The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 24, 1925, Page 7

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EOGAR RICE BURROUGHS guetx HERE TODAY ingle bee T Sees tice ta a ‘from ims the jor ingots. F pet eo pa Mone-time maid rey hold Doping 9 ON WITH THE STORY Cad ear crouched for the But appea at the stood a mile from foot use Manu was very much al Gealone in the growing dusk Sewampered very fast with ti bowed up and out behind the time he cast affrighted the right and left, The} the reached the kopje mi up its face as fast as he HE was really a huge, pre P granite rock with almost fides, but sufficiently | to make its itle Manu. He paused & at the summit to get his Bad ptt the deatings of his Witle heart, and then he I way Around to a point it be could ook down upon the | th. } Tey iivieet, was the great Tar Tarmac. aod with him were MW Gorhangani. The latter wiking together a number of % ditight poles, which they had ‘ ‘the ground in two parulle! ge these two, nt inter @& fox or more, they were} Smaller straight branches Winches in length, the whole mm Grade but substantial lac Tm purpose of all this Manu ‘ Gi, not understand, nor ie that kt had been evolved fertile brain of Flora b 4 means of scaling the me kopie, at the summit of ad ascent Saew that the party had no Gon of entering the city of am was therefore in no dan @ becoming victims of Cadj's Smessins. To him, the dan the Apes was having regained no time in de his warning to the friend people. ma” he cried, in the lan that common to both. hite man and the biacks wp at the sound of his chat ® e Manu. Tarzan.” continued tk monkey, “who has come Wea net to co to Oper. Cadj People await within the ‘mall to slay you.” ‘Wacks, having discovered author of the disturbance hing but a Hitle gray mon-| i I. immediately to thelr|they were coming after him, for) “I saw the white man similarly |the egotism of the lower animals | Gomangan) Mt his words of warning. Mant | Surprised at the lack of Mt displayed by the blacks, | , that they did not un- iat his language, but he could) wnd why Tarzan failed} "any attention whatsoever ) Again and again he called! by name. Again and again! his warning to the ape-| tat without eliciting any reply | ME information that the great i had elther heard or un- bhim. Manu was mystified md Occurred to render Tarzan MP Apes so indifferent to the Of his ol friend? the little monkey gave It looked longingly back in Mion of the trees within city of Opar. It was dark and he trembled at} Of recroasing the vulley, enemies might prow! Be scratched his head ry forlorn littie ball of a monkey. at uncomfortable he was high kopje, he was com. Male, and so he decided there during the night venture the terrifying theu the darkness. Thus that he SM erected against the side prin Gargle | | 4 is Out and Save if ect to Sore Throat We t@ Bayer Tablets of fh four tabiespoonfus of | his people upon the trail of the ape- argie the throat thor. | Repeat in two houg if nec-| while he wan scampering across the BMES you ure only the genuine iiableta of Axpiris Bayer Crows, which tn boxes of twelve Na Adveriixement }ly into ur alone |* marked | from a clear sky, after he lown trees. F goon AND THE GOLDEN LION (Copyripht the kopje: and at last 4 saw Tartan so men to acd never seen A cruel with ompanied him. eciqus the d be east. b een bln the blacks One by one with acks nually urge greate: eed by the ord treatme who his frie eviden luctance the bi ascended adder, cont for arp the whit they Manu saw appare grat time menced to reapr rdened by two peared to it was that the and now each was b heavy objects whieh Manu to » ain to some of thé ama tone blocks that had the construction of n Opar, He ks to the edie been used of tt u the buildings mow the i ka had em 1 with his ay below fed the the party desce the foot of the of the ed th this ume Apes went Tarzan first. Then they lowe and took tt apart ar to the foot of the cliff ich they took up the biocks which had brought from the heart of ne kopje, and followed Tarzan, who t out tn the lead, they commenced ret their steps toward the the valley Manu would have been very much mystified had he a man, but & monkey he saw only aw without mpting te reason mish’ it. He knew that the ways of men were peculiar, and oftentimes unaccount able, For example, the Gomangan who could not travel thru the Jungle and the forest with the ease of; any other of the animals which frequented them, added to their dif ficulties by loading themaetves down | with additional weights in the form of metal ankleta and armists, with Necklaces and giniies, and with skins of animals, which did nothing more. than impede their progress and render life much more complicated than thatewhich the untrammeled| Deasts enjoyed. Manu, whenever he gare the matter a thought, congratu lated bimeelf that. he was not a man—he pitied the foolish, unrea sonable creatures. | Manu must have slept. He thought that he had only closed his eyer & moment, but When he opened them the rosy light of dawn had overspread the desolate valley. Just disappearing over the cliffs to the northeast he could s@e the Inst of party “commenting the ecent of the ‘barrigr, then Manuf turned” hie “face towkrd Opar and prepared to descend from the kopje. and scamper back to the safety of his trees within the walls of Opar But first he would reconnoiter— Sheeta, the panther, might be still) abroad. and so he scampered around the edge of the kopje to a point where he could see the entire valley | floor between himeelf and Opar. And there it was that he saw again that which filled him with greatest excitement. For, debouching from the ruined outer wall of Opar was a large company of Opar’s frightful men—fully a bundred of them Manu could have counted had Manu been able to count They, seemed to be coming toward the kopje, and he sat and watched them as they approached, deciding to defer his return to the city until after the path was cleared of heted | Orparians. It occurred to him tha ladder tx pleces afte rim been onty y very about is inordinate. Because he was a/ monkey, the idea did not seem at! all ridiculous and sq he hid behind a jutting rock, with only one little, bright eye exposed to the enemy. | He saw them come closer and he grew very much excited, tho he was not at all afraid, for he knew) that if they ascended one side of] the kopje he could descend the other and be half-way to Opar be fore they could possibly locate him} again. | On and on they came, but they! Aid not stop at the kopje—as a mat-| ter of fact, they did not come very close to it, but continued on beyond it. Then it was that the truth ot | the matter flashed into the little brain of the monkey—Cadj and his) people were pursuing Taran of the | Apes to slay him. If Manu had|/ been offended by Tarzan’s indif ference to him upon the night be-| fore, he had evidently forgotten it, or now he was quite as excited ‘about the danger which he saw men-| ace the apeman as he had been) upon the afternoon previous. At} first he thought of running ahead} and again warning Tarzan, but he) feared to venture so far from t trees of Opar, even if the thought} of having to pass the hated Opar-| w he ladder com- tans had not been sufficient to deter) Caqj, him from carrying out this plan. For | a few minutes he sat watching them, | until they had all passed the kopje,| and then it became quite clear to} him that they were heading directly | for the spot at which the last of} Tarzan's party had disappeared from | the valley—there could be no doubt} hat they were in pursuit of the ape-man. Manu scanned the valley once more toward Opar. There was noth- ing in sight to deter him from an attempted return, and so, with the agility of his kind, he scampered down the vertical face of the kopje and wag off at great speed toward the city’s wall. Just when he form ulated the plan that he eventually followed It iw difficult to say. Per- haps he thought it all out as he rat upon the kopje, watching Cadj and man, or perhaps it occurred to him barren waste toward Opar, It may have popped into his mind just had re- the leafy sanctuary of his Be that, however, as it | the fact remains that as La, ue ATTLE STAR SS THE SE CAPPY RICKS He Writes Letter to His Son-in-Law Peter B. Written for The Ster by Kyne Dear Matt from " daresay you car In A Remarkably Attra letters a sight be under the burden If you ow of our agents can all, on my triy sonal advie bold them tt earn them bog aap nytt T have: ehnsotieg Jar virhat HIS event offers important sav- Orient te ings on highly-desirable new b Sete ar Ong | Spring Silks of many types—most opportunely, too, for Spring-clothes planning is just beginning. ume on the tendency ( A bawling out in time saves the situation very frequently, and should be indulged in at reg 1 ular intervals by all bosses who ‘ freight tnte know their business ctor bad atique whieh wa hed discharging lighters at 10 39-INCH SATIN CREPES 36-INCH CHARMEUSE RAYON SATIN CANTONS 39-INCH CREPE DE CHINE 6,000 Yards of New Plain and Printed Silks ctive Offering, Monday 85 YARD THE offering includes weaves for street frocks and ensem- ble effects, sports apparel and afternoon gowns, as follow 39-INCH RADIUM SILKS SATINS 39-INCH FLAT CREPE CORDED SILKS Sa ESA eh ea Sports Plaids and Printed Silks « the prop other a help rit An Bayo and coming ¢ he think of 15 differ thinks his job watehed by methods of blackmailing you the home off all efficient schemes) while a Matt, White man is wondering whether to! the creature iy an Egyptian, a dew, an Arab, a whirling Dery making good of e THE PLAIDS ARE OF HEAVY CREPE with woven-in plaiding of con- trasting color in many pleasing combina- 39 inches wide—$1.85 yard. Let us be as hard but just. That's tly keep these young fellows up on oe, ish, a Copt or a Negro. I have promised all of our far-flung) Knowing thix I sought out battle line a raise of $100 a month | leisurely piic ve bim his cus gold during 1925, provided their busi-|tomary tip of Then 1 feng during 1925 shows an average| sought out one of our f fire increase of 20 per cent over 1924.) men and did busine They are to re raisé ina] The Filip lump sum after the books are closed /as much ae he think hae fea for 1925 jabout democ of go I¢ I'm any judge men, our, ment, but he in many French, British and German compet m of nelf-det * in the round-the-world freight) 1 “na and passenger that ene pound. lipine s with bis tions, ive this may not b instances { , service are going to|ing into a fairly ¢ round Know they've been in a fight fighter, and [ had learned that this Never forget, Matt, that noth particular fireman was quite the cock |) ing sweetens life like a substan. of the flreroom him another pick a fight pilot the pound and with tial evidence of appreciation, so Bo I gave for your 195 budget figure $125 told him to extra per agent per month—the — Egyptian $23 being for cabled cheers or (off the bridge. It happened hoots, as the ease may be, ny ina For $28 you can strip the hide off for and tike the provided you use the Ke table i would budge for the ot | minute he on the companior ward well deck he went and down in @ minutes and 36 od 1 would take bim 16 second: th job in the heat of t would still give bim an edge seconds over the Pyramid Kid @ dead agent ata in Aesop's heers I suggest that you human Engtish,| finally “Jenks, Blue- membered he was a pit ——— - & fireman and a member of an infer. | jor race, no he butted the Filipino down to the well deck. When it waa altiever the ‘chicfimate bent a rope| . Well, Matt. I. went out thete pax around the Unconscious man and| Ay nd started a pow-wow sbebl 8 ‘ orald to the plot | White man who could beat the Pyra fropped him overside Into the pilot | mid Kid. All the bandite gathered and when | offered to bet 500 pounds on my champion, All Baba and his thieves got together and held a wa h-wallah. make « long story short Me Pe xajd they’d cover my money, earth was agreed that the event « puld be t follow tad Ngured it bust out int something tke day, whic of five » pure the e e this ed by high priestess and princess of Opar. ta company with several of her priestesses, was bathing In a pool in one of the temple gardens, she was startled by the scréaming of a mon key, swinging frantically by his tall from branch of a great tree which overspread the pool—it was a little gray monkey with a face so serious t one easily have imagined that of nations lay constantly shoulders of its owner. (An intimate # LETTER FROM LESLIE PRES COTT TO THE LITTLE MAR QUISE, CARE THE SECRET DRAWER, CONTINUED little 1 had the t a woman forgiving a man his own sins against her was @ xploded notion, In days of woman's Independence . th very dood notion t your personal t wit might |'0 that ship, and T would have done |". the fate |"0 had not Fate presented a golden the opportunity for me to spoll a horde of Egyptians and m than make it screamed, “they have | #004 for the loss due to this unwar- Tarsan. They have |Tanted demurrage *° I went by train Cairo, planning to meet the again in Alexandria While in Cairo I went out for a look-see at the pyr emida, and while there a dusky Attache of the Court of His Santanic Majesty offered t imb to the of the main pyramid and back again in 10 minutes, and all for the sum of one Egyptian pound. the they wie and and | Marquise upon pulled ‘off at & o'clock the afternoon When Sonny B the contest I was accompanied by a sergeant of Exyptian police, who had had the grace to hall and a squad of Egypt ho were mixed Irigh Most of them wore ¢ align rib. bons and wore faint reminders of the fact that the British lon stills keep ja paw on Egypt. The sergeant heid After some bargnining I Jewed him | the purse and the corporal he Assisted by down to 50 piastres and an agree | stop- watch, ent to do it in 7 minutes, with ajsuide, with a delegation of Exy He came to the great | Pius of $0 plastres for every second |#orts with their own stop watches | rock that lies in the valley before| so cut off that period. to check the referees: Opar; with ail his men ho climbed) wei}, stat, nothing will ‘make an| It was a noble spectacle and Sonny to the top of it. went into the heart) poy ptian work Ike a couple of pi- | Boy beat the Pyramid Kid by, three it, and came out with stones! aires extra, #0 this boy flew at it,|#econds and 1 collected the bet) which they threw down into the | 114 was a young, stringy devil and in |®midst howling and walling and valley. Afterward they descended the pink of condition, because run- | #nashing of teeth | from the rock and picked up the | ning up an down that pyramid for| That was a pious thought of mine} atones again and left the valley—lthe edification of fool tourists had| having the police to protect us, not there,” and Manu pointed toward|i.6n his sole source of income for |t? mention letting them all in on the the northeast with one of his halry | ijwards of three years. He all but|® and giving them two pounds little fingers. busted bimaelf wide epen and man-|e@ch to cover side bets with stray “How do you know it was Tarean | sseq to clip five seconds off his| n sports, of the Apes?” asked La. previous record, so I figured he was eant five pounds for “Does Manu not know his cousin | rey good and paid the bonua with|® bonus. declucted approximately | and hia friend?” demanded the mon-| 4 ght heart |what I thought that pllot had cost key. “With my eyes 1 saw him—it | rat ee the Blue Star Navigation Co, and’ isakt when talking to your own waa Tarzan of the Apes.” That night as I was partaking of a |#ave the remainder to Sonny Boy; | saugnter.” } La of Opar puckered her brows | title elixir of lite on the piazza of "Ho pald his own hotel ill and in-/ #1 am not sarcastic, but truthful, in thought. Deep in her heart| shepherd's hotel, a healthy looking |*isted on buying a ticket home on) wy dear, 1 am saying all this to you pmolderéd the fires of her gteat! srecimen of Young Atnerice dropped | Uf. ship trom Alexandria b bisious. © wiht wen to teattia Tibet love for Tarzan. Fires that had into a chair by y side and, waiving | This showed he had the symptoms you. & on the wrong track and if been quenched by the necessity that | introduction and formality, confided |f @ gentleman in him, so upon MY) you Keep on It you will be very un- compelled her marriage with Cadj)to me that he was a stranger in & advice he hax abandoned athletics as st she had seen the ape oy . eae ; cite sabre happy nstend of trying to make la he had n the “Dp | strange land and fiat broke. & poor bualr an ” Bee cebena fe gous ual reer r it is written among the| qe looked like a you | this letter ches you he will report nice clean boy | A of Opar that the High Prieat-| ind, co Gs “4 come over | t? You for a job. See that you give Sh | 4nd, come to find out, he'd come over | ih you TRA eARY goes ental ens of the Flaming God must take|to run in the Marathon at the Olym-|!t to him f mate within a certain number of | pic eer |fire some dead one and give a live| ears after her consecration. For|on the high hurdles. After failing | OPC hits . Yang imcone jad La tonged’"10| to piace i. eller evebty he startéd| With Jove to you and Fiorry make Tersan thet mate. The ape-|on a tour of Europe and Africa, and|™Y srandaon, I am, ax always, man had not loved her, and finally | here in Cairo he'd been robbed and Yottrs for a little hell-ratsing, she had come to a realization that | was up against it CAEPY he could never love her. Afterward) You know me, Matt. I never pau <= she had bowed to the frightful fate | perize anybody, so I offered this boy that had placed her in the arms of |» job, to-wit, climbing the main pyr- amid in anywhere from two to five ‘As month after month had passed | seconds faster than the Pyramid Kid said thd Fairy Queen to the Twin and Tarzan had not returned to|I'd met that afternoon. ? ll righteet* said they, So all Opar, ax he had promised he would If he would take the job I'd stake thr got on Two Spot's back and do, to see that no harm befell La,| him to @ pass home on our own ship * flew off happily to town. | she had come to accept the opinion |and give him # split on whatever “Oh shucks! he was saying to| of Cadj that the ape-man was dead, | profit might accrue from a plan I himself as he stopped and looked | and tho she bated the repulsive |had in mind, And I unfolded my/ up and down the street. “There Cadj none the leas, her love for | plan. isn't any place to sled ride here in ‘Tarzan had gradually become little| Sonny Boy said he'd’ been long | j}town, The minute the snow falls than a sorrowful memory, | enough in Egypt to learn that no jit's shoveled right off the streets. | Sow to learn that he was alive and| white man should compete with an | And even if St wasn't you couldn't | had been so near was like reopen | Egyptian except on a sure thir go sled-riding anyway for the autos ing an old wound. At first she|otherwise one loses his money. H. mit LIMMlecdt Ee beubikor a: Mae comprehended little else than that | suggested, therefore, that we take an and make a snow man, There is Tarzan had been close to Opar, but | automobile, motor out to the pyra’) s lots of snow where there aren't! presently the cries of Manu arouned | mid and have a private try-out in aay pais: J her to a realization that the ape.|the presence of a stop watch. So I ge j man was in danger—just what that | cot his stop-watch out of the pawn So off he started, Two Spot and danger was she did not know shop and we started. Cuticura Talcum his passengers following close be- | “Who has gone to kill Tarzan of Business at the pyramids was hind, Hh Is The Ideal Powder the Apes?” she demanded suddenly.| over for the day and all the Chuck the path and Cad), Cads! shrieked Manu. “He| guides, fakirs, beggars and jinto a white’ drift of snow | has gone with many, many men,| bandits who hang around there Its purity@smoothness and fra- Here—this Is a fine place for a and is following upon the spoor of| by day had gone home for eve. grance, combined with antiseptic) (snow man he cried. “And the | Tarzan.” | ning prayers and a dishonestly and prophylactic properties which] sniow's Just right. It sticks fine | La sprang quickly from the pool,| earned meal. Sonny Boy stripped help to overcome disagreeable} | Ho had made Mr Snow Man up| neled her girdle and ornament»| down to his running gear and at odors, make it an essential toilet to his knees when a voice veried | from her attendants, and, adjusting | the word go, he went. requisite, sharply, “Hi, there! Stop — that! them hurriedly, sged thru the gar-| No chamols, leaping from crag to Don't you see the sign ‘Keep off} the Grass.’ Well that means ‘Keep off the Snow,’ jet along now "La, La,” these gone to kill gone to kill Tarzan. At the from Suez to ad J arrived for My dear mother, however, told me thing entirely different 1 found from beth my own and friends’ experience she «al the most successful wives are ays the first to make up @ rel “Even th best of men, my dear have pwn in their hearts, a x of superiority » women It has been engrained in them by his- tory and tradition until it hax become almost biological. Very few men can bring themselves, you know, to ac knowledge, to an infertor, that they | are wrong.” sound of that vessel name La wax instantly all attention. Stand ing deep in the pool looked up at the little money tioningly “What do asked. “It wince Tarzan are you talking about?” “1 saw him," screamed Manu; him last night with many r top Manu?” she many moons Opar, What ou n has be was I must have looked greatly dis- gusted, little Marquise, for mother | aid with a amile: “Ob, my dear, 1] am sure you are quite as bad as the! rest in this primitive feminine trait. | Confess that you too at times have | cuddied up in Jack's arms and been magnantmously fom&iven for some} kin or folly that he bas committed himself.” Mother,” I interposed, “I never knew that you could be sarcastic, at since He was also some shakes ‘Let's go and see how the litt country boy is getting along in the city at his Uncle Charley's hous waded Soap She. Ointment 2 and toe. Joam the, Bold | Sour avewstorie Dope 60 "Sasden, Mase! den and Into the temple crag in the Alps could compare with WET Cuticure Shaving Stick 25. (Continued in Our Next Issue) him, and according to his stop watch ry of imnermos( emotions revealed by private te | thankful |nothing of the kind and never will ree SU OF THES PUN & Olive Roberts Barton NO. 10—THE FAIRY | "We'll 85 YARD THE PRINTS ARE OF ‘ALL-SILK THREE-THREAD CREPE DE CHINE in 40-inch width, in Roman stripe patterns, checks, plaids, coin spots and block-print effects—$1.85 yard. —First Floor & NELSO his open window and foot of his bed. Gn beautiful ttle lady diamond on forehead light over the whole room stood poised at the foot of the bed’ for a minute and then grace |fully stepped over the counterpane hoe ne to give you some good advice, Chuck,” said she. “It's about iife. I want you to learn a lesson. Without learning this you will always be unhappy, No one sn right to play until his work cleverer (8 done cheerfully and well. Life is no rea-| Without work would be like living dominate}on dessert for meals. You would soon tire of playing all the time jjust as you would tire of having nothing but sugar for food. Go tack to the country and never for. what I have told you.” huck is going to be @ fine boy, perfectly ob- Just as soon as he stops wishing,” k ever the Fairy Queen later told the been married.” | Twins d and tried (Copyright, 19% went on quietly will manage her bus: happiness and there never a happy and harmonious marriage that a wife did not man- age her husband, but in such a way that he did not know. That has been! pont let that cold hang on any the beauty of woman ever since Eve|longer. Get busy right now and managed to get Adam out of the| destroy the germs of infection be G nd i = jfore serious arouble results. Nev — “3 Eden and put him to work) ming about doping your stomach where she knew he would be happler/ with pills or potions. Such things than lazily wondering if he had bet-| won't reach the inflamed tissues ter eat of the tree of knowledge.” — | 7°" mone throat Be Pad x ig “) ” " | oO ANY Koo rug store an: But T don't want to drop to sub-| ask for a S0-cent tube or jar of- terfuge,"" I retorted hotly. “I only|"Deo"—the genuine Dennis’ Euca~ want perfect understanding.” |lyptus Ointment. Heat a spoonful in- 6 9 a ja tin plate an reathe the pleasantyy i ‘Oh, no you don't,” she interrupted, | soothing vapor. Almost instantly it- for if he did understand you, you|clears the head and begins killing would be most uncomfortable. Be |off germs. Inflammation quickly that your husband does |s#bsides. your cough disappears and 3 the raw, tender membranes com-, mer ¢ to heal mposed entirely of an ing oils, Fine for ca-, and sore throat. Sat results guaranteed or Sold by druggists everyw Eucalyptus Ointment Berkeley, Cale hed on back with « her At shed She struct ideal, my it wil fit your dear, so that husband, Jack is an not very profound, not | h at holarly You are than he. Therefore there son why you should not the situation and make him perfectly happy white doing #0." “I despise a woman who tries to mane husband. 1 said with her get Jo this} “ in ® manner which is vioux and sto J you have 1 mas' mother who is wise band for his since tN BA UP COLD TONIGHT but e wife to 5 vice, Inc.) was Leslie, when he does, all the zest af! loving will be gone ay what you may, my dear, loving is only a and its greatest inte t is tMat one | back. never knows while one lives, what | Dennis will be the outcome. cape te iCopyright, 19 NB A Service, Ine.) TOMORROW: tinued. This letter con: | QUEEN’S ADVICE © I'l run you in.” Poor Chuck got aw fast aa he could. ‘The policeman stood watching until he was out of sight “Come on,” said the Fairy Queen. hurry after him and see what happens next.” As he came near the house his} aunt called out, “I Yas just look- | ing for you. It's time for your! violin lesson. Your teacher will be waiting.” | “Oh, shucks! said Chuck. (Real- ly his name should have been Shucks.) “Everything is such a bother? All work and no fun like there is in the country! I hate vio- lin lessons, and no place to sled- ride or make a snowman.” “Why, Chuck! said his aunt. “You surprise me! Your mother / wrote and said you sald the same | thing about the country. That it | was all work and no play and that you hated to chop wood and clean | paths,” Chuck hung his bead. ths he said. That night Chuck thought he was having « dream, but it was really and truly true—the thing that hap. pened A big Is your husband too stout? Has he taken on unnecessaty weight? Do your friends make re- = eee Teves to wrt your ings, of course, oe you nevertheless? Thousands of men and women have found excess weight easy to remove. Why let your husband suffer from it? Marmola Tablets— without exercises or dicts —will bringbackhisnaturalhealthyfigure. Recommendthesetabletsto him. Geta box for him. Once he uses them he will always be thankful that you oe him to get slender. It is your ity toes test he beeps slender like other successful men. All heve thi eer 1 , the Marmola Bieakal own es Devote tack MARMOLA Presoription Tablets “I gusss blue velvet butterfly flew pene fan a cape Scere ahaa he mt al a

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