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Show FULL TEXT OF ADDRESS BY FORMER PRESIDENT TAFT I i . ' , I I Approval or Disapproval of Wilson Administration the Big Issue The issu.' whirii the Amrriean people are poinp t vote on in this It rtion, no matter what Mr. !oi winhea or Mr. Harding wishe.- 1 whether thry approve the miniiii-istration miniiii-istration of Mr Wilson. Mr. Wilson Wil-son is a man of exceptional alility aflflH ana ot still mon execpnonai Pf" R personality upon his adtninisl ra- H tion mo completely that he is th H administration. It ImpOadble, H therefore, to talk in this campaign HRh without talking of Mr. Wilaon Never sine the days of Andrew Jack.v.n bai pfeddenl erctaed over his party mid OVWT the 1 eminent men contraj u Mr w.i- power and he i morbidly aenaitiTC to any attempt, reel -r Fancied, b: Efl anyone, whetfu r ronirri'sMiian. ator or prominent Democrat, interfere with his control. He haa used all his power and Influence in many diidpline eongreaaman and senator. i ir.- party and to dtfeal them for -- fie, Im , riUsr . mk Lhe w iedom of hi or L;,v" offered obetruction to hie will. Cir-eumstanew Cir-eumstanew have enabled him to HI gratify his love of power. ll' cam! BH into office u minority candidaW and his party, dry with thirst: from office and power caused l sixteen years in the 1,1 the opposition, was onl tOO anxious to submit to his dictation. A I ,,M"-ocratic ,,M"-ocratic majority in the w natc held ggfl up 2500 appointmenta made by Mr. Wilaon'fl Republican predt i ef sor between the adjournment of eongreaa in the early summer of 1912 until the 4th of March, 1913. Discretion to make oth r places by ft removal was promptly exercised ft The civil aei I rr"x P siona and regulation i nend- ; ft -i to give greater latitude in p''- ft sonal selection, and some of theafl amendments were defended by the J president. Other provisions and j MHH regulations intended to secure nonpartisan civil ft evaded b ingenious devices' to substitute Democrats for Republic-arts, Republic-arts, and nil these things effective- ft ly strengthened the executive o- duence with .the Democratic mem-bers mem-bers in the house and the senate it gl When the war eanie on. both RS" publicans and Democrats had to rx-tend rx-tend to tba executive much arbitrary I ui liority. and the OolOSSOl transaction! In the stiiiggle required an ft tuent of the civil M.-riic; SO that from juo.ooo employee, the number In the .iu employment of the government VL . am m r COO gggfl about, the restriction of the Civil ggggfl vice InwH and regulations was intn- gggH I mixed. No czar or king ever had (i gggg trreuter power than WoodrOU WH-. ggggg during ti' war. and no potentate ever gggg ezercleed It trlth lees sfHUnfneei t consult thoee IntereeteC. H gggl iished a seolueion from eonference iih gggg member of the -nuto and roemhom ji ggggg t'f the hou.se unht-.ird o Iffon in tn. ggS The government of the United ggH covers so wide- a field and Involves ij ggggfl the admlnlstralton of rfucli eompllratcd - gggJl and varied function.-- that the chief i must delrgat4- h.s powera, and the H Constitution expooti th.it he will dele- g gate them to heads 61 partmenta H and Important subordinates. The H president must eelect for thaaa pi .'- a H men of such ability and of BUCh (thar at tar that ha may entrust to tnem H power to administer their offices with i. ling hlma axd he musi 1' y e MH to tlx n to Aocidt when his OOUUM . is g needed. If, on the other hand, he sc. li l ts men to whose ability, discretion H and loyalty ho cannot delegate such a , tower, and he insists on requiring that all matters of tho hast import -ante bjh brought to hint before action 1 i taken, h will bait .ithi dclas all Hgl executive action In time of peace, and : - ggggg of affactlvenaaa il l.oi tj r Ills l-ott I K H Mr. Wilson's Jealousy of his power H and his -frudsjtng delegation of it led H him tO adopt the lat'.ei course and to' H require the heads of his departments j H and Othera not do anything of any H Importance until he was consulted. H It was impossible for him to know thl H : .ots and acquire familiarity with the j H merits of the queatlon without delay H and a halting of business. This Is the H one explanation of the cx;ispc rating H slowness with which decisions uir' H made tn that critical year beginning H In April, 1H7, when it became H essary to change a nation of peace Into I H a military organization. More than any 1 country in the world, the United M States has exhibited the genius of or- 1 ganiaatlon In production and all phases J of achievement. Thr captains of In- H .In; try, of railroads, anrl lhe laadOH H all fields of activity were only too H d to tender their services to the H government in its need, but they were H put under advisory committees wlth- j out powers, to dance upon the con- H veniance and hesitation of mediocre H officials with whom political cjcpedl- ind fear of ci con- gWt, H; nt utn protesting public opinion J pushed on tho administration. U there glvea to rnen who know ho I Jl tho power to do the things thai had IIH lo be done In order to enable Ajncrl- can courase. American ingenuity American ctiicfoncy, Aimorlpaa aonlui for organization. Aimrlrin ulrlot-ism ulrlot-ism and American dash to save th world. POLITICAL TEST Ol FITNESS Mr. Wllaon'a conception of hla duty in ratals Inc nil powi r to blmaalf had another sffocl it minimized the importance im-portance of COnaultbW the fitness and iUiillf ii-.itlonx oi men for their task in the functions to which he called th in In many cases It seemed that all that was necessary to fit a man for a place was that he should t- loyal and otti'du-nt to the Wilson administration, adminis-tration, it was unneceaaarj for hini to be peculiarly advised sis to his new dUtlWt beoaUM ha waj to Ue directed tv the president in respect to them. ' ba WOrk Which was done during the u ar of preparing four millions of men for tin- ariu;. and landing half of tham across the ocean was a magnificent achievement, but it was not due to Mr Wilson. As lute as the fall of 1 !' I 7 he hud evidently yielded to the urgX nt demand!' of pacifists and socialists, so-cialists, whom he aeemed to favod that no American troops be .sent abroud (except the small contingent transported trans-ported under General Pershing, after the visit of the allied commission, and that our aid bv confined to financial and material assistance. Mr. Wilson and his secretary of w;r hesitated more than three months, although pressed by the military committer, ot tin senate and urp" d thereto by General Gen-eral Crowder to amend the' first plan of conscription eo as to create an adequate ade-quate for. i- for the army si PPOK1 I I) HY ItEPI IU.K Ns. luilntc the war the Republicans in congress, although a minority, greatly .-insisted the president in the prosecution prose-cution of the war, an enabled him to so ure necessary measun s against the do-iceil i .. - ist. Hu e of a considerable consider-able number of his own part; . There was a complete absence of the partisan wplnt In the t'onduct of the Republicans Republi-cans In the war congress, and yet. when the campaign came on In iOIR Tor eongreaatonal elections. Mr. wiiaon made a most partisan appeal for the i taction of a Democratic congress, oi I the giound that the Republicans wer pro-war iut ajitl-admlnlatratlon. Thi waa when victory WU crowning ou I arms. Had the American peopl thought that Mr. Wilson had achk-vct this by his inspiring leadership Lsu executive measure they would cer I tainly have i-elurned a congress il accordance with his desire. They dli I not do so, because they knew that thi Republican minority had restrained al partlaan spirit and had rallied to th Support of the administration, wher many of its own party followers wlc ! deserted it. They resented the ingrati j tude and injustice of such an uppea and registered their verdict in the elec Hons. All wars, and aapedall this war. should abolish all partisanshir I during its existence. It did so in al! ' other countries enguged in the war I Mr. Wilson should have opened hh arms and Invited to his assistance all u publicans capable of rendering aer j vlc . U nt this he did not do. It was contrary to his nature and the examples ex-amples of Oreal Britain and France and Canada and other countries had nc effect upon hlrn. He could not brook the thought of any one sharing hi power or hla responsibilities. Nothing else could explain the remarkable correspondence cor-respondence between the president and his secretary of state, Mr. Lansing. During his illness the government In many wa. ceased to function, and when Mr Lansing, most naturally and without the slightest Impropriety, suggested sug-gested the meeting of the heads of departments to consult together, and ! this i out inud for two or three months durlnir the disability of the president. ' he was held by the president to have derogated from the power of tho preeidi nt Without a full appreciate. n of Mr. Wilson x theory of completely personal government It would he Impossible Im-possible to understand the Dunslng l correspondence. PQLICX OF WABTE1 DXiM 1 6G This persona) system of government has not made for efficiency and econ-omy, econ-omy, it is not necessary for nie io dwell upon the failure of the postoffil e department to satisfy the moral and J reasonable requirements of the busi-2 busi-2 ness public. I would not have time to s ko over the various instances of enorm-r enorm-r ous waste and delay in war prep.ira-9 prep.ira-9 Hon which ensued because competent 1 men were not vested with sufficient 1 power or decision. Congress, with the -laid of the Republican minority, voted G00. 000,000 for the development of 1 the aviation military arm, and it was i practically wasted. Governor Hughes, I who was appointed to investigate the ; consumption of a billion dollars In i his important field of military prep-I prep-I aratlon, animadverted with gTeat severity on its failure. Of course, the I preparation of a republic for war nec-- nec-- eaaarily involves waste, and no nd-) nd-) ministration can escape it; but the ln- stances during this war were so many I and so glaring that a people groaning . under a heavy taxation may well com-I com-I plain and lose confidence In an ad-I ad-I ministration responsiolc for ihem. LOANS POORLY ISSUED I Then, too. the national loans have rot i.e. ., wisely and justly Issued. In ( fear of political criticism and the desire de-sire io secure popular approval b ! the announcement that the loans were to be made without giving to the lead-1 ers of finance an opportunity to profit, thereby, bonds were floated at a rate Df Interest less than normal by an artificial ar-tificial stimulus of the patriotism of the people, which has done the greatest great-est Injustice to those kost able to bear the loss entailed. At the Instance In-stance of the treasury department, all the organizations, social, business, political, po-litical, of the country were united in an effort by moral appeal to induce the people, even to the poorest factory fac-tory girl, to take the bonds. The movement move-ment was a success. The administration administra-tion prided Itself on the result, but the Inexorable economic law. bv reason rea-son of inadequate interest, hat; sent the bonds down to o and 85. People Peo-ple who haw means enough to hold ih" bonds know that thev are good and that 100 per cent will be paid on them when they mature; but the pooi- people cannot hold them until that lime. The high prices and other exigencies have' l i required them to sell, and in selling I thy have suffered grievous loss. It Is I most difficult to suggest machinery by which eiuit may Ik- done to them. Thi ,. of M.e administration l. prono- inent among the reason why there la o deep ii lcffltng spread all over the country against a continuance of the Iimocratle partv In power. kRMl 1 1 1 i MPJLOl l-s RJ i UNKD Nor has the administration shown a willingness properly to reduce the number of etell employes which has eo enormously expanded b the war. Il is now more than twenty-three months sine the armistice, and yet the ; statistics seem to show that of the in-reaao in-reaao from COO.OOO to more than 6"0.- 000 employes, the reduction has not c.irried the number much, if anv. below be-low 600.000 This, of course. Is a great I drain upon the explanation of it asoepi the indisposition of partisan depart-, depart-, merits and burvaus to turn out partisan par-tisan followers. GOVKRNOB ( WD LIQUOR 1 have thus summarily run over a few of the reasons why on November 1 the American people will turn the democracy out of power and elect a ! Kepubllcan president. f the candidates. candi-dates. Governor Cox has had consldcr-ible consldcr-ible eiffieial experience as governor of hio. He has shown himself a h rawed and active politician. He has aaved himself from defeat because of his affiliation with the liquor groups i in politics, and they have always regard, re-gard, i him ,i-i ,i friend. Mr. fox say that he votes "dry " and doubtless he does, but the lieiueir interests are not likely to have made a mistake in the rnen they support Governor Cox, too. h.w, manifested a wish to avoid responsibility respon-sibility for the maintaining law and order in the case of local disturbances beyond the control of the local authorities au-thorities by the summoning of the militia. An instance Of this was when the great city of Cincinnati was so much at the mercy of street railway ! rioters that the mayor of that city. 1 Mr Hunt, now at the head of the national na-tional labor board of all tho railways, appealed to Mr. Cox to send troops j Which he declined to do. Mr. Cox'a hlef supporters In the state have expressed ex-pressed prldr that the militia ha! never been summoned to maintain ilaw and order in hio under Governor I Cox. This, taken In connection with Governor Cox'a presnosterous and un supported charge that the Republican I part) was collecting a buge fund of1 millions to buy the presidency for Mr. Harding In order that Mr Harding might send bayonets to Interfere in labor disputes jmi conpel in adjust ment unfavorable to labor, showa Mr. i Cox a' temporizer with mob violence rither than one who would maintain ti ill hazards thnt law and order es-1 scntlal to Justice in every free com- : m unity. a SHTFi poi rru i an Mr Cox's tour in the country has re-! reeled in him the shifty politician so distinguished from one who seks the presidency with a rill realization of the responsibilities which must be met I in that office. He was nominated with the aid of Tammany and other polltl-cei polltl-cei organizations in Indiana and Illinois Illin-ois and New Jersey, understood to be strongly weL He counts upon the support sup-port of organized labor, and he has ut. so far as Mr. Gompers can give it id him. Mr. Gompers looks to the same i support of his authority and the same 'consistent yielding to his advice in Mr I fox's administration as he has enjoyed i tr Mr. Wilson's I do not minimize Ml. .omp-r.v' valuable st-rvice to the country coun-try during lb. war. and I agr. r with Ufce4iiwistf nee UVOIf'rCtfl LutlWtTvc Wir g 1 1 ii inp;, but 1 think it would be harm-i harm-i ful to the country for htm to continue I to exercise in the next administration of the labor department and other departments de-partments of tho government the same power which has been his In this Mr. Gompers does not carry the labor vote , In his pocket. He certainly does not 'carry the rote of organized labor, and I it has been shown in manv elections, (that organised labor Is Itself not sub-iJect sub-iJect in the secrecy ot the election booth, to the domination of Its chosen Ifaderg. II IRDING 1 DIFFER EN l i Mr Harding is a verv dlffereni man I from Mr. Co. lie has had political ex. (pcrience of an extended character, but .he has never manipulated lor his own !ald the support of the liquor interests : or created a machine to maintain his State power and secure hlr. presidential ! nomination. He has manifested always approval of labor unions and peaceful i settlement of labor disputes through arbitration, but he has always insisted upon the obligation of the gov ernment to protect the public when Its vitai interests are prejudiced bv continued !and lawless controversies beween em-1 j plovers and employed. Utterly without justification, It has been charged that, I the nomination of Mr. Harding tVSS due to a senatorial "cabal " There never nev-er was a convention so utterly free from domination by any small group of men. senators or otherwise, as this I last Kepubllcan convention. The sena tors who arc charged to have formed the cabal supported different candi-tlates candi-tlates and the convention ran away from them. Several of tbo senators were supporting General Wood others I were euportlng Governor Lowden and 'others supporting Senator Johnson, land, after the (trend toward Harding I beca.me apparent, a number of so-call- ea ouier-enuer senators attempted to defeat Harding, but failed. Mr. Hir-' Hir-' ding is under no obligation to any-! any-! body for his nomination except to the Republican convention Mr Harding lis a man of proved ability and lntcgrit ind Of long political and governmetal j experience, lie has commended him-! him-! self to his country and his colleagues I In the senate; and he has the confi dencc of the people of Ohio, his own i home, as shown by the enormous majority ma-jority with which he was sent to the senate He Is. a man of fine character. I admirable poise, awest tempered, modest, mod-est, knows that he does not know i everything, has no disposition to absorb ab-sorb power hut is firm without obstinacy obstin-acy and a patriotic American who has come up from the bottom by his own efforts. His speeches show a deep I sense, of responsibility for what he says and u full appreciation that he might not embarrass himself when he becomes president by flippant promises prom-ises thrown out to catch an audience or to secure the votes of a prejudiced faction As between the two candidates both of whom I know. 1 have no difficulty dif-ficulty In expressing a decided pre-1 ferenee for Senator Harding. THE LEAGUE OF N ITIONS There remains for discussion the! subject of the league of nations. 1 have always been for international agreement agree-ment to settle disputes on principles i of Justice bj a resort to International tnounais. I ittempted to bring this about by what were called universal arbitration treaties, which were emasculated emas-culated by the senate. After th'i war I hoped for a league of nation and I labored ;is earnestly as 1 could after this league of nations had been formed and agreed to In Paris, to bring about its ratification. Indeed. I had been long before the president of the Deague to Enforce. Peace, whose object was to secure the submission of all justiciable; Issues between nations likely to lead to a war to a court, and all ' nonjustlci-able nonjustlci-able issues to a commission of coucilli-atlon. coucilli-atlon. and to enforce submission before war by economic or mllltarv pressure, i it did not --eek to enforce the judgment judg-ment of the recommendation. The Wilson league went further and 1 ap-j proved the advances propose-d. both' article X and the other provisions, and I wont over thlc country advocating it. j I tried to help Mr. Wilson by making! suggestions a to amendment' fur the I loagua and as to the best means of securing se-curing its ratification- 1 soon became convinced after tho league bad been submitted to the senate that It was impossible to secure its ratification without reservations, and then 1 sought to bring about so far as I' could agreement agree-ment upon reservations which would least weaken the league. Mr. Wilson's failure to secure his league Is due in part to his dcslra al-I ways to be. .'is he said In his appeal' to the voters In 1918. the unembar- i roosed spokesman of the American people In Paris, and although they had rebuked hinrfor that appeal, he neteel SS If he had the ioIc power. Never I from the beginning .did he consult senators sen-ators of either party No senator of either party knew what his plan was jfor a Icagu" when he sailed from thi shores. Ha knew that the senate must, by a two-thirds vote, ratify the league I if It was to become binding upon ib-United ib-United States. He knew that then was a majority of Republicans In the t senate. Yet he took no steps whatever what-ever to propitiate the senators or to Interest them in his purpose. He ig-nored ig-nored them. When William HcfUnley had to negotiate ne-gotiate the treaty of frirls, ending the Spanish war, which presented un equally difficult problem to the American Am-erican people, he appointed on the commission te negotiate the treat' Republican Re-publican and Democratic senators. It was urgeel that tills be done by Mr Wilson, but he paid no attention to the suggestion He appointed on tho commission com-mission men whose membership in the commission carried no weight whatever what-ever with the country or with either 'party, and he went himself to elo the whole thing. I did not object to his going over. Indeed. I thought It would 'educjite him in the affairs of the 'world, but In so far as Is minimized !the necessity of appointing abh. men on the commission to assist him It had bad results. When he returned ivvith the report he defleel the senate opposition and his attitude has always been that of compelling senators to .come to his view without the slightest yielding Of SUJ matter of substance in respect to the league. Il was manifest mani-fest to everyone that more than one-third one-third of the senate, indeed that the ma- Jorltv ot th. serial-- was im ocaoi opposed op-posed to artlcleiX as likely to Involve US Ih wars in wiieh we were but remotely re-motely interested 1 did not agree with them and favored that article. 1 would have been glad to have, the league adopted as Mr. Wilson submitted submit-ted it, but this Is a republic HAS WILSON'S ST IMP. This Is a constitutional government In which the executive in negotiating treaties must abide the confirmation Of Ins action by two-thirds of the senate. He must, therefore-, defer to their Judgment, Judg-ment, but if he eannot secure all that he would wish, he must, in order to obtain progress make concessions, instead in-stead of doing so he summarily rejected reject-ed the compromise- which w a., off'-n-u him on the 19th of November. 1919 a compromise which would have given us what. In my Judgment, would ba most useful advance to un International Interna-tional arrangement to prevent war. Il WOlild have secureel limitation of ar-iPiament. ar-iPiament. peaceful -submission to an International In-ternational tribunal with penalty of a universal boycott, and open diplomacy .three out of the four steps In the 'league toward securing peace. Yet Mr Wilson says. "If 1 don't get article X there can be no league' With hi i peraonsWy.-h hut st.-rmped thnr s vm I upon the Democratic platform and upon up-on Mr Cox so that, should Mr. Cos I be elected, h is bound to stand b (article X n tho other hand, there larc now In the senate enough senateini I who will continue In the next congress I to defeat' article X und who will undoubtedly un-doubtedly flo so If It be offered foi i their consideration. We face, therefore, there-fore, in Mr. Cox's election a stalemate ia.s Mr Harding properly expresses it i Wo face the continuance f the deadlock dead-lock which Mr. Wilson Insisted upon. I Had Mr W ilson accepted that com- promise offered him by the Republicans Republi-cans we should now be In the league of natlems lunctioning in that body and I helping it . to amend itself, and to remedy rem-edy some of the obvious defects of Its original constitution, especially in he matter of an international court 'or justice. Mr. Wilson's failure to enter the league in November. L919, when he might have done so, has In my judgment judg-ment greatly delayed settlement of matters abroad The other nations were willing and anxious to have us on our own terms, hut he said. "No. only with article X will I consent." Mr Root was appointed by the other nations, not by Mr. Wilson, to be one Of a commission to frame an International Interna-tional court of justice under article XI V of the league It was a dlfflcuh problem, but It has been admirably solved and the provision for such a court is now before the league for adoption, with jurisdiction over a large number of justiciable hsues which it defines. Mr Harding's attitude upon the league has been this that In an far-nest far-nest desire to help the other nations he was willing to vote for the league With the Kepubllcan reservations, and he did so twice In anticipation eii executive ex-ecutive rcsponslbilty, however, and of (Initiative, he does not wish to submit jthe Wilson league to the senate. He prefers to negotiate with the leading , powers now In the league to re-vise and 1 amend the league by an agreement i with those powers before submitting lhe matter lo the senate In his sp Bob j of August 28 and in his speeches ut Indianapolis and Greencastle, Ind., this hir.t week he has made it clear I that this country should help in an J association of nations to av oid war land that he is willing and anxious to bring about a modified or revised ! league, avoiding those features of the Wiison league to which he has made I objection. His Insistence la that the league ishould center around a court of justice, jus-tice, and Mr Root's international ce.urt I I of Justice furnishes a basis for his pro- ' posal Expressions that Mr. Harding has "scrapped" the league, has "re-j jpudlated" it, are grossly unfair ex-' I presslons. He has vigorously opposed' article X and the Monroe doctrine pro- ; Vision, but he has not repudiated its other provisions and purpose All In- ferenee that ho is opposed to any, league, or opposed to the pre-sent league, when those features which he deems to be objee-tlonablr are removed, and when other features are ad. Ie-1 t ii.. t he deems to be necessary, does him In-j justice. I wish to be a real democrat) In spirit. I wish to play the game of government as its rules ore contained' 'in the constitution of the I'nited States, j 1 feel, therefore, that though 1 favor-, , ed the Wilson league and hoped that it might be ratified, and favored ar-jtlcle ar-jtlcle X, and hoped that that mlirht es-'cape es-'cape elimination, when I found that it could not he ratified I urged as strongly as I could the acceptance of the reservations offered by the Republicans Repub-licans in November. 1919. and In February. Feb-ruary. 1920- I felt that President Wilson Wil-son made himself the proper subject of the severest criticism in not being' willing to accept a compromise which) the senate had the right to offer him JJy insisting on article X he de-stroyed de-stroyed his league, and Mr. Cox proposes pro-poses to do the same ihing. The onl j possible hope: rf making progress to-warel to-warel a league of nuttons to secure peatr Is th.-iefoir by the election ofj Mr. Harding The present elecUou is Personal Government Plan b Denounced; Extravagance Is Excoriated not i referendum, the result of which IWtU determine whether the American gS .people are In favor of Mr. Wilson's league or are against It. The Issue of H .this campaign Is whether wo shall ap- H ipro, th.- il-on administration. From .my observation, and I have had great opportunity In every part of the coun- H try, I believe thai the majority of the Amen, ui p.-. .p.- . . r. In fuvor of Wilson's accepting th,. reservations gS and entering the league. I believe fur- gfn ther that a majorltv of the people ore gV against article X and I think this, al- though I favored nrtlrle X and would H havc been glad to see It ratified. Tho ) gS -question Ls what can be done under the ' gS rules of the game. 1. ... under the con- tltutlonal provisions, to bring tho ggfl United States Into an arrangement with other nations to prevent war M ggS ! seems to me clear that In th exist- ggfl ing situation Mr. Harding's election IIS the only means of securing this I ( Pom leal Advertisement.; ' GROWING DEAF WITH I fl HEAD NOISES1 5 M TRY THIS I . riOWfcM h:.r.J of 1,. .ruing anl fear Catarrhal Deafness or If you have flfll i roaring rumbling, hissing noises In your flfll ears, go to your druggist and get 1 ounce lot Pormlnt (double strength!, and arid to ; it pint of hot w ater and a little gronn flfll latcd sugar. 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