | fall are entirely negligible month for month, and year for year, ‘ REAL mnn FARM & RANCH LAND! REAL ESTATE " SA n FARM & RANCH LANDS FOR SAL REAL ESTATR ruuu | & RANCH Annn ¥om sALe, | REAL ESTATE FARM & RANCH LANDS FOR SALE PANAMA TODAY low, only about five to the thous- ind among Americans. The interior | country away from the Cities has al- l\wl)- been free from these diseases, and the United States government EL ENCANTO TRACT | reports will unquestionably prove that Panama is the most healthful country in the world today. El Encanto Tract This tract is situated in the district of Donosa, and Province of Colon, about forty-five miles west of the City of Colon, and has a large front- age on the Carribean Sea. Large streams make their way to the sea- board through the property, afford- ing cheap transportation. From the Transportatlon and ‘ Market | Panama is the transportation cross- | road of the World. Location counts| for everything. In this regard Pan- = ama stands pre-eminent. Panama is | the center of things. The cheapest transportation in the World (water | transportation) will carry her pro- | duets to the markets of the World | at the very minimum of cost. The | ships of all nations pass through her gates. The freight rates are less| from Panama to New York than| | they are from Pittsburg, Pa., to New | York. The lands of the El Encanto | tract are ldeally situated from a | transportation standpoint; every | part of them {s near the seaboard.| | The streams are available for to transport products down to the sea, | where it is only three hours to Colon. | Buyers of land in Bl Encanto are not restricted, the transportation center is at their door. The World is nmn-i | market. There are | no off years, nor crop fallure from | drought, rain or frost. The weather holds no hazard; it performs like clockwork, and every day of the year is a growing day. Health Conditions Panama has always been as a whole a healthful country, but in former years the Cities of Panama and Colon were occasionally subject to epldemics of diseases. This was not due to inherent unhealthfulness of the country, but was the result of in- | adequate sanitation and lax quar- antine which allowed those towns to | become the catch-basin of diseases porn by the great tide of travel that flowed across the isthmus. Since sanitation Panama has been abso- lutely free of these diseases for the |\ns|t ten years, and it will be impos~ sible there. The death rate is extremely for it to ever gain a foothold | Cattle and Hogs Too much cannot be said in| {favor of Panama as a cattle| and hog country. Both thrive, and disease is almost unknown, | With no hard winters to con-| tend with, they fatten twelve! months in the year; and do not | lose track of the fact that, with | from two to four hundred ships a month passing through the Sonl and Products The wondorful fertility of the soll uf | the Bl Encanto tract is the marvel of all who visit it. The sofl is formed by the accumulation of decaying vegeta tion, & process which has veen going on | for centuries. The top soll ranged in | depth from five to twenr feot. Thy color runs in all shadea from 1o Diack. Hhie" adll fn the ricnaat tn the Panama ranks with the Hawailan ITs- [1anda, the best sugar cane land in the Vorld itably are all kinds of fruits, etc. Bananas, pineapples, breal fruit, cocoanuts, ivory nuts. peanuts. au Kinds of vegetables, potatoes, ete. Corn, rice, Faffir corn, aifalfs, sorghum, para | krass, guinea grass, cotton. flax, hemp, sugar cane, coffee, tobacco, rubber, van- | ilia and chocolate. Frown eltrus 1 NCENE ON BEAUTIFUL PALMEA RIVER WHERE IT PASSES THRU OUR LAND. coast the land slopes gradually for several miles then rises to the hills and mountains of the interior. That portion now belng offered is the cream of the entire tract. It is fine, canal, it will be hard to supply the demand. That makes this rich land more desirable to the investor. Get some of it. | LAND IN PALMEA RIVER VALLEY HERE IS SOME OF THE level and rolling land, well drained | and attractive. | World and will produce more foodstu(t |acre for acre than any tand in the United States at whatever valuation. The soll. will mature two crops of corn [por year, with leas labor and less o per acre than it takes to gTow one cr in the famous corn beit of the mildl west. In the production of sugar cane Titles guaranteed by the owners. Full ab- stract is on flile tracing title back to the original crown grant. j ama land will become densely said® “I would not give one good A PRICES OF LAND IN $2.50, Easy terms. No interest on def: WORLD'S RICHEST LAND 21l the land west of the Rocky Mountains.” One Good Investment Is Worth a Life-Time of Labor Don't say that this land won't settle up. This Pan- populated. does, there will be enormous fortunes made. who buy land at low prices that make money. Webster was a great man, but he was wrong when he dead wrong. able. Only a few years rich and fertile land in the west- ern United States was selling for a few dollars per acre. It was considered too far away from New York to be worth anything. History repeats itself. Panama lands will be developed by intelligent labor and capital, and it you get some of it now you will have some to sell when it advances in value. THE EL-ENCANTO TRACT, PANAMA, ONLY $3.50 AND $5.00 PER ACRE erred payments. Three years to pay. When It It's those Danlel merican dollar for He was Call and receive full information and literature or write for same. Homeseekers’ LLand Company, Inc, 526 Bee Bldg., Omaha, Necb. Among the crops which can be prof- | The title of this land is absolutely | All good, rich, productive land is valu-| Improvements On the east lles a prosperous French Colony where improved land is valued at $300 per acro. | {On the north and east the seventy- | |five hundred acre plantation of Drake & Watkins Company of San Francisco, and scattered abont| | upon the tract are the holdings of | some five hundred Californians. | A number of the purchasers are| already improving their land, | | while & great many more will go| | there this fall and winter to begin | | work of development. l " Timber ~ | ‘ A part of this tract is covered | with “a fine forest of cabinet | woods, immense trees of Spanish | 'rrdnr. Panamian mahogany, nis- | pero, caoba, ete., await the axe of the woodman, while lignum vitea, rubber, grayacan, corrillo | doro, and a number of dye woods | are growing over the tract. Mr. 8. P. Verner of the Isthmus and Canal Commission estimates the value of the various trees in Pan-| ]lma at $500,000,000. 'What People Think|' of Panama President Wilson said: Panama is now on the main street, it will hecome densely tented people will go there and build up the country. | Hon. John F. Wallace, Chair-| man of Canal (‘omnnnsmn, said: The boundries of Panama embrace a luxuriant and fer- tile country, which is eapable of sustnining a dense popula- tion. The climate is salubri- ons, heretofore the only places sconrged by malignant dis- eases, have been the cities of Panama and Colon, due to uu- sanitary conditions and. the fact that they have been the gateways through which the tide of travel has ebbed and flowed. The temperature of Panama is approximateiy cighty degrees during the day; tl'e nights are cool and refresh- ing. The treaty between the U. 8§ and Panama provides for a protectory which gives the | GRAIN AND PRODUCE MARKET Cash Wheat is Active and Shows Gain of a Cent to a Cent and a Half. DEMAND FOR CORN IS NOT GOOD OMAHA, September 23, 1915. Cash wheat was pretty active today and showed gains of 1@l'%c. Receipts of wheat were a trifle better than during the last few days and the demand for this cereal was fairly strona. There were about forty-six cars of corn received today and there were not many of these sold. The demand for cash corn was not very good, lllhoulh ll’m market sold un- changed to %c hizhe ‘The oats market was higher and was quoled unchanged to %o up. The recelpts of oats were I:’hL but the demand for this cereal was fairly act) Thv:m were no sales of barley re rl.d and that market remained nominally un- changed. tva recelpts were unimportant and the market for this cereal advanced about Zc. Clearances: Wheat mnl flour equal to 000 bushels_ corn, 12,00 bushels, and , 11,000 bushels. Wheat unchanged to 14 hanged to %d lower. |‘p_tl were 2,412,000 4,000 bu., ageinst and shipments of oa Ldverpool spot higher and corn unc mary wheat rece bu. and shipments of 1 ts of 2,952,000 bu. uu&n . st year. mary corn receipts were 636,000 bu. A e aenta. of 430 T weainst re- ceipts of 307,00 bu. and shipments of bu. lasi year. R Fimary ‘oats recalpts were 8000 bu. shipments of u., against re m?m o‘; um bu, and shipments of 1,382,000 b it yeer. CAR LOT RECEIPTS. Wheat.Cor. Odts. 1 187 City.. 8t Louts....... Wianipeg sales were hard w 1 eported | today: tnfer, 1 car, i 1 ca Bample: %e; 1 flr (v.lvet thnfh 4 cars, 85o; 'l Car, ' ; car, s yeno-. 4 mized, 1 car | bk‘ 3 Tellow. 3% cars uu.!:.czac*xfg No. 5 cars. G B 4C Not white, #4dic; No. 3 yel low, No 5 nll ml(ed o.m 0. § mixed a o 3 white. wmu lflmc Barley 1 feed. 43fide 0. ’._ Y C closing _prices. l—‘h'u‘i‘onn & Bryan Mall] Rye: No. furnished The | 3 ‘NEW YORK GENERAL MARKET 2 4| and No. 1 hard, tock and srein brokers, 315 So, Bixteenth street, Article| Open.| High.| Low. | Close. VESt oo 1o 104! ok m} m‘ uumnl | Omaha y. 1 06% o) rfl% 18.00619.50. Boef, 18,00, famly, flu middle west, $8.35G8.4. LEA rHl‘Jb—l-‘srsranc $17.009 firm ulet; moss, 19.60. ~ Lard, Tallow, ' steady; hemlock firsts, 82 :nc‘ secon UTTER—Steady: recelpts, 8241 tubs; \ | creamery extras. Higshe: thats, HH@RO: May m.\ seconds,” 224G Irregular; receipts, 8739 cases; R lsssciais sovy fu’"" G iac: firste, 00 onday i rats, Vige, firsts, G e; nco s, omucsmrég” .\ ' Wi " | CHEESE—Steady; recelpts, 803 boxes; Corn. BGN 575 |state whole milk, fresh flats, specias, % |19giee: average fancy, 14%c o X |, FOU v lfll 1434c. LTRY prices not settled; dressed dull, western frosen roastin chickens, 19¢i2lc; fresh fowls, iced, 13 18c; turkeys, frozen, 17@2lc. llAd. AL No. cember, w!*ce. 36%@%MH%e; No. 3 2 eptember,’ et | wi CNICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS eamery, Zic; firats, King, 19%c. PGG s, 23c; ueundl 19¢. PO(;LTR\’AI{enl, 12%c; roosters, f%e; broilers, Features of the Trading Closing Ba} Prices on Board of Trade. CHICAGO, Sept .—Wheat prices sut- fered a sh reak today, largely as & result of the purchase of Canadian wheat to be imported into the United States. The market closed unsettied, 1%40 to %@ ke net lower, with December at $ic and i u‘y.u‘ ('t(;rn lo;t Phc to l\;‘. oals inished 0 Lo @%c up, an ro- visions of 2 s 5 Despite the fact that the actual amount of Canadlan wheat bought for import |y was only 5,000 bushels, the bearish eifect on prices proved far reaching and quick. The warket, which previously had been on the advance owing to fear that com- tract stocks would prove too meager to fill September deliveries, was now piunged down grade. Subsequent rallies failed to overcome the greater part of the decline. A contributing reason for _sentiment turning against the bulls was the an- nouncement that a large elevator com- any here was proceeaing to clean 500,000 ushels of No. 1 velvet chaff before September options expired. In such & case any question would be avoided as to whether or not the delivery would be valid, regardiess of how the Board Trade directors might rule chaff which had not been o untry offerings of spring wheat in the northwest incvreased materially, not- withstanding that early in the day re- ports were current that consignment no- tices at Minneapolis showed a falling off. It was said that one of the prinel northern rallways handled more I cars of wheat than ever before in the history of the line and that gre larged receipts were expected at apolis next week Tdberal tenders from first hands weak- ened corn. The weather was favorable and eastern inguiry slow. Oaks held within narrow limits. There seemed to be no pressure to sell, Higher prices for hogs strengthened | provisions. On the bulge, though, - ers unloaded quite freely, the January options in particular. Omaba Iay Market. OMAHA, Sept. 23.-PRAIRIE Cholce upland, none here, $11.60; $10.600211.00; No. 3, 35.00010.00; No, 3, ®. Chojce midland, pone hers, $1.00; $10.0042/ ; No. 2, $8.00@10.00; No. Cholce lowland, none here. 9000060, No. "2, §7.000.0; STRA nolce | eholce oat or rye, | _ALFALFA—chof #$11.00@11.50; No. wheat, $6.60077.00, !ll' b‘npuvntfll Apples and Dried Fraits NEW YORK, Bept. Z—~EVAPORTLL APPLES Dull DRIED FRUITS—Prunes, easy; gote, frm: peaches inactive; . - ri- ns, Coffee Market. NEW YORK, Sept. 3. -—COFFEBE-The market for coftee futures opened quiet At unchanged prices and rule J quiet during the day. The only actu i K A — closing figures; 4c. and March up to but the tone wes easier late in e .namoon under moderate offerings, ‘with th ose net um.hnnnd to 4 po 8,750 bags: September, No. 7. 6%¢c; SBantos No. st and freight offérs were re- led steady and rIthOr hlrher with Toe, Eng- : Amerl. | n-vhor\rd in it. No change w Brullh- markets. kets WEW YORK. Sept. B -METALS Lead, ”.50. asked r quoted. i, Slectrolvito, moa Various hanged. Tin, Quotations of the Day o) Commeoditics. NEW YORK, Sept. 3. «quw quA'r-lpot uod Nm 2_rel zum. xu 1 northern, Dulln.h. lLN orthern, Manltoba, $c, o. i Futures, weak; Septembe 4. CORN-—Spot, easy: No. 2 yellow, 8%e, promot shipment s 8not .;sd-‘ e e :‘"I;I N.HAY -Qulet; No. o, =’ ot 1 31.3%: No. % $L15; | contections A foid, Sarioc; Pacific or . 1974 127 e HIDES-Steady; Bogota, @Slc; Cen- tr T i, ! stead Pork, steady: iness, $15.00 | *.0d: O 20 short lears, | Lales. 'rolnu e 'n-. , £160 16a.’ Antimony, £2 10s. Spelter, £63 Sugar Market. NEW YORK, Sept 23.—SUGAR-R w. easy: centri unl 4.02¢; [} Refined, eas: volnll low 6.9 erush u‘k wers 5.00; mond 4.T6e. D A, tton Shernet, LIVERPOOL, Sept - good middling. 6.914 low middiing, 6.11d GiaW: fasuly, &," L"mr 12.00612.90; No. 1| 6,00, | 8 Gopper 1rom, steady and | 00GRL. 6. | #harfa Roth Meyers Giassberg Bakes, Jon Tanner Bros John larvey OMAHA LIVE STOCK MARKET Cattle Receipts Light and Prices About Steady—S8heep Steady to Some Stronger. HOGS FIVE TO TEN CENTS UP| OMAHA, September 23, 1015, Bl & Smith. §l§zs§s Totals. .. 3,600 20,964 CATTLE—Receipts of cattle looked very !amal. thls morning, only 128 cars being reported in. The total for the four dly- }h s vl:ok,\l large, footing up 88,04 ) b(jfl . % argest of any recent week A ondey 1(1.1‘3. lf?:‘ lhnp‘ larger than a year a( 'Y ready pretty well Ay buyers were alre o loa up wi ontl ey were nol Ty o v on w0 that thetrade . Btill, in able killiy u.m lookod The kener: ibed as steady with yester- eager for fresh suj |Bamo 2 weeks i |Same § weoks ago.... Bame 4 weeks 20,78 Bime days last yeur 85,03 The lollvwlu table snows ste recelpts of cattle, hogs and sheep &t the Oi live stock market for the year to date as compared with | bertig in_the main steady, clines reported earlier in the week. Good feeders continued about steady, but cummon to pretty decent kinds were ely slow, the same as they have been every day his week, Medium gred have been steadily accumilating and have suffered @ sharp decline, for the reason ® [that buyers have not been taking tnat kind of stuff. uotations on cattle: Good to cholce earlings, 800008 falr to good fed | fl 00; common to fair fed | 4.0/ xood to cholce heavy 018, 1 to goos cornfe 3009.00; common to fair corn- | 36.76G8.80; rrime Erass beevos ; good to cholce gr " hie Lo ood Grass beeves, 305 common to falr grass beeves & 00 00d to cholce grass helfers, $.50 | Ine. 613,874 146,807 | eXtrem I);u! | Bept, Bept, 11916, 11914, 11818 18171811 /181 1%m 52 somee E83sy u3=R FESF ctnes case 22 "s2ps Ry EBEEE BN =g $2 23 cm®ce &~ L8 'uzs:: btm £3 006.00; foeding | 8.40; ®ood to cholce lnudurl, falr to good feeders, $6.6047.36; 6.60; good to ecats cane B =SENES Boeioi §1 $1.35@7.75; common to falr fecders, $6.50 cholce stock T5@8.35; fair to good stockers, #4.764 177r, common to stockers, $5.50@6.75; stock heifers, 6. 7.00; stoek cows, $.6004.25; stock ocalve $6.60@5.50; venl calves, $5.00@10.00; bulls, stags, ete., $5.0006.8), Representative sales NEBRASKA. (¥ 7% & . =55 =8 RS2SR _3BIRS! conan s e ses iy of live stock Jnion Stock Yards, South Omaha, for twenty-four hours ending at 3 p. m. yestorday: RECBIPTS-CARS. Cattle. Hogs.8h 19 feeders Wl eep. H'r's. 1! b o 10 heifers.. 2 K] “waaes SS8sE 22 feeders [ WYOMING, 6 640 10 steers 3 29 steors 48 wteers 14 feeders. . % steers 11 stees 14 cows 49 feeders. 20 steers i |4 steers 107 steers. 42 steers 2|19 steers 1|34 steers, R : Tiilnols Central Chicago Gt. West.. . Total receipts..12 4 DISPOSITION-HEAD, Cattle, HO,A Bheep. . b 65 140 oame S8 S¥SuERS ™ 0 steers. Moyris & Co..... Bwitt & Company, Cudaby P.cd"; Eo! very small but at th t m- suppl he. on an his woek. About fifty cars, or 3, h up, bringing the total for th date up to 11,0 head. This 1s 10,000 head smaller than a week ago, leas than half large a8 two weeks ago and a Palling " off "ot "6.00 head with, the same da days' receipts are the n.um since the first week of st last | H, ¥. Hamilton Sullivan Bros. Rothschild Mo & Kan “hristh wold al full car ead of & a hua- on & strol u‘e of & ud n p for hc rought s mmm hlw«r punhuu i were not 8o heavy as yesterda: Calt Co. Packers’ "market. was & starting today but when it finally market could | opened hogs were selling on & 5100 basis, | and the bl vought tha not bu; ll’l slcces on the hla end of the offerh way. One lckt hoks \mlll s was wo did lm o out Widde fore_ 1 l 3 The packing «T with & uv\u 03 showi uk‘bu uofl.“'l. and quite a sprin to_the top. Rep.eseutative salos: Bh. )‘& close. hogs were boul \ at 3. fow n- nl own. itchers { B8 on up | | Av. | F) Sh. Y - :x:::?isn:gg Sk el HIWREESSR 8T §HEEP—-Supplies moderated & good bit | today, but at that presented a | appearance for a Thursday. called for meventy-seven cars, or head, and as yesterday's offioial count overran the estimate nearly 2,00 head, the total for the four d This is & gain of 2,000 hewd over & week 'uju 18 more than §000 iarger than two | weeks ago and 000 heavier than for the same days last 5. Vour dags’ supplies wre larger than for any similar period !for nearly twe years and much larger ! than any or the other markets, | (Zhe B lmit held good on fat lambe | agal ay, and bulk that figure, which h the deairable killers all week. Movement started in good season and pretty good rance of everythin | the barn was made by e o' clock. { has Boen 0. quotable sange ih killing |lamb prices at any time this week. | “Trade in feeding stock this morning was fon a tully steady ba and in spots | 100ked a little stronger. Bulk of the Kood ‘u- cholce feeders are selling at um and a good many £oing arpond $5.1004 16, ana "ufer veing misaing for & day the $5.0 top w restored. Heavy supplies | of feeders all this week have ot dulled the appetite of buyers in the least and | prices have shown very little change, al- ;ldhnu(h there was a slightly weaker ‘ten- eno; brought and b jeaned up were in Himited Offerings of fat cwes dropped to al- most nothin 7: the fow that were here selling n !ully steady 8. Best on_sale continue to bring D Lambs, l, lamba, fair to nd : & ewes, ry readily all week pply today ; |Chicago 9 - o wmim e oo BERREREEARSEE" UTS, celpts, %, head beef steers, 'l helfers. , ors and feeders, “ Hmpululmi a thriftly and con-| as CHICAGO 18 141,000 head. | of the offerings | right at the start of the week. | which have | PANAMA CAN PRODUCE A8 MUCH SUGAR PER ACRE AS THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. U. 8. not only power of inter | vening to repel invasions and | ropress local disorders, but guarantees the U, 8. will as sume the responsibility for in ternai and foreign peace of the country. It does not require a profes- tiec mind to prediet the day {when Panama will support { several million happy and con- tented people. | | | 0. H. Forges-Lindsay, says: Thare is no richer land in the world than in Panama. The mean temperature is about eighty degrees, from which the | extreme fluctations do not de- part ten degrees in either di- rection. Hon. John Barrett, says: The climate is healthful and even, invigorating; the land is adapted to most profitable farming. A beautiful country, with a climate that shonld have no terrors for the healthy, and wven solaces for the weak. The lund is nowadays within coni- paratively easy reach of all. Panawa is on the eve of a de- velopment snch as Porto Rico is undergeing with American assistance, y $2GRK; cows and helfers, UGAM; nfi?&sfl'«tnf{.fi“’cm lower; Dlll l.nd ll ts, 1,400 market. and_butchers, &Mll). b Iunbl. me sheep and ewes, SHEEP AND head; LIVE STOUK MARKET e ttle Steady—Hogs Strong—Sheey Strong. Kansas City Live Stoek Market. KANSAS CITY, Sept 1 -CATTLE: Receipts, wun.emi arket stesa: N fed nteers, $0.60@10.00; dressed bee! | ST 40 wallorn steers, w." b\l“t‘ M;'lnr eiots, o 'h' a; market HOGH eceipts, ead; 4 of ‘sales, 00; heavy, AND LAM market steady; yearlings, i ewes, $5.2506. lambs, ‘wethers, Stoux City SIOUX t ITY, Ia., Iu-nd v ) sules, 96,800 Fir—Recelpts, 1,000 head; market steady to lower. natiye stesrs, $5.00@7.00, cows and helters, 6.60; _canners, $1.50604.00, stockers and feeder: $6.25¢9.00; bulls, stags, #00 head: market, 1 50016.00; lambe, §6.00 SHEEP-—Receipts, to i3 higher:, ewes, $4. @8.%. Sf. Joseph Live Stock Muarket. :T JOBEPH, Sept 21-4(\1'1'I‘l—lh s, 1,000 head: market steady to 10c { his! gnr steers, ¥7.0009.50; (‘nll and he! | erx 00 «'ll\.l u w W HOOR- Recelpis loc higher; top. ¥ P ) SHIDEP AND LAMBS—Recoipty &0 head: market steady to strong; k $8.00G18.40. Live Stock in Sight. of live stock at the five prin- m markets_yesterday te. Hors. Sheep 0,600 18,00 Lim .00 21,000 St Louls Kansas City Eouth Omaha Sloux City Totals 65,200 Dry Goods Market. NEW YORK, Sept. #8.~DRY GOODS- Cotton goods were firm and prices ad- vanced y. lonsdale m..&a mus- advanced to Y -hl having a rapld advance. lnv while Japans recovered Anerican Telephons & lme.. dividend of 'l"o Bo'lu. will be vaid on to uocnold-r- -t unou naln‘lmu on G. D..mt— \

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