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i } : i ¥ v IR ARAIEE Y0 DR % 8 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE “FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR, Tho Bee Puhllnhlnx (mr}gnn}, Pmpfleli)r. BEB BUILDING, FARNAM AND § AND § Entered at Omaha postoffice s -.wmd -class matter, TERMS OF BUB"JLI(”’TIHN By carrier By mail per month Dafly and Sunday.. [ Dally without Bunday die Evening and Bunday.. 400 Fvening without Bunday e Evening without Sunda Ze Sunday Hee only.. e Dally and Bundny Ties, thres years in advance Send notiee of change of .M or irregularity in delivery to Omaha Bee, Clreulation Department I(P'MITTANf'B. Temit by draft, expross or postal order. Only twos cent stamps recelved in payment of amall accounts, Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern ex~ change, not .r-nplml OF FICES, Omaha~The Beo Bullding, Bouth Omahna—2315 N street, Clounel Bluffs-14 North Main street, Lincoln~626 1ittle Buflding, 1'hlrl’n—lll Peoples Gag Building, New York—Room 1106, 28 W fth aveni Bt Louls—#8 New Bank of Commercs, Washington-12 Fourteenth street, N, W, oy UI(RVFI'HNI!FN( W Address communications relating to news and edi. Eml matter to Omaha Be Fditorial Department. MARCH CIRCU 66,628 Daily—Sunday 50,628 Dwight Willlams, eirculation manager of The Beo Publishing company, being duly sworn, says thut the verage cireulation for the month of March, 1916, was 42 duily wnd U068 Bunday DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Cireulation Manager, Hubscribed in mr rrun nee and sworn to before me this & day of April, 1916, ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Publie. ATION, Bubscribers luvln. the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed (o them, Ad- dress will bo changed as often as requested. OO S O i il el e et All over except the ghouting, Bay what you will that Ford Is sdme run- ner! "Btriet ucnunublllty“ hn run hed the part~ ing of the ways, —— Don't you feel more In sympathy with the short ballot movement now? —— April showers bring spring flowers and also prepare the way for summer erops, ———— It’s & mighty poor primary that doesn’t have something to comfort all sides In the fight, The blanket ballot shows (nereased talont as & promoter of confusion, both before and ufter taking, / Owing to x-lrrnmn(um‘en beyond control Pancho Villa must defer the pleasure of read- ing his own obituaries, B —— Possibly an indictment could be framed by competent legal talent which might hold Henry Ford for excessive speeding, ——— Our nelghbors in Florence evidently prefer o let us In Omaha finance the municipal 1ight- ing plant ourselves, if we are to have one, —— Wonder If there Is any other enlightened country in the world that works its election of- llufl in shifts of twenty-four hours or more, — Whoever Is to be the next governor of Ne- braska, the pull for a new Union depot for Omaha will have to be kept up till it {8 pulled HErons, The more “reform methods” are injected into the election laws the greater Is the an- noyance and difficulty of exercising the rights of citizenship, *“Reform” covers a multitude of politieal schemes, Had Henry Ford employed a tithe of the woney used in the peace mission in campaign ing for the presidency, there is no telling how many “favorite sons" would have hw-u torpe- doed without warning, —— Considering the magnificent fighting qual- fties displayed in the democratic wigwam, it is amazing how any member of the scrapping bat- talion can keep a stralght face while preaching peace, Every city on the Missourl rivep from Kan- sas City to Sloux City s entitled to equal treatment from the rallroads, If they do not got It peacefully, the means to compel It are within reach, ‘ —— The Ohlo division of the Standard OIl com- pany announce a May day party for stocks Liolders, at which a stock dividend of 100 per cent will be distributed, The oll cost of the Joy-ride causes no worry in that quarter D As a reminder to reckless drivers, lot us em phasize once more the law whieh requires autos to come to & full stop where street cars are tak Ing on or unloading passengors, and not to pro- coed until the car starts, Better observance of this rule will save & lot of aceldents e e Thirty Years Ago This Day in Omaha Complled from Bes Plies T™he it » an train (hat will teave ala will pun over the Belt Line for the o madation of pesidanty of Orohasd 1 The Unlen Nendering company flled thelr articise £ ineorparation in the i s aifice Monday afternsen. The capiial stook Py The marviage of Mr. Frank Newwmb Plovenes Baeon ook Place Menday af o wl yoakilugen of the heide 0 slepiait M. Wiohardans, o Glporghe svenue The . was ¥ T Mev. W, 4. Mares of the Piesi Baptist chusch B W B Mitroy bas ot Paltimors, » WO e vkl e Miss LAilan B ries v 1) of Ihis menth The couple will & Kooy WOERINE tour and Wil pea b . Mis L, ¥ Almy . h 8 Desn ore the Wil wih M snd M ) b, hae - e v g i Lk B Mot WOl hsewn and pepalar e [P T - - . WHE West o e e wing ses ME BB P s ow . i s R N A T e Y1 W) Welshans & Ow TH The Ultimatum to Germany. In any erisis involving the honor of the na- | BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, APE What it Costs to Live tion, the patriotic eitizenship of the country may be depended upon to support the chief | In the White House executive in an assertion of our rights, This has I been true in every past emergency and it 18 | —— Donald MaoGregor In American Magasinge, —— true today with reference to the ultimatum W'rfihkuw WILSON |8 the second president to 2 > . ; recelve a salary of $76,000 a year. His expenses Nosyed Sty Fresidant ‘Wilson. upon. the. efman have been leas than those of Mr, Taft, the first sovernment. He has decided that we must | v, poe 1y the tnorease from 850,00 sever our diplomatic relations unlesy a way 18 found to make effective the assurances, repeat- e«dly given and as often violated, of a purpose to respect the commerce of neutrals on the high #eas, and he has taken an exceptional and dra- matic way of announcing his action in person to congress In order to fortify his position, al- though we doubt if that was necessary The president emphasizes the fact that from the outset of the controversy “the government of the United States has been very patient,” He might have added that this very patience had produced much impatience among our people, many of whom are convinced that the sever- ance of diplomatiec relationg would have been Justified long ago. Vurther patience would appear to be a weakness rather than a virtue, It is still possible, of course, that the Ger- man government may realize the seriousness of the situation and seek to avold the threatened break by a real compliance with our demands, Withdrawal of our ambassador, it must be re membered, does not mean war, but it will mean the strained relationship of undisguised un- friendliness. With the Jlssue thus sharply drawn, the president has no alternative but to follow words with deeds unless a satisfactory response Iy received, —_— The Nebraska Presidential Primary. The returns of our Nebraska state-wide pri- mary election are still too fragmentary to pe mit of comment except upon the decisive presi- dentlal preference vote scored by Henry Ford, That the automoblile peace advocate should lead all the rest in the mentioned-for-president class on the republican slde is wholly unexpected, even by those who figured on him polling a substantial vote, While the vote for Ford regis- ters the latent opposition to “‘preparedness,’” it 16 unquestionably supplemented by certaln ele ments of discontent with the administration’s foreign polley, and also by a labor sentiment attracted through the Ford generosity to his employes, More remarkable and more notable, though, than the Fordivote Is the written-in presidential vote for Charles ¥, Hughes. ,This puts him third in the list despite the fact that the name did not appear on the printed ballot, and he would undoubtedly be second If credited with all the ballots marked for bim, but thrown out be- cause of defects In writing, or 1gnored by elec- tlon officers In disregard of the law requiring them to be counted, The primary furnishes conclusive evidence that Charles K, Hughes is the real cholce of Nebraska republicans for president and cinches by It the election of con- vention delegates who have likewiso announced Hughes to be thely personal preference, Again the Base Ball Season, ) This afternoon, the Western League of Pro- fessional Base Ball clubs, the second oldest or- ganization of the kind in the country, opens its seventeenth annual playing season, Wars may come and go, primary elections may en- gulf us in thelr swirl of heated politics, and church and state may rock with the excitement of passing events, but the public will hang over the ticker or erowd around the scoreboard to note the progress of the game, and keep track of the fortunes of the favored. The home team i# always a point on which to center popular in- terest, and as its chances brighten or burn low, the popular heart throbs with joy or beats with dlgappointment. Omaha, a base ball eminence, will take more than usual notice of the team this season, for “Pa’’ Rourke has made an extra effort to give us creditable representation on the diamond, and we all wish him good luck end a pennant, Lessons of an Election, The primary election, just over all but the counting, holds some valuable lessons, and if Nebraskans are as wise as they pretend to be, the experience will lead to some reforms, This has nothing to do with the method of making up the ballot, the procesg of putting names on or taking them off, or anything of that sort. Until Nebraska is ready to adopt the short bal- lot form of eleotion, coupled with the vote at present methods are quite as simple as can be devised, When it comes to counting the vote and making up the returns, the physieal difficulties In the way make the task most for- midable. An easlly applied, and oft-suggested, remedy 18 a provision In the law for counting as the vote is cast. The ballot boxes should be opened at Intervals during the time the polls and a count of the ballots then de One other remedy posaible In & home, are open posited made, double set of election officers, one to receive and the other to count the ballots The actual work devolving on election boards, especially in the city of Omaha, has been tremendously increased of recent yoars Ly varlous reforms, introduced (o safeguard elections, if the present methods are to be re tained, they must be supplemented by some further provisions for lightening the actual physleal offort that (s required of the judges | and elerks under prevalling practice. 1t ls un | falr to require the test of endurancs now un | dergone in the process of recelving and counting | the ballots | Nebraska has long been noted aa the alow | est of all the slatoan In the matler of making | sloetion veturns. This s becauss we have clung to antiquated methods of counting, while sdopting the most modern features of elections in other regards, It ought to be possible | devise some process by which the countiog ean | be facilitated, and this wili be & task for (he | Incoming lesislature | e Graln market Kings difter from royaity only in form, The former rig up the market to trim thelr amsociates with as wiuch nonchalance s erowned MOBarcha show In WArting wpon each | other, George 1. Phillips, the “eorn King" of | Ohicame, had his hour upon the traders v sod Nin wits 1o it lesser wita and rolreated with the loat. Mut he, too, had to travel the shadowy pike over which royally and ordinary i Kings must hike with thelr vietima Although Mr. Wilson has been forced to deal With many more vital domestic and international problems than any other president in recent years, he finds time to look after his personal business affairs, He re- celves ench month a United States treasury warrant for 84,20 and makes froquent visits, almost always afoot, to & bank a few blocks from the White House, In the early days of the United Btates the presi- Aency was no pluce for A man without indepsndent means. The office cost the occupant more than he Kot out of {t, and at least one president, Andrew Jack- won, after wpending $10,000 of his own money, ended his term without having enough to pay his traveling oxpenses back home, At first the salary was §2,000 A year, rogarded then an very liberal. Buf as the coun- try grew In territory and importance the expenses of the president inereased; distinguished visitors from forelgn nations had to be entertained, receptions and state dinners becarne frequent and other expenses de- The time came when a president had to pay out more money than he recelved veloped after a long Congress, in bitter fight, increased the walary to 850,000, Soon afterward congress passed A bl reducing the pay to 825,000 again, but President Grant vetoed the measure, In those dmys congress provided no assistance in the payment of White House bills. Bt there came o gradual awakening to the financial burdens of the presidency, and appropriations onme little by little, until now approximately 360,000 1n nllowed annunlly to defray certain expenditures in addition to 820,000 u year for traveling expenses, Fven with this help n president cannot escape paying about $50,000 w yenr from his salary for provisions for the White House tables, entertaining, clothing and contri- butfons to churitable and other organizations. This leaves him 926,000 n year which he may possibly et aside for future needs The biguest item a president must mest from his own pocket In the cost of provisions for the White House tables, There rarely are fewer than thirty parsons at every meal, including the president and his family, guests, and o staff of servants averaging from twenty to twenty-two Blills for groceries, meat, milk and other provisions, ordered by the aper, under the general supers vislon of the mistress of the White House, fluctuate conalderably. Tn summer, during the brief time the president and bis family are at the seashore or in the mountaing bille At the White House can be kept down (o about $1,000 a month, or even leas, Put when the president Is in Washingion and during the winter gocinl seanon they run from two to four times that amount This Increase in winter is dus to the extensive en- tertaining expected of the president and his wife. Stats receptions and dinners, of which there are al- ways elght or nine in a season, cost upwards of $1,000 ench, The president and Mrs, Wilson this year in- cluded In their social program four large receptions and five state dinners, In addition there were many wmaller, less formal Affairs, hounek thewss In nddition to this a_president’s parsonal expenses are very heavy. Half a dozen sults of clothes a year and other furnishings needed by & man are quite suf- flelent for a president, but the gowns for the "'Plret Lady of the Land” and the White House dmughters are no mere ineldent, These ladies are called upon to attend four or five functions every week during the menson In Washington, and they must nave ready no less than a score of becoming evening gowns as well as an extensive stock for afternoon wear. Contributions to charity range from finexpensive handkerchiefs and autographed pletures of the White Houwe, for sale at ba to substantial ehecks. As the government provides no refuge from the hot wenther of Washington, a president must furnish him self and his family with a summer resdence, the rent to come from his own pocket. And there Is the cost of keeping up two establishments, Ar Because a president is s0 busy with affairs of state, the work of looking after bills generally In left to some other member of the household, his wife, a daughter or his personal stenographer. The president, then, merely slgns the checks, prepared for him with the bills attached Ot course, the president has absolute supervision over the money appropriated by congress to meet cer- tain White House bills, The sundry crvil aet for the fiseal year ending June 30, 1916, provided $6,00 “‘for ordinary care, repalr and refurnishing of the executive mannlon, and for the purchase, maintenance and drive ing of horses and vehicles for ordinary purposes, to be expended by contract or otherwise.” This covers the wages of the servants, which range from $40 to #75 & month, the pay of the chauffeurs and the upkeep of five White House automobiles. In the same act there Is provided $9,000 for the care and maintenance of the White House greenhouses, 36,000 for fuel for the White House and the green houses, and a sum not to exceed $5,600 for lighting the White House, the surrounding grounas and green- houses, An extra item of $3,000 also 1s carrled for ye. palirs to the greenhouses. Another appropriation 18 82,000 for the traveling expenses of the president, to be “expended In his dis- eretion and accounted for on his certificate solely. " What remaina at the end of the year of this fund, as well as of the appropriations, stays in the treasury When the president travels he invariably occuples a private car, usualiy aiiached to a regular train and vequiring the payment of twenty-five full fares. The government owns no private car for the president—one 18 rented by the day other Twice Told Tales lowa Is ranked first among states in the proportion of automeblies to population. Reports for 1916 show stoady speeding up In numbers. State lcenses have } boen used for slightly more than 140,00 machines, | and applications are coming In with a rush, in order | to escape & penalty imposed after May 1 | The Altrulst soclety of Montelalr, N, J., un | the reform of A citisen addicted to boose. The man toll for 1t and proved his sincerity by walking past | two s without squinting st the signs. As he | rea i the third he turned 1o his ohaperons and whispered bravery deserves a deink,”’ and he | wont Innide A lewsl disquisition on the relation of draw pok to gambling, prepared for the enlightenment of & New York magistrate, draws & cloar Uine botween | poker recreation and poker for profit. Mo long as | the play s minus the “KItLy™ 1t is striotly tnnocent susplelon. But the alters i1 wulle N A makes it mighty dangerous for amateirs gnn of the "Kood old summer e sposding W steadily pop Into view, A soda fountain blew up and satd 1 f lovely Oskalooss, ' A napevtors In New York last Saturday ght & e of Kastor pouliry at scares of shaps hed 1h As and thely orops and found thes selvea twetghied DUt Iwe inatances. Nealdes wors wolghiod with sand and corm as W oa Per Mok The latier was pald fue T . » ) A o inapect " New York's Faster ¢ \ B o P e and and e A el W \ \ . 1 . ¥ ’ \ ' L, bt 1he primary te Prilse N " 1 prvimiv-tucsa " - - e weld s M Ansa tgn \ N N Marming Bty wh . Whiing w ¥ « ' b hor voat and oxiibited & reguinr Mary Walker regalia The demonsiintion carvted the day and Wi dress advoeaies & panialens winseity UL The Boes Lelor Bc Woes of Poland, BOUTH SIDE, April 19.~To the Editor of The Bee: The long, bloody and de vastating war in Kurope is Indeed a great calamity, but since it could not be averted the world should concurrently mee o It that the terrible bloodshed has not been perpetrated in vain and the inde noribable sufferings of the people have brought permanent relfef. It is very im portant, therefore, that when the war is terminated and the terr-s of peace are concluded, to arrange the map of Burope in such u way that it will preclude necos- sity and even possibility of another war like the one that torments the world today. But there will be no permanent peace In Europe, however, as long as there are nations which deem it their privilege to oppress and dominate other nationalities, to persecute them and in terfere with the course they wish to pursue, And before the war brole out thers were several small natfonalities in Burope that were thus treated by their stronger nolghbors, Ons of these nnfor tunate ones was Poland, and its condl tion was certainly most tragis of all Henldén being deprived of freedom and ndependence, Poland has been divided In three parts and all attompts were mae to exterminate the race of its peo ple. But fhey falled and tne love and loyalty of the Polish people to their fathorland has never been more ardent and sincere than it s today, while the crime they committed upon that nation was ever-ready cause of quarrel and became one of the main factors that brought the present war It sy therefore, of prime importance to all the world that this question and others similar are wettled intelligently and the only proper, just, and intelll gent solution Is to restore their inde pendence and let them bulld their own future, Let me cite president Wilson's phrase 20, 1916, “Amerien does mnot ask anything for itaelf, which it has no right to ask for others.” It applies to Poland with equal truth- fulness and puatification THOMAS GIEKTOWSK] Editorial Snapshots Hoston Transcript: Among the “Immor- tals” Incorporated by congress are Wood row Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt, but it In expected that the act will he sub- mitted to a referendum In November Chicago Post Well, anyhow, reports Indicate that the consumption of con. gromsional “free’ wecds Is not overtaking the supply. What effect the state of af. falrs will have on the vote crop rather tends to keep the congressmen guessing Philadelphia Ledger: In the opinfon of two grave and learned United States sen- atorw, it iw “a patriotic duty” for Justice Hughes to put an end to all the discus sion of his avallability as a presidential candidate. The wish is father to the thought Indianapolls News: At the very time when golfers are polishing up thelr elubs, when spring I8 urging them toward the links, when the grass is greenest—preo- cisely at the “psychological moment,'” there comes good news for the man who plays the game, Golf balls may be re- duced in price. Unfortunately, it 1s not to be sald that they will be reduced in price, It depends upon “demand,” and, of course, it depends on the war, Springfield Republican: Dr. David Jayne Hill, former nmbassador from the United States to Germany, belleves that “our government s a practically negligible Quantity as an international influence.' This should not be taken so serlously The doctor s evidently suffering /from a touch of the kind of patriotism that com peln the sufferer to belittle his country with the ultimate hope of helping to aggrandize it, Baltimore American: The creation of an American Academy of Fifty Immor- tals, as proposed in congress, to further the Interests of literature and the fine arts, as the bill declares, will doubtiess ralse n storm of protest from the women ns the names proposed are exclusively manculine. Advanced feminism, espe. cln when it has names prominent in literature and the fine arts of ity own to offer, cannot be expected to stand this outrageous partiality with equanimity Signs of Progress During the last year the Navajo Tn. dian blanket industry reached a total of 700,000, Denver has a eharter election hooked for May 0. Registration of voters is 30,000 below the record, with two reglstration days to come. Guthris, OKL, opens the spring hailstone season with a story of hailstones measyr Ing twelve Inches In clroumference. Pretty kood starter, that In & court procesding at Kan, the plaintiff suing for on the sal tentitied of heer were sold at Welr City, ounty, during the last five and that he I8 entitled to & spif of $12,00 Columbus, ommissions of boore, that %2 earloads Oherokee years Vighty Ttallana of Weed, Cal, have formed a club for the purpose of becom oltinens moment. The In a school that educate appht ralisation so they ean pass ng American at the eariioat possible ction will cants for nat the necessary axaminations. A woodaplitting machine has been In vented which automatically handles loge two feet long and slghteen tnohes thiok 1t ie run by & three-horsepower gasoline engine, and conslsts matnly of & huge kntt wileh works through the knottiost “ sl the rate of sixty strokes & min WAsaia, 1n (he slaie of New Jersey, has | \ we who wields the bla stiek mashors Mis tholt for one hug and on Kien foreihly taken s & fine of 316 and ae yoar In ML The treatm eancnably effleacious aibered & world's et plate "l he s made hea * I apere sateaville, Py, where £ will be t apable of o & fin " fest "y aat argeat £ \hie eharaeter ot the § s Witk ' 4 ", M st rolls . font wam [T ant lite o . ‘'‘My wife carries her fondness for that | cat to excess, “How mo?" “The critter takes a prominent ris given in feline circles.” part “And dinged it my wife ain't talking of having his voice trained.”-—Louisville Courfer-Journal, ‘See. There's the great catch of the| nnlnnnv" “Indeed. And how many coupons do you get with him?"—Judge. “It was all very well for Solomon to| point to the ant for an example of in- dustry, but a better example or & pro- vider would have been a chicken,’ “"Why a chicken? Because It always comes u scratch when it 1s & question ol a living." —~Baltimore American, to the making What were those nelghbors talking about?” awked Noah as he passed in his work on the ark “Gh,” replied Japhet, “they were try- ing 1o give me an argument againat pre- parednoss, ashington Btar “I yuppose every woman takes a mel- ancholy Interest in reading this ‘Diary of # Neglected Wite,' “And | presume every married woman thinks she could write a more harrowing | one," —~HBoston lrunnor!p' | “"Why didn't rm interfere when the cook | chaned the walter with n cleaver and the | waltress yolled murder?” I !hunx)n it was an ordinary cabaret | feature. 1 couldn’t understand ‘what the Sayrmond; rem 15131815 Will Save You Meney | singing."” | and equal?” iSms ANK o 1 thought she was Sun. waitress was y?ll!rf‘ ~New Yor “Do you think that all men are free “I know of one place where they are. o “Where 18 that? “In a barber shop. There everyone to wait his turn."—Detroit Free Pres, THE VAGABOND, TNobert Lnuln Sl.vvmm\ Give me the life I love, Let the lave go by Give the jolly hfll\nnl above And the byway nigh me, Bed in the bush with stars to see, Bread 1 dip in the river— There's the life for a man like me, There's the life forever. Let the blow fall soon or late, Let what will ba o'er an: (Ave the face of the earth around, And the road before me, Wealth I seek not, hope nor love, Nor a friend to know me; All I seck, the heaven above And the road below me. Or lst autuma fall on me Where afield 1 linger, Silencing the bird on tree, Biting the blue finger, White as meal, the frosty fleld— Warm the fireside haven Not to autumn will I yleld Not to winter even! Let the blow fall moon or late, Lot what will be o'er me; J Give the face of the earth around, And the road before me, Wealth I ask not, hope nor love, Nor a friend to know me, All 1 ask, the heaven above And the road below me. % paid on Time Certificates All deposits in the MAHA 16th & Btreots are protected by the Depositors’ Guar- | antes Fund of the State of Nebraska. # Commerecral Accounts Invited $300 & yoar and up Accounts Harney HOWARD 87, === —— There’ A Reasen Don't Fail to Get Our Prices Before You Buy “IT PAYS." Bome big values among our large line of Buffets and Sideboards Buffet, 48-inch length, golden or fumed $l3.25 quartered oak. . 48-Inch length, golden Buffet, like $14.25 or fume length, select (llustration ., , Buffet, 48-inch qunrlered oak, i, $16.75 Bu"ol "66-nch’ length, fumed oak, very heavy, best quartered stock; plush lined drawers, . 828,98 ; TABLES goim ook Totle $11,25 rn o ,$12.25 | Golden or Fumed $l4 95 ()nk 48-4nch toup. ory Massive floldan Oak Table, | We Invite your careful inspectio _—__,._,‘, '“ I|IE. &€ bl o S ! }‘L‘ CHAIRS Golden Oak, saddle seat Diner, box seat construc- BOD . s ssgsrenene Golden Oak, luther seat Diner. . " $1.50 $2.25 m of the material and construc. Heavy Oak Diner, | leather seat. ., tion of every one of these pleces. CIT Leave Omaha .. ... Arrive Kansas City . our own unsurpassed Dining Leave Omaha .. ..... Arrive Kansas Oity Leave Omaha ...... Arrive Kansas Oity , / MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON \ MOUNTAIN KANSAS VIA~ MISSOURI PACIFIC Modern Equipment. 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