f.-ti No. 129 35th YEAR NEW BERN, N. C, TUESDAY, IULY 15, 1913 FIFST SECTION SENATORS AFFECT SEGREGATION OF INSTANTLY KILLED BY LOCOMOTIVE FIND THEY HAD A FIND GENEROUS FOLKS NUMEROUS L TAKEN TO 15 MISTAKEN FOR E IS LEPER WITH THEM ONSLOW C01T! mtn VARIED SAVED COSTUM RAGES URGED P0RP0I1 u iu v.. Some Of Them Wear White Flannel Or Linen Others Stick To Conventional Shades. VARDAMAN, COOELST OF ALL Overman Set Off By A Cream Col ored Creation Simmons In Coatless Group. ' . - :i?tv "a'' ".- r ' EDITOR POE SAYS RURAL DIS- Dallis Dixon Met Horrible Death TRICTS MUST FOLLOW EX AMPLES OF CITIES. Washington, July 10. Summer days in the Senate Chamber. A hot, moist sticky afternoon, without a breath of air stirring beyond the arm-length region of the electric fans. The crum pling, withering heat quivers among the hard red desks, rises malignant from the green Carpet and rebounds from the walls. Hot weather, and the senate on minor 'bills and resolutions drags on A figure in gleaming white, from crown of hat to tip of toe, enters the Democratic cloakroom. Ab his hat comes off, the long iron-gray hair marks Senator Vardaman, of Missis sippi, coolest of all the 95 members .who are compelled to stay here through the ' summer. White duck suit, white shirt, collar and tie, white belt and hose and shoes he is a re freshing oasis in this legislative de sert. , In the chamber are a dozen flannel and linen suits, an odd dozen pairs of white flannel or duck trousers, and here and there white shoes with dark clothing evidence of the inroads that the temperature has made upon the Senatorial fashion. There remains a faithful group in correct black or dark blue Gallinger, of New Hampshire; Smith, of' Maryland; Johnson and Bankhead, of Alabama; Bacon, of Georgia; Goff, of West Virginia, with occasional recruits. ' The rest either brazenly flaunt their light raiment of the tropics or compromise in grays and light browns, with here and there a concession to laundered white waist- , coats of broad expanse. That crinkled linen suit blazoned with the red flowing tie protects the generous form of Newlands, of Ne vada. The other cream-colored one sets off Overman, of North Carolina and those neat white shoes, sox and pants to the left are worn by no less a personage than the solemn Mctum ber, of North Dakota. White flannel trousers have appeared on the boyish form of the erstwhile formally cor rect Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massa chusetts, who rises unashamed, with out a vest, exhibiting the bosom ol black-and-white striped shirt to the astounded gaze of his colleagues Curious turns of satorial Sena torial fancy, Jones, of Washington has found a shirt and collar of robin's egg blue. Clapp, of Minnesota, pats a saffron vast. Brandagee, of Connecti cut, wearing a linen suit and fighting for air, strolls into the Republican cloakroon for ice water. Nelson, of Minnesota, in alpaca coat and a pair of trousers that wouldn't tip the scales at more than a pound, steadies himself at the doorpost and then resolutely steps out to listen to the discussion of our relations with Mex ico. Fall, of New Mexico, is talking and Stone, of Missouri, in gray silk Raleigh N, C. July 10. Chairman Clarence , Poe announces that the Program Committee of the National Farmers' Union has asked Local Unions at their next meetings to dis cuss the problem of segregating the races in- the South's rural' districts as is already the policy in the towns. It is asserted that thousands of white farmers are being driven from fheir homes by the growing number of negro fanners around them and the consequent lack of adequate white social life. The hope is to develop a public sentiment which will require negroes to buy land in communities to themselves instead of breaking up white communities by indiscrimi nately sandwiching white and negro farmers to?ethe fll dkssasstBg the matter further Mr. Poe said For the good of both races the negroes should buy land and settle as largely as possible in neighbourhoods of thtir own. For example fifty ne gro families and fifty white families together in a district can have only half as good .' schools for either race as they could have if all the hundred familes were ot one race; ana witn regard to churches libraries co-operative societies ' social meetings and nearly all other agencies of vital civilization the same thing is true. To have half the community com posed of a separate race cuts in half all the social power for progress, Yesterday Near Carolina City. BROTHER DROVE LOCOMOTIVE Victim Was Beneath Small Motor Car Making Repairs To Engine BUT THERE WAS NO ALARM OWING TO THE CLIMATIC CONDITIONS. Fifteen Volunteer In New To Give Skin To Sore Girl. Yopk VICTIM WAS BADLY BURNED Dallis Dixon, whose home is at Baird's Creek but who has been em ployed as Superintendent of the East Carolina Lumber Company's logging camp at Carolina City which is located in Pamlico County, between Olympia and Reelsboro. met instant death about two miles from the camp yester day morning when he was struck on the head by the cow-catcher of a locomotive in charge of his brother, Herbert Dixon. An hour or two previous to the time the tragedy occurred. Mr. Dixon took a motor driven car owned by the com pany, and ftarted up the road for the purpose of attending to some work at a point about five miles distant. When about two miles from the camp and at a point where there is a junction of the log road,into the main line, the motor car broke down. Mr. Dixon discovered that the trouble was at a point which was accessible only by crawling beneath the car and this he did. A few minutes later the locomotive driven by Herbert Bfcon Bfcw far the The big fact we have to face is trossing. Doubtless Mr. Dixon heard that in thousands and thousands of communities in the South, the negro farmers are not only subjecting the white farmers to more or less disas trous economic competition by their lower standards of living but in many sections the growing number of negroes is driving the white peo ple to the towns for social reasons. When the white population in a com munity becomes too small or too scat tered when the white farmer's wife and children find more negro neigh bors than white neighbors around them a tremendous motive is given for moving away and if the farmer moves some negro will probably buy his land at a sacrifice because other white farmers have the same feeling and do not care to buy land in a pre dominantly negro community. Such is the negro's flagrantly unfair ad vantage for driving white people off the farms and taking the rural South for himself. Public sentiment' must find us a remedy." this whistle but thinking, probably that he could make the necessary re pairs and get out of the way before the locomotive reached the crossing, did not crawl from beneath the car. Just a short distance from the junction and on the road from which the loco motive was approaching was a curve. Striking this curve Herbert Dixon saw the motor car with his brother be neath it on the track and made every effort to bring the locomotive to a stop but before this could be done it had crashed into the small car, badly demolishing this and killing Dallis Dixon who was beneath it. The tragedy is a doubly sad one on account of the fact that the dead man and the driver of the locomotive were brothers. However, not the least blame is -attached to the driver of the loco motive. The victim. of the accident was thirty years old and is sur vived by his wife and two children who reside at Baird's Creek. DENIES REPORT OF FIST FIGHT "ITS AN UNMITIGATED LIE. SAYS CHAIRMAN GLASS OF CURRENCY COMMITTEE. F ORGED TO WORK UNDER NEGRO Providence July 10. When William Comber the Narragansett Pier leper suspect was sent away from that place a little more than a month ago sup posedly to New York, amd then to Eng land, Dr. G. T. Swarts, Secretary of the State Board of Health of Rhode Island, notified the New York City health au thorities. There is no record in the Health Department here to show that the New York authorities took any in terest in the matter. Dr. Swarts, who made an examination of thesupptsel leper after the village Health Board of Narragansett took steps to quelr the excitement that had been caused by the general report that a leper had been for years living in the village, said to a reporter today: "There was no question so far as the State health authorities were concerned but that the case was one of leprosy. But we do not consider the disease con tagious in this climate; in fact, the con sensus of scientific opinion now is that leprosy is not contagious except under peculiar conditions and in particular cli mates. These conditions did not pre vail in this case, so we did nothing more than notify the New York health au thorities after we were given to under stand that the unfortunate young man was to be sent to that city. The disposition of the case was a matter for the village Health Board of Narragnasett. I doubt if any one ex cept the young man's family knows ex- ctly where he is." Edward Comber, Chief of the Narra gansett Fire Department and father of the young man whose presence in the village created such alarm among the thousands of summer visitors, said he had sent h son to England. After the knowledge became general that there was a suspected leper in the village, the local health authorities brought strong pressure to bear on the family to have the young man sent away. The summer resort season, which swells the normal population from about 1,500 to nearly ten times that number, was just getting under way. Business and hotel interests became alarmed for fear the report that there was a leper in Narragansett would injure business. One Man Offered To Let Surgeons Take A Sufficient Quantity Of His Skin. DAUGHTER OF WOMAN YH EXPIRED NEAR COVE CITY TO BE CAR ED FOR. count ".r:i n fir.ni: Mi WOOED MADS TO ROB RICH MEN ROBBER MADE LOVE TO SER VANTS IN ORDER TO EN LIST THEIR AID. WHITES WORKED UNDER NE GRO IN HON AIK, VIRGINIA, IT 1$ ALLEGED. Washington, July 10.- "Its an un coat, lies limply baak in his chair, mitigated lie." That sentence was the wiping his forehead. Bacon waves a solar-plexus Dlow witn wnicn cnairman broad palm leaf fan and carefully ad- t-arter oiaes, oi lne nouse nanmng anu iusts his choker collar before rising Currency Lommmee, nauea a report to ask a question. ' that spreaa lute wnanre in vv.isiinigion Hot afternoon, and not a hope ol to tne enect tnat. ne ana a raemoer coolness until night, and even the of the Banking ana currency commit- hope of iijlool night in Washington tee had had.a hst tight in tne committee springs oafjffrom the breasts of ab- room while discussing the reform normally optimistic persons at this currency measure. of the vear. Reed, of Missouri, First tne report naa n mar mr. jw, un his whiti flannels and glow- Glass and Congressman Eagle, of Texas, ers at a calendar; it is still two had cleared tor action, i nen toe rumor months before currency can be dis- came along tnat tt wasn t Mr. e-agie -pH of Simmons walks out of the but Congressman Willard Ragsdale nmnrratir cloakroon. where coats of South Carolina. Mr. Glass laughed re off. and Kern and Hoke Smith, at both reports. He paid no attention Williams and Oweas are smoking to to them at nrst, dui wnen newspaper forget the weather. The air is thick correspondents began clamoring lor with smoke: everv settee has its him for a statement about his scrap scrawling statesmen; ice clinks in I in the committee he decided to nail the 1 - . I a . .11 1 Ikun named around bv waiters story goon ana nara. from the Capitol cafes. There wss some trouble among the New Senators are discouraged, but banking and currency committeemen ttu-v know to orotest is waste of but it did not happen in the committee words. Congress will stay in ses- room. It appears that there have been slon until September. Hot days or a number of leaks from the Democratic cool, the old members remind them conference on the banking and currency indifferently, the committee work and niii. cnorts nave rjeen made to ascer caucus wrangling and delays must U n who is passing out rnlormation go an. while President Wilson sits sweltering at the White House keep ing tab on Congress, determined that party pledges be redemeed tion of the tariff and curre lation. Congress .may bend before the heat blasts of Old Man Sol, but it dare not quit. , Richmond, Va., July 11. -Rumors and reports of irregularities and mis management of the Virginia Home and Industrial School for girls at Bon air, in Chesterfield county, will be probed by order of Governor Mann. The investigating party, which will be composed of Dr. S. C. Hatcher, of the State Board of Charities and Correction; Dr. Peter Winston, of Farmville, Dr. Douglas S. Freeman, oj Richmond, and L, P. Stearnes, Newport News, will probably sit next week and take testimony from wit nesses under oath. Charges that girls were forced to work in the garden under the super vision of a negro and that the negro paraded about the garden with a re volver strapped to his waist, together with other complaints, caused Gover nor Mann to Order the probe. The Bnnair home was Instituted in 1010 by private individuals on a farm belonging o B F. Johnson and the board of direct urs number abont 26 persons, including several Richmond ministers. r uch of which is declared to be errone ous. This led to words between Con gressman Brown of West Virginia and Congressman Rsgsdale of South Carolina. There were some intimations that Mr. Ragsdale, who is "insurging," was responsible for the teaks. ANNUAL PICNIC AT OAK GROVE Ths annoal picnic of Oak Orove Sunday school and Amity L'Cal Par in -ars Union will be bald Thursday, July SI. at Osk Grove. Rev.' C. E. Vale. paatar, wll deliver a lecture for the Buadaj school and torn prominen for th New York, July 11. That there an many generous persdns in the world has been proved to the parents of seven year-old Bessie Simms of .No. 40.1 York street, Jersey City. Bessie is in the City Hospital there suffering from burn: which refuse to heal without the graft ing of thirty square inches of new shin. When this became known her parent? and the hospital began to receive offcr.- of skin from strangers. Several persons in Philadelphia wrote offering their skin. A man from Broad street New Yorl wrote saying that he would give all his skin the surgeons thought best to take from him. He requested thai his identity be kept a secret. Up to yesterday afternoon, it wss said at the hospital, fully fifteen per sons had come forward as volunteers. The parents of the child were the firs' to volunteer, but the surgeons said there would be more chance of th grafts "taking" well if the skin came from unrelated persons. Three of the .volunteers, all heal' 1) looking young men. who said they wished to escape publicity . w n t to the hospital at 5 o'clock last nig t and lib mitted to the operation ot having fi:m of their skin gr if:e:t ui oi i he bodv nf the girl, The t'iking of the skin front the volunteers did not prove parltcua. -y painful, out it was an "uncomfort able" thing to undergo. There will be another grafting op i ation tomorrow, when mo of. the vol unteers will give more skin Lo the lit tle sufferer; It was said at the hospi tal that practically all of the volunteers had requested that their names be not made publio. Among the letters received by the family was this from Peter J. (lotilieb of No. 1356 St. Nicholas avenue, Man hattan: Dear Fiiend Just a few lines to let you know that 1 am willing to irive thinv inohes of ray skin to save your child from death. I am nineteen years of age and pretty healthv. If you are willing to ac cept me, please write at once. 1 will be anxious to hear from you. Please write if you have nny one else. 1 am sending you a picture of myself so you can nen wlut I look like. Mhv iron save your child. I will pray for her eveiy night. This letter is a fair san.ple of the generous, disinterested offers the fam ily is receiving. Sheriff Ifrnder-o" of On- ow arrived in the c y voF'-'rnay i nn took charge f iwtti- 1 he imbecile d. ushvi of l.nui iirinis who died sit idenly a few l room the road near Cove L'ltv. At he woman's death her dsiumtet vi b ouirht to New Item a-.d placed i Sheriff Lane's charge. Journal rea- ers will r 'rr.emher th .t the time Daunt Mcli'inis died he id- nitty w s uneuown and she ciiizei of Cove C-.ti; donaten ih fund" to i ner burial expenses' rather than allow -ier body to i r sent to the State Medic College. An investigation was mnd ord her identity was discovered, lie laughter wdi be placed in the On - eounty home. vViiiiam P. Ruinbrldgc Lost From Vessel A I Sea Rescued By .Menhaden Fishermen. HAD !!! 1 GIVEN UP AS LOST I'uS From Which He Fell Searched For Him In Vain Nine Hours Afloat. CORONER ASKS APRCQT OC M m Charged that Atlanta, Ga., Wo man Poisoned I!er Hus band. HEIRS W ANT W:I.! ANN VI !,!.!' ,.rl-ilk, jily 12. To he afloat i the briny waters of the Atlantic ran fin nine hours, eie;ht miles from ml, wiih nnlv tlii- fishes for company, n t li.ii In- re-cued by Menhaden ..!,,-! men .Mi cr being mistaken and i.-i i .,i p..rpoi.-e, was the experience i V;ih P. Rainhridge, a seagoing ri Hi ,n wh i left Norfolk last Satur iv on the tug Resolute of the P. )i. Hubert v t ompany's fleet. I ..... .i mm" was the report made I,. .n i ' i- arrival of the Resolute in i- cii l.i-i nulil, as well as when arrived at New York several days While the officers and members I ihc i ig'. crew were bemoaning the .-. nf their comrade, the latter was . in t lit- -eamen's Aid Society in a York i'i consultation with Cyrus ttorney for the society, as i nlli-ciiiig wages from the Am rm .. examination Of F.xhumei Showed Traces Of Morr And Opium. Uodv I a low ol I Ji.lv I. ( i ..I le i hi nil b. nh, Crawl marriage and lei i : his fori line to hi- ' I inlay, in a wane n ,ncr C. W. K.i-Ui The estate ol the at $25tt,tMltl. Announce that the .i Sheriff C. lv, at Allan I here loinor ecu e resn -hipped as fireman i Norfolk last Sat i the vessel which ges for New York orning. lie had been ml had been drinking . ral day- before ship ig, and as in no con : on Monday, .edition, the chief cn i ne told him to go on tell better, lie went up .el's rail, lie leaned i over the rail and fell 'h d when he came up, wi-ri mil heard. The sea mid the weather (dear, Co.. t, the nearest land. ml was .III had Maugllll . ll is e iw. Mr lit eiil All. t r nta her mi I ')()). ( r.r ,ler rnagi i . ill on c. d ., i, i v lord .1 v d floating liler ab-encc. T ,1 leu all I ran li- v.i ai Ht i .i n l be saved r assistance, on the tug lan and dis- e tug was ol t he man lock Mini nose was rk and the ,n of "lost JOURNAL AD. BRINGS QUICK RESULT. ICE CREAM EATEN HERE MADE HER SICK. A special from Elisabeth City to the Norfolk Virginian, Pilot says: Miss Ada Manning, a trained nurse oi Belhkven, is here nursing Miss Bonner Davenport, who is ill as the result of eating ice cream several d "Run this ad. a week," said a gentle man Thursday as he handed a Journal ! man a notice of store tor rent. II I don't get a tenant by that time I will let you know about running it longer." . At - the end of the week he said, "pake out the ad, it has done the work already." For quick results try the Journal's Business Local col umn. The rate 1s very reasonable. LOST one double case Gold Watch in or near Oriental Thursday Liberal reward If returned to Jourdal Office or S. W. Ferebee, Stonewall, New York, July 10. Two young women told Burns detectives yesterday the stories of their relations with James Mclntyre and Reginald Rhind, the men who, with the aid of Mane Kruger, carried out the $50,000 jewel robbery in the home of Harry S. Haas at Long Branch, N. J., last Wednesday One of these women turned over to the Burns agency a gold mesh bag valued at $750, the only article stolen from the Haas home which was still missing yesterday morning. The de tectives refused to give her name, be cause their investigation showed that ahe was a respectable woman and had accepted the bag as a gift without sus pecting its value or where it came from According to the detectives the stories of the two women will go far to prove that Rhind and Mclntyre were members of a gang who, with the aid of maids, conducted a profitable busi ness through systematically robbing the summer homes of wealthy "New Yorkers at Newport, Narragansett ner, Long Branch and other places. Mclntyre was considered the winner of the combination when it came to handling the serving women. The Burns detectives say they have evidence to show that he systematically made love to maids in the employ of wealthy families. He courted them with ardor and success and did not hesitate toj propose marriage and, it is alleged, to marry if marriage was necessary. Hav ing won the love of the servant, it was not so difficult to persuade her to aid in the robbery of her mistress. The detertives promise a chapter of most startling disclosures of the love affairs of Mclntyre within a few days. Manaaer Dickson of the agency said that Marie Kruger, Mrs. Haas's maid, had in a confession yesterday, impli cated Mclntyre in a number of robber ies of wealthy and prominent families in Newport. She repeated to detectives stories of these robberies which she said Mclntyre himself had told her. BUCK tore and range. J. 8 Basnlght Hardware Company, New Bern, N. C. Marriage at Arapahoe. Edgar S, Weave-, a well known young merchant of Arapahoe and Miss Rosa Lane, daughter of Mr. Charles Lanof the same plac?, were married Fr. BJ .ight;.t8;30o'clock at thejhome af AUam B-nnett, Justice oi me Paece, G. W. Brinson officiating. Both of these young peop'e are popular wih a wide circle tjof friend; a l of whom join in wishing them most hmiw and Drosperous married lite. rr HO, I ha if pncimi shamed iw. who iily w.i- lei round ' ee of hi- f be b id dii .U.MIl e I i-l am IU I' I Ma ,'t l -.1 ill Ail. tl tit -1 , St hi 1113 1 1 led al secretary o made an ex.iiilin.il en aiinouili si ' hat he morphine with opiu Their verdict rec resl of Mrs. Crawl. I Ieirs-at -law ol 1 n tin ir petition to isiile, alleged thai Dr. li Hoard 1 ol the found Mr. Weaver came this county recently from the north and has decid d to make Arapahoe his home. el ce the Mai iiin 1 .. li-hi .1 h.-.i help ... l.iinhridgc was iopc for assistance ,11 10 givi up hope ... h-hing ve el- ap -1, bound out fro 111 h for menhaden or (1 1 hey ni 1 foi t he i ,tiry he told Ax 1 willi cramp- when .-el-, and as lie was leg- he bad to depend , ll . it on his back, ig e--el- coming his led toward- him. His were useless, so he 1.1! Crawford "had produced in the deofascd b the contiiu istration ol narcotics .11 cant-." Atlanta, C.a., July 12. representing the plaintiffs i 1 deal il .nil STEADY NERVE SAYS AVIATOR. Glenn Martlnd Volplane To Lake When Carburettor Fails. Muskegon. Mich.. T ul V 12. Glenn Martin's steady nerve and perfect control of his hydro-aeroplane, in which he is making the Chicago-to-Detroi niiu. nrobablv saved his life late this afternoon, when the machine developed carburettor trouble and he was forced to make a quick descent into Lake Michigan. Martin, with his passenger, Charle Day, was flying about 700 feet abov the water when the air valve droppei from the carburetter. Martin volplanci to the surface 'of the lake, making nerfert landing about two and one half r miles from the shore. In a few minute he succeeded in starting his engine again and reached the shore under his ownpowcr. Martin declared his machine was not damaaed and that he will resume his lour lll'V toward Charlevoix .at 7:.ltl js. J tomorrow morning. Beckwith Havens and Roy Francis, who reached Pcntwater this afternoon, remained there during the night, a lowering barometer causing them to defrr the departure until tomorrow morning. J. ...J, 1 n. 11 11 ill tile - ) sel aside the wi ll ol the laic t Crawford, disposing "I an allied at S25MM'ni ""''', lv'!'' nditor J. N. Anderson hen a i-p 01 he verdict of the Carroll Con' oroner's jury holdii., thai 1' apitalists death was due in pui n ng. 1 ne coronei - in . -o mended that Mr-. Mary Hcllc I rawh". who married the capitalist 1 few : before his death, I"' Hel'l !''""" in investigation by the local gran. jury. II. i ,ii- 10 attract attention. Y.i ne, who was ill the the .-I earner vesper, dark bodv flopping the ;hi meant porpoise for 1 e meant niosshunkers. vessel's course turned sed porpoise, and when he saw a man Atlantic. A boat was 111-1 rolln I he id porpoi-.' len d I lit' the Slip iri.ri-.d wl in ll oil l lllg ml quickly rescued the man, w 1. lakeu to Lewes, Del. plain I yneh, in charge of the life 1 ...! kSi s t.nioii ai I. ewes, iiusu lit dry clothing, and chipped in with V , c customs in-pertor and Hrewell, the ilroad telegraph operator, to pay I It .inbri.lgc's fare to New York. Ilain- I. .0 :.. V,.... '..rlr hie piltlge I- -llll in .WH ..v - home with his brother jn Richmond turnpike, Statcn Island. RETURNS FROM REUNION. B. G. CredlcBack From (Jettysburf Had Delightful Visit. B. G. Crcdlc, a member of the New Bern Camp Confederate Veterans, re- ... r tl-- LI.(nH urneil last evening iroin nu . ... ir. D. C, where be spent a wit a an aitctidinir the fiftieth anniversary BUCK stoves and range. J. S Basnlght Hardware Company, New Ner 11, N. C. HELD FOR RETAILING. Onslow County Man Bound Over To Federal Court. ol the Battle of Cettysbuig which was held .1 r.otivfchnrc week before last. ..I " r. . . Crcdlc says that he thoroughly en-1 joyed his visit to Gettysburg and 111 fact had "the time of his lite. those Yankees," he said, "know how to entertain and they certainly gave us the best they had." After leaving Gettysburg Mr. Credit went to Washington where he has refa rives and friends md icnt a s 1 aV viewing the sights of th; capital city Cnited States Deputy Marshall Sam uel Lilly returned yesterday morning from Onslow county where he had been to place Lon Lockamy, white, under arrest on a warrant charging him with tel. tiling spirituous liquors without a government license. .The defendant was taken before Cnited States Commissioner F. W. I target! at Jacksonville for a prelimin ary hearing. Probable cause was found and he was bound over to the next term of Federal Court under a bond of one hundred and fifty dollars which he secured and was released from custody. Harry .Thaw lias sent Gen. l a SteWes l.oiio. Who'i. looney nomt Bl h stovea and range. J. 8. Basnlght Hardware Company, Nw Berm, N. C. m I m

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