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The Barnwell People-Sentinel, Barnwell. S. C. Thursday, May 23, 1935 \ ? After Worlds Collide By Edwin Balmer and Philip Wylie Copyright, 1934, by Edwin Balmer & Philip Wylie WNU Service. SYNOPSIS “Kansdelll Dare Ransdetir Tony yelled; and Dave stopped and lifted both his arms. ^ “Ransdell 1 Ransdell?” came back. “YesI They got over!. The second ship got over!” Then the welcome began. “Tony,” said Ransdell later, when for an Instant they had a (ew words “how Hendron’s changed!” “Yes,” said Tony, “of course he has.” Hut'he realized that.to Ransdell, who had not seen their leader since the last day on earth, the alteration In Hendron’s appearance and manner w T as more tragic. Never had Tony heard Hendron’s voice shake as now It did; and his hand, which clung tp, the list which Ransdell had given him, quivered as if with palsy. It was the list of the survivors and of the dead from the Second Ark. He had read it several times; but again and again, like a very pld man, he went over it. hq Under the leadership of Cole Hendron, noted American scientist, over 300 per sons escape in two Space Ships just be fore'a cosmic collision wiped out the earth, and ^land on Bronson Beta. Giant meteors, fragments of the earth’s moon, fall In their vicinity, but none of Hendron’s colonists is hurt. A river bottom green with vegetation is found, and great forests of dead trees, preserved for a million years by the absolute cold of space. An airplane, which disappears almost immediately, ^ies over the camp, making no attempt «o communicate with its people, who realize that they are not alone on the new planet, and that their visitors may I be enemies. Tony Drake and Eliot James, in an exploration airplane flight, come upon a w&ndrous city, en closed under "wtrar seems Tike half an iridescent glass bubble. Among their finds, in the city, is an edible grain— millions of bushels. On their flight back they come upon the camp of more than 200 persons who left the earth when they did, in a second Space Ship piloted by Dave Ransdell. CHAPTER V—Continued '‘Sure.’’ the girl answered. She ■miled buoyantly and returned. Ransdell looked TH-her thoughtfully, flipped his coffee, and shook his head. Then he continued privately to TouyV *6he’s really a moron, 1 suppose. I floutot if Hendron will approve of laving a moron In our company; but ber empty-headedness, her astonish ment at everything, even her ignor- •nce, which is pretty naive, have de lighted everybody. And she did a big •ting for us.” “What did she do?’’ Tony asked. “The second night we were here iCbervllle went mad. He decided early In the evening that it was against the will of God for us to be here, and that we should all be destroyed. Rut he quieted down, and he was left alone, Later he got up, got into the ship, started the only generator that would work, and turned on one of the lateral tubes. In the morning you could see a big black patch about four hundred yards to the left of where we were camped. He'd have wiped us out in ten seconds,. but Marian Jumped on him. She’s strong. So was Eber * Ville. Insanely strong. But she has teeth and nails. That is ‘why we all escaped annihilation a second time.” Suddenly Tony got up. Hendron. be reuieinl>ered, knew nothing of <heir discoveries atid events, tie corrtd de* sgf the city,” Tony said, facing the en- | “And so we stayed. We picked a [ tire company o£ the camp except Hen- dron and Eve, “Is to read you extracts from the record made, on the spot at the time, by Eliot James. Before I begin, however, I ask you to think of a city made of many colored metals built Uke the Spokes of a wbeel around'a vast central building. Think of a. dome of transparent metal over itf And then remember,'particularly while I read, that every street, every building; every object in the whole metropolis was in an amazing state of preservation. " “Remember that there was not a single sign of human habitation. I have already told you that the people were human—very mqfb like ourselves —but there was not a sign of “them or any renfeins of them except for statues and paintings and representa tions which we called photographic for lack of a better word and for record on their remarkable visual machines. Bear all that In mind. Here, for ex- ■ r Hijinj^wtricb we thought contained residences and after gome experiment ing succeeded in entering It. Th&' ground floor was a hall, or lobby, which was decorated by statuary and bas- reliefs, of animals more fantastic and ferocious^iooking than could be con trived in the wildest nightmare. And yefThfclr presentation had a gay note, as if the sculptor^ had aet^them as humorous, rather than savage, em bellishments in that lobby. At one side of the lobby was another large room which contained the apparatua for what we presently realized wag a va riety of games. They were like no games on our earth. One of them was played with large, metal-like balls which were extremely light and yet very hard, and with magnets. Another was played over a pool, evidently with Jets of water, but we could not turn on the Jets and the poof was empty. We did not take the tlm* to puzzle out the technique of these sports, but pro ceeded by a Targe staircase to the floor above. There, as we had hoped, we found apartments. One oi them, which faced the street from which we had entered the building, was open— and this we have mftde our own.” As Tony turned a page, his listen ers waited almost breathlessly. He continued from the record: "It is an apartment of- indescribable beauty. The living room is more than twenty feet In height. Its walls are decorated with metal figures in various colors. There is no rug on the floor, but the floor is of a texture not un like that of a very fine, deep rug. There are mirrors on many' faces of the walls—the Other People must have enjoyed looking at themselves, or else they must have liked .the added effect of distance lent by the mirrors, for large reflecting panels seem to be an important • part of their interior dec oration. We have also found beds. • “There were two bedrooms. The beds are very low. We had, I Imagine, as sumed that they would be of a luxuri ous softness, but they are- rather hard, so that in spite of their comforts the Other People must have been Spartans in some measure. Apparently there are closets and bureaus set in the walls, but we have not been able to get open the panels which cover them. We have also found a bathroom, but we cannot make anything of it. It Is a beautiful chamber of t -all bright metals, the-colors of which are gold and azure, but it is filled with fix tures and^ other gadgets of great in tricacy as well as beauty. “We are leaving, the problem of de ciphering the Bronson Betans’ bathing -and toilet-making for experts. “However, we-are quite comfortable in that part of our quarters which we have had the courage to occupy. It is now moderately late in the Bronson Beta night and we have decided to try to sleep. To be sure, we have placed a chair in the door to the hall so It will not magically close upon us, for although we are only one story above the street it is Impossible to break these window’s. We have also planned to keep our pistols at our sides, al though a glance at this world of the Other People makes us quite sure that if there were any survivors and they were bent on our destruction, a re volver would be an extremely useless weapon. However, nobhdy has sur vived ; of that we are convinced.” Tony looked up and regarded his fas cinated audience. But Eve was npt there; nor Ransdell. He fried to dis miss thought of this as he proceeded to read: “We did sleep, and we slept very well. However, we woke hefote^the actual retqrn of daylight, and feeling sufficiently refreshed, we decided to continue our explorations in the re markable radiance of the artificial II- IMPROVED - ’"""* - * HOMES IN NORTH uniform inte((National UNDAYI ■ : chool Lesson By REV. P. B. PITZWATER, D. D, Member of Faculty, Moody Bible. Institute of Chlcaso. Q. Western Newspaper Union. *'■ ' ~S ’ Lesson for May 26 THE LORD'S SUPPER LESSON TEXT—Matthew17-30; I Corinthians 11: 23-29. GOLDEN TEXT—Thia do In remem brance of me.—I Corinthians 11:24.. PRIMARY TOPIC—The Supper Jesus Gave Hia Friends. JUNIOR TOPIC—Why We Have the Lord’s Supper. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOR- IC—Why Observe the Lord’s Supper? ~ YOUNG PEOPLE XiJD ADULT T©£ ' IC*—The Meaning of the Lord * Suppei CONSTRUCTED OP > STEEL AND CORK Two portable dwellingi of steel frame* and corkboard walla and roof* went to Alaska to replace^' home* destroyed in the Nome Are a few month* ago, gays Popular Me* - chanlos Magazine. The experiment hag ghown that thig type of congtruc* tion* in which the Insulation I* the structure Instead of an addition to the structure, 1» admirably suited: to cold regions in particular. - The material for the homes waa cut to size at the factory, the part* ivere numbered and the houses were sent by boat to Nome where, despite adverse weather conditions, the dwellings were erected in ten days. It is estimated the coat of such construction 1* fitwwt one-fourth more than for ordinary frame struc- tures, bnt tfr offset this, a saving of fifteen per cent, or more in fuel Is claimed. In addition to complete insulation the cork and steel homes are Are resistant, vermin proof, immune to dry rot and impervious to moisture. The houses can be knocked down, moved and reassembled easily if the steel frames are bolted, to timbers as a base. The' corkboard Is squeeze-fitted between the steel angles and secured with wire. Lumber is used over the corkboard roof and on this is laid composite roll roofing. Each Alaskan home Ifl eighteen by thirty feet, sufficient for four small rooms, and each struc ture required two and ooe-hnlf tons of steel and 5,500 feet, board meas ure, of corkboard. This type of construction permits optional finish, insldo and outside, with stucco, brick veneer, sheet Iron or stone as outside choices, and plas ter, veneer panels or other finish for the interior. Provision is mpde easi ly for inside plumbing and wiring. Standard specifications call for steel doors an<J window sashes with provision for storm windows. Floors are of wood. lay no longei his return to Hendron. Put when he suggested to Eliot James -that they return, others would not allow it. ‘‘Not both of you! . . . You haven’t both,got to go!” ’J’here was altogether too much yet to tell, and to hear. “I^et Eliot stay here, Tony,” Dave Ransdell said. *TU go -to Hendron with you., 1 ought to report to him; ard I want so much to see him,” They wen: in the air. lu the plane wlfb them they treighted a fair half of the objects intelligible and uuintel- UgiNe, which Tony and Eliot hud brought from the Sealed City. With them was also Eliot James’ record. — — : ‘ — It was dawn; the slow sunrise of Bronson BeU was spreading its first faint shafts across the sky. They sighted, far ahead, columns of smoke lifted lazily into the sky. Ransdell pointed aud Tony, leaning to his ear, shouteW, “Our campfires! Our camp!” The camp seemed unchanged; It was safe. Tony glanced aside, and sur prised Ransdell, as he stared down, hat thousand shattering fragments thoughts must fill Ransdell’s mind! On£—and Tony plainly could see it— overwhelmed all the rest. Here,"below was Ev^, Hendron. .. For ItNyas a sudden softness and yearning tnhl was In the eyes of the broad-shouldered, Herculean man at Tony’s side \vhat would be In Eve’s eyes when she saiv him? Eve always had Admired Dave and liked him—and more afore, yes, more than liked him, during ftiose last des perate days on earth. Now he was 'here; and he had done wellN, Anyone would say—Hendron hlmself\would declare—that Dave Ransdell had well Indeed to have brought aerttss space the ship Intrusted to him wit loss of less than half the party. Rans dell would be greeted ecstatically as a hero. Tony caught his lip between his teeth and tried to establish better con trol of his inward tumult. If Eve pre ferred Dave to himself, let her! . _ He busied himself grimly with his throttles, putting down the ship on the bare soli more than a mile from camp. They had been seen in the air and recognized, and the camp was out pouring toward them. Tony and Dana started to run toward them; tfc«* they halted. The people from thfl {amp begaa tP see that one figure wts not that *f SHot James. “Who Is itl WWs with jmT flflflM “It was the tubes, you say, David?” he kept reviewing the disaster at land ing. with Ransdell. “Three of the tubes fused! That was the fault of the design—my fault,” he blamed him self morbidly. “Father!” whispered his daughter to him. “Father, you ought to be hap pier than any other man in the world. 1 ’ “In the world!” repeated Hendron. “In all the universe!” Eve quickly corrected. “You brought all the people In our ship over safely; and more than thvee hundred in the other Ark! Oh, Father, Father, no man In the uni verse could have, done .more. Hendron Ehook his head.—“These people here, of whom Tony has told us. What metallurgists! They would have made a ship. Ah! Ah! Ah! Tony- David-Higgins! The rest of you! What do you think of this? The peo ple of this planet are not here because they made good their escape through Space! They made their own Space Ships and better ones and more of them ;„ and escaped when they were passing some habitable sphere as they scraped some star!” ^No, Father!” “How do you know? I tell you, they probably did it; and accomplished It no much better than irwith my bun gling, that 1 am an amateur—a mur derer. How many did I kill, David? How- many did you say? . . . What rows of names?” “Father, you didn’t kill them!” “I tell you I did! The tubes fused— the tubes I figured and designed my self. The human factor did not fall. They piloted It properly. The tubes fused!” No one could quiet him. His daugh ter had to .lead him away, with Tony and Ransdell both helping her. The excitement of Ransdell’s news and, on top of It, Tony’s, had snapped his nerves, drawn too lonj? to extreme ten sion. It Was perfectly plain to-all the company *whom he had .led that his day, as a man of resource, was done. Tony, thoroughly realizing this, trem bled himself as he hel|>ed lend his friend to his cabin. Partly it-was-from- pity and compassion; foe no one^ knew better than Tony with what-merciless ness Hendron had driven himself and how he had borne so long his enor mous burden. But partly this trem bling was from an' emotion far less worthy. It was Jealousy again of Dave Ransdell. Jealousy more bitter and hard than that wlilch had possessed him when they both were on earttf—and rivals. For here they were rivals again and with the conflict between them ac centuated. How Eve had hugged Dave and held to him and kissed him! To be .£ure, they had all embraced him—men and girls. Every girl in the camp hysterically had , kissed him. But Eve had not been hysterical, Tony knew. Eve—Eve—Well, it had changed this world for her that Dave Ransdell had reached It. Then there was the talk whlcn Tony had heard: the talk already to night of Ransdell as the new leadci of both camps; the leader of the sur vivors of Earth to replace and follow Hendron. * • \ ‘ . , Tony tingled alternately with hate of Dave and with shame at nimself, as he-thought of this talk. He had quier ed the talk of himself as leader and he honestly had not wanted It a few days ago; he would not permit him self to be considered a candidate against Hendron; but now that Hen dron was surely done* he-wanted his people—his people, he thought them— to want! him for their leader. And some sull did; but more, he thought miserably, tonight turned to Dave Ransdell. This was unworthy ; this was child ish. this Jealousy and hate of his strong courageous comrade! So Tony raid himself; but he could not conquer It. fjpw they had come to Hendron’s ^Bhln; and Tony felt himself becoming officious in the endeavor to he of more use to Hendron and to Eve than Dave might be. “Thank you, Tony,” said Eve, In her gentle voice. “Now you go back to the pie.” All right,” said Tony. “Come along, Da “Letshlm stay .here, Tony,” said Eve. “Hlm\and ndt me?” Tony stared. “What more can be tell them?”'Eve asked patiently. “He’s given them bis news, who’re' tjvlng and who”— she lowered her voice carefully so her fa ; , ther could not bear—“who are dead. He has no more to tell You—you haven't begun to tell them what you must have to tell of the strange city!’’ “Don’t you want to bear it?” Tony persisted. “I’m staying with Father now,” said Eve. Rebelllonsly—and yet ashamed of himself for his feeling—Tony turned away and left her with Ransdell “?** best way to give you some idea ample, Is what Ellot^wrote on the eve ning of our first day on Bronson Beta. I will skip the part that describes- the city In general.” i CHAPTER VI Toijy began to read from Eliot James’ diary: “Tony and I are now seated in a bedroom of an apartment in one of the large buildings The night of Bronson Beta has descended, but we have light. In fact, the adven ture of light is the most bizarre which has befallen us since we penetrated this spectacular and sileht city. As twilight descended we were %bout to return to our airplane. We were at the time on the street. We had visited one or two buildings and the effect of tjie silence combined with the oncora- I. It Was Instituted by Christ (Matt. 20:7-30). 1. The time of (I Cor. 11:23). It was on the night of the betrayal of Jesus. Just after the betrayer had been announced. . .. 2. The circumstances of (Matt, 20: It was in connection with the eating of the Passover. At the com mand of Jesus the disciples hud made ready the Passover, and while they were eating he took bread and blessed it and gave to the disciples. 3. The elements iised (v. 20). Bread, doubtless common bread of. the Pass- over reast, and the cup which was the fruit of the vine. II. The Significance of the Lord’s Supper (I Cor. 11:24-20; cf. Matt 20: 20-28). Jesus took natural and literal ele ments and made them to be symbols of his own body and blood. Just as our bread and drink are transformed Into brain and brawn, becoming integral parts of our bodies, so by means of these .symbols the communicant par takes of Christ- We are in him and he is in us. 1. It Is a memorial of the Lord (Luke 22:111). When he left the world he left the bread and the cup by which the disciples would remember him. Every—true disciple will gladly avail himself of the opportunity thus to re member his laird. < “The Ground Floor Was a Hall, or Lobby, Which Was Decorated by Statuary and Bas-ReHefe of An) male More Fantastic and Fero cious Looking Than Could Be Contrived in the Wildest Night mare." ing darkness was more than We could bear. I know that my scalp "was tin- gling, the palms of my hands were clammy, and when i stood still I could feel my muscles shaking. We could not rid ourselves of the feeling that the city was Inhabited; we could not cease looking quickly over our shoulders in the hope, or the tear, of seeing some body. As we stood uncertainly on the street the sun vanished altogether, its orange light reflected by low-.Vying cumulus clouds. The sky took on a deeper green -and at a word from Tony I.would have run from the place. Sud denly, to our utter confoundation, the city was bathed in light The light came on without a sound. Its source, or rather, its sources, were Invisible. It shone down on the streets^ behind cornices. It burst luminously upon the walls of the giant buildings. “The interiors of many of them were also filled with radiance. All this, sud denly, silently, in the gathering gloom, i shall never forget the expression ou Tony’s face as he turned to me and whispered, ‘It’s too much!’ My own mind, appalled at this new, marvelous manifestation of the genius of the Other People, was very close to lapsing into unconsciousness for a second. Then 1 found myself with my hands clenched, saying over and over to my self, ‘It’s light. Just light It was get ting dark, so they turnednn the lights.’ Then I .amended that to—‘The lights come on here when It’s dark.’ Imme diately Tony and I fell into an alter cation. ‘It’s just the lights coming on,’ I said. “‘But that’s Impossible!’ “‘Nevertheless, they’re on,’ “Tony, searching frantically for the shreds -of his sanity* replied, ‘But if the lights come on every night in this city, we’d have seen it through tele- scopes.’ “ ‘Maybe we didn’t happen to catch it’ “ ’It can’t be.’ “Both of us thought of the same thing simultaneously: *the lights had come on because the city had been en tered. It was true that if the cities of Bronson Beta bad been illuminated a^night the fact would have been ob served before their passing? And a new and utterly irrational. feeling struck dfc-’- The people were dead, dead a million years—a hundred mil lion years. But in this startling ges ture of. turning on th$ .lights there was more than mechanical magic. There waa hospitality. That was crazy, but It was the' way we felt “’Let’s ataj,’ Tony said. ‘Maybe we can find a place to sleep. We really ought to know more about it be fore we go ba 2. To show *^the Lord’s sacrificial death (v. 26). Jesus Christ did not die as a hero or as an example of un selfish devotion, hut as a substitution ary ranqom. Ob the cross he made ex piation for sin. 3. It is a guarantee that our sins are forgiven (Rom. 4:25). “It was the signet of the Son of God attached to reuertiptlon.” 4. It symbolizes the believer’s re ception/if Christ ,(1 Cor. 10:10). The communicant thereby participates In the body and blood of ; Christ, becom ing a member of his body. 5. It is a forward look to a complet ed redempton (I Cor. 11:26). When faith is exercised In Christ, redemp tion begins and its eompIetTtiiTWttLtake^ place at the coming of Jesus Christ (I Tliess. 4:10, 17). The bread and the cup constitute the keepsake of the Lord until he returns. These elements ONE THIRD LESS TIME WITH THI possess not only a spiritual, but a tremendous psychological value, both as a memorial, and as a prospect. III. Qualifications for Participation In the Lord’s Supper (I Cor. 11:27-29). 1. A proper apprehension of Its meaning (v. 27). Eating and drinking unworthily primarily refers not to the demerit of the communicant, hut the failure to grasp the meaning and Im portance of the ordinahee. To engage thoughtlessly in* this service is to do lumlnntion which was so useful though I It unworthily. Only a regenerated per ; so puzzling to qs. " You can‘scarcely ! son* ciih discern the Cord's body. Faith understand how this affected us with In the integrity of Christ’s person and the conviction that the place must be Coleman M I I III Al l>«. Iron Bodnc* your Irontnjr Him one-third... your labor one-half I boa any place with tba Coleman. It'a anti rely aelf-haatins. Mo corda or wirea. No weary, endian trip# between a hot atote and tba iroo- ta* board. The Coleman makea and buna ita own tna. Light* instantly —no pre-heating. Operating cost only an boor. Perfect balance and right weight make ironing Jnataneasy, guiding, gliding motion. See you local hardware or house- funiahing dealer. If be doea not handle, write na. The Coleman Lamp G» Steve Company Inhabited, and that around the next rrbeyond the next door, we must find $ome of the people. But we found no living things.” Tony looked up again. “1 find here a number of pages of notes of the most sober sort. They are Eliot James’ at tempt to describe and analyze some of the remarkable objects and Imple ments we examined. Of course neither he nor I are physicists, chemists or engineers, so our notions are probably valueless ; those of you who are more expert than either of us will undoubt edly soon have a chance ta Inspect the engines and Implements of the Other People. -“The first thing we Investigated was a store. It was a department store, in the sense that It contained a great many kinds of things; but it did not contain, for example, clothes or, as far as we could discover, food. It had house furnishings, and furniture and kitchen appliances—and by the way, cooking must have been a cinch for the Other People, because apparently they cooked things by Induced beat and under high pressure, with steam, so that it took only a tew minutes. The store-also exhibited some of those automobile-like vehicles like the one we found wrecked. “In the store,” he continued, “we also found a large department of games and sports, and one of chll dren’s toys. The children bad very pe culiar blocks. Wires extended from their sides and corners so that they look like cockleburs and can be stuck together to make variously shaped fig ures in which the differently colored blocks are held apart by wires. It wai Tony who solved the enigma of th blocks. ‘Molecules,’ be said, as w< stood staring at them. /And then ] realized that each bldck waa designed to represent an atom and that tbs children were taught by playing wltl the blocks the atomic structure of vaM ous elements. *0 BA | work is essential. Anyone* who does j not believe in the absolute deity of Clylst »nd is an unworthy communicant 2. Church membership (1 Cor. 11: 18-22L Christ’s body Is the Church, which Is composed of regenerated men and women united to him as head and to each other as members of that body by the Holy Spirit. 3. Orderly walk. Conduct which dis qualifies for participation in the Lord’s supper Is a. Immoral conduct (I Cor. 5:1-13). It Is most perilous for one who is guilty of-Immorality to approach the-Lord's table (I Cor. 11:30). Sickness .and death are often visited upon such, Thig explains why some are mysteriously taken away in death. b. Heresy (Tit! 3:16; 1 John 4:23). The one who does not believe in the deity and Incarnation of Christ ia a heretic. Such should be excluded from the Lord’s table. . c. The one who stirs up party strife (Rom.. 16:17).Those, who cause dlvia- Ions in fhe Church should also be ex cluded from the Lord’s table. 2SJV PARKER’S HHI hair BALSAM KemoTM Dandruff -Stop. Hair VLUln, Impart* Color and Beauty to Grmr and Faded Hair HleJ?CwWb.^ NY. FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Maal for oaa to connection with Parker’* Hair Balaam .Makea the hair aoft and ftnffjr. CO cents hr mail or at drnjr- ffiat*. Hiscox Chemical Work*. Patehoarna. N. Y. Weak Women “After childbirth Hack ed strength and Buffered 1913 Elli* St., AngnaU. Ga., “bat I was much im Droved after ♦■wine Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pr» script ion a abort time. It gave toe new strength and made nut feel that I had the right amooat of energy to carry on." New size, tablets 50 cts., liquid $1.00. Laras Freedom and Triumph To be gripped by an Iron-handed ne cessity from without Is slavery; to be borne along the path of <f(]ty by an Inward force, which we would not re sist If we could, is freedom, peace, tri umph. SEED THOUGHTS Often it takes some tide of grief ta lift us to our best e a e Remember that every drop of rain that falls bears into the bosom of thfl earth a quality of beautiful fertility.— O. H. Lewes. • * • All things and all acts and thia whole wonderful universe proclaim to ns tb« Lord our Father, Christ our lore, Christ our hope, our portion, and our f -i • FREE IT Pe.Tea Beta. MeUitone Vanity Sets.Wrlst Watches. SI lTerware.01oeka.BafiBaiis.ete. Sell only IS boxes of tamo ns WSOTV HOUSE OUVBOM. SALVE er BOHagSTIta LAXA- TIVK TOMC PILLS st Bo each. Mail us Joar order today, we ship merchandise, tend na the money when *old—we ship gift VRJUE Trial bateta ailkir of Una* mmmtltut pridmtu mailtd pee ea r*e*tpl of df* mmk or tUtmtfa. 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