Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1946 — Page 10
I'D NEWSPAPER "published dally (except Sunday) by Co. 214 W. Maryland Scripps-Howard Newsand Audit Bureau of Mion County, § cents a copy; dellv20 cents a week.
a ' $5 a year; all other states, , 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a month, - .RI-5851.
Give Light andi the People Will Pind Their Own Way
E GREAT COMPROMISE
United States senate, it now seems probable, is about to choose one of three “solutions” to the OPA
f des which it begins to debate today : ONE-.No legislation 2 at all, leaving OPA permanently
TWO—OPA renewal, in toto, as OPA and President ¥ Truman ask, or I'S THREE—A “Compromise” OPA law, somewhere between these two extremes, and not very much different { from ‘the one President Truman vetoed last week. . Of the three the third appears by far most likely to | come out of congress. It isn't going to be very satisfactory the Président, nor to congress, nor to the public. It isn't
s, much as they would rise o with og regulawhen.
; fo be retarded and reduced, asthe opponents of OPA have j contended right along. y x .
* = » » ".
dpes pretty accurately reflect public sentiment in this | country, was unwilling, last week, to leave control of prices . completely to the discretion of a bureau in which it had ap- | parently lost nearly all confidence. The compromise the | two houses then offered undertoak to limit this discretionary power to decide when a price increase was justified. "Yet it contained no workable formula for determining dccurately what new price ceilings are ‘justified. Obviously ' congress cannot, by statute, set price ceilings itself. If | there is to be any regulation of prioes at all then somebody's | discretion has to be trusted. Or price control has to be : abandoned. dg 3 Ll OPA has not, and never has had, any actual control | over production costs, in which the variable factor is prin- | cipally wages, and the country has no disposition to place any limits on wages. Yet when production costs rise prices rise—or production stops. Experience under OPA has | pretty definitely proved, if proof was needed, that manu-
| any law can only be fighting a rear-guard action. . . . holdimg down prices at the expense of production, or letting | prices rise at the expense of “economic stability, and inevitably trying to reach a compromise of its own between these two alternatives. In the final analysis the only thing that can check | rising prices is production, and more production, until supply overcomes demand. So, to whatever extent production is retarded, supply also will be retarded, and pressure of prices upward will be made greater. "The compromise OPA law probably will not, as Presi- | dent Truman said, hold prices down, and it probably will | not, as Senator Taft contends, let production go full speed | ahead. It will leave in greater or less measure, decisions that mean life or death to American industry and poverty ‘or prosperity to American workers, to the not always infallible judgment of men in a government bureau, without | a definite formula and without a rule upon which everyone
alike can depend.
. » . . . » ” . HERE is a fourth solution . . . but we haven't heard _™ it seriously mentioned. That is enactment by congress | now of a definite program for the termination of OPA, by ‘steady and sure degrees over a fixed and absolute period of ‘time. However long that period might be—and it would ‘not be too difficult to determine how long it should be— | whether a year, or two years, or five years, and however i gradual the degrees by which price regulation passed out, | such a program nevertheless would give the country the | certainty it requires for a steady acceleration of production toward the point where price control no longer would need bo. be considered.
RUSSIA GETS $100 MILLION
} YY UENEVER we sit down at the table with the Russians, : we give something away. When we trade, we get a + toothpick for a load of cordwood.
¥
11943. We continued giving at Yalta and at Potsdam. Now fat Paris we vote Russia $100 million in reparations for Italy’ in return foreRussia's agreement to call a 21-nation ‘peace conference. ¢ .t To be more exact, we pay Russia $100 “million to keep ‘an agreement she made at Moscow last” Christmas. r ” RUSSIA: agreed a that time to a general peace conference 1 May 1. Then she stalled her way out. Now, we pay off again and Rissia consents to hold the conference July 29, nearly three months late. % We say “we” will pay Russia the $100 million because {any money Italy is able to send to Russia will come -indi- | rectly out of American pockets. We are putting up the 3 to feed Italy and to rehabilitate Italian industry. The rations to Russia will be paid out of the products of industry. If the conference July 29 promised to settle anything major importance the payoff might be defended on the of expediency. But the deal has a Munich smell. ~ Simultaneously with the calling of the conference ; PH a warning that settlement of the German and Aus- ! trian questions is not in sight. A general peace conference
A or =r
ue to the world, and of no value to the United States. hie rehabilitation of Europe cannot proceed so long ny and Austria remain a political ho-man’s land, from the rest of Europe by military roadblocks Germany divided against itself into four air-
a highly integrated economic unit and until such, millions of Europeans will stay. in the J Uncle Sam. paying for the bread. : ¢ which cannot approach this situ-)
any stretch of imagination, ‘Such r Russia's ill-gotten gains, duving unsolved.
1
{likely to yeR very well, eithér. Under it prices are certain |
ros mri
{ent Truman. predicted » “But ier it, predetel » Ser eloed he ;
} Conaness which in spite of istatements to the contrary;
-
We started giving away things at Tehran in November, |#lave property-owner free?
cannot dispose of those questions will be of negligible |
Hoosier Forum
"| donot agres with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it."
— Voltaire.
"Let Tenants Try Paying Taxes And Quit Being Cry Babies" -
By J. Wesley Smith, Indianapolis I have been a tenant and now am a property owner, and travel over
| facturers and farmers will not produce goods at a loss. So, {the city and county appraising and checking real estate, and feel quali- | while the cost fadtor remains out of control, OPA under fied to state the thing as I see it.
Maybe some rents have been a little high, some extremely low; not | enough to pay for the two or three raises in taxes and coal we have had, along with the boost in prices in building materials and labor. Labor has had many a raise since the property owner has had;a raise in rent. In fact, only a small portion of the people get the $1.80 to $2.50 per
living Sr up for all oo : VIEWS ON THE NEWS
Now, you tenants who are squawking about your rent going By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Some senators seem to think that
{to be raised a little, let's let the rent” where it is, and attach a rider to this bill, to wit: a veto puts the President in contempt of congress. » »
“That the tenants pay all and It would be easier for the cus-
full damages for the windows they break, the woodwork and doors they tomers to hold the price line if they didn't have to eat.
deface and drive nails and spikes in ~ ¥
for this and that, along with hanging ‘a clothes line on; the cement steps that junior cracks and breaks with his little hammer; the plastering they knock off; the door knobs and locks they take and destroy, the coal bin they knock .down and chop up for kindling along with the double garage doors| Operation Crossroads should sign (and sometimes the garage), the Orson Wells for the next Bikini picket fence and posts. The fau- | broadcast. céts they break and the many other| * w- 8 little things that at least 85 per]! More surprising than the goats cent of the tenants do destroy and surviving the A-bombing is the fact break up should be paid for by the|that peace is popping up at the Big tenant before the next rent is due, Four conference. or be held against him with all expenses thereof for garnishment. And along with this to pay for the garbage and filth that some of them pile up in their homes that |
”
Truman would make political TNT?
» ” ~
Ld Poles feudin® at the polls sotinded as familiar as “My Old Kentucky Home." » ’
draw. roaches and .hugs. Be it V . known that this is the whole“DOES TIMES SAY A. V. C. truth.” | 18 COMMUNISTIC GROUP?”
The property-owners are the tax- By Arthur Zinkin Jr., Indianapolis payers, not the suitcase-carriers or| 10 The Times of July 3, there apthe little furniture-owner’ who is|peared an editorial on the local atthe one who is doing the loudest | tempt to pass an F. E. P. C. ordiyelling to our senators that the| nance through the city council. The taxpayer pays, the radio announcer|writer evidently does not approve of that the shopowner pays, and|such legislation, which is his right. against the real taxpayers—so don't| But in expressing his opposition he you think it is about time it 18 | resorted to invective in impugning evened up a little—and set the|the motives of those who are be- | hind the measure. Among the orLet's sell our property to these] ganizations which has thus beén tenants and let them try paying a tarred with the epithet, “fellow few taxes and quit being the na- | traveler” is the American Veterans tion's ery babies. | Committee. Is it not possible that
Side Glances—By Galbraith
1 ¥ corn. 4948 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REG. Y ami or, "l bought this up-to-the-minute ‘book. on juvenile delinquency— it worrigs me haw shibborn and hard-boiled he is. Penanding his bottle!”
Whoever thought that Taft and]
individuals
A. V. C. is as honest in its support of F, E, P.. C. as the writer of the editorial was in his opposition? As a growing organization, it is important that the red smear be removed from A V. C. Do you feel that A. V. C. is red, Mr. Editor?
Editor's Note: No, we do not believe A. V, C. is Communist, and récently applauded A. V. C's refusal to let Communists take control of its convention. The Times calléd no. ohe Communist who has not publicly so proclaimed himself, gave full credit to the sincerity of and - groups favoring F. E. P. C. who are not Communist, still believes a municipal F. E. P. C.| ordinance would do grave injury to! the minority groups it purports to benefit. o on ” “TRUMAN, NEW DEALERS KILLED RENT CONTROL™ By Jehn L. Niblack, 5115 Carvel ave, Thomas Stokes, your Washington
Truman spoke for the common people when he vetoed the bill extending rent control and some other parts of the OPA. Mr. Stokes should get out of Washington and live in the clean air of Indiana or some other midwestern state awhile until his head clears a littld, President Truman last Saturday vetoed the bill extending rent control. Then Saturday he got on the radio and cussed out congress and the Republicans for killing rent control. Cohgress has a majority of Democrats in both houses, Senator Byrd of Virginia then introduced a bill which provided for nothing but rent control.
the committee room and stopped consideration of the bill on the grounds it did not revive the rest of the OPA as desired by President Truman and ‘the New Dealers. * No, it was not congress or the .Republicans who killed rent control.
New Dealers. $ ~ » ” “QUACK MEDICS STILL OPERATE IN OUR MIDST” By James D. Roth, 31638 N. Capitol ave. The fake medical shysters are
still in our midst despite reports
$2 per throw you can buy a jar of paste which is supposed anything in your aching frame. This certain “doc” sells only six jars at one lecture, thereby. creating the impression that it is scarce.
When the crowd leaves he sells six more jars to a new audience. And how come that a medical “doc” like he claims to be, needs guinea pigs, ground squirrels and fleld
to cure
All this, my friends, is to draw attention. And when people leave without buying, he casts insulting remarks toward them. If you have been in this store you ‘have seen this “doc” who does not. dare to |
at the floor and the ‘money passed up to him. I saw some poor working folks! give this man their money. Why do the people do this? If you wish to. check this, make
to your. $2.
your friend every time.
DAILY THOUGHT
Thus saith the Lord, stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the. old paths, where is the good way, ahd walk therein, rand ye shall find rest for your souls.— Jeremiah 6:16.
ABSENCE ofsoccupation is sink. rest; A’ mind quite vacant is a mind dis-
; 4 tress'd.
Cowper,
“| sissippl.
correspondent, today said President
Senator. Barkley (dear Alban) rushed jnto|
It was President Truman and the|-
to the Better Business Bureau. For
mice - which, he says, will perform|
| very soon, but never do?
look anyone in the face, but looks |
the rounds yourself, but hold fast
If you need medical attention, go to a resident physician who is
Why ate. we "Hoosiers? Nobody knows—definitely. But -in Indiana you cannot overlook the name or the breed, They thread the warp and the woof of the state—even the nation. : Th get the perspective: Hoosier is the nickname of Indiana. This opens up the entire matter of nicknames in America. At once you discover that in the matter of nicknames, Americans are almost unbeliev-
in the United States than in any other nati | patch on earth. Of record, after expert, nationsearch, 4000 American nicknames have been listed and discussed. Incredibly spurred on by our penchant and knack to name with a whimsey punch, we nickname friends and enemies; figures, lecal and national; husbands and wives; parents and children; celebrities in games and sports; men in business, politics and the professions,
Better Than 'Goober' OUT OF THIS FLOOD of nicknames come those of the 48 states of ‘the American Union. There. are 225 of them, of record. The highest number for any one state is 10—Kansas. The lowest number is one each for Vermont and Indiana. But “Green Mountain,” Vermont's nickname, ‘obvious and common, leaves Indiana with Hoosier as the only state in the United States®with but ‘one nickname, and one that is unique and distinctive: almost universally used; of elusively unknown origin. "To clear the picture of all nicknames in the United States, take a look in detail at some of these state nicknames: two states—Ohio and Virginia—chose “Mother of Presidents” as one of their nicknames, and five states—Colorado,” Maine, New Hampshire,
al
>
one of their nicknames, America.”
to be the “Switzerland of
pem—— hp randror-soing- at -other-state- mickhames might: sarang von ns MT LANE RR RS AN
HINA SHING TON. uw, By. Thamasal.. vm ; 5 Bilbo Is Odious Symbol of se
WASHINGTON, July 8.—"Outside interference” is being blamed for Senator Bilbo's victory in Mis- >
It was no doubt a factor, perhaps enough to give him his slim majority, over his three opponents.
to appeal. President Roosevelt discovered its potency eight years ago when he exerted his “outside interference" .to try to defeat a number of senators. The President, lost every senatorial contest.
Issue Must Be Faced
MR. ROOSEVELT'S “outside. interference” outweighed the issue he sought fo raise, which was the senators’ opposition to certain New Deal measures. Senator Bilbo coupled “outside interference” with exploitation of an issue, “white supremacy,” to which many ‘southerners still are peculiarly susceptible. But it was impossible to prevent “outside interference” in an election where Senator Bilbo was an issue. He is a symbol of something odious that decent people everywhere resent and will continue to resist. It is a national issue, and Mississippi is a part of our nation. It is just as well to have it raised, and to have the evil cried out as a warning, even if the price is Senator Bilbo for another six years in the senate. Before the civil war, when slavery was a burning national issue, there were those who advised letting the South alone, to settle it in its own way. Abolitionists who dared go to the South were persecuted, and any stranger in Southern towns in those days | was suspect. But that issue would not down, just as.the Bilbo | issue won't down. It must be settled, though it will come slowly. Tt is of little avail to try to purchase a temporary truce at the price of withholding “outside interference,” and to think that thereby something would be settled for all time. Senator Bilbo, after all, is but a symptom : His victory served to point up some failures in
REFLECTIONS Put Up Higgins
NEW ORLEANS, July 8.—Mr. Andrew Jackson Higgins, the Bourbon-drinking boat-builder with the fractious temper, has surmounted a few mild obstacles and is about to begin an extensive chore of putting low-cost roofs over the nation's head. 5 . Mr. Higgins had a little labor trouble, a few months back, which he solved in a typically Higgins manner, He liquidated four corporations, thereby ridding himself of the American Federation of Labor, with which he was having difficulties. He then bought out fhe physical assets of the old enterprises, lumped them under one new corporation, signed a contract with €. I. O, and proceeded to interest himself in mass-production houses.
Looks Like Metal Motel ANOTHER LITTLE TROUBLE which the land-ing-craft tycoon has.experienced lately was a combing over by the press for making passes at Argentina's Peron, in the name of big business. Seems Mr. Higgins likes and admires Senor Peron, and Senor Peron thinks Mr. Higgins is cute, too, a bit of mutual trust and that affection somewhat at variance with a state department policy. The burly A. J. is not a man who is apt to be disturbed by being called a Fascist lover and a betrayer of labor. He is going ahead with a grandiose plan to put a Higgins roof over every head that can afford one. His housing project is aimed at a production of 200 units a day, with a possible top of 400. The program calls for about $10,000,000 worth of special tooling, and he is dickering with Housing Administrator Wilson Wyatt for the necessary priorities—a collaboration which, he says,4s highly agreeable to Mr. Wyatt. 1 have seen one of Mr. Higgins’ houses, and it is, to
WORLD" AFFAIRS
RIO DE JANEIRO, July 8~Flying time between Rio de Janeiro and New York will be cut from four days to 30 hours when Pan American Airways inaugurates its post-war big plane service next Wednesday. Larger planes will carry 55 passengers instead of 21, fly straight from New York to San Juan, Puerto Rico, to Rio de Janeiro without overnight stops. The new schedule is stepped up to give European, passengers faster service into New York. Schedules. from Rio to New York, Paris-and London will be just about as fast as the direct routes across the South | Atlantic by Argentine, British, French and Brazilian
| airlines.
San Juan Will Be Center = | "IN THE.NEW POST-WAR aviation picture, San Juan will be the most important tegminal point. It will be the junction for Miami and New York planes, north and southbound. Passengers going to the Middle and Far West will be routed through the Miami leg of the route, ‘Pan American, fighting stiff competition from other countries, believes that the big backlog of wartime passengers will be dissipated within a month when daily flights in larger planes are ihaugurated. New ‘DC-4's will operate on day and night schedules. Flights from New York tq Buenos Aires will be cut to 36 hours, from five days. Buenos Aires to Miami will be about 32 hours and from Rio to Miami about 36 hours. [Pan American's new schedule is built to compete
war, London to Buenos Alres. Air France has completed surveys and is about to start a .new service. Pan
3
By William A. Marlow y State's Nc Fits All Hoosiers
ably inclined and gifted. There are more nicknames .
civil] war;
New: Jersey. and West Virginia—each claim; through
Lgiert
It supplied the senator an issue which still seems
- ference”
with other, airlines in the field since the end of the British-South American Airways is flying from -
stir your ‘pride a bit in Ind#na's “Hoosier” — “Lizard”
for Alabama, for example; “Goober,” based on pea~-
nul, for Georgia. Then thére is “Sage Hen,” for Nevada. Would you like to swap “Hoosier” for "Sage Hen"? Ask any Hoosier! Hitting the high spots to broaden the peispective? the basis for selecting American state nicknames sorts out something like this: On a physical basis—“Cotton,” for Alabama,” “Lead,” for Colorado; for comparison—"“Italy of America,” for Arizona; as a characderistic of the inhabitants—“Nutmeg”’ for Connecticut, for its wooden ones in olden days; “Tarheel,” for North Carolina, from a taunt of Mississippi men to North Carolina soldiers, because they failed to tar their heels, stick, and fight in a tough battle of the Show Me,” for Missouri, because Congressman William D. Vandiver speaking before the “Five O'Clotk Club” in’ Philadelphia, in 1899, said: “I come from a country that raises corn, cotton, cockleburrs, and Democrats, I'm from Missouri, and you've got to
show me.” a
Accepted by Nation
INDIANA'S “HOOSIFR” stands apart from all
such nicknames. It has tMe elemental simplicity of the Abraham that the state helped to develop. It has a range of appeal that takes in peoples of all ages, of any. race, in every grade of mén. It impresses ns does the sea, a great mountain, the wide sweep of an on-stretehing plain. Though you see it and hear it a thousand times, it is always new and still good. Above all, it will apply fittingly to all Indiana folks, whether you think of the lowly ones, the great ones, or all of them in the unassorted mass. Significantly, on Oct. 10, 1944, a Wendell I, Willkie Sinaia article, date line New York; said; of" the: Hoosier lawver ste.” the “H readily .understood throughout the ea pone Thus _America universally knows Sia “Hoo+
sanpisnnid
vem i ALIVE, RN w pm Rar
NT ATI wn
ETI
our democracy. It goes back bevond the mere election, Back to things that make the minds of men easy prey to prejudice. Lack af education, lack of equal opportunity to vote and earn a living, low Vipe. bad housing, bad food, all warp the body and e mind, especially if carried down from to generation, gEraton Those are failures of our society, a nd failures of some who consider themselves the elect in Mississippi. es muss share the blame for Senator Bilbo, for ey have kept down apart of Mississippi’ white as well as black. Pie people; More democracy is the remedy for the Bilbos. That not only means more people going to the polls. It also means that more people should have the good Sites of our soclety, so that they can go to the p as free, independent, and enli polls 1s ghtened men and ‘The South is waking up to that. And, -curiously enough, it was “outside Interference” that started the awakening. While President Roosevelt's “outside interference” on the political side failed in 1938 and was criticized, it had its effects.
May Be Final Demonstration
BUT MORE EFFECTIVE was his * ‘outside interthrough the New Deal program. It was responsible for the progress apparent in the South today—the Wagner act, financial help to make farm tenants independent citizens, the wage-hour act, TVA, and others. They laid the basis of economic freedom. Slowly the seeds of- Roosevelt's * ‘outside interference™are sprouting and bearing fruit here and there. Georgia under Governor Arnall is an example of successful local application. The Bilbo victory perhaps stands out darkly by contrast with evident progress elsewhere in the South. Maybe it is the final burst of bigotry and prejudice, somewhat natural in these disturbing times, to herald the twilight of such arrant demagogs. That, at least, is the hopeful way to look at it.
By Robert C. Ruark
Pre-Fabs in 5 Days
say the least an unusual dwelling. There isn't any wood in it. It doesn't look like an igloo, a Quonset hut or a barracks. It looks like a metal motel. The walls of these confections, which will begin to roll off the line in about six months or so are thermo-namel, a Higgins process of “applying porcelain ename] to sheet metal. Plastic cups hold the hollow walls apart, and into the void is poured a hopped-up concrete called thermocon. This filler foams up. like a bicarbonate of soda and expands in the space between the sides, making a solid wall through which electrical conduits and tubes for radiant heating are threaded. The thermo-namel can be glorified by any color scheme: the customer fancies from shocking pink to peagreen. It is rustless, never has to be repainted, and is fireproof. The largest unit is a five-room job, designed to sell for around $4500. It is constructed about 15 per cent more cheaply than the formal. house of wood, brick and plaster. It can be erected by eight men in five days. All houses come with large kitchens, equipped. The ice box ‘is not a separate fixture, but is recessed into the walls, and is as big as a clothes closet.
3000 Workers on Hand
IN THE BATHROOM, which also runs larger than
you'd expect, the shower stall is circular, and its lines ; . are continued three feet into the floor,
circular tub. About 3500 laborers have trickled back into Mr. Higgins’ fresh-laid corporation, and in the-midst of the confuséd new enterprise, A. J. sits in his cluttered office and fights loudly and happily with anybody who stumbles- into his lair.
By Ernie Hill
Faster World Air Service in Offing
American do Brasil, a subsidiary of Pan American, has twice-weekly flights from Rio to London by way
of Lisbon and Paris, Pan Air has a backlog of 700
passengers who have applied for space. F, A, M. A., the new Argentine government-controlled airline, also is preparing to enter the international field, with European and general South American flights. Pan American is making a definite play to speed up flights, to offer service to Europe by way of New York and compete with other airlines. Pan American has one of the European routes awarded by the civil aeronautics board. ' Coming along as rapidly ss possible. as a Pan American competitor, is the United States controlled Aerovias Brasil, formerly T. A. C. A, which fs now controlled by T. W. A, Aerovias, since its control passed to T. W. A., has been getting new equipment and soon may push Pan American on its Rio de Janeiro to Miami flights. Braniff Airways, already flying to Mexico, is the third United States company coming into the South American picture,
Pan-American Leads Field LOCAL AIRLINES on South America's east coast are numerous. So many have been founded since the end of the war that it is difficult to keep up with
the latest crop.
‘For international flying, however, most countries have a leader in the field and the stoutest competition is expected to develop between them. Pan American, with more equipment than all of its com= petitors put together, has a big jump toward leading the pack for passengers and miles flown in next couple + of yours.
“The body
wl
making a °
~Both Frie Price ‘Pres
WASHIN ~—Administ gress told day they h of OPA le satisfactory ferred witl before the was to ope ate Major Barkley ( Sam Rayb Majority | Cormack, conference
By ited, Ps WASHIN( i va thre senate tode both {friend control are The meas) extend OPA one year, 1 increases m law expired The bill { over new at poultry anc any new pi Senator Ji charged OP ganda drive public.” TI been warnir sole purpose opinion to favor of Ol Urg Senator Mont.) ask OPA fight tactics,” ant tion with “f “Business profits and charging it OPA threat Although . Leader Alt expressed h measure coi House this major confi ONE: Th emption, sp neth S. V Wherry cla promises h chance an that adequ flowing ‘to low prices ¢ OPA was cl notice.” TWO: A A. Taft (R their July increased then, This sion of th ‘pricing pe been estab bill vetoed The Presic plan “most THREE: W. Lee OT duct a fili
Se
Chairmar N.Y) of t mittee tol Mr. Truma new OPA b the latest or provide poultry anc The mea senate floc sponsored Taft pricin .. This wou producers | profits of J production deems higl step up pro . It also v distributors June 29, 18 Mr. Taft gram as g discretionar
Goo Flo Times RIO DE 8—A consic aire—down a year—is | States as f Many he have befal tycoon, whi to: hear tl watch the live quietly Lynch's 1 bus, has be place of th cans, head New York have urged Lynch, 6 wife, founc ' When tl Aires, he li a touch of mediately i health aut! Pass) Lynch Ww in the “c crippled an although N right offer try, sight 1 But Arge “better afte cans, insis ready a p or no mill Then Ai over Mm.
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