PAGE FOUR IAN- MARCH 4, 1933 1 HE CHARLOTTETOWN GUAR Prslldant W. _ Becreta ry- LleuL-t-ol. D. Editor and Managing - Aaaoctua Editors-Frank UNITED BTATES-I‘1|I Beckwttl Butltllnl, St. Loull.‘ Cheater B. llclmro, l. P. A TllE cutntonrrown outnmmL Y A. alasltnnpn, D. l. 0. Director-J. B. Burnett Wllker and D. K. (‘unto J. U. LHIIIIML Morning Dally (founded M871 $0.00 ver {all tin advance) delivered, $4.50 per year (la advanca) mailed la “Mia and Unltaq Batu, ADVERTISING BIPBISENTATIVB! Special Agency inc. Icy y"; “m”; Illlldlag, New York City, General Motor; Building Detroit Interstate Built-a tug, Kansas City, Willoughhy Tower Building Glenn Building. Atlanta; franeiaco; 1.135 ho (0th Btreeg Philadelphia, chit-arc: Syndicate Trnu alouadnock Bullmnm up partisanship. Morning Maxim ; Biography may be an an in which truth submits to discretion and SATURDAY, MARCH l, 1933. 1 A c000 BEGINNING 'l“he tone of the addresses so tar delivered in the L" ‘ ‘aturc indicates that members 0n both sides of the House are desirous of avoiding par- tisan bickcrings. There is an evid- ent ‘fillill to rise to an CCClrlOfl which all recognize to be serious; and th;s f in itself ls an augury of the mcs: i 1 fortunate and promising kind, ‘ The times through shich we are , y. Pei-Jig in Coniunctzon wizh other provinces clad counirics hlltJl-ltt hate l f” a sobering effect P“ Our political I apeechmalrers. To quote a fat-orite , lt is light. auq “a; hog; - phrase of the late Fresher; v3.33“, q-iltcd. Mr. 1.2a has indicated a 41¢. sire tn discuss msttersirom a broad- er than party standpoint, and Hon. Or. Lfacbflllsn, acting leader of the House, has responded by assuring the ODPOSltlOD that all available in- formation asked for will be fumish. ed. and that suggestions and con- structive criticism will be welcomed. These overtures should be taken WYlOH-fily by every member or the House. They present ~~ rnportun- Ill’ of establishing a precedent which may or may not be "Wm in the heat. 01 a political campaign, but for which there is every reason mo necessity at tho present time. EMBARGO ON ARMS 5i! Jvlm Blmons amiouncement In the British Parliament, that no ‘ further permits for shipments of ltrms or munitions to Japan or- China will be issued by the British Government, has been hailed in the press ‘with great approval. Japan has. in the most public manner, been found guilty of aggression, and has left the League of Nations to carry on a war which ha: been fipefiiflcfllly declared to he unjust by the League in full Assembly, Plainiy, further action by the Lea- vgue, or by its member nations, was t . authorities, but they speak for themselves. Some 20.000 head of finished cattle can be sent to Great Britain within the nex; months and sold at better {K1095 than are obtainable in the stock yards here. Sea-ch thousand head are now ready for export from the Prairies. “There is no question,“ continues the Globe, "about the market or the p3_\'m?l‘.t. ‘The Government is no: called upOrl :0 guarantee bonds two at 7 per cent. interest, or to see that the imp0r'.er5 live up to their bargain as the ballgrhoo drive for -a!lr¢:'*d trade vrifli . ,Thc potszh >not raised, nor is it necessary to agree t0 take oil and coal in ex- change. It is a straight business dwl." ‘This, manifestly," concludes’ our foremost Liberal contemporary, "ts where the attention o! erqaorters and the Government should be dir- ected. Britain wants Canadian cattle, and is prepared to take more than can be forwarded at present. It is a dependable "and growing market. It is where the future '0! the Canadian cattle export trade lies." ' Ly of unfair clifihng is A VIA TION PIONEERS Nowadays an aeroplane, soaring high, ls a commonplace. event, and the Dominion is dotted. with alr- pmts and Customs air harbours. The following interesting comment. on the early desires of man to fly ls taken from a recent editorial in the Monteral Gazette: The idea of constructing a “fly- ing ship" for ages haunted the human imagination. It attracted the attention of Roger Bacon in the thirteenth century, of Leonardo do. Vincl in the fifteenth century, of Cavendish in the elchteenth cen- ’ tnvoivcd when the dispute with Ja- pan took the form it. did on Febru. ‘_ dry 24, and the line which such ac- tion will rake is indicated by the rnbargo on war munitions now an- ounced by Britain; and which will douhtedly give a lead to the other utions to take a similar course. It should be noted, however, that e embargo applies to China as ell as to Japan, and this, suggests e Winnipeg Free Press, may be egarded as a weakness in the pro- dure. In order to maintain neu- lity, the nation applying the s embargo includes China, hlch is being aggressed upon, as ell as against the declared and oclalmed aEEressor-Japan. This uts the victim nation, which may ldly need assistance in its efforts i to defend itself, in the position where assistance is withheld from lt; and in this particular instance the embargo, while absolutely sound ln principle, may actually work out to the advantage of Japan-which la will armed-and to tho disadvan- tske of China, which needs help to defend herself against Japan's ag- gresslon. The arms embargo, however, ls merely tha first step. This dispute ln Manchurla will demonstrate how necessary it is for the League of Nations to carry its influence farthrf than it. has vet done in the lmm: o. oupun. Wmm the aggres- sor has been denounced, there must. ,,be some provision which does not iexclude the nation against whom - Jttlte aggression ls made. That the League ts working still on this issue .‘ I OUR CATTLE TRADE "The representations of Western. cattlemen to the Federal Mntster of Agriculture,” says the Toronto Globe, leading Uberal newspaper. Flshoqving the possibilities in the bury, and lt.was at this time of year, December 2'2, 1709, t-herc appeared in the Evening Post, pub- lished in the reign of Queen Anne. a. dcecrlption of a flying machine said be have been invented by Father Laurent, a. Brazilian priest. who appealed to His Majesty tl1¢ King of Pmtligal to pmtedt b?! patent a contrivanoe which, it was figured, “might traveldthrough tllfl air two hundred miles in “Vent-Y- four hours." The contnvance never got beyond an engraving of its pro- posed format. Many a year after- wards, when aerial flight became a live topic in the British coffee houses, Addison poured sarcasm upon the notion by mying that "it. would flll the world with wicked intrigues such as people cannot meet who have nothing but their own leg! to carry $11011" EDITORIAL NOTES The fact ls noted. in. s. New Brunswick exchange that. the first entrance of the Mari- time Provlnoes into steam-naviga» than on the high seas, occurred in 1333. The present, year is the cen- tennial of that event. The ship was the Royal William. She was not built in the Marltlmes, despite the era which she lnnttgilrated. She was built, on the St. Lawrence not far from the City of Quebec. But the fact that, capital raised 1n ltfontrcal and Halifax, produced the chip, gives connection with this section of Canada. The Royal William, taking her name from the reigning covqelgn on the British Throne, William IV., not only was the fluf- meamship built in what. now is Can- ada, but, also was the first steam- drlvcn vessel to show the British flag ln a port of the United State! of America. Not long after launch- lng she strpeared in Boston Harbor Wlth a cargo and was liven an en- "'E‘“&'-.“!‘.F'€°.°P“.°“- ' ed. ‘ IIUIIZQ ti! “It III" Then are deeply-ml“. old u- tahlishedp far-reaching. relations between man and nature which cannot be ignored without loss. man was cardled and brought up 1n mo). with nature, and be must. ever return to her like the wander- ing birds whose life is never full until moved by s11 Organic home- sidrness. they come back to nest in the place where they were born. 1n A period or evolution which has been mainly urban we miss our con- tact- with the open country, which is, for many a condition of full sanity, and makes for the steady- ing and enrichment of ltfr. impec- lally in youth ls touch with nature invaiuable for it remains true of the child who goes forth cvery day that, "what he sees becomes part of him for a day. or for a year. or for a stretching cyclc of yvars.“=SF5- tem of Animate Nature, One of the most. encouraging of many encouraging signs o.’ the times is the appointment of Sen- ator Cordell Hull. of Tennessee, as Secretary of State in the Roose- velt Caoinet, shortly to assume office. senator Hull Ls one of the outstanding members of the upper brunch of Congress, the man from of reciprocity." Senator Hull believes that revl- slon of war debts-one of the chief problems to be tackled by the new Administration as soon as it takes omce-would be useless unless ac- companied by a reduction of trade obstacles. As a guarantee of good faith the Senator expressed the view recently that the United Stat- es should take the lead in propos- ing a l0 per cent horizontal tariff reduction, to be joined in by other countries. A similar suggestion was made by Sir John Aird in his rec- ent presidential address at the an- nual meeting of the Canadian Bank of Commerce. The legislatures in several of the provinces are in session and there is an encouraging note in some of the proceedings. In New Brunswick, for example, the Speech from the Throne on Thursday referred to the beneficial effects already felt as a result of the agreements made at the Imperial Economic Conference, “and with a, readjustment o1 ex- change, the trade of this province should the greatly stimulated and im- proved.” On thc samc clay the Speech in the British Columbia As- sembly noted that timber ship-merits from the coast had increased by 10 per cent, and the trade within the lnnpire by 69 pcr cent. over 193i. At the same time Hon. Mr. Mac- Pherson in his budget speech in the Saskatchewan Legislature was fore- casting a surplus, at the end of next fiscal years operations of $4,005. The Reciprocity Treaty n! 1011, which we. defeat/ed at the polb. was unsatlsfactcry for more roas- ons than one. It was for no definite period of time, and it. was so from- ed that the change of a single item by either country would have brought the operation of the agree- ment to an end. As Mr. Bennett has said, any trade agreement which cream a channel of trade that may be terminated at. the caprtce of, or without, notice to, either party or be ended by one party without considering the interests- of the other would ‘he fatal to the inter- ests 0f both. The reciprocity debate in Parlin-. ment. and the speeches favoring the. proposal by Premier Bennett, R. ‘B. Hanson, M. P., and others, seems tn have started something in tho United States. The Americans as the result. of cxhorbitant tariff enactments have 10st the bulk of their once proflablo trade with Olnada and would much like to get it, back. The agreements made at the Ottawa conference last year have caused them loss of sleep. and they are now apparently wil- ling to talk business. They will find Premier Bennett ready to deal with them, but he will not be a party to any jug-handled bargain. Nineteen obtwenty one murders conunitted within the precincts of Grcnicr Lnndon were solved m’ ' " Metropolitan Police lost year. '1‘ s is a record the authorities of the great, British metropolis may well be proud. Politics and slack coulil procedure are things that do not enter into the nation o! Justice in the old Ommtry. Hence this notable achteveluent. One of the bl; trees o: Seqllolfl which was a seedling in 271 B C. suffered s burn three hilt Wide when it was 51d years old and 890m 10a years in folding its livlnz 0-s- cues over the wound. when it was killed at the 0B0 0f 3.171 Wits. 9- Metltuselah cmonl trees, it was engaged in health; a third ma! wound 1B feet wide and about 30 leotllllllwrl» Arthur What 3011p of £00m y lame: . Barton. MD. PECULIARITIES IN CHILDEDX SHOULD BB CORRECTED, Some years ago I examined all the boys o! a large reformatory . school and among other thing; (113. Icovered that at least one half of the boys came from homes where the parents tvere not living togcthgg I believe that this teaches that. the surroundings of youngsters has very much to do with their behavior. A ycuxigster may be normal nat- urally but his surroundings-war- cnts,‘ home, cvcn school itself-are such that he is in conflict with them at all times. Another youngster may have lit- tle personal peculiarities which are not much ln themselves, but if there is no sympathy or direction in the home, these peculiarities tn- stead of being corrected grow to !such an extent that the youngster ' is soon in need of mental treatment. These personal peculiarities may c ti Ldity, outbursts of temper, _ luck of sociability, dislike oi pi ylng with other children, 0b- stlnacy. Orthcre may be behavior disorders such as stealing, lying, or playing truant, temper outburtss. Or, there may be also habit dis- orders such, as nail biting or thumb sucking. ' ' Some idea of how important. it is to ‘get. these peculiarities corrected in children is found in the report of the out patient-department for ner- vous diseases in Guy's Hospital, London, England. Seventy adult patients were treated and the results were check- ed up two years later. Of this num- ber 14 were improved and 12 were much improved. This gives a per- centage of 37 improved or cured. A similar investigation among 00 children two years after their treatment" showed that 15 were im- proved and that 24 were much im- proved, a percentage of 65. In- cluded in this group were all variet- ics, even such unfavorable ones as feeble minded and epileptic child- I811. You can thus see what helpful work can be done at the plastic Age of children as compared with adults. The thought then is that child- ren who show any of the peculiarl- tles mentioned above should be treated by parents, teachers, and physicians just. as they would be treated for any physical ailment. And the earlier the peculiarity is recognized and corrected the better for the mental health of the child. ‘n 5 ocIJLQ THE RIVER 0F TDVIE We say that. repose has ned For ever the course of the river of Time. That cities will crowd to its edge In s. blacker, inceasanter line; That the din will be more on tts banks, Denser the trade on its stream, Flatter the plain where it flows, Flercer the sun overhead. That never will those on its breast; See an ennobling sight, Drink of the feeling of quiet again. But what wasbcfore us we know not, And wc know not what shall suc- cecd. Haply the river of Tlmc,_.. A5 ll? Brows, as the towns on its marge Fling their waving lights On a wider, sbateller stream- Mny acquire, if not, the calm 0f its early mountainous shore, Yet s solemn pence of its own. And the width of the waters, the hush 0| 111'! Eray expanse where he floats, _ Freshcning its current and spotted with foam M if. draws tn the Occnn, may strlko Ptnlfffl to lllf‘ soul oi’ tho man on its breast»- As the pale waste wldcns around him, As the banks fade dimmer away, As the stars come out, and the night-wind Brings up the stream Murmurs and scents of the infinite sea. —Mal.thew Arnold. BOSSIEPS LITTLE WIAKNESS A city girl visiting her uncle on the farm was watching a cow chew her cud. "Pretty fine cow, that," said her uncle as lie came by. "YPS." said the girl, "but doesn't lt cost a lot to keep her tn chew- lnl-eumfif r . Public Forum This column t! opal (or flu Alienation by snnndena of question: o! Interest. Th‘ Chlrluttetowll Gnlrdlau does not neruurtly adorn the ‘platoon ll corresponding ‘GEES. LACETS 055E Sir-Jr. is not with any deslra for personal publicity that I re- quest space in your valued mper to place before the public the facts In the case of Mrs. Lacey. The sen- sational news which recently ap- peared about her ln the newspap- ers was a police theory which stmsequent investigation proved tn he absolutely without foundation. Mrs. Lacey is a registered Pri- vate Nurse and has spent several winters in that occupation in Bos- ton and vicinity, her summe o be- ing spent at her home on the Is- land, Last fall, finding conditions not good in the nursing profession, she accepted a position as cook ln a doctor's home at Chestnut Hill, Muss. qwo years ago, however, she was retained as nurse to a lady patient for some six months, and during that time became acquainted with other members and some friends of the family, including a youth, than about seventeen ycarsof age, Dhilird James Burke. Since that time Mrs. Lacey ooh- tinucd to be interested in her for- mer patient, who never recovered normal health, and has paid her regular visits at the hospital where she is at the present time. On one of these calls at; the hospital Mrs. Lacey again happened to meet: James Burke. Burke told her that since their previous meeting he had got into trouble with the law and had spent some time in the Con- cord Reformatory. on that account. he complained, he was having difficulty tn getting a Job. but had one ln sight it he could obtain a car. He was prepared to pay a reasonable cash installment but his Retotmatory record made it hard for him to obtain credit for the balance. Mrs. Iaeey sympathlzed with his predicament, believing that. he was stncere in his desire for honest employment. Bome days later Burke called. on her, bringing the ca: agent with him. Before they left they came to an arrangement whereby Burke paid $150.00 cash and. obtained credit for a co atlvely small balance to be paid at the rate of $11.00 per month, which Mrs. Incey endorsed. ‘rhls arrangement together with the registration ln her name gave Mrs. Lacey legal ownership of the oar, as security until the balanw was finally paid. When this car was later identi- flcd as the "bandit car" in a crim- inal case, Mrs. Lacey was taken to Police headquarters and accused of having supplied it. to facilitate the culprit‘: escape. Hence the charge and the large amount of bell. as mentioned in the press. Mrs. IAcey, however. was able to exonerate herself completely.‘ Her explanation was investigated and proven to be correct, and sh was accordingly released, the charge against her being unconditionally “withdrawn. I wish to express appreciation of the action of friends in this Pro- vince who have stood staunchly by Mrs. Inoey in her harrowing ex- perlence. I am, Btr. etc. J. K. LACEY (Patriot Please Copy) CONDITIONS IN U. S. A. Sin-Your many readers, as well as our personal friends and kln on ‘The Island” may be interested in some first hand information as to conditions ln the “Sunny South" section of the so-mlled the “land of the free". The annual "trek" to the warm eouthland starts about Nov. 1st and consists of a. great variety of tourists and others. The millionaire may go in the luxuri- ous pisllman car to his winter pal- ace in Palm Beach, where servants have the place all ready for these, "nobleman" with their wives and retlnuea. Others travel by motor car often with their families who attend school in the south. Be- sides those, there are hundreds of thousands of "hitch hikers" with all thelnworldly pomcsslons in a. but: on their back and no money- depending entirely on chartty en route as well as at the destination. It is estimated that. there are more \.__..',\\\‘ Dunn's”. KIDNEY EQILLS t?" 1/‘ Mining Beneath The Sea (National. Development Bureau) Coal u a. commodity with "w use of which most people we in contact either directly or indirectly but few ever see where it. comes from. ‘Iburlsts when vlsitwB it Sydney Mines in Cape Breton Is- land in ‘the province of Nova Scctla. can now have the thrill of descend- lng one of the largest. coal mining shafts in the world and 034119719110- ing an adventure worthy of the pen of Jules Verne. A drop of a few secomb places one a. thousand feet below surface level. Down grade through stibterraenan pawages the hardy may venture tzwo and a quarter miles out. under the ocean bed. Fourteen hundred. feet over- head is the ocean floor: a more solid dyke in bet/ween than that plugged by the finger of the little Past‘, Present and Future Trade with the States (Toronto Mail and Empire) The proposal for freer trade relations with the United State, may be approached from many angles. Take, for instance, the export of Canadian cattle to the neighboring republic. From 11)]: to the Spring of 1921, Conservative and Union Governments wet; in power at Ottawa, and during all that time our cattle enterrr the United States free of duty. During x920 alone we sold 420,891 cattle over there. We are quoting from figures given in the Hons. by Mr. Gershaw, Liberal member for Medicine Hat. From Ma; 27, 1921, to September 2r, 1922, the Washington Govcmmen. imposed an emergency tariff df 3o per cent. against cattle from this country. This cut our sales of cattle on the hoof from over 400,000 head to 224,000 head. Then on September 2!, r922, the Fordney-McCumber tariff came into iorce and at once there was a hit-thei- drop in our exports, s0 that in r925 we stripped only 123,438 head to the United States. The last blow came on jnnc 18, I930, when the I-Iaxvley-Stuoot tariff came. into operation, That tariff levies duties on cattle, of less than 70o pounds, of 2% cents a pound, and 3 cents a pound on cattle over 70o pounds. In the boy o! Haarlem. iFalrly well known Ls this feature of the coal mines of the Atlantic coast of Canada, but. not so gen- eral ls the information that. coal utining ls carried on extensively at: Nanaimo, British Columbia, on the Pacific c0ast,and there also 0p- erations are carried on beneath the ocean bed. than a million oi.’ these unfortun- ates at present, men and boys with grovm women and children '*htklng" their way to the south. How these manage to exist, 1s a problem, but we have not heard of anyone dying of hunger. Florida. is the goal of many from the north but all the southern states get a share. There are hun- dreds of little towns in Florida on the east and west coasts as well as central places, that are bidding for the tourist trade so you can take your choice. Some like the west coast and‘ others the east, it depends on what you are after as well as the size of your purse. If you like sport and excitement, Mt- amt will suit ‘you beat. If you are rich and want. society and what goes with it, you can ‘go to Palm Beach. If you are old and tired and want a good rest at. moderate cost St. Petersbrurgh fills the bill. Besides, there are hundreds of smaller places that are attractive and what I may consider the best place others with different ideas may consider "no good." So there you are. St. Petersburgh, a nice little town of about 40,000, had up to Dec. lat about 8,000 tourists, and expects 15,000. 0f these, only, 150 were from Canada. mostly from Ontario and up to that date we dld not see one car from the Maritimes. Before going any further, we better say something about the trip. It took us about '7 1-2 days to cover the about M00 miles from P. E. I. to this place. You can make it a little shorter or longer depending on the route you take. We followed No. 1 all the way and for the enperleme. passed thmtgh Boston, Providence, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore a-nd Washington. The worst traffic con- gestion centres we have seen in America are between New York and Trenton on the New Jersey slde of the Imdson River but ae- cldents are few when you consider that in thts vicinity there are al- most as many people as in all Can- ada. New York ta a great city with many attractions. The more than 20 miles of Broadway with its mum-colored electric display at night is a, wonderful picture as is also the sky line of Wall Streets sky scralpera when viewed at night from Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges. The traffic is tremendous but well regulated by the army of about; 20.000 police and officers. (Continued on page 14) DR U G SPECIALS Fl!!! Mfloeellg Saw Pnaale with Purchase Tooth n! Prophylactic Brush 50c. 25cm: Bayefa Alltlrln Tablets 50o Box Bayefla Aspirin Tablets , $1.28 Bottle Bayer‘: Aa- ptrln Tablets 00c 35o Bottle A. ll. S. I C. Tablets .. 10c 5003a:- Vlcka Vapo Itch. Mo $1.00 Bottle Eltol Frill $1.00 Bottle Beef, Iron and Wine . $1.50 Bottle Fellows Hy- lifllphltea ............. 01.00 ll.” Bdttle Najol sol u. a°EHE LY.“ “noun m 'l'lIE 2 MAGS DRUG STOII year ending June 30, 1932, our exports of cattle to the United States dropped to 18,651. The Mackenzie King Government was in oflice from 192x to !930--ll1ElI is, for the whole period during which these increasingly adverse tariff enactments against our cattle were being placed on the Statute Books at “Iashington. As Mr. Bowman, the member for Dauphin, reminded the House the other day, Canada's exports to the United States were valued at about $560,000,000 when the King Government assumed office in r921. In the following year the Fordncy-McCumber tariff cut that trade down to $304,000,000. When the late Liberal Government was sworn in Canadian wheat had frce entry into the United States. When that administration left office it faced a practically prohibitive embargo of 43 cents a bushel. In r921, the year in which the King Government was formed, there was an ad valorcm American duty of 2o per cent on Canadian wheat flour, and when it lcft oiTicc that duty had been raised to $1.04 per hundred pounds. So it was with meats. \Vhen the late Liberal Government was inaugurated our beef, mutton, lamb and pork were on the American f rcc list. But when it went to the country in I930 the duty on beef had risen to six cents per pound, on mutton to fivc cents per pound, on lamb to seven cents pcr pound and on pork to two and a half cents pcr pound. The same thing occurred with regard to poultry, dairy pro- ducts and many other lines of agricultural produce. But Mr. King and his colleague were never able to do anything in the way of securing freer trade relations with the neighboring country. Our exports of agricultural products to the United States were reduced from $120,000,000 in the last six months off 1920 to $r,7oo,oo over the last six months of i931. We do not attribute this terrific decline to the Liberal statesmen who held the reins of Government during the whole period of rising American duties, but we do say that Mr. King was wrong when as Prime Minister he implored the House to speak softly for fear it might offend the Washington Government. Mr. King is now so keen about the United States market, which was wholly lost under his‘ nine-year regime, that he would scrap the Empire trade agreements in order to approach the United States with a. free hand. There is no justification for such a panicky suggestion. This country has always got on better with the Eitglish-speaking nation to the south 0i the international border when it preserved a manly, self-respect. ing attitude-that is to say, when Jack Canuck talked to Uncle Sam on equal terms. ‘As the Prime Minister has said, Ottawa is ready to receive proposals from Washington, and we shall be only too glad to trade on a larger scale with the republic if we can do so without jeopardizing Empire trade, without imperilling our own interests and without sending two or three dollars to the South for every one dollar that we receive in return-as has too generally been the case in the past. It is up l0 Mr. Roosevelt. '- Li‘ CHOCOLATE BARS - The following bars are now on sale, and meeting with popular demand: Green's Island Maid Bar Creamy fudge centre, dipped in soft cara- mel, rolled in freshly roasted peanuts, and all this coated with rich, creamy chocolate; Green’: Delicious Bar This is a combination fudge and caramel bar, dipped in chocolate. 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