New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 6, 1928, Page 12

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MRS, NELLIE ROSS TALKS IN MAIN Wyoming's ex-Governor Attends Democratic Rally Portland, Me., Sept. 6 (®—Mrs. Nellie Tayloe Ross, former governor of Wyoming, and Charles Dana Gib- #on, artist, were the headliners at a democratic yally~in City Hall here: tast might, at which Edward C. Moran, Jr., candidate for governor; Herbert Holmes, candidate for United States Senator, and the Hon. i‘rancis E. Slattery, of Massachu- etts, also spoke. Mrs. Ross raised three major sues in her address Prohibition, farm relief and water power, and rated them apparently in the order named. She maintained that Smith truly for the presidency was supe ior to Hoover. Laying great phasis on prohibition. M reconciled her admitted with Smith's “wetness” on lief that his honesty would compel | him to approach a solution of the issue with an endeavor to end the contest for the greatest good to the greatest nunmiber. Discusses Farm Problem In speaking of the agric ullurdl situation, Mrs. Ross said: “The pl..l. form of the democratic party is co witted to correction of the :lfipu'\ ed condition of agriculture. ( ernor Smith, if he is elected, prom- ises to set in motion machinery to evolve a solution. He promises to call to his aid agricultural exper who know most ahout the um,nu The safeguarding of our national Tesources, er, is another matter that involves the progress of nearly every section of this country. No practical serv- i perhaps than Gov. Smith has rendered his own people in New v York has been more far reaching in | its consequences than his successful | battle to save from selfish private interests the vast water power of New York. 1 shall welcome the day | when this clear headed man ik over this problem.” Not Knocking Hoover “I am not here to disparage the value of Mr. Hoover's public serv- ice in the past, but I do assert my sincere conviction that character of his trajning does mot promise the necessary qualificaticns to deal with the multitudinous responsibilities | p that evolve upon the president of the United States. Gov. Smith, on the other hand, has demonstrated a genius for statecraft that is uni- versally recognized.” In his opening remarkes Mr. son classified himself as a ‘re- formed republican,” and urged the election of Al Smith as a politician rather than Herbert Hoover as & business man. “In Al Smith you have the greatest authority on gov- ernment in the world,” he said, “and his burning passion is to wee ! Now, 1 am| it worked nationally. telling what I heard neighbors say, Elihu George Wickersham.” Curtis Plans to Go Back to Washington Providence, Scpt. 6 (A —Senatol Curtis plans to return to Washing- ton this week-end from his Main: speaking 'trip, without stopping in Rhode Island for a few days of rest, as previously planned, according to an announcement made last night daughter, Mrs. Webster 2nd, of River Point. Mrs. Knight's statement follows an inter- view with her father yesterday dur- ing & rally at Norumbega Park, Auburndale, Mass. Although the republican vice presidential nomince said there was a slight chance of his change in his mind at the last minute, Mrs. Knight declared last evening that she did not expect he would visit the Knight home in Pawtuxet Val- ley this time. two of Root my and It May Be Urgent When your Children Cry | for It o one i drops harm baby remedy. fecl far fow No oon done. for ¢ eate 1o zive you h the for thatt 1 and vou could use in an emorzency ns most ion must be pains—or other suffc without if; some estra hottle, un there witl the honce children, enmes with it it every day. it's that reli ring mothers Never be keep an ta make sure i alw “istoria o'dor that m ton hook prominently water pow- | el Gib- | MAN SICK IN HIS BED ATTACKED BY INTRUDERS Girl Restrained from Calling Police While Father is Punched in Face. Adolph Guidel and John Wojbule- wicz went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Szydlowski,, 66 Smith street, Tuesday night and Guidel as- saulted Walter, according to com- plaint to Officer Eugene Kieffer last the men arrested, however, s0 no ac- | tion was taken. | According to Szydlowski, he was in { bed because of illness when the two | { men, both intoxicated. entered. He ordered them out on account of their condition. he said, but Guidel, |telling his companion to hold Szydlowski, threatened to punch him, Szydlowski called to his daughter to notify a policeman and Wojbulewicz prevented her from leaving while | Guidel, grappling with Szydlowski, punched him in the face and tore his shirt. Szydlowski managed to seize a stick and beat off the attack, | whereupon Guidel and his com- | panion retreated. PLAN T0 ORGANIZE CHURCH IN MEXICO Gatholics Will Undertake a Nationwide Expansion Mexico City, Sept. 6 (UP)—The Mexican National Catholie church, | which now claims to have 370, members, will undertake a nation- | wide organization, according to an by Patriarch announcement made | Jose Joaquin Perez. The churen operates under gov- | ernment supervision and the state- | ment by the venerable patriarc! {who is 78 years old and in an en- | feebled condition—said at there were 32 priests and churches in the federal district and | 11 outside states. | “The National tinue its polic | ligious liberty,” church will con- toward ideal re- the statement said, such as the Pope in Rome until |some Mexican is elevated to the | papacy. Meanwhile we do not de- | sire to establish connection with any other sect.” Refutes Charzes | He refuted charges that the ichurch had been started at instiga- tion of Luis Morones, recently re- ‘plgm-d secretary of commerce and | the political foe of the late gover- |nor Alvaro Obregon. He said the church was organized 50 years ago but that the movement had not been crystallized until 1925, The patriarch of the Mexican National Cathelic church was one of the three—including President {Calles and Obregon — allegedly marked for assassination by re- ligious discontents, He reportedly had died abroad. In the statement he said that the assassination attempt “shows the orce of our work ¢nd the fear it as inspired in the Roman servi- tors." STRESS TOLERANT STAND Unitarian Ministers in Mccting in Decificld, Mass,, Score Pastor Who Attacks Catholics. Deertficld, Mass., Sept. § (UP)— The tolerant stand of the Unitarian church in the matter of a religion and politics were stressed in a reso- lution adopted unanimously here by 79 Unitarian ministers, This action was preceded by an attack on the Rev. Dr. Albert C. Dieffenbach, editor of the Christian Registrar of . Boston, a Unitarian publication, who, in a rccent speech, had been quoted as Roman Catholic should not be elect- cd president of the United States.” Kollowing the speech in question, | Dr. Dieffenbach claimed that he had been misquoted by a press associa- tion other than the United Pre resolution adopted by ers read: “To avert possible misunderstand- ing by the general public as to what we are convinced is the atti- tude of the great hody of ministers and people in the Unitarian church- s of the United States, n ministers, meeting at their N tional Biennial Institute in Deerficld, Mass., solemnly reaflirm that the tra- ditional policy of our I ship in loyalty und devotion to the principles laid down in the Federal Constitution is that no candidate for public office within the gift of American peopl rded as disqualitied by reason of his particular form of religious belief or affilia (tion, and further affirm that neither [ this nor any other expression by a [ Unitariun group or individual can be taken upon any MH' the person or ns making it.” Yalc Professor will o to Geneva Conference \\Ku:hmz:mv. Sept. 8 (B—Lresi dent Coolidge, upon invitation of the cague of Nations sccretariat, has pointed Professor T. 8. Adams, of as an expert to at- and tax evasion va October 22, hy wiil discuss a report v{hn for such office e ion lopt dhering of experts ar, which was at- and s, ility of MILK MARKY P —The 1 tion has or be instalied ona railway- The nd out S deral red at | Berlin, raiway adminis that markets 1 to queneh their thirst will s 10 the workers wects of drink and the In a round administra niik Jepic poinis ministration =00n “ train ons fo employes special show win tinenc the A that in view of ity I obin 1o | night. The complainant did not want | *fusing obedience to foreign heads | ing that “a!l 79 Unitari- | | e Iellow- | should ever be ' NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1928 FLASHES OF LIFE: GIRL FLIER WOULD KILL SELF IN EMERGENCY SPRECKELS CONES OUT FOR SHITH Support Democratic Nominee New York, Sept. § (UP)—Because he says there is a similarity between the two major parties but Governor Smith has taken a definite stand on the prohibition question, Rudolph Spreckels, 8an Francisco banker and cwic leader, has announced support of the democratic ticket, Spreckels has been considered a republican although he voted for President Wilson in 1912 and Sen- ator La Follette in 1924. He says in a letter to John J. Raslkob, chairman of the democratic national cemmittee, that there is little differcnce now between the parties and that the major differ- ence in viewpoints of the two can- didates is on the prohibition ques- tion, “The eighteenth amendment was adopted nine years ago and no fair- !'minded perscn can honestly claim | that it has promoted the cause of temperance,” Spreckels said. Gives His Reasons In pointing out why he favored | Governor 8mith, Spreckels said: “Governor Smith has courageous- ly stated his views upon this all im- portant question. While he, as pres igent, could only recommend repeal | or modification, his election would be regarded by members of various state legislatures and the members of congress as a mandate to them, from the people, to follow the presi cent’s suggestions in that respect. Therein lies the hope of reasonable legislation to promote temperance and correct the evils fastened upon us through the 15th amendment. “Herbert Hoover, on the other hand, has announced that he is op- posed to repeal or modification. He would build up still further, at the 1uxpayers' expense, the great army of enforcement officers, thus enlarg- ing the field of corruption and con- finue the farce, which after nine years of failure and disastrous con- sequences, he declares to be a ‘noble cxperiment.” If the people indicate approval of the murders, gang wars, poisoning of alcohol, hypocrisy and debauching of our youth by electing candidates who favor the continua- tion of prohibition under the 18th amendment, we may as well admit that nine years of prohibition has destroyed the moral fiber of the American people.” MRS, KNAPP WAY ABANDON APPEAL Is Now in the Woman's Hospi- fal in Jail Albany, N. Y., 8Scpt. 6 (UP)—It was indicated today that Mrs. Flor- ence E. 8, Knapp, former sccretary of state of New York, might aban- don a contecmplated appeal against a 30-day jail sentence imposed on | her atter ‘her conviction for grand larceny of state funds. Neither yesterday nor early today had Mrs. Knapp's counsel made ef- forts to obtain her rclease from Al- bany county jail by means of a cer- tificate of reasonable doubt, pend- ing appeal. Supreme Court Justice Staley was here to receive an appli- cation for such a certificate, Those intimate with the former ing against applying for the certifi- cate, telling her that a long-drawn- out appeal might react on her |healih more secriously than the thirty day incarceration. The one time sccretary of state, however, it is reported, scemed insistent that application be made. 15 In Hospital Should any legal action be taken, it is not expected to be taken until Saturday when Justice Staley opens |a session of supreme court. In the meantime Mrs. Knapp has been removed to the women's hos- pital room of the jail from the home-like quartcrs of the sheriff's apartment there, where she spent the first day nd half of her sen- tence. The hospital room is imme- diately over the tier of women's cells. Mrs. Knapp's treatment, prison officials raid, wonld be exactly that accorded any other sick inmate. Former Local Pastor Visits Boyhood Scenes Michael Maietta formerly of | | Rev. | this city, now occupying a pulpit at | Springfield, 1L, is visiting scenes of | | his boyhood 1 New Britain and | vicinity, Rev. Mr. Maietta was born | in this city and entered the ministry | here. He was in charge of the Italian Mission at the South Congre- gational church and later was assist- | ant pastor at the Emmnucl Gospel church, He is accompanied by Mrs. | Maietta and two children. Watertown, Ma —P— The school board of recommendation of the board of health, last night voted to delay the opening of the public schools here until October 12 bhecause of the recent spread of in- state official are said to be advis- | jmen existed here and it is time to | | tilling company and tse WALKER PREPARES ANSWER Will Tell Mra. Willcbrandt What His Administration Has Done Re- ganding Night Club Situation, New York, Sept. § (UP)—Mayor James J. Walker soon will tell just what his administration has done about enforcing the prohibition law in the nation’'s grestest city. Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, assistant United Btates attorney, re- cently wrote the mayor concerning ihe might club situation here and is understood to have commented on lack of cooperation by New York police in the government prohibition Crive, Walker called for all data avail- able on prohibition arrests, raids, and court injunctions interfering with police activity, and prepared to veply. One report said that Mrs. Wille- brandt had refcrred to the mayor as | one who would have first hand in- formation on night club The mayor denied there was suc erence but added: “Even if there had been such a suggestion 1 fear I could not qualify to Mrs. Willebrandt's satisfaction as 1 have been in a New York night club enly once in three years, [ will say this however: If I were to qualify as an inspector I don't think 1 should need to become a reckless purchaser of orchids or of Staten Island champagne or to spend $60,- 000 of the government's money to learn facts which are well known | to virtually every man, woman and | child in New York city.” He referred to reports of expend- | itures by prohibition agents in ob- taining evidence against recently padlocked night clubs, PHILA. ATTORNEY FINDS EVIDENCE Links Up Holl With Edward 5. Goidberg Philadelphia, Sept. 6 lM—DIs(rIcll Attorney John Monaghan said to- day he had found evidence linking Max “Boo Boo” Hoff, alleged "king of Philadelphia bootlegge with Edward 8. Goldberg, proprietor of a store which deals in military goods, bullet-proof vests, machine guns and other weapons used in gang war- fare. This was the latest important de- velopment in the grand jury investi- gation of Philadelphia’s underworld activities which Mr. Monaghan said had established an alliance between | the police and the rum ring. The prosecutor promised more scnsa- | tional developments today. Perjury Charge Arrested last night on a charge of | perjury after he had testified before | the grand jury, Goldberg was re- leased in “heavy bail” early today. The amount was not stated but it was sald it was much less than the | $100,000 Monaghan said would be| asked. Records and books of the Military Sales company of which Goldberg is the head, were seized and impounded for the jury. The district attorney declared that when receipts for bullet-proof vests were found on Petey Iord and Frankie Balley, notorious gangsters, once arrested in connection with the slaying of John Bricker and the wounding of Mickey Duffy at the Club Dadix, Goldberg had told city | hall detectives that the vests had been paid for by Max Hoff. Ford and Bailley, who are serving long prison sentences for highway rob- | |bery and aggravated assault and| | battery on a policeman, were quv--‘ tioned by the grand jury last week. The Bricker-Duffy shooting long has been regarded by the authorities as a high light in the series of gang murders and as connccted with the more recent slayings of Hugh Me- l.oon and Daniel J. O.'Leary, which ; brought about the present investi- | gation. It was said to have marked ! the beginning of a war for control of the alcohol business by rival| bootleggers. Find Machine Guns large number of guns were found in Goldberg's place,” Mr. Monaghun said today. “This man has conducted his busi- ness deflantly. Weapons of the most deadly character, such as machine guns and sawed-off shotguns, have been sold with no record, n[)l r- cntly, of thelr final disposition. e police have known something of thix | man, | “It has been known for a long| time that arsenals supplying gun- “A machine | find out exactly what is going on.” Other developments in the {nve: | gation were the statement by the prosecutor that Max Hassell, of Reading, Pa.. known to the police as | the “Beer Baron,” would be sum-| moned before the grand jury; keiz- ure of records of the Glenwood Dis- | summoning | before the jury of police officials | and detectives sald 1o have bcen | fraternizing with hontleggers | Germans Deny They Will Ask for Evacuation Berlin, Scpt. 6 (P —German offi- cial circles today denied reports | fantile para i B238R4% 3 >2>2>>> 3343 which they laid to French journal- ists, that the German delegates mt | |Geneva were about to present a note | {to allied representatives which | would contain concrete proposals | for evacuation of the Rhineland. It was pointed out that the nego- tiations have not gone beyond the conversational stage and that no basis for an ultimate solution can be found until that stage is com- | plete. Additional parl probably ! will be held at Geneva tonight or to- i morrow. |the frenzy or religious fervor, slash- land destroying whatever | African customs as polygamy, husband’s brother, and the presence jtem of clans. SCIENTISTS BAGK FRON WILDJINGLE Americans Reach Home From Sollh America New York, Scgt. 6 w—no Amer- ican scientists have returned fromn the Dutch Guiana jungle where big black men spend their spare time carving delicately wrought combs and cooking utensils as favors for their dusky lady friends. Dr. Morton C. Kahn of New York, representing the Myron I. Granger expedition of the American Museum of Natural History, and Dr. Melville J. Herskovits, anthropologist, of Northwestern University, are back in the United States after spending two months among the Djukas or bush riegroes of the Suriname river valley in Soutly America. With the scien- tists who reached New York yester- day came many packing cases filled with carved paddles, stirring sticks for food, canoe seats, combs, stools, mortars and many charms, all destined for the museum. Escape Slavery The Djukas escaped from slavery in Dutch Guiana in the first half of the 18th century, but despite their early contact with European and In- dian cultures they have retained their original African civilization. “It 1s an interesting comment on the processes of civilization,” said Dr. Kahn today, “that there in the equatorial jungle of South America these negro descendants of the rebel slaves of Suriname should have created a culture that,.maintaining itself on its own basis, has con- sciously cast aside all the recogniza- ble elements of the white civiliza- tion, and to this day have kept con- siderable that is purely West African in original.” The Djukas have contact with the white man’s civilization through the Dutch traders. but turn up their noses at its boasted comforts and ad- vantages, preferring to live as their ancestors have lived for centuries. They spurn firearms, trousers and modern methods of agriculture, and hold to their primitive religion, with its taboos and its veneration of the snake and the alligator. “We were probably the first white men ever to witness theobeah, or religious dance of these people,” said Dr. Kahn. “To the accom- paniment of throbbing tom-toms and their own weird chants, the clay-daubed natives dashed about in ing right and left with razor-edged cutglasses, foaming at the mouth came to hand. Some even swam the danger rapids of the river." aceful Man The Djuka is a pezceful man, con- tent to live in harmony with his neighbors. He hunts and farms after his primitive fashion, but spends many hours ot his wood carving. Dr. Herskovits made a study of the soclal, political and economic life of the pcople and found such the marriage of a widow to her dead of food taboos associated with a sys- COOLIDGES PACKING UP Prosident and Wife Getting Ready | 0 Leave for Washington Within | Few Days. Superior, Wis., Scpt. 6 (P—Pack- ing took hold of the summer White House in eurnest today. With President Coolidge's return to Washington only a few days off, the time had come today for almost last minute preparations. Most of the houschold linen was placed away in trunks and boxes while the chief executive’s bulkier personal effects, such as books and papers, also were packed. Leaving such preparations to Mrs. Coolidge and the White House at- tendants, President ‘oolidge tried to make the most of his last chances for an open air life before return- ing to the capital. Stating that his fishing rod would be the last thing to be packed, he had arranged last night to fish as usual this morning in one of the private lakes of the Cedar Island Lodg The chief exccutive found time to study the results of the Wiscon- sin state and national primaries, held Tuesday, the results of which were not complete by last night. ¥rom associates in his oiiice here he obtained sidelights on the out- come of the election which had net been published in the papers, whence he derived most of his in- formation. ELLIOTT C. HOUSE Pclham Manor N. Y. Sept. 6 (UP)--Elliott (" House, for ycars promirent m the cotton goods in- dustry in the United States, and treasurer of the Duchess Bleachery. Inc., died sulddenly at his home here today from ucute indigestion. PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS Broke Out on Face. Healed by Cuticura. “‘Blackheads and pimples broke STUFEY FIN Boston, Sept. 6 (1) —Stuffy Mc- | Tnnes. manager of the Salem club of the New England baseb |was fined $100 today by President Claude Davidson for taking his |team off the field during the sqcond Igame of a double header at Lynn on * |September 4. The Salem players re- Jvuq»n to play becanse they said it | was o0 dark. by forfeit 1 league, | Jynn won the game | By the Associated Press. Ryen, N. Y. — Here comes Dick Byrd to a Mendelssohn tune. The commander, best man and hand- rome in his uniform, was the cen- ter of attention rather than the bride when Charles J. Murphy mar- ried Jane Brevoort Walden. Portland, Ore. — Uncle S8am has heen smashing bottled rum here in a rock crusher. Seized three years ago in a boat, 1,$53 cases of bond- ed liquor were fed into the machine bottle by bottle as officials of the W. C. T. U. watched. New York — Frank Courtney wants the world to know that he runs a speakeasy, not a night club. He so told a magistrate when in court for conducting an unlicenspd cabaret. He was fined $5. Geneva — George Bernard Shaw's latest: He met Aristide Briand here and asked: “Mr. Minister, why do you allo% Americans to capture southern France? 1 have just been there and heard hardly a word of French.” New York — Manhattan has so few mosquitoes that screens are the excepsion. An elderly woman as- signed a room on the 20th floor of a hotcl demanded them, however. “Pigeons might fly in at night and I'd be dreadfully frightened,” she explained. London — Why should John Bull marvel at Babe Ruth and a few dozen home runs? Two cricketers this seuson have made 3,000 runs— KFrank Woolley of Kent and Pat Hendren of Middiesex. breakdown scems to | have had a breakdown. The con- gress of the Gaelic league has ap- pointed a committer to see if some- thing can be done about the neglect of native dances in favor of Ameri- can jazz. Dublin—The Tirana, Albania — The sum of $500,000 is desired from the na- tional assembly for a palace of the | new king, Zogu. He is to have a gold crown, too. New York—Dr. Raymond L. Dit- mars, curator of the New York zo0, knows what to do for snake bite. From a passenger on the Beren- garia, bitten in midocean by a cop- | perhead the curator received an urgent radio. D 1 directions were radioed here was no grave danger.” the doctor explains, | “but T wanted to keep him from worrying.” The patient was a stu- dent of Vienna who was taking home a collection of snakes for & museum, Y.—1f Eleanor Smith, 17. who has soarcd 11,663 feet to an altitude record for her sex, ever realizes Rer ambition and flics the Atlantic alone, she will carry a re- volver. “If 1 came down and thought 1 wasn't going to be res- 666 Cures Malaria and quickly relicves Billousness, duches and Dizel- n Freeport, N. | ous watery evacuations, Ask for it wherever beversges are sold. One Glorious diink of |and Croatian subjects THE MOXIE COMPNY Ch o o oo BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS box of Cuticura Ointment 1 was completely healed.” (Signed) Philip Short, 134 Greenwood St., Dorchester, Mase., April 9, 1928. Use Cuticura 1o clear your skin. Seap %e Ofutment 25 and . Talcam Be_ Bold| o cued,” she explains, “I'd just have to shoot myself and call it a day. Greenwich—Helen Meany, John- n Weismuller and Paul Wyatt, promiient swimmers, accept invita- tion to wedding of Prince Thichibu in Japan. Orange—Over $10,000 worth of jewelry stolen by thleves at home of Joseph W. Bailey. Darien—Raymond H. Schweizer, wealthy business man of New York thrown from horse and seriously in- jured, Hartford — Franco-American Or- der of Koresters close their annual state convention with election of officers, Hartford—John Coolidge, son of President Coolidge, arrived here and departed again within seven min- utes without giving any notice of his plans. Hartford—Gov. Trumbull prédicts saving of $3,000,000 Ly end of fiscal year next June, through eftorts of the board of finance and control. Norwalk—Will Irwin, friend and bicgrapher of Herbert Hoover, ad- dre d_republican dinner guests at Roton Point, Stamford—Bastianno Di Petro of ew Britain, arrested and charged with assault on Sergeant Amos An- derson, who had stopned car to search for liquor. King of Serbia Refuses to Issue Warrant For Arrest of Croats— Will is Done. Belgrade, Jugo-Slavia, Sept. 6 () King Alexander has chosen the way of peace o bring his Serbian into accord and has imposed his will upon his cabinet, It was learned yesterday that the cabinet recently decided to throw into jail the leaders of the Croat separatist movement. Prime Min- ister Anton Koroshetz hurried from FIT FREE Proof If you have Epilepsy, Fits, Falling Sick- news or Convulsions—no matter how bad —write me today without fall. Attacks stopped over might in many cases. NO NARCOTICS—no harmful drugs. Satis- faction or money back, DR. C. M. SIMPRON 2021 W, 4TI MT., l.l.unun. o. {or any diug store in America. ALEXANDER WANTS PEACE | the meeting to obtain a reyal decree to this effect. Alexander, however, refused his signature, saying that it would be unfortunate if on ap- proaching the tenth anniversary ef their reunion the Croats should be given occasion to open war against their mother country. The Croatian separatists are net yet reconciled and planning to send a special delegation to protest to the league of nations against what they term Jugo-Slav tyranny. Increase Your Weight 5 Pomds_in_w Days Make Yourself Strong, Heal and Vkomfl- at the Su:.’ me. By this time most people know that the ‘world's gredt fleah producer is Mee Coy's Tablets. Take them for a few weeks and the hollows in your clieeks, your meck and chest will soon fill out and whet be man or woman you'll ha tractive figure and plenty of * energy in just a shart time. No- one will call you skinny any more. 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