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LONGWORTH PAID FINAL TRIBUTES President and Other Leaders Attend Last Rites in Cincinnati. (Centinued From First Page) Comelius Vanderbilt and Cornelius Vanderbilt, jr.; Mr. and Mrs. Hulbert ‘Taft, Postmaster General and Mrs. ‘Walter Brown and Vincent Astor and hundreds of other organizations and individuals. News Given to Paulina, Paulina, the 6-year-old daughter of the Longworths, learned for the first | time today that her father was dead, when her mother reached home with his casket. She was in school hereand | the news had been kept from her. President Hoover's special train reach- ed here at 11:14 this morning. _ With | him and Mrs. Hoover were Capt. Russell Train, his naval aide; Capt. Joel T. Boone, the White House physician; Postmaster Brown and others. The station was crowded as the spe- | cial arrived. The official Reception | Committee for the Chief Executive in- THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, Silent Tribute to Speaker Longworth As funeral services were being held in Cincinnati April 11 for Speaker Nicholas Longworth, attendants at the House cluded Mayor Russell Wilson of Cincin- | of Representatives arranged this silent tribute to his memory. His gavel, draped in mourning, with which he adjourned nati, Col. Campbell Hodges, the Presi- dent’s military aide, who accompanied | the Longworth funeral party from South | Carolina, and Kermit and Aflhle“ Roosevelt. | The presidential party made its way | thrsugh a battery of cameramen and | left in automobiles for the Longworth | me. While the President and his party | were at Rookwood, the Longworth home, | the grounds were closed to outsiders. | They remained for about 15 minutes | and returned to the train to await the | time for the funeral. The Honorary Pallbearers. Honorary pallbearers from Cincinnati were: B. H. Kroger, G. H. Worthington, J. V. Campbell, Maj. Russell Wilson, R. P. Ernst, W. F. Wiley, F. W. Cottle, A.C. Shinkle, J. H. Graydon, B. P. Hollister, C. Hulbert Taft,'C. L. Harrison, R. A. Taft, J. M. Hutton, Gilbert Bettman, Waltef Heermann, Joseph Wilshire, W. P. An- gersen J J. Rowe, Judge W. H. Lueders, Fred Schneller, C. M. Jacobs, ir., B. L. Kilgour, C. W. Henry. W. H. Chatfleld, J. L. Mitchell, Marvin Petrovic, M. Y. Cooper. H The out-of-town honorary palibearers | were: Col. Willlam Donovan, New.York: | F. R. Grasselli. Cleveland; Gen. Clarence | Williams, Washington; Cleveland Per- kins, New York: John Wilkins, Henry Percy R. Payne, New York: Walter F.| Brown, Toledo; James W. Wadsworth, | New York; Gen. Cornelius Vanderbilt, 8. Rankin, Joseph Assel, W. F. Hess, |* years he was Speaker. the last session of the House, is resting upon & bank of flowers, while behind is the chair in which he sat during the . Photo. | Charles Taft was an honorary pall- A. P. ELETING SPEAER MAYBEHARDTASK G. 0. P. Insurgents Will Have Balance of Power That Must Be Recognized. (Continued From First Page.) nated for Speaker might receive the united support of the regulars and pro- gressives? Ramseyer of Iowa might r ceive such support, or Purnell of In- diana, or Mapes of Michigan. If the Progressive Republicans had their way, | they would pick a Speaker far less regu lar than any of these gentlemen, all of whom go along with the party leaders ship and with the administration. La | Guardia of New York or Frear of Wis- consin would be more to their liking. But the Progressives in the House are still the tall of the dog and cannot ex- R. Livingston Beeckman, Newport, R. I: Efrem Zimbalist. New York; R. L. Agassiz. Boston; Quinéy | Shaw, Wallace Goodrich, Manchester, | Mass.; Thomas Nelson Perkins, West- | wood, Mass.; Frederick Winthrop, Bos- | to ton; C. Bascom Slemp, Washington; | Count Laszlo Szechenyl Wuhlnglon:l Ogden L. Mills, New York; John F. Carew, New York; Gen. Charles L. Mc- | Cawley, Washington: Woodbury Blair, Charles G. Dawes, Chicago; Fulton Cut- | ting, New York: Clarence Mackay, New | . York; Stephen Crosby, Walter H. New- | ton, Minneapolis; Charles P. Ligh! ‘Washington; Henry P. Fletcher, Gi i Castle, Pa.. Leland Harrison, Washing- ton; George Garrett, Isaac Bacharach, Atlantic City; Richard Aldrich, New York: Robert L. Bacon, New York; John N. Garner, Uvalde, Tex.; Bertrand H. Snell, New York; Charles Crisp. Ameri- cus, Ga.; Samuel Rayburn, Bonham, Tex; John Q. Tilson, New Haven, Conn.; John McDuffie, Monroeville, Ala. Pinis Garrett, Dresden, Tenn.; Will Rogers, Beverly Hills, Calif.; Will R. Wood, Lafayette, Ind.; John W. Geary, | Aest Tagker, Chicago: Fleming New-} , Washington. All members of the delegations from | the United States Senate and House | of Representatives also acted as honor- | ary pallbearers. Colored Prisoner Caught. ‘WILMINGTON, Del,, April 11 (#).—| Scarcely more than 24 hours after his| escape from jail at Elkton, Md., vherel he was serv sentence for larceny, Everett Valentine, colcred, was captured | here today and returned to Maryland authorities, Local police were advised yesterday that Valentine had escaped and was be- lieved to be fleeing in the direction of | Wilmington. Artist Who Painted| Longworth Portrait| Returns to America Baron Doblhoff Says| Speaker Looked Forward | to Another Term. By the Associated Press. 1 NEW YORK, April 11.—Baron Robert Doblhoff, Austrian artist, who painted two portraits of the late Nicholas Long- | worth, one of which will hang in the Speakers' gallery in Washington, re- turned to the United States on the liner Albert Ballin today. The baron spent nine months in | the United States in 1030 and did a portrait of Speaker Longworth for Bee- man Dawes, brother of Gen. Charles | G. Dawes, Ambassador to Great Britain. | He said Longworth liked the portrait so | well that he wanted Baron Doblhoff to do another which eventually would hang in the Speakers’ galle The baron said the portrait was painted upon Government requisition and that payment was made from a special congressional fund “When the portrait was done” the | baron said, “Mr. Longworth said to me: | ‘I do not know but what I have been hasty in having the portrait done. I still have three years to serve as Speaker and when that is done I shall prob-| ably be Speaker again for another pect to wag the Regulars to such an | extent. Delay Seen Advisable. | Until the Republican leaders return Washington the first of this week, as some of them are expected to do, it may not be known whether intensive cam- paigns fof the nomination of this or that candidate for the speakership will go forward immediately or wait awhile. Some of the Republican members of the House said yesterday, however, they be- lieved it would be the wiser course not now to line up for any candidate, but | to hold the matter in abeyance until| next November. Changing conditions in the country, perhaps with improvi ment in’ btusiness conditions and better conditions on the farm, might give a different complexion to the Speakership fight in the House itself. The candi- date selected by the Republicans at that time might be different from the can- didate who was picked today. While it has been a customary thing | for majority leaders of their parties to| succeed to the Speakership in the House, when occasion arose, it has noi been invariably the custom. It was suggested that if Col. Tilson were not picked for the Speakership nomination, he would certainly hold on_ to the leadership of his party in the House, a most important post. If he becomes the nominee for Speaker, as he may very well become, then the Republicans must find another floor leader. There are likely to be as many aspirants for that post as for the Speakership. Among the Republicans mentioned for the speakership nomination is Rep- resentative Will R. Wood of Indiana, | chairman of the Appropriations Com- mittee and also chairman of the Re-‘ publican Congressional Campaign Com- mittee. Those are both important posts and Mr. Wood doubtless would be loath | to give them up even for a chance at the speakership. Dickering Is Expected. Before the election of Speaker, all kinds of dickering will go forward with | the Progressive group seeking to win lative program and in reform of the House rules. Befare the death of Mr. Longworth threats were made by in- | dividual Progressives to jump the res- ervation if their desires were not met. Party lines, however, are more nearly occasions. It gives the insurgent a sonal benefit. | Regular Republicans in Wisconsin say that the successor of the late Henry | Allen Cooper in the House will be a | Republican beyond & doubt. They hope also to be able to elect a “stal- wart” Republican in place of Mr. Cooper, who was allied with the La Follette wing of the party. The old Cooper district holds many regular Re- publicans. Mrs. Harry E. Thomas, Re publican national committeewoman for Wisconsin, issued a statement through the Republican National Committee last night declaring that the trend in the Badger State was toward regular Re- publicanism. “President Hoover,” sald Mrs. Thom- | as, “will again recelve the electoral | vote of Wisconsin in 1932. We car- ried the State for him by 93,946 votes | in 1928, and it is certain he will re- | ceive a very substantial majority for | | re-election next year. Says Wisconsin Regular. “While apparently little notice has been taken of it in the East, we had a four years RECKING Building Material Bargains TEARING DOWN 2 City Blocks for U. S. DOORS very important election last week with | SALE! Arrangements are being made for the | ymous telegram from Chicago. | annual convention and fellowship din- | | ner on April 21 of the Distriat af Co- | lumbia Parents and Teachers’ | ation, of which Mrs. Joseph N. Saunders | #ccording to Sheriff Hopkins, president. The conv problems in the s to 3:30 o'clock is Paul Hoove! Ransdeil of Louisiana and Miss Eileen Haltigan, girl winner of last year's ora- SAUNDERS. Bowles is chairman Washington former Senator Joseph torical contest in the District. Music will be furnished by the glee Associ- ntion, which will deal with | hools, wil be from 104 slain - gunman. the Wilson Normal | School, flollowed by the dinner in the | the name of the other bandit, explain- | auditorium of the National Press Club. |ing he was related to her, the sheriff fois s ts_for both thi charge of arrangements for e | convention and dinner, while Mrs. Louis | of the underworld, intimated the wives B. Castell has charge of the dinner|of two of the robbers also have crim- reservations. Wooton, spondent of the New Orleans Times- Picayune, will be the toastmaster at the dinner and the speakers include Col Campbell Hodges, corT aide to President GUNMENSIDENTITY 'KNOWN' 70 SHERIFF ;0fficers Continue Search for Two—Leader to Be Buried in “Potters Field.” Armed with what they consider def- inite knowledge of the identity of the two gunmen who escaped after their leader had been killed in an attempted }nnldmp of the First National Bank at Upper Marlboro, Prince Georges County authorities last night were continuing | their efforts to bring about the capture lof the fugitives. | Sherift W. Curtis Hopkins, convinced the bandits had eluded his posses and | made their way out of the county, ask- ed the police in other sections of Mary- land to be on the lookout for them. What are believed to be the robbers’ | names have been turned over to Hop- |kins by Claude H. Owen, assistant cashier of the bank, who frustrated the attempted hold-up by firing three bul- lets into the chest of Joseph Hayes, leader of the robbers. Owen received the names in an anon- ‘The gunmen, according to the wire, have criminal records in the Illinois city. One of the names in the telegram, is the same as that given Washington police by Mrs. Mary Anne Hayes, wife of the Mrs. Hayes, who is about 30 years old, refused to reveal in | said. The telegram, couched in the jargon inal records. Hayes, whose body has been held at an undertaking parior in Ritchie, Md., | will be buried today in the town’s “pot- ters fleld.” His wife, who with her 21- | month-old son, Mickey, has been held at | the House of Detention since the day of the attempted hold-up, told county of- | ficlals she was unable to provide a funeral for him. P, Mrs. Hayes is expected to be released clubs of McKinley and Central High| Monday Schools. ned Other features are being plan in connection with the dinner, which will be one of the largest given by the association. Two former presidents, Mrs. Birney and Mrs. Giles Scott Rafter, will be among the honor guests. the candidate for the State Supreme | 1on Court, Justice Chester A. Fowler, wi ning handily over the La Follette or- ganization candidate, Attorney Gen- | eral John M. Reynolds. A. Gueles WILL PLAN PILGRIMAGE Plans for the association’s annual | pligrimage to the home of Thomas Jefferson at Monticello, Va., will be dis- | cussed at_a meeting of the Association the Preservation of Virginia An- tiquities at the Colonial Dames Club, 1300 New Hampshire avenue, at 3 | o'clock Thursday. Mrs. J. F. Russell and Mrs. Kate B | Al Mr. Fowler | pohhe’ are scheduled to speak. The was appointed to the court by Gov.| hiigrimage this year is expected ta be Kohler him. and later the people elected | made on May 12, He was re-elected with 30,000 ol . | ity over Mr. Feynolds and e’ So- | ey tts e A S e concessions in the matter of the legis- | Cialist candidate. This is simply an- ‘The Committe on Dowell Meek, chairman; | Mrs. Virgil Jackson, Mrs. John Prank Little, Mrs. E C other illustration that the State of | Nelson T. Webster and Mrs. Wisconsin is regular in its politics.’ Despite the fact that the late Speak- | president of the association. | to call it. | er Longworth was re-elected in the {Ohio first district last Fall by only | 3,500 votes, the Republicans say they | adhered to in matters of organization | Can_ elect his successor in the special | of the House and Senate than on other | election, whenever Gov. White decides | pling ex-soldier at Dortmund. . Gere | But | many, again has his dog which led Chance to be “regular” to his own per- | it Was pointed out that it should be | him about | possible to pick a wet Republican can- | cast the pet was returned to its master, The district is “wet.” | Chinn. Mrs. George Tully Vaughn is Radio Finds Blind Man's Dog. As the result of a radio broadcast, a Two days after the broad- didate for the House there who can{n having strayed to a town some dis~ win. tance away @ Keeping ‘Washingéon Men Well Dressed ® N Russian calf . . one’s leaning to- ward a wider toe of sturdy design finds the Highland Straight Tip as fine an D. O, APRIL - 12, 1931—PART ONE. HOOVER DUEBACK || What Mr. Longworth Leaves HERE EARLY TODA Special Train Scheduled to Reach Capital in Time for Breakfast. By the Assoctated Press. ABOARD PRESIDENT HOOVER'S TRAIN AT BLANCHESTER, Ohio, April 11.—President and Mrs. Hoover were enroute back to Washington to- night after attending the funeral of Nicholas Longworth which was frought with memories of the past 30 years of life in the White House. Standing beside the grave in beautiful Spring Grove Cemetery were President and Mrs. Hoover, the present occupants of the Executive Mansion; Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, widow of the late President; Mrs. Longworth, who was married there Kermit and Archibald Roosevelt, who practically wers reared in its shadow, and Robert and Charles Taft, sons of the late President. ‘When Mrs. Longworth left the church, Robert Taft, chief usher, offered his arm but Mrs. Longworth was bearing up well and refusing support, walked steadily to the door of the edifice and down the steps to the automobile. bearer, and the two Roosevelts were active pallbearers. Chatted With Crowd. All together there were eight persons nt who had lived part of their lives beside the white columns of the President’s house. Hundreds gathered around the Hoover special as it prepared to leave Cincin- nati d the ident and his wife stood on the platform chatting with the crowd until the train pulled out. “Were glad to see you in Cincinnati, Mr. President,” a man called. “I am sorry I had to come on so sad a journey,” the President replied, “but I am always glad to come into your city and beautiful State.” ¥ A little girl in the front row told Mrs. Hoover she was in the sixth grade, to which Mrs. Hoover replied: “Fine, I was there once myself and liked it.” Before the train left, the President had the chief of police and other of- ficials come up to be thanked for what he termed “splendid handling and nice treatment of us.” Due Early Sunday. Postmaster General Brown, an Ohioan, who was with the President, found a number of friends in the crowd with whom he talked until the train left. The special is due back in Washington early Sunday in time for the President | to have breakfast in the White House. Monday he begins a round of speech. making by appearing before the annual meeting of the American Red Cross in welcoming address. Tuesday he has an other busy day, a speech at noon lt] the Pan-American Union, a base ball game in the afterncon and a radio | speech on the Tuskegee anniversary a night, A large crowd greeted the Presiden! at Chillicothe, and he gave his auto. graph to a dozen or more persons who were able to reach him. The Chief Executive chatted with persons standing near the platform. CALHOUNS ANSWER SUIT OF SCULPTOR' Couple Denies Noble Conceived Me- morial Idea—Congpiracy Hear- ing Is Next Week. Capt. and Mrs. C. C. Calhoun have filed in District Supreme Court their answer to the $250,000 damage suit brought against them by W. Clark Noble, local sculptor, who charged fail- ure to carry out a contract for con- struction of a memorial to womanhood. The memorial was to be erected by the ‘Women's Universal Alliance. Through Attorney W. Gwynn Gardi- ner, the defendants deny that Noble | had conceived the idea of the memo- rial and assert the project was two years old before he was brought into it. They also deny recelving large sums of money as contributions to the proposed memcrial, Mrs, Calhoun contending she financed the matter herself. Noble's design had never been of- ficlally adopted by the Women's Uni- versal Alliance, the defendants stated, and the agreement was only to use his design for illustrative purposes, the court is informed. The criminal charge of & conspiracy to blackmail, which grew out of the matter last August, is scheduled for hearing early next week. Noble, his wife, and three others are named in the | F]nrlnl and _enjoyin; {such a master of it. |and irresponsible “man of the world” conspiracy indictment. §ron\, NEW YORK AVENUE ot HE i@g ifi @ Keeping Washington Men Well Dressed ® For One Thing, the Memory of a Personality That Overshadowed a Job and Remained Its Master. BY WILLIAM HARD. It was a notable and an extraordi- nary thing in Nicholas Longworth that no matter how great his public aspects became, his private aspects remained still greater. He lived in a country in which men tend to get dominated and dwarfed by their jobs. They tend, all too often, to be power men or railroad men or steel men or tintack men or sheep-dip men more than they are human beings at large. They have this tendency also in politics. They arrive almost at knowing nothing but politics, talking nothing but politics, being nothing but politics. It was never so with Nicholas Longworth. Nicholas Longworth always seemed to be a great gentleman bent upon ex- g the process of iving itself, and doing politics inciden- tally with his left hand. When you met him, you did not meet a mecha- nism of statesmanship. You met a man who had chosen for some hours of each day to be a statesman. Leaves Personality Behind. It was, therefore, that you could love him as you could love hardly anybody else in the fleld of public affairs. His nature overlapped public affairs. Pub- lic affairs was but a corner of him. What he did in public affairs will dim with the decades. He, as long as any- body that knew him survives, will not. | All men leave some achievements, all to fade. Few men leave a personality that, after them, is a presence. Long- worth has done so. It was, indeed, his detachment from | politics that really enabled him to be | He could look at | it objectively. ~Though Inside it, he could look at it also from the outside. He did politics in the middle of the day. The rest of the time he was what his critics called frivolous. He en- joyed, he laughed, he went to parties, he exchanged amenities and joculari- ties, he played cards, he listened to music, he performed music, he en- countered people, he studied human natire, he relaxed. At 12 midnight he might seem to be the most unburdened on elther side of the Atlantic Ocean. Cool, Complete Master. At 12 noon next day in the House of Representatives, when he took the gavel at the Speaker's desk, he was the se- rious, cool, complete master of every detail of what would be done during the afternoon. The contrast between the reveling “Nick” of the nighttime and the commanding and controlling “Nick” of the ensuing daytime was one of the incredible miracles of contempo- rary Washington. It was thought in-| credible. It was, in truth, for him| wholly logical and natural. Possessing a physical constitution that year after year was able to defy he ravages of late hours, he gained from his relaxations a fresh, amused serenity every morning for viewing and | estimating and forecasting the plays of | politics and the outcomes of parliamen- tary maneuvers and manipulations. As n ordinary member of the House, be- fore he was Speaker, he had never per- itted himself to become the chair-| man of an important committee. That way, he thought, lay the fate of be-| coming & specialized expert on some| set of detalls. tied to any details except those of the management of the whole House. He desired to envisage and operate the to- tal of the game. He played society in| the evening. In the morning he got | up and, with 435 members of the House | for his pieces, played chess. Knew Personnel and Raules. ‘ He became that game's unparalleled contemporay master. His one bookish trait was that he had read—and read— and read—the rules of procedure of the | House. His one trait of specialization, easy for him, was that he had studied— | and studled—and studied—the char- | acters of the members of the House.| With this equipment of knowledge of procedure and of knowledge of person- nel he ruled. | But he ruled because he also, declin- | ing to be a detailed expert on any given legislative topic and keeping_even ms} Do doodeis oo dostoeddoaty <3 Specializing in { Perfect Also complete line of stand- ard and all-American made watches. Shop at the friendly store— you're always greeted with a ;mlle—wlth no obligation to uy. Charge Accounts Invited M. Wurtzburger Co. Ll 901 G Sl..N.W. . O o % o% % LA XXX EXEIXTXIXIX XX 1204 0y o”:‘ poode el 0 " X o K3 03 IXTX % Y ogoede X3 %0 % o%% o e e RS K3 UNLAP Hats for Spring are as correct as Bond Street and as stylish as Park Ave- nue. They have that superior look that makes for perfect appearance. Dunlap Hats job of composite legisiative leadership at arm’s from his own inner life, could every morning look at the mem- bership of the House of Representatives, includj lf, as a new objective problem to be solved in the midst of the humors of reality. He thus became, through taking itics, as it seemed, lightly, the most astute political phy- chologist in the Capital City. This writer will on that int re- member always most especially a con- versation that happened at the be- ginning of e last session of the Con- gress between the Speaker and a mem- ber of the President’s cabinet. The Speaker outlined the prospective results of the session. The member of the cabinet was horrified. “Can you, he 1 "l\lpfiofl such things?” “I can- replied the Speaker, “support I am against most of them. I am not umn‘ you, though, what I want. I am telling ‘what will hap- pen, so that you can guide yourself ac- cordingly.” Prophesy Came True. ‘The things that the Speaker thus prophesied did happen. The member of the cabinet did not—emphatically not— guide himself accordingly. The Speaker | did. The member of the cabinet got several times cast on the rocks. The Speaker rode out the storm with at least his eyebrows above the waves. Hs could never have done so, this writer thinks, had he not always held himself a bit aloof from, a bit ironi- cally and laughingly poised over, his dally working tasks. In_ that posture he did not over-estimate his own prin- ciples and preferences and did not wreck himself or his party majority in the House by pressing those principles | and preferences to the ridiculous point or “rule or ruin.” He will be much remembered for his large share in restoring the House of Representatives to its pristine prestige, relatively to the Senate, on Capitol hill. How could he do it? Only by keeping his party majority in the House intact and loyal. How could he do that? Only by judicious firmness plus—very plus— judicious compromise. How could he see when compromise was desirable? By detachment, by realism, and by that trait without which nobody has realism— humor. And how did he cherish and nourish and sustain that humor? By being always Nick Longworth the human being before he was Mr. Speaker Long- worth the practitioner of the trade of statecraft. By being, one might almost say, irresponsible before he was re- sponsible. He leaves us the large lesson that avoldance of succumbing to a job is the rightest route to the mastery of it. (Copyright. 1931.) Kemmerer Ends Peru Study. LIMA, Peru, April 11 (#) —Prof. Ed- win W. Kemmerer of Princeton Univer- sity, who has been here three months studying Peruvian finances, said today the work of his mission was virtually concluded and he would sail for the United States April 21. His report, he said, would include pro- posals regarding reorganization of the national treasury and enactment of legislation to establish a central re- He never wished to be |serve bank, to provide for an income | ax and to maks certain other changes in the Peruvian financial system. POLICE OF CHICAGO GIVEN FREE HAND Mayor Cermak Says Politics and Department Have Been Divorced. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, April 11.—In the midst of preparations for a week's vacation in the Southland, Mayor Anton J. Cermak today announced “the Police Department and politics are per- manently divorced.” The mayor ordered acting Commis- sioner John H. Alcock to run the Police Department with a “free hand” and told him he was “free of any political pressure.” “Any men who are in plain clothes | and in the Detective Bureau through | the influence of politics should be put back in uniform,” said the Democratic leader, who was put in the mayor's office by the largest majority ever gl\'cen 11 n-;uyornluundldlu. ‘ommissioner Alcock said he woul hold district captains peuon:lly r:s sponsible for clamping the lid down on all illegal activities. “I told Alcock he was free from political pressure and that he was re- :E?z;lnble to no one but me” Csrmak | said. | The mayor, however, refused to dis- | cuss Alcock’s retention after his offi- | cial inauguration April 22—at which | time, the complete cabinet will be an- nognced‘ mmett Whealan, Democrat, ;elecud president of the Cook COH::; | Board at today's meeting, succeeding ‘gen,n;k‘ m:hose resignation accom- | panie assumptio: yoral | duties Thursda; Pt SR N o Rail Mill Plant Closed. 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