The evening world. Newspaper, September 18, 1911, Page 3

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TRE EVENING WORLD, MUNva:, i. TOCALL OUT 18,000 WOMEN IN STRIKE Rule of Three and Galton’s Law Can De- cide Nine Times Out of Ten Whether a Marriage Will Be a Happy One. Latest Arbitration Effort Fails r rmitration Effort Falls) sue iy ihe: Fair Maklen Selected With and Employers May Refuse Mathematical Precision Should Balk the Further Peace Talk. { March ot Science Is interrugted. i < B GREAT Greang rater LAND PARENTS No, Me Ko V6 SCALE OF TOTAL INHERITANCE OF A NUMAN BEING ETHEL EDITH MARES JEAN Famivy pa FAMER ATHE Fi PFOTHER Good: ma Ya DRINKS — % A.GROUH ~ 74 ATEMPER MA oO. +M% yy, MOTHER FATHE + 4 EVEN UF ZY + NDEPENDE A scoup - 4 EASY SIGNING, | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. | ' | Put down 6! Grice ——s 7 i - and carry 2, sab ps oA X= —%y GRAND PARENTS GRAND PARENTS Unioa Counsel Says Harilest, tract three-| + Vg_’ Ate FINE SACCANCE BvEN i is eighths and add TOTAL: Y GRAND PA, A +h Points Have Been Settled ixteenths 16 PINeyt AG >, 15 is, 1f you GRANDMA t and Agreement Is Near. Gant: to choos FINE Hib MY PERCEN TAG. | | a wife accord: GREAT 1S , ) & Yong and heated conference pe: | EO ereae| seen Yy iW tween representatives of the Merchants’ | scientife for-| ENCOLENPAG % r Society and of the Ladies’ Tailors and mula described | AGE t Dressmakers at the Victoria Hotel broke ‘NIXOLA in the current yy up @t 815 o'clock this morning with the} GREELEY* SMITH number of Me-, twe aides further apart than eve To- | Clure's Magazine by F. T. Brewster. | ‘fy day the union was threatening to call! ‘Though we have known always, or! i out the women of the Dressmakers’ }at least since Ovid, that Love is an art, it remained for Mr. Brewster! to demonstrate that {ts18 an exact} science, For, according to his article, If you know about Galton’s law of hered- ity, and are sufficiently disinterested to apply it in the selection of a wife, you can predict for a certainty Just how many of your offspring will fill the Presidential and how many the electric chair. Young man, hovering on the brink of the precipice; maiden with reluctant feet and @ practical mother, pause and learn just how you ma: ure Hl whether a bionde with pate reat & brunette with @ squint holds for you! the maxtinum of matrimonial happine: ! “Society pec: Mr. Brewster declare Union, 18,000 of them, in an effort to force the employers to a settlement. ‘The union members say work left un- completed by the men tallors is belng finished by women. A new effort at arbitration was begun Jate Inst night by a man whose name was withheld by both sides. He ob- tained the consent of the employers to act voluntary mediator. Just after the tempestuous breaking up of the pro- cedings he appeared at the hotel with | typewritten paper which he aad the | unten officers had signed after the moet- ing adjourned. He showed it to the of- ficers of the Merchants’ Society, and the employers were slightly encouraged, though they sald they had almost lost confidence that the rank and file of the unton would ratify any agreement framed by their leaders. EMPLOYERS ANGERED AND MAY STARVE OUT STRIKERS. At the headquarters of the Merchanta’ Soelety, No. 366 Fifth avenue, it was eald the willingness of the emplo: to a bitrate, which was unanimously ex- pressed by @ vote at Terrace Garden Friday night, was disappearing. The { manufacturers have deen angured by the attitude of the workers toward the compromise offer and are now inclined J, LX, Hi (a ‘one sort of a man to build a skyscraper, quite a dif. ferent sort to work in it afterward; one! kind of man is sulted for the locomo- SLAPPED WOMAN'S. tive cab, another for the director's | chair, One equally well fitted for all) these occupations would be of little! use in any. “Zt is, then, « fortunate impuise that inclines men and women { DEATH STRIKES FAGEANDISSENT | CONGRESSMANAT Lik olde do TNILORS THREATEN Modern Cupid Exchanges His Bow for a Pencil: |CHNESE ADMIRAL DESERTED WOMAN Love No Longer an Art but an Exact Science PLACES A WREATH F GRANT -ONTONBD Mayor G | the Visitor to the Monument ynor Accompanies i on Riverside Drive. | Admiral Kwang of the Impertal Cht- 'neee Navy, doffed Nts generous chapeau | to-day as he Intd upon the tomb of Gen. | US. Grant a floral wreath that wae in- jtended to show the apprectation of the | se nation for a great soldier, The ceremony waa accompanied by much offictal pomp. Admiral Kwang left his fagedip, the crulser Hal Chi, at Ninety-sixth street jand North River after Mayor Gaynor, accompanied Lieut, Kennel! of the | police force, and Deputy Police Com | missioner McKay, came to ‘escort him | to the tomb In Riverside Drive. j tall of sixty Chinese marines snapped thelr rifles to present arms at th |mand of their officer, the bugler f forty mounted policemen blew a flourt and the Chinese sailor man stood with | sloved hand at his saluting pose untti Hed. ny While the visiting Admiral acknowl ! thus punctiliously the poltce te Mayor Gaynor held open the automobile door, The trip to the Tomb WAS Watched by Ciousands of Interested spectators, Capt, GH. Burnside, t A., retired, tn Milan of tie ‘Tomo, met the |Party, Again the Chinese marines pre Twente arms and Capt, Burnside took the Admiral’s wreath and descended by & ladder to place the wreath in ite 1p position. As he did so the Ad- miral and bis with te New York- ers, eto 1. From Governor's Island Mrs, Bredertck Dent Grant the commanding officer, Lieut. Houze, his alde and Chaplain K 3. Smith } Fiv ed assembled out side ) av a brief addvess from the visiting naval ehlef, He sald \to them Is a great tisfaction to me to n pect and distinguished General great respect Grant to our countr » hel : ched the earth to find a pri | | Mayor Gaynor for \ to make a finish fight and starve the pevhzets of their own sort, | e pepper-nuts, only | 10 JAIL 10 DAYS BREAKFAST TABLE, Visit and this ceremony for me." Ny men into submission. ‘alente te reinforce their special | +o discover that she hud determined to, | ‘The auditors cheered the Mttle talk } Leaders of the strikers eay independ- theisechildren. 4 man {wed no prince who could not play upon cnt manufacturers, outside of the Mer-| SHOU range far for his scquaint- | the jew’ ‘arp. After all, a certain de- Madison ") ¥, ences, but should y \- , i; MN ’” ents th full merry in his ft jai stupidity is the com , :, ‘ ‘nlon scale. at a rate which means the| O7® clase.” © |fion lot of mens and dreadful we may|Women Must Be Safe in{Sudden Demise of independents will be in control of the| INHERITED QUALIT: be a hereditary ility to disease, one a % . ee 4 ; ; tal trade in @ few Gaye and the om- reees Castine THE) must die of something. The most we| Streets at Any Time, Says | Shock to Taft, Who Was to players’ organtaation must elther come ‘9 terms or go out of business. jeyer London, counsel for the union can hope for as husbands or wives is that we shall reinforce our mild excel- Jences in our children, and help them ‘When a man chooses a wife whose ad- mirable qualities ‘e inherited rather Ma gistrate. generally recognised as the head than personal, he doubles the intellec- tual and moral legacy of his children, to @odge the gravest of our inborn | | { Have Been His Guest. and the party went back toward the ship Where curious crowds had been for couph what like. the guest Brook! a of days making excursions to see fh real Chinese man-of-war looks ‘This afternoon Admiral Kwang is of the comm Yard. ALS Se HE HOLDS BACK $2 A WEEK ndant of the cally recognized aa the head sere { FROM EX-WIFE’S ALIMONY. , the atTIRe) Jonterss) meghruen according to Mr. Breweter. ‘And, as we must ave concluded from| Frederick Dentke of No. 383 East One| DODGE CITY, Kan., Sept. 18—Eamund Steen ; silo than th This theory indicates that the normalj Galton’s law, the best way to guaran-|Hundred and Fifty-seventh strect was|H. Madison, Representative in Congress | !ts: Ray B. Brill, ex-wife of Abraham { OVERTIME AND KOLIDAY PAY jrathor than the abnormally intelligent| tee the impeccability of our offspring {s|sent to the workiouse for ten days by from the Seventh Kansas District, died | Bil) # wealthy manufacturer, asked 4 ONLY REAL DIFFERENCE NOW, | woman makes the best wife—at least| to look the girl over and atrike a bal-|\fagistrate House in Morrisania Court| a: the breakta nie th hie home Justice Bijur in the Supreme Court to- k We find the employers ready to| fm a racial standpoint. ance between her faults and virtues, l¢o.day for slapping the fa of Mrs. } to-day day to punish him for contempt because 1 eet all our demands in a reasonable “The chances that any child will | "acial and personal. Minnie Collins. RADhasani tative aad J (et patel J hod week from { spirit.” he sald. “Bome of the hardest) fahentt a parent's qualities are just | AN ARITHMETICAL PUZZLE FOR| Aro. Collins sald sho was waiting out-| vine ngures in the nee oe OF the) her alimony since last November. | points have been practically agreed | double when these qualities, in ad- CUPID TO WORK OUT. |alde of a store at 2 o'clock this morning | TiKINE flaures in the hard fight over| 1. N. Jacobson, counsel for Brill, told bit! upon. In my opinion the only real dif) Gition to appearing ia the indi- | Cupid may have to do some elaborate |for her husband, Dentke and four other | We Fules In the last Congress which re-/Justice Bijur that Mrs, Britt had re- i ference now {s with regard to double) vidual man or woman, rum also in | bookkeeping and may spend many|men spoke to her. When she turned | Suite! Im the curtailment of the Speak-| fused to furnish her ffteen-year-old son , pay for overtime and full pay on cer-| the parent's family,” says Mr.* | eleepless evenings before lie strikes hack atc than: ania and radical changes in the} With carfare and lunch money. tain legal holidays, without work. | wrewster. ; omen balance, but the ultimate result will be Brill obtained a divorce from n the stove i ve House, Madison and bgp 4 ; { “These questions are to be submitted “This principle is know as @al- | worth while. Prather Birt Senlaoner: ba Kansas, Hayes of California | 82°, husband, tour {yanta, awe.” anid Me to the union for @ referendum vote, ton's law. fuller form, it is | How many young men hesitating, on |icoman Devlin. went out and other progressive Republicans, un-|ercnted ner Mo Weekly altmore, foutt Ither at a mass-meeting or at a num-| that, of the total inheritance of | the brink of matrimony between prac-|iatey in the morning wit! pg ee hohe iad krante ‘ Later a ings. If the met ty . Reha * ler e hip o orris of Nebras-| Mr. Brill had the order modified, so that tr of small meeting: any living being plant, animal or | tical Emma, alluring Ethel and honest de the atr lea) inh Giana iaisa ct there Arai l ihe gong eWhe RUC AL REA ence oneent to a slight modification of| man, each parent hae contributed a | Jane may have their problems solved Mrs. Collins told Magitsra |Congress waged and won the ta ft being stipulated that the amount was hese demands ~ think there is a fair’ quarter, each of the four grana- | for them by retiring to th bedrooms | that Mra. Dentke hiad vis | reorganization the House meth ae to go toward the support and education a rospect ee pease eae et re up| Parente @ sixteenth, each of the | 4nd figuring quietly on Gaiten's law in the morning and had aske It was a fight marked by bitterness and|of young Leighton Brill, then a atudent \ ae eaaont ambedying potnte on| sa@t Srent-grandparents a sinty- | Jane, for instance, with her sweet na-| i, prowecute her hiwhand for ‘*!parttamentary strategy, for majority | t,De Witt Clinton High School, TO en ee ent ccm fORFth, and so-on, while the ia- | ture, her charming complexion, contt-| of 'the two little Denike cilldren Sohteol ih (BING Gk ehioalles “Aenlien: Last year Mrs. Brill wanted the i which the emplayers and the wor! fluence of each generation is just | utes one-fourth to the batting average. eee cargo in changed to diss co urOl I Place of | arbitrary | hoy to quit school and go to work, He ’ were agreed and this would be sub-| oat to thas of all thi But Jane's mother, vinegary, suspicious, i Pee ee eeiet rata’ ere Sree ee refused, and she would not furnish mitted to the referendum meeting. au o eo wemevations | vith a poisoned tongue, how much must| oTderly conduct.” sald the Magistra Mr, Madison served twoltim with oarfare and lunch mon ~ that have preceded it. Cae Ghduct tor hi - “and Denike ‘es nt to the workhouse | Congresses and was r the | The boy then went to his father, who MEETING AT BATTERY. |,..72: 2rinciple is of much practical tm-| Gaiton's law ove: for ten days, Lam sorry for his chil-| present one was active in’ the] hus since been giving him an allow: MASS- *|portance. Let Mr. A, an able man of| taswer’ A clesr head a fair knowledge| (ren or I would make {t three months. |work of the 1 extra session. He|ance and deducting !t from the all- ‘ an able family, marry Miss B, of like , : ve | The stre: ew York must be made} was a member of the Ballinger-Pinchot | MOny.” Ct 2 of fractions, » blackboard and a piece ; i Pics Waar sak i sakes a tk : endowments. All the little Masters and] Se chalk are all one needs to solve the| safe for women at any time of Jinvestigating committee and t éban aoa vanarwen dealulone me 4 an Athletic Field, eth: shots, barring accidents, | conundrum of the lovesmiltis. RICKS 68) (aoe shane di Ipectal Interest in the Philip Mrs, Brill has been living at Sev- A mase-meeting of the residents of |Fit gunpose that Mr. So before you ask her to be yours, don't | sed Haine neta ration investigation t enty-sixth street and Madison avenue q the lower section of Manhattan will be| jy yews yat Mn! f brush up your poetry, your romance or lot the House Insular Att orn, divaisee hen Tianna qf ela in Battery Park Friday night to Bis 4 V4 1s personally the equal of your religi Take another dip into & ian waa th of which hi asa me urge upon Park Commissioner Stover | Miss B. ut her family ts a poor lot. | your arithmetie, Fee Meeate che Wh. ChE iene | VIRGFOUS ned the the Now, a quarter of the little A’s will be : A This la Roosevelt. fr ttac the establishment of an dthletic field atupld or vicious cf tn eeceh WAY. Gr peeuenneen.04 Court charged with rowdytsm. This|dent Roosevelt from attack | ! Li ai i relieve, had influential in with the Secret Service h and open air gymnasium at that point | oie able to keep atep with the reet.| DODGING ONE CAR, GIRL man, I believe, had inf i. Hon with the Beoret Ber H ‘Alderman Drescher is In charge of the R, | ons in tie communte n controversy, and M atrangements, which include a parade|SAYS THE LAW PROVES TRUE 1S MAIMED BY ANOTHER, | iicn or weattn. So tar ax was MSE. gat Bria \ of local athletic, church and political NINE TIMES IN TEN. . veapnegenen Sabliitaletanl pole support \ is "5 fi Sscape, | ence was brought to hed ‘“ See i Mopars } qusetzations, ane sprenert 92 12 he “Or suppose a family, erwise ex-| Miss Huttner’s Companions Escape, | But peers an ; F Mes my h, Sept ; Fee ; q \ William J. A. WB “et, |Cellent, has one black sheep in it, If hut Her Life May Pay for #0. will y ot dent Taft was shocked to learn of the ) lan, Daniel Finn and James D. MoClel-| 11. Geiinquent is a parent of husband ut H BIG MY 8 | noor, brought before me laeath of Represe Madison, H or wife, they are taking a one-to-six- Her Confusion. |e Questioned later, Magistrate Houscewas to have been a guest of the Con- st teen risk of a like blemish in each off The old mistake of dodging one car| sa 1 that he had no fehl the man | gressman durin s vi to Kansa q their own flock--a serious hazard, some-Jonly to fall under another going tn the | Wis He drew itis sonal isto . from (next weels, anid Syracuse last Sat \ | times, for a prudent man. On the other/opposite direction was repeated las: | Pilastay sua oblg ? waaliatote urday de that Judge Mad fi { hand, the influence of a parent's grand-|night in Fourteenth street, near Second | Ma" y was in a larg sponsible for H. father, counting for only one part in}avenue, with the result that Miss|}) pee a the inauguration o: present to | | our, may reasonably de chanced. |Frieda Huttner, nineteen years old, of! e474 across the continent. The President i | If Sherlock lolmes Frederick Adain Wools of the|No, 6 East Thirteenth street, is dying) FIRE IN SUBWAY STATION. foe iota suse Madison. mon ‘ Massachusetts Institute of Technol in Bellevue with her skull fractured ~ than a yen to visit Kansas dur vt ommissioned to ascertain vas applied Galton’s to the royal] Miss Huttner, her brother Max and| Short Cfreatt Starts smoky minge (UN 8 ONE 8 eect y were co has app! P, th } oe \ which New York Sunday news- families of Europe. Such-and-such a}another girl had started across Four-| ny! caiclen mala tc attend the eat | No fussing roduced the best adver- royal pergonage—runs ils study—having|teenth street when Max and the ae tags ne Let a ie | ‘ ae pepe Broek ee such-and-such ancestors, married with him saw the two cars approa day Aei ree me O00 BE tae aes Aue nor stewing— tising results, he would come |) tree reas sould, the They retreated, but Frieda appare I h in i face to face with these figures so many children, have w confused. She jump ft L A | e - eget “te 1, & it of the way of the east-bour i\ Sunday World Sunday Herald many mediocre, able, gitted, red-]and in front of the west-bound one f pee Poe \ \ sapt. 36, 1, ODA Adrts. f, Adtt, ee ee onatonour wat. }from East Twenty-econd street _w the ‘ | " “ formity, they have turned out to be.{called out. The motorman, James | usec Sunday, 6 i) 165 form Leary of No. 0% East Fifteenth street ort Soph. 10th, Jy ' The theoretic prediction comes true in fee aa ha adawals Aneta ‘ about ninety per cent. of the cases—|helped get the girl to th a ; . sunday, “ 9 208 ‘ abou a as can|TH@ police said the accident was ap- |‘ ; i.e oropat J } i : Sapl.17ih,y ’ ee a ee eed eather |parently unavoldable and did not ar- | nulek. | tthe Wh Just add hot water, if . » made for tow y " a ni } I a }ie at him. Dr. Kigan took Miss Hutt- | House. ; ‘ Showing that the Sunday World} gir THE “IDEAL” HERSELF 1s |" | House ner to Bellevue in an ambulance, printed 232 more advertisements than OFTEN UNATTAINABLE. the Sunday Herald on the first Sun- From this we may infer that the pos- | HOLD GIRL IN MALE ATTIRE. fay in September; 541 more on the | session of a desirable or distinguished pal Lh bie nd Sunday, and 685 mor. yecter- | ancestor 1s not such an empty honor as | sappw Alvany High schoot eco! DunGay, and © ° #5 Hr i | y s September, || We have been led to believe. A “pennt ‘ ( day, the third Sunday in September jXev lass with a long pedigree” Ja| Graduate Accused at Rogier y shest New Y racially the best investment “for the] INDIANAPOLIS, Sept, 18—— Marian r The next highest New York Sunday J) rae Som millionaire, Baton Smith, aged oightean, who says } newsp7per vrinted but 3,308 adver- “Ideally,” Mr, Brewster mys, ‘as|she is a daughter of Alpheus Smith of r tisements yesterday, or about one- J exnectany lghtened persons in @ high-|No, 186 Second street, Albany, N. Y¥., bd hird of the Sunday World's total sclentific age, we all ought to marry | and a graduate of a high school there, : nto the best endowed families, and thus|was arrested here late yesterday . Kj te b DI vhich she aid There can be no doubt | ake sure that our children will be able | charged with burglary, which she ts sat mT REPORT. but thet | righteous and long lved, a credit} to have confessed, i i | a Joy to thelr parents, Practically,| She was wearing male a tire swhen ee . Prt we < fe tow, caught, She declared she had been ‘ Sunday World Ads. atam be t sngowed families are fowi sleeping in barns here for a Week and i he Best R It and thelr daughters, belng aleo highly | eee re oe aan ee ata a. female i Produce the Best Results. | fiiciteiod “una acientitio, dectine to| Bas, Become as ahe said, a female iw | marry Us was starving, the police say. She i9 ! | “3¥e And ourselver, ia abort, 4a the | pretty and epparentiy’ well educated. . 1 and bring to boil, seTve, for Household Goods. T.M. STEWART 438-442 WEST SII ST. AS J reanidee A 4e-| Mrs. Shannon did not know the ad+ Gress of her relative and could not, o1 that account, send a messenger for ¢he money. All of yesterday and last sight she worrled over the money. OF EIGHTY YEARS | | | “They have all forgotten me Gut Jimmy. [ know where Jimmy lives, Jaround tn Oliver street. He will Rep | | Beveral times Mra Conlon kept her | | aged companion ) waodering from | [the house of Jimmy. | — jlocked the doo fac and hid the | key when #he went to bed jast night. i - * Early to-day she was awakened by Mrs. Shannon Dropped From sire shannon, who srt walking about the room muttering Incoherent appeals to her dead son, Before Mrs. Conlon could get out of bed Mre Shannon was at the window Window Seeking Son Who Died Years Ago “Lam going to see Jimmy,” said the oid woman, “Te wil! help me! | Although her favorite eon Jimmy hae|. Mf® Conlon #aw her disappear, heard t eh of her body on the sidewalk | been dead for twenty-three years Mra. etre Then she heard @ |Johanna Shannon, elwnty years o14,| scream and h 1 downstairs with #1 started from her bed at No. @ Cherry lthe speed. he: wing puysleal powers street to-day to seek him. She made| would permit | her way to a window, stepped on the| Mrs, Shannon war dead on the side- sill and tumbled o She fell four stor-|waik. A few «from her body lay {19s to the sidewalk and was killed | Mrs. Shannon jived with Mra. Mary Conton, seventy-eiglit years ol, in the |Foome tm the Cherry street tenement. The two old women depended largely for | support Upon @ pension of $8 a week | drawn by Mrs. Shannon, whose husband Wasa roldier tn the Civil War. Rosle Goff, the thirteen-year-old daugh- ter of the housekeeper of the tenement, Rosle was unconscious, Mrs in falling had missed her inches and she had scr 4 and faint. @d when she had realized the situation. | A Coroner's plysician authorized the | removal of (he remains of Mrs, Shinnag to the Oak street station, There are | AS Mrs. Shannon wan not mentaity |; wrandehiid living in Brookty j Strong her penaton was doled out to her {and it i# supposed by Mrx Shannon's ach Baturday night by a relative, Last/ friends that they will see that thelr Saturday night the relative fatled to|arandmotier ie buried in Calvary by the show up with the weekly 63, and the /side of her husband and Jimmy 2500 Suits |. Loveliest Fall Styles 4% Tomorrow, Tuesday yy Actual $22.50 Value Jeg ie pene S y | 5 Indisputably the finest collec- | tion of tailored suits ever shown in this city. Practical, durable, artistic; the kind not seen in other stores. Broadcloths So great an ity will not occur again. You will be justly proud to wear any one of them. Sra new style note of the season from French panel skirts to slightly lon, coats in dashing man tallored meno or sumptuous trimmed affairs. Each with Autumn snap and tingle in every fold. New Shades Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES i 14 & 16 West I4th Street-—New York 460 & 462 Fulton Street—Brooklyn 645-65! Broad Street—Newark, N. J. AS OUNNIDOTA UR RAUOKOOKODOXODUC OCC K erin. | FISCHER ‘PIANOS FAMOUS FOR QUALITY UPRIGHTS GRANDS PLAYERS $350 to $600 $600 to $1000 $650 to $1090 Franklin Pianos UPRIGHTS PLAYERS Special, $185 Easy Terms Special, $430 : 9 SEWER 2 2 Spee oe eae ee Quality considered, these prices cannot be duplicated elsewhere J. & C. Fischer Factory Salesroom, 417 West 28th Street, Near 9th Avenue | Oldest Piano Makers in New York JRE CET COUCH COMER EH I HO ORCI CH PENNELL: 2 okeS Sea BRE Furniture Stores Fatabliahed Nearly Malt a Century, Special offer for this week .7-Pc. DINING ROOM Suite $9 .00 China Clos:| et, Exten-' sion Table, Buffet or Sideboar d,. 4tineChairs, leather seats. ; CASH OR CREDIT, WE FURNISH HOMES COMPLETE GEO. FENNELL & CO. 2209 3rd Av., Bet. 120& 121 Sts, |Furnjture, Rugs, Bedding. Bromx Store 3d Av. & 149th St, ————————————

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