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A—16 s Congressional Devises Syste i T0 ALL LINKSMEN UT at Congressional, where a system that appears the best yet each month in the year, each card club so each player may be rated on gcoring of the player. The new scheme Will Supersede Best Score Method of Calculation Most Clubs Use. handicaps really count on that lengthy golf course, the boys in charge of rankings devised for rating a golfer on what he should do. A new handicap rack is being set to have space for a round of golf each day of each month. The whole idea is to set up a cross-section of the his average game and not his best game. Heretofore handicap systems have will rate the golfer not on his best game, but on his average game, which 18 something altogether apart from his NEW PLAN 15 FAR BY W. McCALLUM. are getting ready for installation of up in the golf shop with cards for average game of every golfer in the been arranged on the basis of the best best game. Believe Plan Will Work Well. “WE FIND, and all handicap chair- men find, that golfers do not always turn in their best scores, not with the intention of avoiding a low handicap, but because they overlook this little matter,” Roland MacKen- zie, club pro, said. “So we have arranged to have every player turn in every score he makes, good or bad, so we may arrive ai a cross-section of his game. It will make our handicaps higher at Con- gressional than at other clubs, but we believe it will work out better in our own club.” Turkey Tourney Planned. UP AT Rock Creek Park Manager Ed Burns is going forward with plans for a turkey tournament, to be | played during November on dates to| be set later. The tourney will not be played on any given series of dates, Burns says, but several days will be allowed for each match, following the qualifying round to be played about November 4. Two of MacKenzie's aides in the golf shop at Congressional, having nothing much to do on their day off, played themselves 84 holes of goll between dawn and dark. They were not trying to set a marathon record either, but when Warner Grey and Sammy Hill stepped out early in the morning they decided to hit a few | golf balls. They kept on hitting 'em for four complete rounds and 12 holes | Both of them scored | X in addition. ground 80 for a single round. HOUNDS TO BE CAST IN FAIRLAND TRIALS| Maryland Fox Hunters Will Hold Five-Day Meet—Two Classes Are Scheduled. Spectal Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE‘ Md., October 16.—W. B. F. Johnson of Midlothian, Va., will be master of hounds at the an- nual fleld trials of the Maryland Fox- | hunters' Association, to be held Octo- ber 21-25, with the Fairland Riding sand Hunt Club, near Fairland, as headquarters, Mrs. J. Banks Berry of Rockville, secretary-treasurer, has an- nounced. Judges will be: Casting, W. B. Ran- dall of Washington; horseback. Ev- erett Beall and George Willson of Lay Hill, Willard Marlow of Beltsville, Cadwill Seine of North Carolina, Ar- thur Jones of Brinklow and George Ward; in automobiles, John A. Wheeler of Burnt Mills and John Smith of Laurel. . The hounds will be cast each morn- ing at 6:45 o'clock. Derby entrants will be marked at the Fairland Club Sunday afternoon, when entries for the classes will close, and the all-age hounds will be marked | Tuesday afternoon, when entries for this event will close. The derby classes are scheduled for | Monday and Tuesday and the all-age trials for the three other days. The annual bench show to be held | in connection with the trials will be; staged at the club Tuesday afternoon | and will be open to all hounds en- tered for the trials. The judge will + Emmett Trot of Owings Mill, Md. Approximately 150 of the finest hounds in this part of the country will participate in the various events. BASKET CHAMPS DRILL Twin Oaks Black Hawks to Hold First Workout Tomorrow. Twin Oaks Black Hawks, 145-pound District A. A. U. basket ball cham- plons, will hold their initial practice tomorrow night at Roosevelt High Bchool at 8:30 o'clock. Frank and Bob Schaeffer, Joe and Charlie Hunter, Ralph Goldberg, Wal- ter Olverson, George Lassise and Harry Cole are requested to report to Manager Frank Ciarronti. BASKET LEAGUE MEETS. ‘Managers of unlimited quints desir- ing to enter the Heurich Basket Ball League this season are urged to at- tend a meeting Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Heurich gym, Twenty-sixth and ‘Water streets. ‘Navy Has ‘Blue PORTS. by W. | | ITH four women's golf championships in progress, still another feminine tourney will be played to- | morrow and Friday. This one is at Kenwood, where the women of the club are to compete over the 36-hole | match play against par route for the {C. 8. Teal Trophy. The trophy was presented last year. will be played each of the two days. Pairings for the tourney follow: 9:30 Mrs. R Huff and Mrs er Mor Mrs. H._Parker: :40. Mrs. Theodore M:s. E. E_Olsen: ¢ yce and Mrs T. R. Ho nia Pope and Mrs Leo Wal R. E. Hotze and Mrs. J. C. ale: 10:05 'Mrs. ¥, C. Meier. Mrs. R. C. Miller and Mrs, Ford. UST as was the case several years ago when Indian Spring and Co- | lumbia reached the semi-final round and had to decide on a course to play the match, captains of the golf teams at Indian Spring and Kenwood are to flip a coin late this week to decide on which layout they will meet on next Sunday in the penultimate round of the Maryland State team champion- ships. Roger Peacock heads the In- | dian Spring team, twice victors in the | State tourney, while Maury Fitzgerald | heads the Kenwood outfit. DID you ever see a No. 4 iron shot hit for a carry of 220 yards? Had | you been out at Congressional yester- | day you would have seen it done. From | the bunker at the right of the fair- way at the eighth hole at Congres- | the finest shots we ever have seen, the carry, 220 yards away, with a tool that is intended for a distance of about 170 yards. He also played the lengthy thirteenth with a drive and an iron. TWO Washington lads are to be P. G. A. championship, which gets under way tomorrow at Oklahoma City. Al Houghton, Washington prod- uct, who now registers from Virginia Beach, is an automatic qualifier, while Cliff Spencer of Beaver Dam, who is getting to be just about the best scoring pro around the Capital, also is at Oklahoma City. IT looks like another club champion- ship for Howard Nordlinger at Woodmont. Howard, seven times win- " ner of the club title, meets Joe Gins in one semi-final over the coming week end, while Melvin Kraft and Bobby Baum, persistent challengers for the title, clash in the other semi- final. playing second-round matches in their club championship tourna- ments today. with the final round scheduled in three gf the tourneys to- morrow. At Columbia, where Mrs. B. C. Hartig, medalist, fell before Mrs. Norman B. Frost, Mrs. Frost met Mrs. George B. McGinty and Mrs. James ‘W. Beller met Mrs. H. R. Quinter. Mrs. David H. Clark, former mid- Atlantic and Virginia champion, back on her game again, shot a 79 in the first round of the Army-Navy Club title tourney yesterday to win handily and today met Mrs. Philip Cole. The other semi-final lay between Mrs. C. S. Stern, the medalist, and Mrs. R. G. Guyer. At Washington Mrs. W. S. Masden and Mrs. J. E. McCabe, comedalists, moved snfoothly through their first match round and may meet in the final round tomorrow. Mrs. Mesden defeated Mrs. G. C. Roney, 3 and 2, s, Yale Variety Coach Hamilton Suffers as “B” Squad, Using Eli Plays, Makes Varsity Look Bad. By the Associated Press. NNAPOLIS, Md., October 16. —AIll was not well on the Navy gridiron today—and Head Coach Tom Hamil- ton was developing a distinct case of Yale “blues.” The reason: Using Yale plays, the Navy “B” squad made short shrift of the varsity yesterday in a lengthy practice period which ended under floodlights. The “B” eleven, fresh from de- tailed study and practice of ElN strategy, went into the air and through the varsity line for good gains. The second varsity fared little better, with a “B” back pick- ing up 25 yards on the first play. ‘The Yale plays worked for gains steadily, but not spectacularly, Hamilton observed. ' Today he put the Tars through another lengthy session, giving them a second dose of the same medicine. Navy's eleven starts its New England pilgrimage tomorrow. Two battalions of Midshipmen, which will constitute the cheering section, wil! entrain for New Haven Friday night, Net Star Now in Business Dorothy Round, former Wimbiedon tennis champion, is shown as she outfitted one of her first customers in a London dress firm, with which she has just become affiliated in starting a business career.—A. P. Photo. Eighteen holes ! P- | champions. | sional Roland MacKenzie hit one of | smacking the ball on the green on| in the thick of the scrap for the | WOMAN golfers of four clubs were | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, R.MECALLUM | while Mrs. McCabe defeated Mrs. Fred | | Nesbit, 5 and 4. | | There were no upsets in the first | | round of the Congressional title tour- | ney and today’s matches found Mrs. “Don Scott, the medalist, meeting Mrs. | Roland MacKenzie, Mrs. F. G. Awalt clashing with Mrs. J. J. McCarthy, | Miss Helen Dettweiier meeting Mrs. | C. S. Teal and Mrs. J. F. Dowdall | meeting Mrs. J. O. Rhyne. Both Mrs. | Dowdall and Mrs. REyne are former | Allen B. Mill scored a 77 to win the | gross prize in the tourney staged at | Indian Spring by the procurement di- | vision of the Public Works Admin- istration. W. W. Alsup was next with 78. J. M. Tammany won the net Runyan Learns Course at Oklahoma City Demands By the Associated Press. KLAHOMA CITY, October al golf stars, here for the national P. G. A. tourna- day on a course that commanded re- spect for its exactness. Hills course, over which the battle for the professional crown starts tomor- the defending champion. “I enjoyed it very much,” said the mite after turning in a 71, one over par. “It is all a matter of direction. it requires great accuracy.” Taking Final Tune-ups. day with the clacking of club on | ball as the big shois of golidom got in There were all the big names in golf—Walter Hagen, Gene Sarazen, Revolta, Milwaukee; Craig Wood, Deal, N. J.; Henry Picard, Hershey, Pa., the a host of others. The official entry list was 122, It Ryder Cup team. Only Olin Dutra of Chicago was missing today. day only a few of the late arrivals kept scores. Most of them were a stroke cago, and Horton Smith bagged a 72 | and a 73 respectively. a 73 and Billy Burke, Cleveland, a 76. Charley Lacey, Chicago, hit some MUST BE ON LINE Great Accuracy. 16.—The Nation’s profession- ment, took their final warm-up to= The general opinion of the Twin row, was summed up by Paul Runyan, 140-pound package of golfing dyna- 1t is a very tight course, not long, but 'HE tree-studded course echoed to-| their final practice licks. Leo Diegel, Horton Smith, Johnny Nation's low scorer for the year, and contained all the members of the 1In their first practice rounds yester- or 5o over par 70. Frank Walsh, Chi- Johnnie Farrell of New Jersey took scorching tee shots to garner a 71. SWIM HOPEFULS REPORT Twenty-five natators reported to Coach Dallas Shirley yesterday as the Western High School swimming team started training at the Y. M. C. A. Pool. Three veterans, Hunter Rein- burg, Ed Murphy and David Sherline, form the nucleus of the team, which will be managed by Carroll Thomas. Tentative meets have been arranged with Central, Baltimore Poly, Friends’ School of Baltimore, Calvert School of Baltimore, Massanutten Military Academy and the local Y. M. C. A, SHOW FOOT BALL FILM. “Foot Ball Teamwork,” a movie short showing fundamentals of the grid game as executed by the Chicago | Bears, will be viewed by foot ball coaches from local colleges and high schools tomorrow night at the Palace award with 100—30—70. IN CHESS BY FRANK HE second round of the tourna-! ment for the championship of the Capital City Chess Club | furnished two surprises. The game of principal interest was between | Martin C. Stark, present champion, land D. H. Mugridge. Stark did the unusual by making a blunder, which cost him & rook, and he resigned on his twenty-seventh move. Mugridge | thus retains his hold on first place. The other surprise was furnished by F. B. Walker, who made V. L. Eaton lower his colors, the game going 61 !moves and requiring two sessions. | Walker played his favorite, the center- | | counter gambit. He won a pawn on| his twenty-seventh move and the ex-| |change on his thirty-fourth move, | | which gave him an easy victory. Eaton | laid traps to win a piece, and also the | | queen, but they were ineffective, | The standing: V. M. L. C. %1% Y2 1% | Eaton Stark L. 0 1 | DH.Mug'dge F.B. Walker 1 } IN THE minor tournament of the Chess Club the results were as fol- | | lows: Rubin won his game from Bol- | | ton, postponed from the first round. In | the second round Gay and Davis drew, | Flynn won from Van Horn, Lang lost | to Gleason and the games between Weeks and Rubin and Bolton and Stark were postponed. In a game ad- vanced from the seventh round Rubin defeated Van Horn. The present standing: w. L Rubin. 2 0 Gay 1% FA H JA. Davis_ 1 C. . Stark 1 E. M. Weeks 1 BARNIE F. WINKELMAN of Phila- delphia, well known as a master chess player, who ranks high in tour- naments in Philadelphia and in the Western Chess Association and is as- sociate editor of the Chess Review, | gave & simultaneous exhibition at the Jewish Community Center on the eve- | ning of October 5. He was opposed by | 24 players, many of them quite strong. Only one game was lost by him, and he won 15 and drew 8, quite a credit- able showing. y; Winkelman won from A. C. Hoff- man, W. A. James, G. W. Hervey, W. | R. Carpenter, C. W. Pete, D. 8. Burch, W. E. Bryant, J R. Moore, Paul Chiora, Joe Gorodsky, J. Embretson, F. A. Bol- ton, Comdr. Charles S. Seeley, U. S. N.; Leonard Menkoff, A. Seidenber; total, 15. He lost to E. Schuman—1. He drew with H. Richardson, M. C. McDowell, S. Naidell, Irvin Belt, W. Rosett, Max Kessler, Mrs. H. E. Kit- tredge, A. J. Schneider; total, 8. Other exhibitions will be given at the Jewish Community Center, among the players mentioned to follow being Frank J. Marshall, Isaac Kashdan, Samuel Reshevsky and A. W. Drake, all of whom are in the forefront of American chess. ALTER F."JAMES, secretary and tournament director of the Cor- respondence Chess League of America, 219 East Main street, Cherokee, Iowa, is making another request for players to participate in the correspondence match between England and America. He says the match will be fought with 1,000 players on & side. He says Eng- land is putting on a nation-wide ad- vertising campaign, and that enthu- slasm over the event is running hign. It is expected that American and British masters will conduct the top boards. Membership in the Corre- spondence League is not required in order to play. The local club is being asked to be represented by a division. The closing date for entries is Oc- r (% | after five hours of playing he had | and later with Herman E. Kittredge, . | tion, Theater. CIRCLES | B. WALKE! tober 31. The object of the match is to popularize chess in England and America. The class of an entrant, A, B or C, should be stated. Pairing will be made accordingly. 'HE world championship match be. tween Dr. Alexander Alekhine present champion, and Dr. Max Euwe is under way at Amsterdam, Holland. The players are in fine fettle; Dr. Alekhine played for France in nearly all the matches at Warsaw and Dr. Euwe trained in Holland with two ex- perts from Austria. In the first game Euwe adopted the Slav defense and was defeated in 30 moves. Dr. Euwe turned the tables in the second game. The champlon played boldly. He lost the advantage in the early part of the game and resigned in 45 moves. Euwe is reported to have done some clever finessing in this game. Two sessions were required for the second game, five | hours being clocked in the first session. The third game of the match also was played at Amsterdam. Alekhine had first move, and played P-K4. Euwe played the French defense and ap- peared to get a good development. However, the champion pressed the at- tack, and when adjournment was had gained two pawns. The queens and two rooks apiece still were on the board. Euwe resigned on his forty- first turn without resuming play. Alekhine thus leads by the score of 2to 1. ‘The fourth game is to be contested at The Hague. "THE STAR has received a communi- cation from Maud G. Sewall, 2613 University place, Adams 0449, setting forth that for several years efforts have been made to encourage chess playing among the women through a group which met first with Charlotte Haliet with Mr. Mundelle as adviser and coach. She states that the ladies wou:d be glad to see the movement estab- lished on a more permanent basis than has been attained. Women who are interested are invited to get in touch with either Mrs. Kittredge at 808 Twenty-second street, West 2603-W, or Miss Sewall at the address given above, Miss Sewall also asks whether the Capi- tal City Chess Club could be inter- ested in sponsoring a woman's sec- —_— HESSICKS REORGANIZE 150-Pound Team Will Hold First Practice Next Sunday. Reorganization of the Hessick A. C. 150-pound eleven now is under way, and all candidates are requested to report for practice Sunday at 11 o'clock at Taft recreation field. Bob Mathias, “Spud” McMahon and Irving Eppert are asked to report. The manager of the Delta Phi Sigma team, which is challenged by Hessicks, :;fi reach Mickey Simons at North LAURELRACES DAILY UNTIL OCT.30% 25 Minutes by Special B. & O. Trains leaving Union Station 12:10 and 12:35 P.M. T T D. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1935. HE woods are full of hounds and bird dogs these days; even the official hunting season does not open for some time yet. The occasional shot heard, pre- sumably, is target practice only. The dog that is “broke,” the puppy that now is in great demand. The dog that can get somewhere in the fleld trials that are scheduled for early dates is the hero of the month. And talking about heroes, attain- ments at the bench show do not dis- qualify a dog from attainments in heroism. Champion Lucason of Ash- tead o'Bellhaven, the collie that set & record by going best of breed three times in a row in Madison Square Garden, by going best of breed, best in group, and best in show on numer- ous other occasions, recently acted the hero when he plunged into the Shrewsbury River near Red Bank, N. J., and towed to shore & 10-year-old ’ as Women’s and Men’s Ranking Loops Roll. weekly beatings tonight and tomorrow when the two Dis- men’s, continue their wide-open cam- paign for the city’s foremost bowling Undefeated in two matches, the champion Rosslyn girls will attempt Convention Hall tonight when they tackle the Lucky Strike five in the Swanee, in second place and holder of two early-season records, meets have broken into the limelight by their 587 game and 1,616 set, neither without Ella Limerick, their star, who is ill, the Swanee girls have proven both by their standing and pinfall. Tonight's other matches find Ar- Stars Take Drives Tonight UCKPINS will take their worst D trict league, womens’. and honors. to make it nine straight games at week’s feature. Temple at Rosslyn. The runners-up of which has been threatened. Even the “surprise” team of the league, cadia and the Bill Woods rolling side meeting Convention Hall. Arcadias Roll Temples. TOMORROW evening the men re- sume the battling of the fast pace which has kicked last season's | championship Occidental team off the top perch and established in its place the Arcadia team, which has done the kicking. Decisively trouncing Occidental last week in three games, Arcadia will op- pose Northeast Temple, winner of only one game in three nights’ shoot- ing. The league leaders will be roll- ing on their own drives at Fourteenth and Park road. Occidental, however, faces just as tough an opponent as it met last week, for its foe is none other than Mike Rinaldi’s Grand Central Valet team, holder of early-season pinfall marks. Valet's game of 680 and set of 1894 has not been approached and they seem in no mood to stop there. Heurich’s Brewers, in second place, face Lucky Strike at Georgetown Recreation in the other match, Espey Has 174 Game. EDD]E ESPEY'S 174 game at Arcadia last night during the progress of a Columbia Heights League fray gives local pinmen a mark to shoot at all season . . . It may prove the best record of the 1935-6 campaign . . . Hessick Coal Co. continues to lead the Columbia Heights loop, winning two of three games with Highway .. . The 365 set of John Mosley of Li- | brary featured the Government League | matches . + + but Penfold's 133 was high game. — COURT MANAGERS MEET Heurich League Will Be Formed Monday With 12 Teams. Managers of local amateur basket ball teams are invited to attend a meeting Monday of the Heurich Cup Series Arrangement Committee to or- ganize the second annual league. The | confab will be held in the Heurich gymnasium at 7:30 o'clock. Competition in the 12-team circuit will start the second Sunday in No- vember, with three games each Sun- day and other contests throughout the | week. The Heurich gymnasium will be the scene of all games. Managers who expect to be present Monday are requested to call West 1600. — VIRGINIA SPEEDING UP | Will Use St. John's to Tune for Conference Rivals, UNIVERSITY, Va, October 16.— | Saturday will be Charlottesville-Al- bemarle day in Scott Stadium, where Virginia plays St. John's of Annapolis. Tickets will be sold for 55 cents. Coach Gus Tebell is giving consid- |erable attention to speeding up the Cavalier attack. The Cavaliers will try some new wrinkles against St. }John‘s, looking ahead to the five games with Southern Conference rivals which they must play starting with V. M. L here on October 26. Press Box (Continued from Fourteenth Page.) sentiments of a local Ohio State alum- nus—he should stick to the dual task of manicuring trees and administer- ing the government. The problem might be put this way: Needy students should be free to work their way through college, and student athletes should be especially encouraged to do so because they entertain thousands of people, fatten the athletic fund and contribute no little to the gayety of alumni banquets and the untrammeled purchase of light wines, booze and bicarbonate of soda. Luckily, the Ohio foot ball players have not taken offense at Gov, Davey’s sardonic state- ment. ©One more such statement, however, might well touch off their tempers and bring a counter blast from the A. F. of L—for the State's wage scale is anything but high. (oonyrl:at. 1935. by the North American ewspaper Alliance, Inc.) IMPORTANT NOTICE To Foot Ball Fans NAVY-NOTRE DAME Foot Ball Game Baltimore, Md. October 26th Round-trip railroad fare, $1.25. Special train will leave Wash- ington 12:00 noon, arrive Bal- timore 12:45 P.M. Special ar- rangements made for busses to transfer our patrons from the station at Baltimore to the Stadium and return. Football tickets, as well as railroad and bus tickets, on sale at City Ticket Office, 613 14th St. N.W.,, telephone DIstrict 1424, PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD by side and the National Beer five | boy whose rowboat had overturned. | Although Lucason had never swum before, he started for the river as |soon as he saw what had happened, |and even before his handler ordered ‘hxm to “get him.” 1SANC‘!‘ION shows seem to be the order of the day around here. September saw a crackerjack at Pikes- ville. St. Margaret's Hunt has one will see one in nearby Virginia. The | St. Margaret show holds more than | the usual interest for local fanciers, |as the judges include Mrs. Richard | H. Johnston of Ruffcote Kennels for all terriers, except miniature schnau- zers; Mrs. R. C. Birney of Aspin Hill, for Boston terriers and miniature schnauzers: J. A. Johnson for chows, and Frank Downing, vice president of the National Capital Club, for all other breeds and best in show, There will be classes for junior is “running good,” is the dog that | | season. | Washington will be treated to a one- scheduled for October 19. November | SPORT m fo Base Golf Handicap on Playing Average L3 puppy, puppy, novice and limit. Al entries will be post entries, accepted at the gate until 1:30 pm. Club grounds may be reached via Annap- olis Boulevard and Long Inn road. Victoria of Ruffcote, Dandie Din- mont terrier, brought home two more winner’s rosettes, which she won over | the week end of October 5. The first was taken at the Delaware County show, the second at the Montgomery County terrier specialty show. Both clubs are near Philadelphia. MUCH experimenting with various types, brands and varieties of dog feed convinces me that the only substitute for meat in the dog's diet is more meat. Buscuits, meals, canned feeds, all have their place, but are valuable chiefly as supplements to meat, not as substitutes. Grown dogs, especially house dogs, can perhaps live for long periods on manufactured feeds, but the dog that is working, the dog that is hunting. the dog that is breeding, must have | Baltimore, on behalf of the Collie Club of Maryland, asked the club’s permission to sponsor the collie entry and judge as a collie club of Mary- land specialty show. Last year's Wash- ington show saw some of the year's lr)‘enst collies introduced to the show g. BREWERS FACE PALACE Meet in National City League Grid Feature Sunday. ‘Two games in the 150-pound divi- slon of the National City Foot Ball League and another pair of tilts in the 135-pound section will be played Sun- day. Headlining the league program, American Brewers will oppose the Pal- ace eleven in a preliminary game to the Maryland A. C.-Palace unlimited contest at Seat Pleasant. Cleveland and the Cardinal eleven will meet in the other 150-pound tilt. In the 135-pound division the Georgetown Boys’ Club will play Vire ginia Avenue and the Brookland Boys' | Club wiil tackle the Centennials, meats. Beef is best, lamb is good, pork and veal are practically taboo, chicken has no value, fish is very good oc- casionally, but should be fed in greater quantity than beef or lamb. ‘The Old Dominion Kennel Club met October 7 for the first meeting of the The indications are that day, outdoor show. If the weather gods are kind, this will be a big im- provement over the usual two-day, indoor variety. Dogs, especially in quantity, belong outdoors. If the one- day program is accepted the probable date and location will be Saturday, April 18, at Griffith Park. Members present at the first meeting selected a tentative slate of judges, headed by two well-known all-rounders and in- cluding 16 or 17 specialty judges. A surprise was sprung at the meet- ing when Mrs. R. M. 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