THE SANFOED EXPSE 8 P, II 8T. CLAIR l punt tshfiu? D. L BT. CLAIR j pPBL18H™ FRIDAY - - - May 28.J91( College Graduates. The college graduates are com ing home with their diplomas. Some of them will be welcomed back with open arms because they have not lost touch with the folks at home and will know bet ter how to enter Into sympathy and work with the men and wo men who are bearing the beat and burden of the day. Others who "have nothing but their “sheep-skins’' will stand around, afraid or ashamed to put on overalls or aprons, and the com munlty will not know that they are here. More than that, it won’t care. To the average man and woman there' need to be a mysterious power, somehow, about the young man who had been gradu ated from a college. He seemed to be listened to. whether or nol he had anything worth while tc say. The college graduate was talked about and held up as an example. But in this en lightened day the college gradu ate must do, he must create and he must attain before men will take note of him and honor him. To our mind a college should do at least two things for a student before graduating him—it should Inspire his mind and heart witb an ideal or inner light, and it should teach him how to apply knowedge, Energy, intelligence, faith—when these elements are in proper balance in young men and young women as they leave college, they will render a true account of themselves. Each one will have an ideal, a purpose, the name of which he cannot take in vain. To a boy or girl „ thus endowed and trained success will come. A Picture of Calm Beauty. The other day at Montrose, in Hoke connty. we passed for the first time the State sanatorium for the treatment of tuberculos. Lo cated on a beautiful hill in the centre of a horizon almost cir cular with a diameter of twenty to twenty-five miles, the build ings with their surroundings of waving pines, growing crops and browsing cattle present a picture of calm beauty. It would seem as though the place had been marked out by a kind father for his sick children. The area of the site of the sanatorium with the snrrounding timber and farm lands is 1,300 acres. We saw a number of peo ple on the place who were evi dently fighting the great - white plague, They seemed to be en joying the fresh air and the ozone of the. pines. ' Ho danger of ; crowding here. -- The farm lies to the south of the buildings. There are arcres of it, and we saw fine crops of young corn and vegetables. On the farm is a fine herd of cows for milk and butter. We saw some fine chickens on the place. We were told that the patients lived principanlly on milk and butter and eggs. Here it is that the State has begun a a great work. We have not seen a cleaner place any where. Several buildings, nice ly painted and well ventillated, dot the hill. But the work has hardly begun. We asked a phy sician for the treatment in the sanatorium. The reply was, rest, cleanliness and plenty of sleep in the open air. The construction of toe buildings puls the patients out of doors. The sweet, dry air and restful surroundings give rest and sleep, and the beauty makes contentment. The sana torium is under the control of the State Board of Health. l>r. Branson. That the higher educational institutions in this State are com ing ihte closer touch with the masses tif people, for whose up lift and enlightenment they were established, is plain to any one who has made note of the ad dresses delivered by college pro fessors among the people this spring. The - modern college most make straight and dear the way for the liberation of the spirit of men from the tyranny of place and time,” bnt it most not forget that the “present state and'all of Its practical problems -Is the field of its mission.’’ In other words the college must be democratic. Last week Or. E. Of Branson, of the University fac ulty, delivered the literary ad dress before the Sanford Graded Schools, and he made it clear that this Was his conception of the mission of the institution which he is serving with con spicuous devotion and efficiency. He talked to the people about matters that—have to do with their everyday wellfare and he made us understand that there are men at Chapel Hill who know more about Lee county, its resources and possibilities, than we ourselves. Dr. Branson is a very Interesting speaker andev ery man and woman in the com munity ougnt to have heard him. The Express is glad to know that Dr. Branson will speak in Sanford again on July the third, Which tne people of Lee county will observe as Community Day. He wUl be greeted by a Urge au dlence on that occasion. While Germany may think that her' kultur” is everything, she U being made to see and respect the culture of the United States. Our ideal is not world conquest by brute force. r t - Be a booster and boost Lae bounty, Tbe Meaning ot the War. All honor to President Wilson for refusing to allow this nation to be swept into the war before the people had taken the sober second thought. We do not know what the German note contains, but if we do have to go to war it will not be the Presi dent’s fault. He is the world’s most conspicuous advocate of the international gospel of good will. The United States is the only world power not now at war. Last Sunday Italy declared war on Austria and took the long expected leap into the volcano whose darning crater stretches over Europe, Asia and Africa. So the world has now roaring in its ears the thundering of eleven nations at war. If this be not Armageddon when shall we see that final death grip of the na tions? It is estimated that the war is costing ?2,000,000 a day. We have not seen any figures giving the total number of human lives lost since war was declared last August. No doubt the number runs up into hundreds of thous ands. We get many heart-rend ing pictures of the effect of the war, '‘but in this panorama of pain and misery"’ there has been no more affecting scene than that piesented in the simple words contained in the following press dispatch sent out from Paris one day last week: Three Hundred coiidrenoi uei gian farmers living near the fighting line—152 girls and 14s boys—arrived in Paris Tuesday. They made a total of 2,000 chil dren who have been brought into the capital from Belgian, French and British camps in recent months. Many of them are or phans or have been separated from their parents through the exigencies of war. Numbers of the waifs have been eared for by the soldiers, who call them trench rabbits Some of them have been actually shertered in bomb proofs. Near ly all those who arrived were carrying toys which had been made for them by their soldier guardians. Many children have been wounded by shells during the fighting . in northern France About 90 have been treated in one large hospital near A rmen tieres. Some of them have lost legs. The heart of every human be ing who reads these words must melt with pity for these children. This war represents a great ho man convulsion, as the flood which swept away the greater part of the human race repre sen£e3 a great colvulaibn of na ture. A few weeks after-, war was declared Collier’s Weekly said in an editorial: Civilisation itself stands in jeo pardy. The nations which are at war are the custodians of en lightenment for the earth, and they are entrapped into treason to their trust. For, after ail has been said on the side of the vir tues developed by war, we know that these peoples will not be the same peoples after this tor nado has swept them. * * * The index finger of everything good will stand lower after it is over. The long climb to the op lands of the sonl, towards which mankind straggles, is not gained by leaps, and a long, tragic slip like this must be regained by effort which would otherwise be unnecessary. A thousand years from now the world will be suf fering morally and spiritually from the efforts of this unthink able thing which has come upon ns. If the war were to end today it would take many yean for the poison and fever engendered by the strife to run their coarse and the mind and heart of the world to clear themselves in the waters of sorrow. Think of the cost of industry the world over, of the millions of men taken from its activities, and all those who never will return home; of the men maimed for life, the or phans and widows of those kill ed, and one has but a faint con ception of what war is for those who make it. All of the evils which Collier's depicts and a thousand othen will come as a result of this war, and the only mite of consolation to the nations now engaged In the life and death struggle, Is thst out of the mad chaos has come a frenzy of patriotism and sublime heroism and self-sacrifice. The rigor of discisciplinsr brought about by this war will have a good effect. Obedience is strengthening and peace-giving. A military regi me, with its iron-clad discipline, does not break spirit, as any Confederate veteran who follow ed Robert E. Lee or Stonewall Jackson will tell you. It makes men ready for forced marches and to meet death. But the spir itual loss that will come as a re result of this war where "ball the world is on fire” will far out weigh the spiritual gain, "The Scotch, like the Jews, are everywhere,” remarked . a speaker at Red Springs last week. He might have gone fur ther and said that the Scotch know how to cope with the Jews wheft it come to tmtuiisg great fortunes. THE NAVY NOT A THREAT. It is an Ideal, Says Mr. Wilson —Praise For Mr. Daniels. President Wilson delivered a patriotic address on the Ameri can flag and the protection it carries lor Americans, at a lunch eon given in New York Monday of last week in his honor by the New York citizens’ committee for the reception of the Atlantic fleet The President said he had al ways had a deep interest in the navy. It is right, he said, that America should have a great navy to express its character. The navy brings the United States in touch with the rest of the world. The navy of the United States expresses our ideals. The fleet lying here at New York is a great fleet and has nothing of bluster ahout it, “The great thing about America is that it wants no terri tory, and questions no other na tion's honor. We stand for hu manity and for the things that humanity wants." Speaking of the flag, the Presi dent asserted that it typified all that was best in the world. “We lift no threats against any nation or class in the United States. This fleet in the river is a great, solemn evidence that the force of America is the force of moral principle. There is nothing else for which she will contend.” Beginning his speech the Presi dent said: "But before I speak of the navy of the United States I want to take advantage of the first public opportunity I have had to speak of the Secretary of the Navy, to express my confi dence and my admiration, to say that he has my unqualified .sup port, ior l nave counsexea witn him in intimate fashion. I know how sincerely he has it at heart, that-everything thakJthe navy does and handles shodrd be done and handled as the people of the United States wish them handled ■ because efficiency is something more than organization, "Efficiency runs into every well eonsidered detail of personnel and method. Efficiency runs to the extent of lifting the ideal of a service above every personal in terest. So that when I speak my support of the Secretary of the Navy I am merely speaking my support of what I know every true lover of the navy to desire and to propose; for the navy of the United States is a body spec ially trusted with the ideal of America. . . < 1 . -I tea.<i gjs « - 1 - j An Unknown Hon. The New York Herald says "the greatest herd on the Lusi tania was a stoker whose body was found floating in the sea, each arm clasping a woman, while a babe was tucked under his life-belt. He had tried to save three lives, and of course in doing so had lost his own.” No body knows this unknown hero. He was of the same sort of ma terial as the peasant woman in Prance who, when informed that her four sons had been killed fighting'the Germans in Alsaace. wept because she had no more boys to send to the front. A Country Lite Wcakjuu Being Remedied. Progressive Parmer. ’ ' One of the greatest weaknesses of country life heretofore has been the absence of public recog nition of worthy effort. The farmer or stockman or school teacher might set a worthy ex ample for his fellows, bnt public notice would not be directed to it nor public recognition given as an incentive for other like en deavars. Anything that brings our country people together does good, and if it brings them to gether for the purpose of recog nizing and honoring worthy ef fort, it is doubly useful. This Is why the county school commence ment is worth so much. And this is why every county should have a county fair. With a county I commencement in thespring and a county fair in the fall, it will be hard to keep any county from catching the spirit of progress. Death of Two Sweet Singers of the South. Wadsbore Anson tao.-^ - There died in Memphis a week ago today one of the South’s sweetest singers, Judge Walter Malone, jurist, poet, and tender hearted gentleman. He was author of the now famous poem, "Opportunity,” the lines of which begin. “They do me wrong who say 1 eome no more.” Also of “The Whistling Boy,” “Hernando De Soto,” the latter being one of the greatest epic poems ever writ ten by a Southerner. Only a few days before his death, Judge Malone scribbled the following lines' on a piece of paper and, handing them to a friend, re marked: “This is my epitaph; I have just Written it.” The lines were these: “Hranger, who passeth'toy my low house of clay, Pause for a moment in a tender mood; Think not your sigh of pity thrown away, ' Because I woold say 'God bless yon,* if I could.” 1 Secretary Hanlsls spoke -is Wilmington on Wednesday night. THE NEGRO POPULATION Some Inters Stine Facts Shown By * New Census Bulletin.' A new census bulletin on “Ne groes in the United States" shows that the colored man of North Carolina is faring very well, eays the Washington correspondent ot the Charlotte Observer. The negro population in North Carolina in 1910 was 697,848, that being 31.6 per oent. of the total population, and 144,123 of ..that number were mnlattoes. There were 339,581 males and, 858,262 females. Of the male population 2tys*rs old and older 38.8 per cent Wert' illiterate, and 10 yeans and older, 31.9 per cent. 6f those between aix and 14 years-old 64 per oent attended school. 2 - i More than half of the popula tion of South Carolina was ne groes in 1910, the per oeuV of colored population being 55.2 per cent. ±ue mfurea snowing me pro portion of negro population in various States are interesting In Alabama the pel- cent of negro population is 42.6 percent olthc total; in Arisona, 1.0; Arkansas, 28; California, 0.9; Colorado, 1.4; Connecticut, 1,4; Delaware, IB. 4; District of Columbia, 28.5; Flori la, 41; Georgia, 45.1; Idaho, 0.2: Illinois, 1,9; Indiana, 2.2; Iowa. 3.7; Kansas, 8.2; Kentucky, 11.1. Louisiana, 43.1; Maine, 0.8; Mary land, lT.Oi'^l^asaachnsetts, 11 Michigan, 0.6; Minnesota, 0.3; Mississippi, 56.2; Missouri, 4 - Montana, 0.5; Nebraska, 0.6; Ne rada, 0.6; New Hampshire, 0.1; New Jersey, 3.5; New Mexico, 0 ; New York, 1,5; North Dakota, 0. l: 13bio, 2.3; Oklahoma, 8.3; OregoD, ).2; Pennsylvania, 2,5; Rhode Island, 1.8; South Carolina^ 55 :. South Dakota, 01; Tennessee. 11.7; Texas, 17,7; Utah, 0.8; Yer nont, 6.5; Virginia, 32 6; Itas: - ngton, 0.5; West Virginia, 5 3; Wisconsin, 0.1; and Wyoming. 1.5. There has been a great increase n the number of farms operated yy negroes since 1900. The cer. ins figures show that the increase ietween 1900-1910 was 10,460 or 19.4 per cent. The number in 1910 was 64^96 against 53,996 in 1900. The value of farm prop srty operated by negroes increas sd 176.5 per cent during that lecade. The census showing is alto gether creditable to the negro. More than 40,000 owned their own homes in North Carolina hj^lQ, . The Synod of Appalachia. . i By an a|most unanimous vote the General Assembly of the Southern Presbyterian Church in session at Newport News, Va, Friday" voted to erect a new Synod to be known as the Synod of Appalachia and to include in its territory the contin gent mountain districts of the Syn ods of North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky. The erec tion of the Dew synod was adapted on the grounds that it would Unify the work of the churched in* the mountainous section of the four States; that it would develop the church internally, and that in the eyes of the world it would magnify the work of the church among the mountain people. The new synod will have a mem bership of bewtween ten and twelve thousand. The erection of thsSyn od of Appalachia will take place in the First Presbyteriach of Bristol, Tenn., daring the coming fall,;' - —«—-— . .1 Honorary Degrees Conferred on Three North Carolinian*. At the closing eiercises of the commencement last Friday Wake Forest College conferred honorary on three of North Carolina’s ’.spits* The degree of Doctor of I livinity was conferred upon Iter. g. C. Moore, of Raleigh. Judge ife- W. Wiu»ton,of Raleigh, was honored with the degree of Doetor of Laws. Both these gentlemen were present to receive their diplomas. Th* oth> er who received the degree of Don tor of Laws, bat coold not be fm> ent, was Dr. Edward K. (irsham, President of the University of Kprth Carolina. ' ~~ .■ --- - ■ Now School Houses. ‘ Daring the last biennial period SlO TOW torsi school houses have bean built in North Carolina—eoe„wbiU and 204 colored, at a coet nffSIlj. 407,77, This means an average of mpre than one ru ral sen in .1 noose for every day in the year, and in eluding the city Khool house#: built the average runs considerably over one per day. This pace of hasiding at least one new school hoots, for every dav in the vear according to approved plans of modern school architecture prepared by most Com potent architects under.the super vision of the State Department of Education and distributed from the office of the State Superintendent of PnbHc Instruction, has been Main tained for the past twelve years—a total of ’4,475 new school houses having been built during that time —in 4,385 days. This also means that three fifths of all the school bouses in this State hare bees bnilt anew or re built within tits last ysa.1.—Report of Stats Sspuria Undent, 101214, p.». "Utafc&stxtefc AOOOOOO Homes LOOK FOR THIS NEW PERFECTION GIRL You’ll see her in the windows and on the counters of hardware, furniture and department stores everywhere. She stands for the NEW PERFECTION OIL COOK STOVE—the simplest, most efficient Oil Cookstove made. Already it has made cooking easier and kitchens cleaner for over 2,000,000 housewives. Made in. 1, 2, 3 and 4 burner sizes; also NEW PERFECTION stoves with fireless cooking oven attached. Uw Aladdin Security Oil or Diamond White Oil to obtain the beat rcauha in oil Stoves, Heatera and Lamps. STANDARD OIL COMPANY WatUorfemDlC (New Jmer) Cfcar!otta.N.C. ■ Norfolk, Vs. (BALTIMORE) Charleston, W.VW ft’liniai^Ya. rhsrlsstwi. 1 r mm ronxf all Cold Needs Attention. ; No use to fuss and try to wear it out. It will wear you out instead. Take Dr. King’s New Discovery, relief follows quieklyrTfc eheefcs your cold and soothes your cough away. Pleasant, antiseptic attid heaiing. Children like it. Get a BOc. bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery and keep it in the house. “Our family cough and cold doctor” writes Dewis Chamberlain, Manchester,Ohio. Money’ back if not satisfied, but it nearly al* ways helps. Wtien 70a want a fact to become generally known, the right way la to publish it. Mm. Joseph Kalians, Fern, lnd., was troubled with belching, sour stomach and frequent headaches. She writes, “1 feel it my duty to tell others what Chamberlain’s Tablets bare done for me. They have helped my diges tion and regulated my bowels. Since using them I have been entirely well." For sale by all dealers. Cow P«as Fof Bale - Any quantity._15 varieties. Write for prices. ROWLAND & CO„ . All Field Seeds - Augusta, - Georgia Kwp Ton ttonUMih tod'Utn H«Uthr. A rigorous stomach, perfect working livsr and regular acting bowels Is guar anteed If you will use Dr. King’s Kew Life Pills. They Insure good digestion, correct constipation and hare an excel lent tonic effect on the whole system— purify your blood and rid you of all Wktl Weild Tee Dei 1 There are many times when one man questions another’#actions and motives. Hen act differently under different cir cumstances. The question la, what would you do right now If yon bad a severe cold 1 Could you do better than to take Chamberlain e Cough Remedy f It is highly recommended by people Sho hare used it for years and know s ijTalue. Mrs. O. E. Sargent, <’era, inn., says, “Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy Is worth its weight In gold and | i U*kt» pioMule in mCjagwUMlM ti. For sale bj fill dealer®. ” f-Jr* MlB,Gib8on,H. 1>. Practice Limited 16 Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat -Citizens Bank I Building Kaleigh, N, C. Will be in Sanford at Central Caro lina Hospital every Tuesday from 7:45 to 10:45 a. na, WILLIAMS & WILLIAMS, Lawyers, Sanford, N. O. P. P. FELTON, Lawyer, Sanford, N. C. “-----r-;-- -! K. if: HOYLE. SAMR. HOYUk HOYLE & HOYLE, Lawyers. Booms 1, 2 and 3, new Jones boiling up stairs oyer Griffin Bros. Store, Sanford, N. C. A. A F. SEAWELL, Attorney at:Low, Sanford, N. C. p. B. Teague C. E. Teague TEAGUE & TEAGUE, Attorneys^at Law, Office over Post Office, Sanford, N. C. ’Phone 141. DR. T. W. McCRAOKEN. Dentist, Sanford, N. C. Offices In the Commercial Building. Work done st night. Dr. A. Y. Russell, Dentist Offices In Poet Office Building, _' Seuford, N. 0-_ Hours 8 a. m, to 5 p. m. Phone No. 187, . DR, JT. I. HEAL VKTEHINABIAN OiBee With Wilkin*- D«r "PhoneS Blelu Co. Nl«ht ** 176 IAVEOBD, M. C. ft. p. Lewie, M.D„ K, F. Brittle. Jr., M J. B. Wrlsht, M.D. Drs. Lewis, Battle & Wright No. 6 West Hargett 8t„ Halelgb, N. O. 'Practice limited to diseases oi eye, ear, nose and throat. Office hours from 8 a. in., to 6 p. in. Sunday only by appointment. Dr. Wright will be In rt an ford the tec ood Saturday In each month at the Sanford Hotel after 8 a. m. C ASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Y*i Alwsyt^beart sSfttwv w ' 28 Items mentioned -below are the 28 Special Bargains we will have on sale . | Friday and Saturday, I the 28th and 29th. > 29c will buy, on these two days , | only, these wonderful values, and I our store should be full and over I flowing to take advantage of this I* special feature sale. I Don’t expect to get them the next week. This special event is for the 28th and 29th only. Any and all of these items will I be only 29c on the 28th and 29th* I 1 I : 7. 8. 9. ii. .12. 18. 14. 15. IB. 17. 18. 19. 20. I 21, 22. 28. 5 Ladies’ lOo tape neck vest, strictly first, Ladies’ !>0e muslin go ras^ nicely trimmed, Ladies’ 50clawn waist, new styles, all sizes, 45 in. embroidered flouncing, worth- 50 mid 69c, per yard - - - ' - - - Ladies’ 50c long uip corsets, uSts Support ers attached, - - - Men’s bine chambrey work shirts, sizes 14 to 17, - - v - .. - 1 dozen Ladies’ or Men’s plain cambric handkerchiefs for - - ‘ ’ Ladies’ 50c muslin corset corns, nicely .trimmed, • - Boy’s Oliver Twisi'suits, sizes 2J to 7 years, 8 pairs Ladles’ 15c black hose fee 57 ji'psdr Ladies’ J50o Lisle hose 50c Sash Ribbons, all colors, per yard, \ 50c Dress Silks, assorted colors and kinds, Men’s 50c Dress Shirts, all sizes, - f - Men’s and Boy’s 50c caps,all colorsand sizes 60c gold top beauty andLoircle pins, - - Ladies’ 50c Oigandie and Lace collars, 72 * 90 Patent seam sheets, 42 x 36 best grade pillow cases, pair - - 38c colored border Turkish towels, extra Jieavy, each - • Ladies’ 50o Knox braid sailors—white, - black and burnt, --*-r; - -- 1 can Colgate’s talonm and 1 large size 5 for 29« 1 for 29c 1 for 29c I 29c 29e I I 29c ; 29c tooth paste, 50c value, for both, 8 balls' aylvia and silkatine thread, any colors, - - - - 29c ««29c 29c 29c l 29c 29c 29c 29c 29c 29C 29c 29c 29c 29c I I 1 I I 24. 1 dozen yards best 5c val. insertion—inser tion only—dozen( - - - 29c 25. 7 yards nice quality colored lawn, makes complete dress, 7 yards, 29e 26. 2 men’s. 25c'wash lour in-hand ties,. 2 lor 29c 21. 6 yards Sanford Beet yard wide sheeting— 6 yards lor - - - - . - ■ - 29c 28. 2 pairs Indies’ 25c mercerized Lisle hose— ' % 2 pairs lor - - - - 29e The 28th and 29th means a big saving on any of the 28 arti cles bought by you at 23c, Don’t miss them. Executor’s Notice. Having qualified as executor of the last will and testament of T. L. Bass, deceased, late of Dee county, North Carolina, this is to notify all persona having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the under signed, duly verified, at his office in vSanford, L#ee county, on or before the 2nd day of May, A.D. 1916, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery . All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment. This 1st day of May, 1916. ti. P, Hatch, Executor of the last will and testament of T, I* Bass, deceased. Williams A Williams, Attorneys. HettolMi Liwt Trouble Oared. Many recoveries from lung troubles are due -to Dr, Bell's Pine Tar-Honey, it strengthens the luhgs, checks the cough and gives relief at once. Mr. W. 8. Wilkins, Hates, N. C.,S?ritest “I used Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar Honey In a case given up as hopeless and it effect ed a complete cure.” Get a bottle of Dr. Bell’s Pine Tar Honey. If your congh is dry and hacking let it trickle down the throat, you wifi surely get rw I lief. Only 25c, at your druggist." Notice. The undersigned haring been ap pointed andMuly qnallfisd u executor o( the estate of Belle Devin, deceased, all pernone haring olaiau against said ; estate are notified to exhibit the seine before him on,or before April 29th, 1919, or this notlee will be pleaded In bar of their reuovery. All persons la-. debted to said, estate will pltaae- make Immediate par meat. This April 29th,. 1918. „ P. P. Pelton, llxeoutor of Bella Darts, dooeaeed. Anplr iloan's Vreelr For Lambeso. Your attaokt of lumbago are not "early #o hopeless as they teem. You • can relieve them|aimost Instantly by a simple application of Sloan's Liniment - on the hack <tnd|lnlos. Lumbago Is a -- form of rheumatism, and*, yields per fectly to Sloan’s, which penetrates qulegly all In through the sore, tender l muscles, limbers up the back and makes 11 feel, line. Oct a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment for 26 cents of any druggist and- have It in the house—against colds, sore and ewotlen Joint#, rheumatism, neuralgia, solatloa and like ailments, xotir money bask ir not satisudd, but it' doesgtvealinoitlnslentreUef,_ ' "'-1' ■ -V * ■- ' V , -V'-'s ->i

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