Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 April 1940 — Page 9

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VIONDAY, APRIL 1, 1940

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Hoosier Vagabond

Suaiaata CITY, April 1.—At dinner this evening, in the hotel, a nice-looking elderly couple were sitting at ‘a nearby table. They were recently arrived tourists. 13 don’t iow why they singled us out for their generous offer. But at any rate the gentleman came over, apolo‘gized for interrupting, and said they had a delicacy, far more than they could eat, and would like to give us some of it? The delicacy, it turned out, was boiled iguana. | Now that doesn’t mean a thing to you unless yol've seen [an iguana. But if you ever have “seen one, it means enough to | make your hair stand on end. For an iguana, as far as we can see, is nothing more nor less t an a horrible-looking lizard. They turn your stomach when you see them in the public markets. | Many people eat them in these parts, and they are

dered very good. The elderly couple had read |

about them, and being thorough souls who won't pass to the market, bought e alive, brought it back, and had the chef cook it. ‘There wasn’t anything we could do, under the cirtances, but accept. We pushed it around the te, took a few nibbly bites, with our stomach erves drawn like tight wires, , nodded a couple of y grins of delight and appr tion, and went upirs and lay down. {| It| tasted all right at that. Excerlt that | somehow m, to eat with my eyes, instead of my mouth. » = 2 |

Entertained by the British

"You may faintly recall my having spoken, some’ weeks ago, of meeting a very nice Englishman in Costa Rica, name of H. W. Foote. He is a former British officer of the World War, and a businessman who has been living in South and mntral America for several years. When the present war came along he turned to the colors, but since he was way off here they attached him to the British Legation and sent him running up and down these Cen-

I ALWAYS COUNTED myself a lucky kid if I found myself standing onthe corner of Washington and Meridian Sts. when Box 45 went off. It was a sure, sign that the whole Fire Department would w up. For sheer excitement there was nothing like it around here when I was a boy. To be sure, sometimes the fires: weren't anything to brag ‘about, but it always paid to stick around just to see the grand lot of horses our Fire Department had at the time. i I guess I was luckier than most kids because I remember standing on that corner on three different occasions when Box 45 went off. On all three occasions - I acted exactly the same. At any ate, I distinctly recall that -as soon as I sensed the ignificance of the event, I immediately turned my ack to the fire and peeled my eyes toward Illinois Epo Washington Sts. so that:I wouldn't miss seeing ick and Ned round:the corner and make their final , dash down Washington St. I'd give anything to see something like it today. |T felt that way about: Dick’ and Ned because they || were the horses that lent luster to my bailiwick which, lof course, is just another way of saying that they were the horses that belonged to Engine House 10 ab the corner: of Merrill" St. and Russell Ave. ® = 2

Felt Sorry for the Others

Most of the kids around town, I suppose, stuck up | for their horses just as I did for mine, but I couldn’t | help feeling sorry for them because they had such | a long way to go to beat Dick and Ned. At any rate, | that’s the way I felt about it at the time. I feel a

| little differently about it today because. now that I

‘think about the old horses, I find that maybe the

other boys had something to brag about, too. 1 oh |

‘Washington

| after one taste he tried to put the whole piece in

WASHINGTON, April 1.—Opinion here is confused and pessimistic (about the Allied outlook and it is not likely that [Sumner Welles brought back .

much to change that feeling..

- We are throwing in a good deal of help. Not only does our revised Neutrality Act operate in favor of Great Britain and France but we are practically turning over our aviation industry to them. The Administration policy is to give Great Britain and France priority in purchase of any of our military planes that are in production, withholding only a few of the latest secret devices such as the bomb sight, which apparently is superior to that used by any other power, After ‘Secretary of War ‘Woodring and Assistant Secretary Louis Johnson outlined this policy to the House Military Affairs Committee last week, members indicated they would offer no opposition. The next morning the Senaje Military Affairs Committee voted down a proposal to investigate the sale of planes fo the Allies. Individual members, includ-

' ing Senator Bennett Clark of Missouri, pronounce , |this ‘policy another step toward Jivol vement in

Europe. But the evident disposition in to support the policy. : ” - 5 A Major Allied Victory 3 | This means that the production capacity of: the | Ame can aviation industry is practically placed at ‘the posal of the Allies. Experimental work will ‘be continued for our own military purposes, but the | Allied purchasing missions now have the first call

len the planes that are in regular production. In the Sudden of some here, this is one. of the major

My Day |

1 SAN FRANCISCO, Sunday—VYesterday was a nice | day. Miss Thompson came in by train from Chicago. We had a birthday celebration at lunch with all | who had been together a year before when Johnny | Bosttiger arrived in the world. He sat in his high chair next to his father and a ~ cake with white icing, lighted candles and “Happy Birthday” written on it, was carried in and put before him. We drank his health and made wishes on his : candles. which obediently blew . outiat the proper time. "Then his father cut the cake ‘and his mother handed him the first piece. It had been baked by Katie, who can make angel food cake - that melts in your mouth. Johnny looked at it doubtfuly for a minute,

Congress is

but his mouth at ‘once. ' It required a napkin and a bowl

| of water to wash him clean again afterwards, but Sis and Buz and all of us had a Splendid time watching

him enjoy his first party.

Afterwards, Anna, Tommy and 1 took a walk and really enjoyed seeing the spring. Forsythia, cherry and apple blo; , shrubs and little plants were flowering in the woods we walked through. We could look across- the ake and see white ~apped mountain: the It was the kind o

‘land more good here then if he went back.

By Ernie Pyle

to see us: in fact, invited us out to his house for luncheon the next day. , He turned out to be just, as nice as we first thought he was, and his wife was just that nice, too. And who should be the other guests at this little luncheon but the British Minister and his wife. “(They didn't try to sell us into the war, either). - . Mr. Foote says he realizes he’s probably doing Bug But he says that if the Germans should really start bombing that beautiful i outside of London this spring, he will simply have to drop everything and over and: enlist.

2 # 8

Trying to Get Home

Well, at last the time has come to go nome. is, if We can get out. For a while it looked as if there didn’t seem to be any way to leave Guatemala.

We want to-go from here to Miami, because our car|{

is stored there. We had reservations on a United Fruit boat from Guatemala to Havana, from where it's an easy hop to Miami. But what did they do but up and cancel the boat on us! That one boat was like a keystone in an arch. When they took it out, everything else fell down around it. We couldn't pack up fast and go earlier— the boats were full. We couldn’t lay over an extra week for a later boat—it was full, too. ‘The boats to New Orleans were full. The boats from Honduras were full... The boats from Costa Rica were full. We tried to get reservations on Pan-American Airways. The planes were full. We thought of walking. We thought of swimming. Nothing did any good. We looked to ourselves like permanent Guatemalan residents. And it isn’t that we don't like Guatemala; for we do. But we want to go home, and when a fellow wants to go, he wants to go. You know how it is. The cause of all our trouble seems to be a flood of . round-trip- cruise tourists, who have finally’ got over. being scared about submarines and pocket battleships in the Caribbean. Whereas early in the winter there were no people at all on the boats, now the boats are lousy with people. Darn their hides. But finally, to make a long story short, we did get seats on Pan-American Airways; we are flying home by a ridiculously roundabout way; I ran out of dough

"and had to radio the boss in Washington to buy our

tickets, and if the boss can ever locate me he'll fire me, sure.

By Anton Scherrer, Certainly the W. Washington St. kids around Engine House 6 had something to brag about. That was the .nome of Tom and Jerry, a pair of roundbellied, full chested little fellows that somebody, who knew his business, picked up at the Stockyards. They tore to.a fire like a streak of lightning, especially when Johnny Meadows did the driving.

I wouldn’t for the world minimize Tom and Jerry's great performances, but I sometimes wonder whether their feat of reaching Box 45 in the time they did wasn’t due, more or less, to the fact that they had a straight run down Washington St. Dick and Ned

‘could have done the same thing, I'm sure, but situated

Box

as they were they hdd to make a turn to reach |

45, to say nothing of getting in and out of the Illinois|

St. tunnel, the incline of which was so steep that a streetcar coudn’t get up without the help of an extra

. mule. ; 3 8 =n

And Phere Were Others

The boys of E. Washington St. had something to « brag about, too, because of all the. sights in town— barring Dick and Ned, of course—there was nothing prettier than to see Louis Glass of No. 11 going to a fire behind Bob and Billy, a pair of sorrels.; Joe Keys behind Dandy and Dick looked mighty good, too. I'm pretty sure they also belonged to the East Side for 1 remember that they always approached Box 45. rom somewhere beyond the Court House. Come to think of jt, there wasn’t a nag among the lot. Engine House 1 on Indiana Ave, had Joht and Norman, as lively a pair of browns as ever graced our streets. “Long” John Miller held the reins, 1 believe. No. 7 on Maryland St. had Fred and Billy; No. 5 Hook and Ladder had Old Star and Country and No. 3 on Prospect St. had a pair of grays. As a ‘rule, the grays were the last to arrive at Box 45. It wasn't because they were slow. Not at all. It was their hard luck to have to plow through Virginia

Ave., as muddy a street as Indianapolis ever had.

By Raymond Clapper

developments in American pro-ally “policy, pind is the equivalent of what some describe as a major military victory for the Allies. This action is supported by the arguments that it will encourage larger production and reduce the| cost of military aircraft to. the United States Government: that it will speed up development of even better types; that it will stimulate production capacity this year to 30,000 or 40,000 ‘planes, which is about 10 times the capacity of two years. ago, the expanded plant facilities being financed by French and British purchases. The whole thing! has happened : so quickly and easily that its full import and bearing upon the course of, the war and upon our relation to it may not fully appear until years later when the history of the period is put together ‘and ‘ seen in® better perspective. i ” 2

Acquiring Vested Interest Thus far our relations with the|Allies are on a cash basis. That cannot go on indefinitely Allied sources say they can finance their needs here for another year. Some of our officials say it can be done for a year and a half or two years. After that it would be up to us to carry them |financially, with loans or grants, or else cut off which. would create complications of the most serious nature. We are radually acquiring a vested interest in the war. This is happening at ‘the very time when isolationist sentiment appears to be rising again, when the determination to stay out of the war seems more firmly held in the popular mind than ever. Yet ‘James H. P. Cromwell, the rebuked Minister to Canada, blurted out the 'basis of American Government policy when he said we want the Allies to win. He might have added that we are doing everything we can, short of going to war, to help them win, That is the cold fact.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

that made us feel that Seattle, would be = perfect |

place in which tg live. An early dinner; and then all of us went to the opening of the Home Show, which is sponsored by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer with other civic and commercial organizations. 1¢ was a finer show than the one I saw [last year and big crowds were on hand for the opening. I enjoyed it very much, for I am always interested in -all the things which improve gur homes. Afterwards I read an article about two Seattle boys who have established a research bureau of their own to look into employment possibilities, and was interested to find that some of the products which I noticed especially last night were spoken of as. 0p- | ined portunities for new jobs. The floods in Northern California made us come as far as San Francisco by air this morning. When I looked down at the country I could see the great damage which these floods have done. In many cases trees and houses seem to be surrounded by lakes, and fields are completely hidden under water. ‘They tell me that a plan is under way which will take this excess flow down into the San Joaquin Valley, where it is sorey needed. I hope the plan will soon be an accomplished fact. . We left our family regretfully and the skies wept with us. We could not, grieve for long, however, for we were anxious to see how Miss ‘Thompson would like her first flight in five years. - Luckily, she enjoyed it. Now we are in San Francisco for a few hours and will resume our trip to Los Angeles by train this evening 4

|

That |’

|The Gall Poll—

84% 3%

HopeAllies Will Win |

By Dr. George Gallup

PRINCETON, N. J., April 1.—Where are Amer

can sympathies today

after seven months of war

‘in Europe? Have Ameri-

cans been aliendted by the British blockade and the halting of American “ mails? Is the. public more pro-Allies than it was the outset, or not so much s gt With many Americans concerned about these questions—and with the belligerent governments themselves anxious to assess American sympathies—a_ nationwide survey by the American stitute of Public Opinion indicates that there has been no change in the number favoring the Allies as compared with the first ven of - the war. Half a year of blockades, of submarine and aerial warfare an diplomacy leave the American public in three main groups: | 1. Those who favor. the victory of England and France—by far the largest group. Despite the Allies’ interference with American mails and despite the fact that Allied orders for cotton, tobacco and other farm goods have proh~ ably not come up to the American farmer's expectations, 84 persons in every hundred in the Institute survey say their sympathies are with England and France. This is exactly |the number who said they favored an Allied victory in the Institute’s survey six months ago. | 2. Those who favor Germany— an infinitesimal number, but important in any general picture of American sentiment today. Whereas about two persons in every hundred said ‘they favored a German victory six months ago, approximately one in a hundred says so today. 3. Those who consider themselves “completely neutral” —a small group who refuse to take sides in any sense, favoring neither Germany nor the Allies.

Fourteen persons in a hundred |

took this position six months ago, and approximately the same num“ber take it now. Interestingly enough, city dwellers and persons in the lower income groups are more inclined to the “completely neutral” attitude than other classes of the population.

” ” 2

N its/two tests of the American public’s Sympathies the Instivute put the identical question to corresponding cross-sections - of

CITY MILK PRICE DIPS CENT MAY 1

Reduction From 12 Cents Automatic Under State Emergency Order.

. Indianapolis’ milk bill\ will be reduced several thousand dollars weekly beginning May 1 when the retail price automatically will drop from 12 to 11 cents a quart delivered. “The cut will become effective under an order made by the State Milk Control Board last December following several weeks of hearings. - The retail price was raised from 11 to 12 cents a quart last Nov. 16 upon petitions of the producers and distributors. The farmers filed their petition first for an ‘increase from $2.18 per hundredweight to $2.54 in the price paid to them by the distributors. The distributors filed a petition asking for an increase of 1 cent a quart in the retail price if the farmers, were granted their raise. The Nov. 16 emergency order precipitated a bitter fight between consumer groups, distributors and farmers and at hearings to make the order permanent, hundreds of persons jammed the House of Representatives chambers, protesting the increase. The State Board, after severhl weeks of study, finally ordered the 12-cent price in effect until May 1 when the farmers ‘estimated they So turn their cows out into pasures

COLISEUM CIRCUS 10 ‘BLACKOUT’ INK

Following the close of the.public ice skating tonight, workmen will

begin transforming the Coliseum from a rink into a “big top” for the presentation of a three-ring circus starting Saturday afternoon. The .Greater Olympia Circus, which will be presented by Arthur M. Wirtz, will give 18 performances, continuing through April 14. After skating ends tonight, miles of pipe that have been carrying near-zero brine beneath the ‘huge concrete slab will be filled with hot fluid, ‘At the same time workmen will ‘remove the dasher fence surrounding the hockey rink. By the time this is completed, the

one-inch thick ice will ‘be soft

enough for removal and will be scooped into the large Steampipe. Hned snow pit to melt further and £4, After the floor is mopped and treated, hundreds of loads of dirt and clay will be trucked in to form a base for the animal acts which will be a part of the circus. |

ke ‘NOAH BEERY JR. WEDS HOLLYWOOD, April 1 (U. P.).— Noah Beery Jr., 26, and Maxine Jones, 23, daughtey of cowboy actor Buck Jones, motored toward Mexico City today on their hone oon, ‘They were married at Miss J

home here Saturday. hit

Beery, the ‘bridegroom’s uncle, was|ure

od

SECOND SECTION |

#

< A (LU P Which Side do you want to see win the present war — England. Framce

POLL: Germany? ENGLAND & FRANCE....... 84%

15%

As the European war enters its. eighth mohth a nation-wide survey by the American Institute of Public Opin’ ion indicates that the vast majority of American voters still desire an Allied victory, despite Anglo-American clashes

over the halting of U. S. mail and other issues.

Although there has been no substantial change of, sides since the

war began, the survey shows relatively y more intense sentiment for the Allies now than six months ago.

the voters in each of the 48 states: “Which side do you want to see win | the present war—England and France, or Germany?” The results of these identical surveys are shown below: c 6 Months Today Ago 84% 849%

Win ak 2 “Completely Ne utral,” No Choice or No Opinion.. 15 14 But if few voters have changed sides since the war began, there have nevertheless been important changes in. the intensity with which Americans have come to regard the: Allied and German causes. Asked, “Do you feel more sympathetic or less sympathetic to-

Want Allies to Win

| Want Germany to

" ward that side today than you

did when the war began?” one

voter in every six €17%) says that” o

he is less sympatfietic to England.

and France than he was. In this connection few mention. the British blockade, the stoppage of American mails or the sharp curtailment of British tobacco purchases in the United States. Instead they comment that “I'm beginning to feel the Allies are nearly as much to blame as Germany,” that “the Allies aren’t doing all they could to win the war,” or that “they didn’t do enough for Finland.” Significantly, too, most frequent criticisms of the Allies on these grounds come from younger citizens—persons between the ages of 21 and 30. : ; 8 8 ” UT for every person who feels » less sympathetic toward the Allies today, nearly two' persons say they feel “more sympathetic,” sg that England and France have “been ‘the net gainers in the tug-of-war - for American support.

%

-

THE STORY OF DEMOCRACY

The increasing intensity of pro-

\. Ally sentiment is accounted for

‘by three main factors, the comments show: (1) The war is apparently not going as well as expected for Eng-

land and France, (2) ‘increasing

dislike for Germany’s tactics in the war and her rule of conquered Polish territories, and (3) a growing belief that England and France are fighting for a prinSle that is important to Amerca. The actual vote of those favor‘ing England and France is as’ follows:

More Sympathetic ..........28% Less Sympathetic ......... neo 17 Just the Same ..............55 In its general sympathies for the Allied side, American public opinion obviously supports much. of what U. S. Minister to Canada James H. R., Cromwell told an Ottawa audience a fortnight ago in a Speseh that drew a blunt

By Hendrik Willem van Loon (ILLUSTRATED BY THE AUTHOR)

' CHAPTER 19

MEDIAEVAL guild was a voluntary association of

men engaged in the same craft,

formed for the purpose of mutual :

aid and protection of its members. They were a new development, for in each one of them there was a nucleus of that Christian spirit of the brotherhood-of-men which had been unknown to the people of the ancient world. Oldest documents about these guilds go back to the first half of the 11th Century and we find them in the archives. of Cambridge and Exeter in England. Two centuries later they had be-

ment instructed every ir England to inquire from the masters'and wardens of all guilds how

much property they had.

This, by the way, is more than

our own Government has ever done in connection with our labor unions. The European guilds, as well as the European labor unions, have always been held responsible for whatever damages they. might cause, being in this respect treated exactly like the organizations of employers. - In America, until now, it has never been possible to exercise such a control over any organizations of [laboring men. . But then, our American labor unions

"are of comparatively recent

origih; in Europe, the guilds have played a very decisive role in the history of the last six centuries. ” ” 8

HE guilds became the basis for the development of a regular “people’s party,” opposed to the closely knit class of nobles and the highly influential associations of well-to-do merchants. The former very. speedily lost all control upon the actual government of cities. With the development of a number of highly centralized monarchies (also a phenomenon of the latter half of

the Middle Ages), the feudal no-

bles were gradually being reduced to that economic obscurity which today has left them high and dry as a mere historical curiosity. The great conflict was to be-. come one between the working classes and their employers, the men of mapey,

QUIET MEETING SEEN IN. COUNCIL TONIGHT

"An era of good feeling was expected to begin for City Council-

men tonight. Not a single contro-

versial issue is scheduled for debate. This unique situation is the result of Council's diligent activity in getting rid of argumentative topics and the failure of citizens to present new ones. The Health Board’s milk ordinance will be deferred, pending the preparation of amendments %o it by a group of Civic leaders and milk

producers. Council President Joseph

'|G. Wood said he would oppose any attempt to kill the pending meas-

ure while the amendments are be- :

ing prepared

come so important that Parlia-\

The Guilds made several attempts

to gain control over those cities in

- which they were the most important element of society.

Occasionally the landed gentry and their royal overlords would also get in open conflict. They cid in England in the year 12156 when the nobles and the clergy (seeing the handwriting on the wall, and correctly interpreting its meaning) forced the king to grant them a charter —the Magna

Charta. This guaranteed them certain liberties, such as ‘no free- -

man should be taken, imprisoned or damaged in person or estate, but by the judgment of his peers.” s 2 2 LTHOUGH the 4 were mentioned in this fa- | mous. Magna Charta, the real “common people” (as we our=-

_ selves understand that expres-

sion) “were still an undiscovered, and therefore negligible quantity

lin: the eyes of the high contract-

ing parties. Several more centuries were to pass before the humbler classes

of society would lay any claim to

a direct share in thie actual gov-

ernment. In the meantime, the guilds,

more and more conscious of their

increasing strength, made several |

attempts to gain control over some of those cities in which they ' were the most important element | of society. Especially in Flanders, | the great manufacturing center |

Hard Luck Boy - Has Close Call

Times Special ELKHART, Ind, April Twelve-year-old Billy Cole is one} boy who can take it. A few years ago, he received a broken leg when struck by an automobile. Then he had his tonsils and adenoids removed. Twice his eardrums were punctured to avoid mastoid. Then his appendix was taken out. Last week he narrowly escaped injury when a team of horses hitched to a wagon on which he was riding, bolted and dashed down the street. In spite of his tendency toward hard luck, Billy earns his own Spending money doing odd, Joby

Pl

i than

“commons” |

of the Middle Ages (wool was grown. in England but prepared for consumption by weavers of the Low Countries), the guilds were at times able to dominate the’ local governments to such an extent their leaders could exer-

| cise almost dictatorial powers

over the whole community. ” 2 =

O sooner: had they reached this point; of eminence the inherent. weakness of every form of popular government made itself felt.

For every Pericles, there were always at least a dozen Cleons. Personal ambitions frustrated the most unselfisi efforts-of the few truly great leaders who were brought forward by the guilds. They were either murdered or exiled.

there were outbreaks of anarchy: which made it very easy for the employers to break the hold

which the guilds had gained upon’ |: their city and to force laboring

men and their families back into those hovels which surrounded every mediaeval manufacturing city.

NEXT—Men open open up new trade ‘reutes, and find new ideas on how they should live.

PURDUE PROFESSOR

TO TALK AT CHURCH|

Prof. Edgar Ainslee of Purdue University will speak during the in-

| {terdenominational prophetic con-

ference tomorrow and Wednesday at

the Roberts Park Methodist Church. The conference will be sponsored by the Coombs Bible College. Sessions will begin at 10 ‘a. m.; 2:30, 7:30 and 8 p. m. both days. Prof. Ainslee will speak on “The Dawn of the Scarlet Age” at the 2: 30'p. m. session Wednesday. i Other speakers include Dr. Ww. S. Hottel, who is a Detroit pastor and teacher of a Sunday school class in

Buffalo, N. Y.; the Rev. Paul E.|. |Billneimer of Anderson, Ind; H. C.

Marlin, Covington,: O.,, newspaper

editor, and the Rev. Jesse Towns of | advice

Indianapolis, Nazarene district

public rebuke from Secretary of State Cordell Hull. What a majority of American voters would not agree with, however, was the suggestion which many |observers thought they saw in Mr, Cromwell's speech that the United States should enter the “war on the Allied. side. All Institute tests on this subject since the war |be have shown only a small minority of U.S. voters in favor of repeating our World War role this time. In. the Institute’s mosti recent ‘survey on the question less than 4 per cent of those interviewed said they would approve “declar= » ing war on Germany and sending an army and navy abroad to fight” ~ el If the Allies should -appear to be losing 55 per cent in a recent survey -said they would favor lending them money, but only 23 per cent said they would be in favor of entering: the war and : sending troops in such case.

LEGION AID NAMED (ON N. A, M, GROUP

The National Associatio of Mane ufacturers today announced the

Legion, nnounced

to Commanders Daniel and Stephen Chadwick ihg the magazine staff.

of the committee and gate, Colgate-Palmolive-[rome is vice chai

The moment they were gone, |"

[6—Yes.

ponte which was see acity crowd of 900 last be repeated at 8:15 o'clock tonight,

night, is to

freshman the pers

. Both the varsity and bands participated in formance last night | Gothic-window backdrop

lopt to Brother Stephen, C. high school faculty.

Did the famous pil her, ‘Walter Johnson, throw right or léfte thandedIs asbestos animal, vegetable in origin? 3—Are all of Presigent sons over. six feet t

mineral, or

an hour a breeze, gale, hurricane

or cyclone? - | ; 5—How many days before - Easter does Lent begin? ; 6—Is the Statue of Bites in New York Harbor the gest statue in the world?

Answers

1—Right-handed. 2—Mineral. | 3—Yes. I foe urricane. : 5—Forty, not emt Sanda.

FR

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