Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1947 — Page 14

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The Indianapolis Times |n Tune With the Times tal ae wm 4 w+ Donald D Hoow 1 wen

E 14 Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1947 - io Ly hah a FA gine } Fach u ON PROMOTING INCREDULITY MEMORANDUM AT MIDNIGHT ae. The smal ier “s* s the od Engin °" [MPORTANCE OF POLITICS | Unity i ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ INCE you ask mie, what this country needs, right. A poet wakens in the night, F ents F a MANY OF US, the word “politician™ 1s » : shillings, cents and mills—with occasionally 5 > - : Is fewer and smaller messiahs, and moré and- tching ideas on wing, law writs were headlined in Latin, such as “capias . > . wa A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER «@@BPov| stouter fellows who balk at following any and Penning words to make them sing. ad satisfaciendum” “venditioni exponas” “fiers ~~ PeT"ONS. it generally suggests Warkahesly flpreces Owned and published dally (except Sunday) Whether they are Democrats, Republicans, Poetic fancies fly away," and now written into our statutes. not so much an injustice to those who have en Jamanyohs Tutios Pubiining Ove 21 W. Maryland Socialists or Communists, it is hafd to blame In the shining light of day; : The table of sheriff's fees is illuminating, al- tered the field of politics as a reflection UPOR . Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard News- pi er of TO op Re: ag as swift wings ie : SHough ouastunally staytiing "Tuo 4 few; the intelligence of those who misuse the word ’ " ' som he oH paper Alliance, NEA Seryice, and Audit Bureau of] 0100 of a small group or class with some . ==OLD ROSE. 5 ii pilloring Shy person hss he ia in A pollen is person who takes part in poliCirculations. . promises for a larger group or class, and obtain "x . tting 3 stocks. . .... : Price in Marion County, § cents a copy: deliv-| "ji... 0 he head of the parade out of the LET your fancy fly and send in a contribution yor ducking any person jon csere e410 M Vics, Which 1 the Jelenct of Joverient. a ered by carrier, 25¢ a week. wilderness. It is hard, I say, to blame the messiahs; to “In Tune With the Times.” Keep in mind the “Por whipping a free person. ...... ihe og Het Ba eed icin The Mall rates in Indiana, $5 a Torr; Ml Vhs ave, even If most of them when pinned down would limit of 250 words, For whipping a slave. ............ C festinies of hundreds of millions of people are yn aiong, Canada Telovaos Bly is) admit the wilderness is not so bad AND that ; ....y All penalties were severe as compared with t0- = guigeq by men who attempt to apply principles of month. . they don't know any way out of it. AN OLD BOOK ( day's standards. Horse stealing, and hog steal- covernpent which are most conducive fo peace Give Light and the People Will Ping Thew Own Wey But the rest of us are certainly blameworthy, ing, particularly were decried. For instance, the ng prosperity. On a smaller scale, the problems We fall for too many bright but thin promises. ANY things improve with age, including old penalty for hog stealing was graduated upward of “eitizans ta unities of every country are h Il U it d N ti We listen to too much suspicion of our neighbors. books. One of those treasured gems in my as follows: : J controlled by myriads of office holders who are Marshall on nire arions ! We agree to envy somebotly’s advantage, real or library is “The General Instructor,” or “The office, For the first offense—"twenty-five lashes trying to provide the best public services’ posible ECRETARY OF STATE MARSHALL shares the grow-| fancied, and vote to f@issipate it. Especially, we = duty and authority of Justices of the Peace, Sher- —well laid on, at the whipping post.” “ at least cost. Whether precinct committeeman or : ; . ited| tumble for too many programs that cannot cost = Iffs, Coroners and Constables, in the State of Ken- For the second offense—“two hours in ™ ruler of a nation, all of these people are politicians. ing anxiety of Americans over the future of the Unit us anything, expense being borne by government. tucky,” published in 1800 in Lexington, Ky. by edmond rider Fo pileral 4 bi .9f shese people att Pilliiclant. Nations. While pointing out that progress at best must| And finally, we go all out for ideas that seem to “John Bradford, on Main Street.” “iy court Rouse: .. . with: both ears mailed working individuals, subjected to constant surveils be slow, the secretary has left no doubt that he would de- indieaté there may be less work and more security : a was Even to me by “Old Alex, 4 Dewspajes to the pillory , . . and at the end of two lance and criticism. Proof that this is the rule ; bly i i today (so-called) for us. £ egrapher, e . became aged, pe h “2D hours the ears shall be cut loose from rather than the exception is in the fact that their mand results from the assembly session opening ay. Discrediting present and past messiahs won't crippled, and several of his former associates in . misdeeds aud mistesen Sm AIWad ewe The ic i i i ati Ve k th spaper business, al with me, took care 3h! Americans believe in the United Nations, Bs the sec help n Ju TOW S10Ps apting. w hi She 1avuoes the Wig Paper 1A pes To jue, Sook. etre It would appear therefore we have made some live in glass houses, ad their lives are Boy Shots policy, "Our people and our government have been much| TIOTOUDS tome” ncredulty’ might lp ats him in his tative town Creo his at wodly OEE y SISSING WOOD, | Twn. ikheut Shem, Ye would rapidly policy. r peopie : ask to be shown, and insist upon it,' henceforth. possessions was presen! Let us remember this the next time we speak slower that those of Europe to grow pessimistic about the James Russell Lowell must have been thinking, me Just before he died. Ne legacy could have WHY, OH, WHY? of politicians in a derogatory sense. United Nations. Therefore, the feeling in this country eA Sah ay, bout a vin ® He bons Fi inh t bee n — Many evenings have I pondered over Why wot the fale sex Joey these rules? ; —WALTER MYERS JR. that it is at a fatal turning point is significant. Without| But corn keeps ketohin' us, all peoples, everywhere, Apparently it was used as a handbook in Ken- : TWH Yam, 120 SU_Wio Pumsuce Maybe the congressional high price investigators iy Chistian um America's abiding faith and vigorous support, this experi-| It seems, ~JONATHAN BROOKS. tucky and Indiana before those states were ad- "ws could learn something from veterans whe had te the denomins t in world ization certainly will fail like its pred- ." mitted to the union. No doubt it constituted the Another reason for avoiding atomic warfare is cash their terminal leave bonds to pay debts. Alse link them t ment In worig: organization : p Nations, like individuals, find that being broke entire “law library” of many justices of peace. so that the 1950 hemispheric census will make if it is true that food prices in Newburyport are SHE IAlme! ecessor, hb about the worst trade barrier, The printing is masterful, the rhetoric admir- sense. on the up and up. United State: Despite the sorry record of its past two years of frus- | ™ es : The comix tration, the basic idea of the United Nations still appears S M i / IN WASHINGTON B Peter Edson operating de sound to our people. Indeed it seems more necessary than | ermon on a ount ie wv BY ‘ ; the United ever. Current alarm is not aver the use but the deliberate f ; U N ’ U fi : h od iB : 4 ‘ name but be misuse of the organization, To quote the Marshall diag- ) . ° S n iNIS £ Uusiness oo Unified shun nosis: “Obviously, if all members do not similarly strive (as ‘WASHINGTON, Sept. 16. — For many weeks, a‘ trusteeship committee. At the last Ssemwhily, 3 spe ot a iri al] ® in ; ; : : : . o staff of American experts on- United Nations affairs cial 15-nation committee was set up to review reports the U. §, i. doing} lo meet their Obligations under the char has been at work in the state department here, shap- from countries with dependencies. The United States, Christian ch ter, the United Nations will be imperiled. ing U. 8. policy on 60-odd items on the agenda for for instance, must report on Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto it Melk He did not name Russia and her satellites. But he the general assembly meeting convening today in , Rico and Guam. : © En made clear they were the culprits New York. : All league of nations mandates have now been Alia Rp : a. ' “nie Sme pressure Is seing szerid 1 Wind » the teansterred bo He United Nations wi exception ot > ment. doctsh Ep Ea rp is anon abe net phe ene threes tt a pen omg aca a cepa ceo Sl Oh ae Apt enim, L5€8810N, In two months. That would allow it d- those over Palestine and South West Africa, Sout bro mes eR: HE CHCOTTAgINg thingy abolit Lhe Sec FETA 8 Spatefiien, ? ” ¥ acs Nw RRA AR g SRS aor et oro Hibistas Sins: AIG WaT CATO Hot det tne RE Danae ER SAR po-rezra By as of two recent Truman affirmations on this subject in London in November. But if this is done, the as- at the last assembly, but refused, wanting to annex at Rio, is that our government has no intention of letting sembly may have to reconvene early in 1948. Some this ex-German territory. > i : } i of the items of unfinished business will take long The legal committee has many technical questions Russia get away with this sabotage. We might wash our study and longer debate. on privileges and immunities of staff members of hands of the mess, or we might remain in the United Two Yugeilavien Pro | United Nations organizations. Its principal business, Vations ppease Russia. We shall do neither. wo Tugosiavian Proposals however, will be consideration of an agreement on Nations and af Pe : : . PRINCIPAL ISSUE before the economic and genocide, the crime of mass destruction of racial, ree Sg Not only will we stay in; we intend to lead the fight financial committee may be post-UNRRA relief ligious or national groups.’ inside the organization to make Russia honor her commit~ needs. This subject took most of the assembly timie The assembly's budgetary committee has a heavy ments or take the consequences. last session. In the coming session it may develop schedule. Secretary General Trygve Lie had recom : : : : . ! |into fulldress debate on the “Marshall plan,” so far mended a $39 million budget for 1948, but it has been Half of the eight-point Marshall program for support la strictly U, S.-Suropean altair. cot to 394 million, of the United Nations concerns United States fulfillment of | Conflict may now arise over whether reconstruc- Fi . Agond ro wii ODNgations, The other half invoives resisting the | tion shal be managed bythe United Nayony own "Tinancing on Agenda aia mm" ipa =. violations and aggressions of others, and strenginening the COMMISSION O11 EUrvimus sassy ansilphiuisits. wins SOF -. TRE: QUESTION. OF 11,.8.. dotutonsiinn ions, = wo F nN ay

may be done by the United States, acting alone. 40 per cent of the United’ Nations budget may not be . Yugoslavia has put on the agenda for the social, brought up again at the coming .assembly, in View humanitarian and cultural affairs committee two ap- of world conditions: At the last session, Senator parently Communist-inspired items. One calls for Arthur Vandenberg took the stand, for the U. 8., that measures to speed up the handing over of war crimi- no one country should contribute more than a third nals supposed to be hiding in displaced persons of the budget, to avoid its financial dominance. camps. Financing construction of United Nations pere | The other Yugoslav proposal should give the as- manent headquarters on the new site in New York sembly its biggest laugh.’ It calls for recommenda- City will be brought up. Immediate plans call for tions ‘to prevent the disseminatioin of slanderous a $65 million outlay for general assembly and secre reports.” If any government is vulnerable on this tariat buildings. Whéther this is to be financed by

United Nations machinery for that purpose, If Stalin by his obstructionist tactics hoped to bluff out or tire out the United States, he has failed. Our delegation enters the assembly today with a more positive policy and more punch than ever before,

Penalty of Plain Words

ENATOR TAFT is “a little surprised” by the reaction to charge, it is Yugoslavia itself. member-country contributions, by private bank loans his suggestion, made in.a California news conference, Administration of non-self-governing territories guaranteed in a United Nations mortgage, or by loan _ - Bas

: ill be incipal business before th mbly’s from the U. 8. government, must be decided. that Americans “eat less meat and eat less extravagantly.” v pringipe ee MEINYY 2 iy w ont, 2 !

He shouldn't be. : There would have been little or no reaction if Mr. Taft had spoken, as President Truman did in his economic report last June, about “strict economy in the use of certain foods through personal restraint or special organized campaigns.” Nobody would have been quite sure what he meant, Or, with relative safety, he could have talked, as Sec-

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BACKGROUND . . . By Marquis Childs eid Idealism Prevails at Geneva

GENEVA, Sept. 16.—All through the long, bright long pull will mean greater saricultisal production : n summer and into September, this beautiful Swiss machinery, fertilizers. The war put such necessities : alm country and the deficit city by the clear blue lake has been the scene of one Out Of reach for almost every country and

retary of Commerce Harriman just has, about how “the is great. : nl : i hy : : her. . that came out was a ge! present high prices are due primarily to-the fact that this conference after anot The total need staggering i i P iovi Pp i eke ih A “ Men with bulging brief cases have met in the one and, naturally, the delegates looked hopefully Ww. 3 nation is now enjoying an all-time record of prosperity. fd i inevi rica to make the most of it. They were told +N : i pn : f fos palace of the old League of Nations, which inevit- to Ame e , Wi . + « Americans on the average are eating 25 per cent more! 5 eo : ; frankly that such a hope was quite unrealistic, and meat today tl before th " i a 4" & ABT {ably has a somewhat depressing atmosphere. It is a the estimate was in the end greatly reduced. \ ay 131 Defoe 118 War. . : a sr monument to a. failure, and the sense of this weighs This organization is moving rapidly toward a There is, of course, much truth in what Mr. Taft said. = ~——— 4 Sede = 4) N {upon the men and women who pass along the high, tice] goal, a world food council with power to i The trouble is that Senator Taft used plain language Hoosier Foru "I do not agrae with a word that you say, but | will |gleaming corridors. This time, fe eed Jor S00p- allocate supplies to needy countries, : ne raw r coulc . ' Se defend to th ; : i. ‘a |eration is so much more desperate and the ol es While the meeting was going on, another mara~ i] which everybody could understand. That, the American | efend to the ueath your right to say it."—Voltaire. are far more threatening. thon conference 'was continuing. For more than i People ie 0 think, is what they want from men in public| = p——— Sp— omer Fight on Hunger and Chaos three months delegates youked 3 framin § the Sats i 1 Bd se , _ "va RQ ; ‘ * . * ti r iza i i ; and se dom appreciate on the rare occasions when Investigating Clergymen Were UMT Would Invite Army THAT WAS ABUNDANTLY CLEAR in the con- jer of = isteruatignel uy Foi 8 buik : they get it, { : § : ’ Into Every Home | ference of the food and agriculture organization, =o." 0 ‘mune to try to put into practical effect ; y ————— 2 Taken In by Tito $ Propaganda 2 By James Clinger Jr., Veléran, City [one of the more Jisoreus 3 Mesninely) branches the ideal. ° : nw : Bn , ; of the’ United Nations. en the delegates of every E i V. P. No. 1 Takes a Stand . By Magr. Paul A. Doery, OM. Cathedral, Vincennes ae ie Sow: as oy of fhe ay nation had reported on their food supply, it was evi- World Free Trade? i ! ROCLAIMING ref ; : The Indianapolis Times published a feature story Sept. 9 apropos Who wou ght universal military dent that the food picture was darker than at any WHETHER THEY WILL SUCCEED is quite ane n P yo Nl Te usal to sign a Taft-Hartley act affi- | the report of Dr. Buckner on Yugoslavia. He states that “Religious training to the last ditch. Don'|time since the war. To make the available supply other matter. Both in Europe and America there i davit that he is not a Communist, John L. Lewis asks: life is natural and normal.” those who stupidly favor that mon-|go around would therefore be much more difficult are grave doubts whether the world is ready for an { | “What does Mr. Denham propose to do about it?" The many readers of your paper are entitled to the truth. The strosity realize that U. M. T. would ish hse Years hich starvauion ssemay WL ape ih this stage, of beginning recovery— H Robert N. Denham, general counsel of the national newspapers and Protestant ministers have repudiated the seven invite the army into every home in A complication is the fact that many nations no measurable only by microscope—Europe cannot af= I labor relations board, replies what he ‘intends to do about | Protestant ministers’ report, America. “The brass would have jonger have the proper kind of money—hard cur- ford free trade—and there is great uncertainty I it. The.Taft-Hartley act doesn’t say that Mr. Lewis oF ‘Dr. E. R. Clinchy, president “of the National Conference of actual or potential control of the enicy is the hargh pheaseie bay Too even where Thiet pep I. T, O. will be approved by the U. 8, 4 ANY : Lone to : ace OnE 3 , declared, “It is unfor » delegation [lives of every youth in the country. |it is in surplus. at Is a factor, of course, over- senate. anyone else, must sign such an affidavit. * It says only that Ohuistians: and Jew Yeclared, ht is: uniortunate ‘thay, he aeitgation Why brin y these shores a. shadowing every attempt at economic agreement in But the delegates come and go, talk with reasom tnions whose officers won't sign can’t use the NLRB's elec. |" dis statement did not deal With: the question es to whether human blight that made miserable the | this age of crisis. sei and logic. ed lion machinery and its yrotection ag: it f oo ol ‘ar rights And the various freadoms as We know them BD the Urited lives of thousands of European boys Al the same time that they added up available They talk with earnestness and idealism even EE Ne 3 S | e 1 against unialr employer | Sie REE \gUne ised at Wis Sane to the citizens of Yugos avia. _ |uefore world wars I and II. Let voe|food supplies. the FP. A. 0. delegates also considered witer” fie headlines that mirror events outside this practices, : |i Tr po ae EE He is the Yugoslavia despot who people remember that once the mili-|the world need. for the kind of things that in the curious little paradjse say something quite different, As Mr. Denham reads the law—and his reading, Mr. | goiscopal Chirehian New York Shot down the American planes. tary gets into control of our educa- | Lewis concedes, may be correct—this secti ; i ut eR . : ‘His name is taken from the Thira tional processes it will be next to 1 he > Section A\pplies right |resighed from the board’ in. plotest International Terrorist Organiza- impossible to dislodge them; ror WORLD AFFAIRS o sie By George Weller up to the top hierarchies of the A. F. of L. and the C. I. O.|a8ainst the report. tion, which he founded. they are a strong and smug lot. . : : ' For instance, no A. F. of L. local union can take cases to| Bishop Iriney Georgevich, Serbian —__— "" __ : - | k A Vv the labor board unless non-Communist affidavits are filed | Puoavia bishop I a, Side Glances—By Galbraith Gree mnesty Prospects oor § by its ficers ‘ . » o . ’ . tas. 10 : % : y its offic ers, the officers of the international union it affili- “Those utterances are an attempt ‘ . ATHENS, Sept. 16-~America’s pew policy of mercy , amnesty, it is likely to be a dead letter—which would 3 at ith 1 the pr Ito: falsify the religious issue.. The . i ates with, and the president, .the secretary and the 138 vice! to falsify 8 h [ [ |/in Greece takes its first baby steps this week when exactly fit Shy aims in backing Markos. q presidents of she A. F. of 1 itself [real issue is one of Christianity and | v , Should America really step in and insist that the . ie gi dell, religious people versus communism.” Jah v'} the general amnesty, pushed through parliament by amnesty be je workable Communist leadership b OST if hot allah the A F.of L's h . fic le | The Swiss Protestant newspaper, To) . |Premier Themiistocles Sophoulis, goes into effect. in Yugoslavia and Bulgaria would lose its strong ently hud decided . . * oh oo ey olhc ue pps Die Tat, said, “One feels ashamed S Lr : | Americans, having intervened boldly to save the argument of offering political sanctuary to fugitives 4 3 ! aec a ey etter sign, and so keep as a Protestant to find American c Truman doctrine, are trying to divest it of unre- from Greece's “monarcho-Pascist leaders.” H the benefits of government protection. Mr. Lewis, being | clereymen how visiting Yugoslavia G2) J > lieved dependence on rightists and royalists. The lat- Perhaps the strangest phenomenon in Greece's vice president No. 11, has ch ed their mi {passing judgment over the impris- 5 pm - M should. Tail high-pressure goldfish bowl today is how quickly 3 . : i a 8 chang , eir minds. And ob- oned Catholic Archbishop .tepenic | - ‘¢ / } ter, naturally, are eager that the amnesty shoul “political persecution—sometimes real, often phoney-— servers predict that C. I. 0. leaders will follow suit. _ and other Catholic priests by stating | Too Much Uncertainty twists around and bites the hand that did the perSo perhaps, at least for the time being, no A. F. of L.|that they committed crimes against ¢ EVEN MORE OPENLY HOSTILE to amnesty se¢uting. An atmosphere of persecution is the natural ] ion ¢ i . tm [the people—as if they knew any-| laboratory for conversion and if responsibility can be or C. 1. O. union can qualify to use the services of the NLRB, Lising about it. Are these clergymen) than the royalists ae the Communists and their "0", 01s door that is extracpoints for the i leaving that government agency little to do except to handle | called to indulge in a diabolical usoeiated "liherals®, any Hops Sk in ® Allerjoans Balkan comintern in Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania, ! cases brought by independent: unions and deal with em-|¥®me And make themselves spokes- | 'the leftists for their program of mercy than they have Where liberty is still at stake. : ployer complaints of unfair union practices ymen of Titc'} SommULise=gopa- for tifeir lavish expenditure of money were dashed Even some of Greece's royalists now perceive that ’ w to a lr ion Prac Ices. ’ ganda becaiise of their opposition lwhen the Communists turned their bitterest fire Greece's Slav Snes 8% Ses big hance vie e can Imagine w » Ta. ! ink i rag | " i ! men observ u - 2 ¥ 2 e Worse ca amities, We think it was | to Onthdlicism? against ampesty. : Fra the. governs ya Ye fully ¢ | government protection and favoritism, not the genius of | The leading ‘secular newspapers | To the Reds it is merely a cunning trick to split 5% © -agreeme + such men as Mr. Lewis, that brought about the vast growth | (0unced the ministers with edi-| them from their party followers—ike the British ended the Sugler Caves Gvil Wat. Guerrillas, threatof Griioni ’ od &rowlh |torfals and cartoons. The Boston | Po tried to do almost fwom the day théy landed in ened with execution for civil crimes, took te the of unionism and gave them their present great power. If Herald expressed great concern for Gresce. mountains in 1945 and became tools for a Communist | they think otherwise—if they believe they're big enough that segment of the Protestant What is actually most dangerous to the Com- PAR Of penetrating to the Aegean. now to get along without clergy “which seem all too willing munists, in the Americans’ new moderate policy, is _ Doth Republicans and royalists are now so dis- ] ) g & Without government help—why not let its be taken in by the Soviet that if pushed through resolutely it woud not only Usted by the unmistakable complicity of the Greek | | them try? Fit _ |semantics” The New York. Daily break up Communisls’ strength tn the tains and TeDels With the‘Slavs that they are inclined to forget Mr. Lewis is not'a Communist; He's just a headstrong |News in_an editorial, "Clerical their great argument of persecution, use- ur iUily dor Creating . Sood Elas po man with an overwhelming appetite for power and a strong ites Adiaiey the eed Bl Ed PrOpAgandx Noewiere in the Bajkauk, lowers "aS beaten by the British. : | aversion to any restraint on his use of it. Incidentally, he's | land Plain Dealer captioned the edi-| | have been coerced into the ranks by force, these U.S. Support ®™Not Positive ~~. | the man who, when he was trying to wreck the A. F. of L., Sie] i 6 SHES 35 “Seven [so-called Communists ate eager; to retin 0 peacefy : accepted the help of Communists in organizing C. 1. O 3 and Wie Thal The He, Ai a : y 2 + 4+ VU. Boston Post printed’ an editorial Some remain voluntarily with Gen, Markos’ Slavunions, thus doing much to bring about the dangerous con-| with this conclusion, “Obviously the “democratic army” because they mistrust dition responsible for the Taft-Hartley provision to which | Communist stooge, Titq, cannot be the rovalist promises of mercy. ~~ he now objects folentl If hi believed, and it looks as if the by It is deeply questionable today whether these dis- bs \ if niin ila ph s fyresent stand proves American clergymen who feil for 107 oy wi TM 866. u. 8 par. oor g-4_|/illusioned and frightened followers of Communist , has MN ~ detrimental to a great many A. F. of L. unions, as it may, his line are amazingly gullible” | \-COCR.IONEYMASERVOLWC.T 00 NG. Y. 8 PAT, oF , lenders are’ very much Teassured hy Ameria wp- : a4 hel) WN there's always the possibility the A. F, of L. can dispense’ Tito in 1936-39, then Josef Ruring vacation Junior was up at dawn clamoring for breakfast, to amnesty. SO A pr st. Greece Wr | od ‘with his dubious services as 11th vice president, , Brodzoyitch, was on the Communist ut.now | have #6 call him a dozen times! Do you think - Unless America can give more explicit guarantees Communists with fodder for argument by n BT EL oo : i general stafl fh the war with Spain. he’s. studying too hard? i ve ~ to the republican amnesty than it did to the royalist ing the defsh penalties on : a : Bie Rio if) hw Lod Ch ; ri ud py Le i ; hi i Gh iit a em

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