Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 December 1937 — Page 3

FRIDAY, DEC. 8, 1937

PAGE 3

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

{© TAXFREE SECURITIES WORTH

50 BILLIONS MAY BE SOURCE OF NEW REVENUES FOR U. §.

House Group Also Considers Levying Upon Exempted

Salaries; Senator Bo

rah Attacks Farm Bill;

Charges Measure Is Invalid.

(Continued from Page One)

tion as threatening “national suicide.” In a broadside that questioned constitutionality of the Farm Bill, the Idaho Senator warned the Administration that failure to face the “fact that millions do not have sufficient food” would lead to “a people filled with revolution.” “These people are a fact and you can't ignore that reality even if it takes every cent in the Treasury,” Senator Borah said. He denounced the proposed theory of restriction as putting the farmer in a “strait jacket” as far as prices are concerned. Senator Borah led the most dramatic attack during 10 days of debate on the crop control bill and, in addition, proposed that instead of reducing production the Govern- |

understand it today, is being permitted to exist as a more or less | temporary expedient—tolerated, I | may say.”

Plenty Is Theory

| Asserting that “industry's objec- | tive requires the application of the ‘theory of plenty’—always a greater | flow of goods and services,” Mr. | Sloan declared: | “Our difficulty is that our operatfing policies—such as increasing | prices, less work, reduced flow of

goods, bureaucratic control, artifici[al restrictions—lead us directly to (the application of the ‘theory of | scarcity’—less things for more peo-

| ”» |

Mr. Sloan said “the perpetuation

Assisting in drafting recommendations for G. O. P. policies at an Indiana Republican executive com- | | mittee meeting in the Claypool Hotel today were

9

Ernest B. Thomas (left), Rushville; John K. Ruckelshaus, Indianapolis, committee chairman, and Arch N. Bobbitt (right), Indianapolis, state chairman.

Indiana Republican Executive Committee Drafts Recommendations on Policies

Executive committee members shown discussing

1938 policies are Mrs. Grace B.

Cambridge City, national committeewoman; Ray E.

an 4 k

4

» Times Photos. Willis (center), Angola, publisher Steuben Republican, and Mrs. Charles W. Teetor, Hagerstown, Indiana

Reynolds League of Women Voters past president,

(left), |

ment should buy the farm surplus|,¢ the capitalistic system, and the and provide for its distribution %0 | maintenance of democracy itself,”

the needy. The removal of the surplus from the market would keep the price of farm products up, he argued.

Bill Reading Resumed

In the House reading of the Farm Bill resumed. An amendment to protect new wheat growers from drastic reduction of acreage was approved. In the meanwhile, President William Green of the American Federation of Labor announced today

after a meeting with his executive | council that the Federation would |

submit a new Wages and Hours Bill | for Congressional consideration | “probably tomorrow.” | Mr. Green's announcement was made as House Wages-Hours Bill | advocates prepared for a drive to | obtain passage of the bill which was | deadlocked in the House Rules | Committee until it was forced out

by petition yesterday. | Sioan Blames Fear |

For Production Dip |

NEW YORK, Dec. 3 (U. P.) —Al- | fred P. Sloan Jr., General Motors | Corp. board chairman, said in an | address prepared for delivery today | before the Association of Life Insurance Presidents convention that industrial recovery “is to be sub- | stantially altered or perhaps super- | seded.” “The condition of paralysis that is spreading through our national | economy,” he said, “is because of fear that the very foundation upon which our industrial enterprise is | based is in jeopardy. “Too many believe, and too much | has been done to make them believe, | that the industrial system, as we

| depended upon “the intelligence | with which we distribute the pro- | ductivity of industry” among its “component, parts.” Asserting that it was an “indisputable fact that the recovery movement could not have run its (normal! economic course,” Mr, Sloan blamed the current: business reces- | sion upon “certain influences-—some {due to our national economic policies and others, psychological in | nature—which have resulted in not only arresting, but actually reversing the normal trend of the recovery | movement.” Wages, he continued, especially in worker's groups “earning the highest wages already,” have risen with the result that “prices in general have advanced more rapidly than purchasing power . . . prejudicing both consumption and employment.

Strikes Held Injurious

“Not only that, but worker groups have been permitted to interfere with the flow of goods and services through costly strikes . . . in some cases, minority groups have prevented the majority from working even on terms entirely satisfactory | to that majority. “In other respects they have demonstrated an utter lack of responsibility entirely out of keeping | with the obligations they have been | granted as a component part of the | industrial system.”

NAMED ON BOARD BLOOMINGTON, Dec. 3 (U. P). —The Board of Aeons, highest men’s student organization at Indiana University, has named Richard Shannen of Ft. Wayne, Theodore Fleming, Princeton, and Thomas Buck, Star City, its membership.

to

IN INDIA

NAPOLIS

James, Viola Sims, at 1220 E. 29th. |

80 Clothed

Link - Belt Workers | Take 85; Golden Gloves 30.

the Belt Railroad. Two Charges Dropped

Charges of failing to stop after an accident and reckless driving were dismissed by Judge Karabell. Pat Schrader, also of 811 N. Alabama St., owner of the auto driven by George Schrader, was fined $15 on a charge of having license plates on the car. Patrolman Henry pong eight motorists in less

HE list of children cared for in The Indianapolis Times’ Clothe-A-Child campaign climbed to 80 today with two large contributions. Employees of Department 228 at the Dodge plant of the Link-Belt Co. took 35 children and the Indianapolis Times-Bruce Robinson Golden Gloves Fund cared for 30 boys and girls. The Link-Belt employees formed a “Clothe - A -Child Club” last December with dues of 10 cents a week for each member. The Golden Gloves fund used by Clothe-A-Child was the remainder of the sum earned last winter by the amateur boxing shows. Much of the money was spent last January to aid flood sufferers.

The donors’ list: TAnk Be, Dept. 228, Dodge t

than were charged with miscellaneous offenses. Meanwhile, five persons were injured in overnight accidents.

324 St., received head and body bruises last night when struck by an automobile at 32d St. and Capitol Ave. She was taken to St. Vin-

{ported her condition as “fair.” 35 children | Nathan F. Washburn, 38, of 221 W.

Ye ildren | 320 St., the car driver, was not

1 boy and 1 girl | held.

SANITARY PROJECTS BY WPA SURVEYED

Four-Year Work to Be Continued Till July.

an : cms ae Vm va Times-Bruce Robison Golden G

Three Hurt in Accident

Three men were injured head-on collision at 38th

in St. Irick Spellman, 55, of 340 Eastern |Ave., and Ed Miller, 47, of German [Church Road, the car drivers, and | Patrick Boucher, 62, of 517 N. Tacoma Ave., a passenger in Mr. Spell(man’s car. They were taken fo St. Vincent's Hospital with cuts and bruises. Meanwhile funeral services were completed for Sergt. Boyd Thomas, Ft. Benjamin Harrison, killed yesterday when struck by an auto

Scope of the community sanitation program in Indiana, for which the Federal Government recently al-

Mrs. Mrytle Pfeifer, 47, of 407 W. |

| Road 67 last night. They were Pat- |

Here's County Traffic Record

Earl, Josephine Wright, at 919 N. Liv-

Deaths (To Date)

1937

Accidents (Dec. 2) Accidents .... 4 |

Injured ...... 5 | 0

Arrests (Dec. 2)

Speeding 22 Reckless Driving 0

Running Preferential Street

8 Running Red Light 8 Drunken Driving | 1 Others %

MEETINGS TODAY

Exchange Club, luncheon, Hotel ington, noon | Optimist Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, noon | Reserve Officers Board of Trade, noo Phi Delta Theta, Trade, noon Delta Tau Delta, Pi,

Wash-

Association, luncheon,

n. luncheon, Board of luncheon, Club, noon Beta Trade, : ndiana Stamp Club, meeting, Indiana

luncheon, Board of

noon

Clubs p. m, exhibit, 5436 m.

Federation of Community Civic meeting, Hotel Washington, Irvington Artists, annual Washington St t 0p Women's Committee, Indiana State Symhony Society, luncheon and lecture, Athenaeum, 1:15 m. Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, concert, Murat Theater, 3:30 p. m, Printseraft Club, dinner, Hotel WashingHotel Wash-

4.

ton. 6:30 p. Mm. Kappa Sigma, luncheon, ington, noon.

MEETINGS TOMORROW

Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, concert, Murat Theater, 8:30 p. m. Indiana Hotel Association, Claypool Hotel, all day. Reserve Officers of Claypool Hotel, night. Alliance Francaise, Washington, noon. Gideons’ Association, Washington, 7:30 p. Irvington Artists, E. Washington St. 7 Indiana Stamp Club, coln, all day.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

(These lists are from official records at the County Court House. The Times, therefore, is not responsible for errors in vames or addresses.)

Rafe Radford, 22, 1233 Massachusetts Ave.; Dorothy Willis Mitchell, 21, of 1646 Columbia Ave. Clyde Smith Jr., 21, Anderson; Elizabeth Kimmerling, 18, Indianapolis. Harvey R. Davis, 33, Indianapolis; Edith Pearl Boyer, 30. 320 E. Walnut St. William Menderson Cunningham, Indianapolis; Rachel C. Kitrick. 408 S. New

Jersey St, Rietel, 22, of 333 Wisconsin St.;

Ernest 22 Valley Mae Sears, 22, of 1041 Chadwick,

BIRTHS Girls Arita Carlstedt

meetings, dinner, Hotel meeting, Hotel m. annual exhibit, 5436

to 10 p. m exhibit, Hotel Lin-

Indiana,

luncheon,

Dwight, at 2157 Sugar Grove George, Mary Green, at James, Florence Powell Artie, Mildred Roark William, Cloris Bell, at St Joseph, Sarah Miller, at St, William. Charlotte Philips, at cent’s, Luis, Frances Stanfield. at 928 Arnolda. Th as, Louise Coleman, at 2602 N.

Oxf Leroy, Martha Watson, at 949 Camp Loretta Cloe, at 101 Bloom-

Edward, James, Mabel Jackson. at 2223 Lexing-

St at at

Vincent's | Vincent's. | Vincent's,

St

Vincent's St. Vin-

=

ington

ton Eugene, Lucille Schoolcraft, at Coleman. Boys

| monia

Columbia |

| 1 World War Memorinl Shrine, 8 p. m S, |

ingston. Samuel, Flora Waters, at 1938 Columbia. Howard, Natalie White, at 1225 W. 25th. Louis, Mary Noel, at 1745 S. Keystone. S.

Peter, Dorothy LaRussa, at 804%

Senate. Jesse, Blanche Bartley. at Coleman. Harley, Mildred Griner, at Coleman, Lewis, Katherine Hibler, at Coleman. Carl, Margaret Jones, at Coleman. Victor, Mildred Kerns, at 2282 Massachusetts Robert, Isis Montgomery, Marshall, Marie Penley, at Coleman. Walter, Edith Simpkins, at Coleman. Burton, Kathryn Whiteside, at Coleman.

at Coleman,

DEATHS Owen G. Davis, 64, at City, lobar pneu-

John Albert MacArthur, 69, at 114%2 E. |

Ohio, coronary occlusion, at 1820 E. 10th, at Central Indi-

at Long, lobar

75. Vinzent's,

at Long, pulmon-

at at at Spann, 68,

Jentral

at Indiana, 220 N. Noble,

Phoebe J. MaGee, 72, pneumonia. Margaret Sullivan, 60, at 1419 E. LeGrande, carcinoma. Harley Jane Ellen Sandberg, 2, at 322 N. Denny, ocarditis O. Copeland, 76, 435 W. VerCharles Lorenza Ellington, stove explosion. 42, 1409 Julia at { cerebral hemorrhage.

James B. Asimakis, 52. ana, chronic nephritis. Carl G. Wilson, 37, at Veterans’, sepintestinal obstruction. George Smith, 12, at St. Vincent's, periAlexander, ary lobar pneumonia. 92, at 125 W. 33d, myCharles Novella Barksdale, 39, 19 1720 Minocqua, lobar pneumonia. Freida Kirsch, Oppenheimer, Methodist. uremia. arrv Goodard, 69,

at

located an additional $837,000 for |

continuation of the work until July 1, was outlined today by Dr. Verne K. Harvey, State Health director. Since program was started four years ago, 83,468 sanitary toilets have been erected in Indiana. A total of 5,666,954 man-hours of work has been employed in the program, Dr. Harvey said. The program is sponsored by the State Health Board, which offers technical supervision of the work. Property owners buy the materials, spending $1,265,867 during the last four years, and Federal agencies provide the labor. BRANHAM RENAMED HEAD OF BALL GROUP MILWAUKEE, Wis., Dec. 3 (U. P.) Judge W. G. Branham of Durham, N. C, today was re-elected president of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues for a term of five years and given a salary increase of from $12,500 to $20,000 a year. Judge Bhanham’s re-election was the high spot of the closing session of the minor leaguers. All attendance records for a minor league meeting were broken with 1002 baseball mean registered. Milwaukee announced the sale of Outfielder Frenchy Uhalt and Catcher Bill Brezen to the Hollywood Jacific Coast League club. The Hollywood club is managed by Wade Killefer,

hypostatic pneumonia. William Burford, 47, ticemia. at St. Clifford T. Jones, tonitis. 21, tuberculosis Anna Chapman at City, skull fracture. t, myocarditis. Tenna E. White. 80. at Long, burns from apoplexy Isabel Korbly, 56. coronary occlusion,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

wee United States Weather Bureat wee.

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: Occasional rain tonight and tomorrow; rising temperatures, with lowest tonight about 36,

Sunrise 6:50 | Sunset

TEMPERATURE Dec. 1936 eee S08 1%. Minn

BAROMETER 30.41

" 3,

% a.

»

«A. Mm,......

Precipitation 24 hrs. ending Total precipitation Excess

Ta. Mm...

Indiana=-Occasional rain probable tonight and tomorrow; rising temperature tonight and east and extreme south tomorrow. IMinois—Mostly cloudy tonight and tomorrow; occasional rain probable; rising temperature tonight. Lower Michigan—Occasional rain p-ob-able tonight and tomorrow, rising temperature south and east central portions tonight and east central portions and extreme southeast tomorrow. Ohio—Cloudy, occasional rain tomorrow and probably in northwest and extreme | north portions tonight; rising temperature. Kentueky — Cloudy, occasional rain in west and central portions tomorrow and in extreme west portion tonight; rising | temperature.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M. Station, Weather, Amarillo, Tex, «+..«+ Cloudy Bismarck, N. D. .Cle Boston RE . Chicago Cincinnati

Bar, 30.02

Es COLLEGE HEADS’ POLL OPPOSES THIRD TERM

NEW YORK, Dec. 3 (U. P).— Presidents of 13 colleges and universities recorded their opposition today against a third term for President Roosevelt. The educators, all heads of privately endowed in- | stitutions, were polled by Joseph | Leib, organizer of the first Roose-velt-for-President Club in 1930. Opposition to a possible third term was expressed by the presidents of Dartmouth, Lehigh, Duke, Brown, Drake, Colgate, Cornell, Washington and Jefferson, Beloit, Texas Christian, Lafayette, College of the Ozarks, and Vanderbilt,

while he was walking on Road 67

(Continued from Page One)

| <i

|

|

improper | sts.

hours yesterday. Twenty-four others | st.

|

{ |

cent's Hospital where physicians re- |

| State Safety | effective

|

| | | | | | | |

Sng ee 2 Killed and 4 Hurt Critically | BOB BURNS

In Head-on Crash at Richmond

his auto was struck by a locomo- | St. and 16th St. east of Sherman [tive at the Shelby St. crossing of | Drive,

The projects include: Keystone Ave.—25th to 34th Sts sides) and from 38th St. to the ville Road (hoth sides); and on side of Keystone Ave, Fall Boulevard to 52d St Thirty-fourth St. erson Ave, (hoth sides) Twenty-first St.—From Dearborn St. Emerson Ave Sixteenth St. Emerson Ave Minoqua St, Cottage Ave. Cottage Ave.

(both Millers-

from

-From Sherman Drive

-From Minnesota St.

-From Perkins to Golay English Ave.-—From Emerson Ave Brookville Road

arrested | Clyde St. -From the Brookville Road to | two | English Ave.

Troy Ave.—From Carson Ave,

Ww limit Sherman Drive—From 10th fo 21st Sts Minnesota St.—From Keystone Ave. to Sherman Drive, Orchard Ave.-—From 30th to 38th Sts nes non St.—From State to Keystone ves.

School for Officers Opens at Purdue U.

A school to train special police officers for enforcement of the new Law which becomes Jan. 1, cpened today at Purdue University in Lafayette. Fifty State Policemen and 20 Auto

and | License Bureau employees are to be | room-—she got her Paw

instructed in the work, Special instructions are being given which will permit the officers to judge the driving ability of persons who never have received operators’ licenses.

Three Types of Permits

Under the new safety law will be granted three types licenses: (1) beginner's permit (2) beginner's license and (3) complete license. Frank Finney, Aufo License

the west | Creek |

From Orchard to Em- | to | | to |

to | to the |

to Dietz |

. 10th St.—From Tibbs Ave. to the city | S.

drivers | of |

| Says: OLLYWOOD, Dec. 3.—It's a | funny thing to me that when we | need the advice of a doctor or a | J]awver we think nothing of calling | in the highest authority and paving fancy prices for it, and yet when | we're puzzled by some perplexity of life, we try to figger it out our=selves instead of going to the hest authority. If we would jest ask some old person, who has been through the mill, they would straighten us

out in a minute | and it wouldn't [cost us a cent. When my Cousin | | Lobelia’s fella come to call on her | one night. he met Grandpa Snazzy comin’ out of Lobelia’'s house. Grandpa says “Young fella, you look nervous—what's the matter?” The voung fella says “Why, I'm gonna { propose to Lobelia tonight and I'll | bet she'll be surprised to death.” | | Grandpa says “Well, she gave her | { little brother a dime to go to bed | at 6:30—she hung four cupid pic- | tures on the parlor wall—she moved | | the sofa to the darkest corner of the | and Maw to | | go callin’ next door=-she put the | dog in the cellar and right now | she's sittin’ at the piano, practicin’ | ‘Because I Love You'.”

i (Copyright, 1037)

'BRIEFS ORDERED IN MARRIAGE MILL CASE

| |

| Briefs in the Lake County mar- | | riage license case must be filed with |

the Indiana Supreme Court by Dec. |

[near MeCordsville. Bureau head, who is in charge of Burial in Post Cemetery the school, is being assisted by memMilitary and Masonic services are | bers of the National Safety Council. to be held at 1 p. m. tomorrow in | = - |the Ft. Harrison Service Club.| Burial will be in the Post Cemetery. | SOCIAL CRE Sergt. Thomas was returning from an American Legion meeting ir Oaklandon to his home in Law- : ; ! te | rence when he was struck. Ber- ed br-elections mn Alberta S political | nard Hendricks, Muncie, driver of | history ended last night with the | the car, was held at Greenfield | lection of Dr. Peter M. Campbell, | pending completion of an investi-| Unity candidate, over his Social gation. Credit opponent, A. J. Burnap, by Sergt. Thomas, who was 49, was| 710 votes, 11th Infantry assistant regimentai supply sergeant, and had been sta-| tioned at Ft. Harrison nine years. | He enlisted in the Army in 1908, | but has spent part of the time since | then as a civilian. He served in| Panama during the World War. Survivors are the wife, Mrs. Etta Thomas; son, John, 16, and daughter, Ruty, 14, both Technical High School pupils, and father, John Thomas, Whitman's Creek, W. Va.

Traffic Kills 67st in St. Joseph County

SOUTH BEND, Dec. 3 (U, P.).— Frank Salay, 63, merchant policeman, became St. Joseph County's 61st traffic victim of 1937 today when he died of injuries received Sunday when he was struck by an automobile. .

DIT AID LOSES

LETHBRIDGE, Alberta, Dec. 3 (U, P.) —One of the most hotly contest-

City to Build Walks ‘In Outlying Sections

| The Police Accident Prevention 2 {Bureau announced today it was | | sponsoring the construction of side- | walks along boulevards in the out[lying sections of the city where pedestrians now have nc protection. The projects were planned, bureau officials said, because of the hazards to school pupils forced to walk along boulevards where there are no sidewalks. Persons alighting at the end of bus lines also are endangered by walking on highways to their homes, officials said. The bureau said WPA labor would [be used in building cinder or gravel paths. More than 12 miles of paths | are to be built, officials estimated. Work has been started on 21st

See Pages

LEA

Cleveland, O. Denver Dodge City Helena, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Little Rock Los Angeles Miami, Fla. Minneapolis «.ovvvun “es Mobile, Ala New Orleans New York Okla. City, Omaha, Pittsburgh I Portland, Ore. Rain San Antonio, Tex. San Francisco .... St. 3 ve

ampa, Fla

Norman, Irene Bivens, at 2029 Fernway, ‘Doneld, Mary Wharton, at St. Vincent's.

i

T oe TB. sag J Washington, D. C. «+...Clear

%

I

OO

STORE

Has Important News for You!

30 and 31

[13, it was decided today. The appeal is being taken by {George W. Sweigart, Lake County lelerk, who is seeking dissolution of an injunction prohibiting him from lissuing marriage licenses to women |who are not residents of the county. | Obtained by Fred Egan, County | Frosecutor, this injunction is based fon an 1852 law. It prevents Illinois couples, seeking to avoid the com|pulsory physical examination required in their state, from coming ito Indiana to be married,

Troops From

. - U. S. Marines Force Japanese

American Sector

(Continued from Page One)

* 2 ! able incident preliminary to seizing |

power. Immediately after the grenade was thrown, T. E. Maitland, a British lawver, was beaten by Japanese civilians and arrested by the Japanese soldiers. It was said that he had seized a Rising Sun flag from one of the civilians and stomped on it. His friends were trying to bail him out of prison.

An American “Pop” Murphy, for- |

mer member of the Navy, was beaten by Japanese soldiers. Both Mr. Maitland and Mr. Murphy were said to have fought back when hit. Mr. Maitland was later

released pending settlement of his case.

‘Report German Efforts ‘To Mediate War

HANKOW, China, Dec, 3 (U. P). =—Creneralissimo Chiang Kai-shek and Dr. Oscar Trautmann, German Ambassador to China, are discussing possible terms for ending the Chinese-Japanese war, sources close to the German Embassy asserted today.

Britain Shakes Up Army Command

LONDON, Dec. 3 (U.P) =Young- |

er men succeeded to the high command of the British Army today in shakeup regarded as the most important since the World War. Maj. Gen. Viscount Gort, 51, be-

came a full general and chief of the |

Imperial General Staff, succeeding Field Marshal Sir Cyril Deverell, 63, who had resigned “to facilitate

the promotion of younger officers.” | It was emphasized in official quar- | ters that the shakeup was not due | to fears that a war was imminent, |

but that it had been felt that the

army should be prepared “for any |

emergency.” WARSAW, Dec. 3

rived at the Polish capital today seeking to liances with states.

The Polish Government is ex-

Central European

WILL

(U. P) =Yvon | Delbos, French Foreign Minister, ar- |

strengthen French al-|

pected to take the opportunity of | reaffirming the validity of the Franco-Polish defensive military pact at the same time reaffirming Poland's policy of strict neutrality between Germany and Russia.

Report Franco Ready To Withdraw Unit

| PARIS, Dec. 3 (U. P) Gen. Francisco Franco, commander of | the Spanish Rebels, was reported | today to have suggested immediate | withdrawal of 3000 foreigners from | each side in the civil war on condi- | tion that at the same time the Non- | intervention Committee grant bel ligerent rights What was said to be the text of Gen. Franco's reply to the Commit=tee’s proposal for withdrawal of | volunteers and appointment of neutral] commissioners was circulated in Spanish Loyalist circles here,

Hull Says U. S. Had

Warned Japan

WASHINGTON, Dec. 3 (U. P.) == b Grave concern over the narrow mare gin by which a serious incident bee tween Japanese troops and U. S. Marines at Shanghai was averted during the Japanese victory parade was manifest by State Department officials today.

Secretary of State Hull announced that American official both at | Tokyo and at Shanghai previously had warned the Japanese Govern= ment that the proposed victory march through the International Settlement was inadvisable. It was evident that officials here feared that just such an incident as that between Japanese troops and U. S. Marines might arise. While official comment served pending receipt official dispatches, it was evident from the attitude of Secretary Hull and other | officials that the action of U., S. Marines, in expelling the Japanese | from their defense sector had the | full approval of officials here. At the same time it was apparent that officials realized that a serious situ= jation might well have developed from the Japanese action,

wa I'C= of

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