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a ——— me @ done: times he tet go of my! throat and told me ho’ give me an- Other chance. “My tonere had e@wollen ao that I — t have spoken if 1 wanted to. He ck me in the face again and eald: ‘Now I will cut you uy.’ Me began slashing through my clotiyes and —) my other arm, “None of the cvts were very deep, mt the pain was awful. Jt was worse when he got to my face and neck. The man was cursing awfully no TAFT DEFENDS tore money. ne eaid, man didi kept dimwing the razor lightly over my cheeks @e that St just cut through the okin. “He stopped cutting me suddenly as he heard a nolse in the hallway and then the short man called out ‘ve, got It, Tony, give her another soak and we'll beat it.’ “[ shit my eyes to look as if I had fainted, #0 he didn't do anything but pick up my head and rap it down on the floor. Then they went out and then 4i4 faint. “Half an hour tater I recovered and Reard mother calling. She was knock- | ing on the hall door. 1 tried to answer her, but couldn't. Henry Levy, who serves papers in the house, Was coming upstairs, and he tried to break open the| oor. He couldn't, and got a indder. | Then he and mother came thruogh th rear window and found me.” Mrs, Mauermann said that her daugh- ter did not fully recover for sevaral rying part to find ti “Cut off her nos Pledges, He D Republican legisiation, thieves had taken the savings and also the envelope containing the rent money. When Mrs. Mauermann went to the Weat One Hundred and Twenty-ftth | treet station and reported the robbery Was questioned at great length, De- tives were went to question the daughter, and they ress, ecially on wool, in time for political purposes. shake her in any deta The ruln in the 1 of her story the wounds ‘k corroboraged To cut the tariif rates now with “! ext two or three years « revulsion of flat Jed déscription o: two thugs who had tortured and beaten Proposes to stop stich a movement her, but no trace of them has been obtained. ‘In fact, the case has not Wit™ the Republican platform, Yee progressed to that satisfactory po- > mpewene on oS ER AR oe ACES ETRE AS APNE * making © report on ft NAMA el BACK FROM YEARL DISAPPEARANCE {Republican insurgents on the same even if defeat stared him in the face The President rested his entire | List and Cotton bills, President Taf ‘defense of his tari policy. party he could not have done anythin, ¢ Mrs. Van Buren Finds Daughter| Tacey in Her Regular a3 September Hunt. ; the cotton schedule. To prove that According to Mra, Willlam Van Buren, wife of an officer of the American Bank Note Company, who jivex at No. 38 Fourth street, Brooklyn, her nineteen- year-old daughter, Tacey, is a perfectly | 6004, home-loving girl for eleven months ) in the year. But she just cant be good ment for a tariff board.’ He quoted the Republican State Convention of and Kansas, the very States whose the tariff bills. ‘The measure, the President declared, } 1 September. aid not represent a proper measure of ; Tacey was arrested on Lawrence| protection of the industries affecte’ street, Brooklyn, to-day by Detective; and was erefore not good Republic Cunningham of Brookiyh Headquarters, who has been looking for her ten days, He knew where to look sucessfully to- day, because Mra. Oxmund, next door neighbor of the Van Burens, told Mrs Van Buren that #he had found her son } Felix, who ts eighteen years old and had $ been mfssing for a week, In a house in| Lawrence street, and that Zacey Van| Buren had run out of the house when Mrs. Osmund entered, “Two years ago, in September,” Mra, Van Buren explained to the police of the Adams street station, by whom she was called to take charge of her daugh- legislation, “If I ha@ allowed the Wool bill to become @ law,” he said, “the progress made toward w better method of rovis- ing the tarif would have been entirely lost and the polloy thrown to the winds.” ‘The President declared also that the hasty framing of tmportant tarif bills at an extra session of Congress called for another purpose was unnecessary, as the Tariff Board had been matructed to report, particularly on wool, in time for the action at the regular session |this winter. ter, “Tacey ran away for a week, When| OUTLINES TARIFF POLICY HE she came back, voluytartly after a WILL PURSUE. ra ek, she sald that she ran away be-| ‘phe President deflantly outlined his cause she was afraid we would make |tarif policy, and declared that he f,her go to School No. 77, where she had) would pursue that policy at all haz- Ufalled in the summer examinations, | gras, fand that she would be humiliated, or ins he said, “that we have | “We believed her, But in the first! now reached a polut when every on ought to realize that the tariff ought! to be changed and busi dis- turbed except upom information which will allow us ic pase bills that will |disturb {t least. The natural oper- ation of the ta ff umder suck condi- tions, with <merican ingenaity, is due to reduce the cost of production and {that in itself will secure, if we ad- |here to that policy, a reduction of | Week of last Sept jawain, and when taaid she had bee mber she ran away she came back she married to a young man named Peter Ackers, but was sorsy {for it, and, anyway, he had left her, ) This year I have been watching her very carefully, But at 3 o'clock in th afternoon a week ago Monday she sald she wantod to sit ony the and get a little alr. hour later, only 1 front steps I called her an} find that her Sep- tari iates from thn . Mad dinapyeared. smith’ tools* is to invite in the next { x for Ns er two or four : are @ revulsion of feel ing and then a recurrence of higher rates ind the old system of high tari 1 propose go stop such The Repudlicans of the Seventh As- “sembly District held a rousing meeting last night at No. 2 ‘hth avenue to tr leader, Willa \,, |movement so ivr @. Z can, and to se-| nderee thelr leader, William Halpin, |Ouoe's eque-son im aecorudnce with the| for re-election. Speeches were made es Arde by ‘former Congressman Willian s. | Bevublican DIAsiorm 208 on informa. Bennet, Rogister Max 8. Grifenhagen, | sccurate and ampartial. fMamuel Strasbourger and John J. Lyons, |. “2! te: Policy t# not approved by the Republican leader of the Thirty. |tBe electorate thez of course those of first Assembly District. Register Grit-|¥# WBO axe Bow in oftge -ust give way cnhagen said “that whether Halpin was|*0 ‘ose WO will carry out @ aif. unsuccessful or not he would remain |£ete8* policy. pert while we are in of | his assistant, as he was too valuable q | 90¢ oUF duty caght clearly to be un- public oMclal to lose." erstood, because we believe it is right days Halpin was the champion broad Jemper of America. He ts a bfother of Capt. Matt Halpin of the New York Athetlc Club, In his younger cussion and @ cle.r perception on the part of the people wi)’ convince them to approve aud adopt it.” =| In opening his speech the President if What I say here will be in large art a resume of those messages, with some additional suggestions that the formal character of thia address tly AZ ck lenin ats ee bao, developed a very strong sentiment ‘An election clash in Montreal, strikes #™ong Reptbiicans, and, indeed, among fn Ireland, labor riots in Spain, trouble ™42¥ Democrats, that a bureau or coms in Vienna and an uprising in New York ‘ission or board of competent persons but New York's uprising was that of should be consUtuted to make Investi- thousands bent on taking early advan. ation into the facts concerning the tage of the |dutiable articles in the tariff, and to 5,292 World Ads. Yester- less permits, Statement on His Policy. | CHIEF POINTS IN PRESIDENT TAFT’S DEFENSE. Mad to veto the wool, cotton and free lie: tariif bills, ft wae his bounden uty under pledges mage to bis party. Tho bills ai not represent » proper meacure of protection of the industries aZected aud Were, therefore, not good hours. Everything in the Fad war Masty framing of important tariff? broken and thrown about ‘he mat- tress where the family's savings were, Sled for another purpose was unnecessary. hidden had been cut to pieces. The ‘The Tariff Board bad been instructed to report to the President and Con- ‘We have reached « point when every one onght to realize that the tariff ought not to be changed and business disturbed except upon information whi ere unable (0 iil allow us to pass bills that will disturb it the least. he Fater and the old system of higher tariffs. . If that policy is not approved by the people “then those of us" who are tage where it is considered worth Bow in office must give way to those who will.carry out @ different policy. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Sept. 21.—Declaring that it was his |“bounden duty” and that he had to veto the Democratic Wool, Free saying thier taritf revision policy was a game of politics, and rapped the Hls ies. OF THE WOOL, COTTON AND FREE LIST TAR BUS Xilled the Measures Because It Was His “Bounden Duty” Under Party eclares in First Dilis at an extra session of Coagres the regular session next December. ‘The Demoorats introduced and the House passed the three tari bills for | blacksmiths’ tools” is to invite in the | feeling and then @ recurrence to higher! and to secure # reduction in accordarce 't to-day, for the first time, made a Speaking here to a great throng, in which |. were Democrats as well as insurgents and standpat Republicans, the ‘President emphatically held that under his pledges to the Republican The latest sartorial wrinkle fre Paris is the family one-style sult. brought over yes t re they, as well 8 everybody else, have been improved in condition by our larger trade with Canada. But the bill was framed and came to me in a form rst clauso all agricultural ed to be free, and | jamed. These same | implements were named in the Payne | bill, and were made free in that bill | from any country which permitted our agricultural implements to enter it with- ous duty. ig else. He attacked the Democrats, score. “Mr. Taft made it plain that he would not altar his tariff policy. case on the foundation that his ad- { ministration is committed to the revision of the tariff scientifically through the tariff board. He criticised the methods of Congress in framing the bills revising the Wool bill, making additions to the free list and revising the Republican party is committed to the tariff board policy the President reviewed the history of the move- clauses endorsing the policy from Ohio, New York, Wisconsin, lowa insurgent representatives voted for statutory Tariff Board bill and had advocated such s means of securing accurate information im respect of the Probable operation of the proposed revision, the Mouse at once began to make @ record for political purposes ing three tariff bills, the woo! e cotton no public hearings of er of these bills, and isfactory infor- any kind on they prese: mation upon which the of them upon the indust: involved conscience of a tariff-for-rev who believes in any reduction, how- ever pront, of existing duties, but for one pledeed as I am to maintain « tariff Niph enongh to enable exiting indnatries to live, the “The wool bill. propo revenue uty of 2 per cent. upon raw wool in- stead of 11 cents a pound, a reduction of considerably more than 60 per cent of v ent duty, and an average duty of 6 per cent. on woollen cloth and factures, This was avowedly a tariff for revenue and was not drawn for the purpose of protecting the indus- tries. It passed the House and went to the Senate, where an Insurgent Re- | publican Senator proposed a substitute | in which the duty on woo! of the first class Was fixed at @ per cent, and of a second class, or carpet wools, at 10 per cent, and the average p age on was made 6 ad valorem. It was clatmed | ithor to be @ protection bill | a never submitted to a commit. | ence was ever taken In re | it, and It was evolved from the | pendent investigation of @ single | nator, A majority of the Insurgents 1 the Democrats In’ the Senate com- the woollen manufectures per cent by Its promised on a bill which made the tax firat on raw wool recond cluss, 85 per cent.; ; and the aver= cent. ‘The | bill, against the vote of nearly all of | the regular Repulbicans and some in- surgent Republicans, passed the Senate and was sent to conference, where a bill was agreed upon in which the duty was | 20 per cent. on raw Wool, and an aver- ago of 49 per cent. on woollens, ‘This | Dill had the effect of raising the duty on carpet wools, as fixed in the Senate, 19 per cent., and as fixed in the House, % per cent. Here was the firat case resented to me. “There was nothing in the record in either the House or Senate from which I conid obtain any informati the effect of this bill upo: P Passing the bill, without any indication as to its effect on the industry to which {t applies. HIS BOUNDEN DUTY TO VETO BILLS. “En the absence of si adeq ine formation, and with the prospect of se- onring it im three months, it became my dounden duty to withhold my approval of the bill. FREE LIST BILL OFFERS NO BOON TO FARMERS, “The Free List bill was called the ‘tarmers’ ilet.' for the purpose of giving an impression that {t was passed report them in such a way that Con- gress ond.the publio might be reliably yi e dviwed of the probable effect of any ree ANA quan me Proposed revislod of the tariff in the , , . ad bune and Press Added To- gether. future, The President explained how the There will be dnother such uprising | to-day, Tariff Board had been provided for and the appointment of the members. ChARGES DEMOCRATS WITH PLAYING POLITICS. “Althou,h many of the Democrats bad assisted in the support of the to compensate the farmers for some eort of injury supposed to be done by the Canadian peciprocity treaty. This rea son was finally repudiated by the leader of the Democracy om the floor of the House of Representatives, and is cer- tainly not true. There was nothing in the Canadian Reciprocity bill that re- quired any compensation to the farm- era, for in @ very short period efter Hh etek “This first clause, therefore, of the free-list bill offers no boon to the farmers at all, although apparently G@rawn for the purpose of inducing them to think “Tho free list has two clauses affecting meat and flour, As they went through he House they put meat on the fr t and flour on the free list. In the Senate, however, an amendment was put on iimiting the operation of these two clauses to imports from those countries with which we dave @ reciprocal rela- tion and which admit certain agricul- tural products of ourp free. This lim- {tation made Canada the only country which would be affected by the pro- visions of the clause. “Now, in our negatiations with Canada for reciprocity we attempted to secure free meat and free flour. Canad: meat and flour. portations of meat ‘anada without duty woul not ha’ any effect to lower the price in this country of either in normal times, But | this free-list bill was giving to Canada | something for nothing. Thus the bill was #o loosely drawn, it was drawn on | such: a wrong principle, and with s0 Mttle information, and it purported to do so many things which it did not do, | that T hod no hesitation in vetoing it COTTON BILL PRODUCED GREAT CONFUSION. “Finally the cotton bill came to me. This bill differed from the others in be ing a bill for whic hthe Democrats alone, and not the insurgent Republi. cans, were responsible, It had passed the House on the’ report of the Ways and Means Committee made without the tuking of any evidence of persons inter- ested in the manufacture or any one else; it had completely changed the method of clansifying cottons, classifying them ac- cording to the threads in the yarn in- stead of by the threads of the piece and the specific duty upon the square yard, ag in the present bill Important change, adopted aft tion This was a most and it had been an informal communica- writing with the eau of ds and after an adverse report The bill was diy an a free-trade bili It came to the Senate in the form in whieh it except that certain endments were added, “One Was an amendmept cutting down the metal schedule by & sweeping re- duction of 30 per cent., and another was in ps a an amendment of the chemical schedule | me @ purported reduction ad valorem per cent. So hastily was the bill together, so little attention was paid to the consideration of it tn the Senate, especially !n the chemical sched- ule, that #he most ludicrous results were hed. I had the bill pectally with r ‘hemical schedule, and even in the very short time I had I found the greatest fusion produced by the amendmen: I have gone Into this matter at con- siderable detall in order that my post- tion with respect to thee bilfx and the genera] treatment of the tariff may be understood. I am tn favor of the re- duction of the tariff wherever It can be done and atil! give a living measure of protection to those industries of the country that need it — SUFFRAGETTE TUG OF WAR. Women experts, to Be Pitted Against Men Opposed to Movement and No Odds Asked. A tug of war between militant suf- fragettes and mere men 4s scheduled to take place on Wednesday evening, Oct. 4, at Lyceum (gil,e@Third avenue and ‘'Thirty-fourth street, in connection with | > ONE KILLED, MANY HURT self her husband,’ Count Claude Perier, son of a former Pr ‘The family sult same piece of cloth. GIRL WHEELS DEAD BABY AROUND BLOCK AN HOUR. Mother Faints When Little Care- taker Stops and Tells Her Child Is Sleeping. Mary Montero, nine years old, of No. | 1067 Washington avenue, the Bronx, | wheeled a baby in front of her home for more than an hour last night before it was known that the baby was dead, Diary had pleaded with Mrs. Tripaldi mother of the child, to let her wheel the baby up and down the block in tic carriage. The mother consented, bu cautioned her not to go off the block Mary passed back and forth in fron of the house many times and reporte to the mother the child was sleopin She stopped once in front of the mothe to lift the baby up in @ sitting pos tion and screamed. Then she calle. to thee mother, who on picking the tn fant up realized that the baby wa dead and fell in a faint. Dr. Benjamin of Lebanon Hospitt. responded to the call and revived t mother. He examined the baby aid it had been Canimir- ident of ad for over an hour, IN TRAIN COLLISION. Passenger Trains Crash Head-On on Outskirts of Kan- sas City. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Atchison, Topeka and § Mi url Pacific passeng: trala ¢ usted into each other at the eastern boundar of the city early to-day. It 1s reported one person was killed | and severai were injured, e trains were Santa Fe No, 13, the| nsas Mast Mail from Ch due! here at 1.10 A. M., and the Missouri | Pacific fast mall from St. Louls, div here at 1.20 A. M, Both trains ure said to have been running Jate. The Coroner was summoned, Joined a wrecking crew and went the scene of the ster. dod aie RICH “MASHER” He to BAILED. | Man Sent to Workhouse as “David| Salomon” Freed on Bond, The commission me “David Salomom wh charged with insulting tw two en on the street who was days by Magistrate K this afternoon Foster_in the Cou four ES ae GRAND CIRCUIT TROTS OFF. DETROIT, Sept. noon caused the hours 1.—Rain this after- postponement of the| Grand Circuit races at the State Fair grounds. It was announced that the programme would be set back one day, thug extending the races until Satur day Avilla DETROIT STRIKE ENDED. DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 21.—Tho street car strike here ended last night. The men will get increased wages and re- gurn to work at once. 5 RES Rockaway Man Appoint ALBANY, Sept. 21.—The Conse tion Commission has appointed Joseph P. Powers of Rockaway Beach as Deputy Superintendent of Marine Fish- at @ barn dance and fall festival which ie to be conducted under the auspices of the Woman's Suffrage Association of the Fourteenth Assembly District. “We're golng to pick out men who are opposed to votes for women for one side,” sald @ ‘aember of the committee to-day, “and we're going to put our moat formidable women on the other. We're not going to ask any odds for a IVs going to be en ociation will resume te week- The ly meetingw to-night et No. Thirty-fourth street when cdirestee actual operation it will eppear that will be delivered by John Vi Mrs. Harriet Jounson Wood oes Mary Hastings, very appearance of a glass The very of Lg Ale bap ag ed yearn for a taste of the foam ses Ioeuet, amber bard seductive | beverage. Follow the impulse. | ‘Restaurante, Cafes, Oyster Houses, Dealers, A ell cut off the! c The Casimir-Periers’ one-style idea is Sensation all ire simp fri carried down to the dog. ise has a jittle {+ at off Pe same bolt. the rest of that ment, 9 had to eit up all |a 35c. quality at 2 5° alb. _TEY EVENING WORLD, TRURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1911, Count, His Wife and Pet Dog Dress Alike was the atestion the oid he og gut # only about thirt ous aver get their names in bers as being behind a bill for t! of the people, and you never more than thirty-Ave Congressmen. Up to this thr n's attitude on ally subjects had been decidedly pessimistic, ;[ t all was changed with the arrival of a third person. Not Mrs John this} time, “either, but a little freckied lad} jot elght years, who answered to the name of “BY.” The gray fighter said | As soon ae the little fellow had gone into | the house to get the bountiful lunch ‘that Mrs. John had prepared for him-- | because she was preparing this was the only reagon that John and the reporter | ever escaped to the freedom of he | |plice*—that they had adopted the lad a| few months ago and he was to be thelr | fon As the reporter was leaving John L. Krowled out an epigram of some class. {Bald he “Why don't they out ont these campaign promises amd elect a man for what he Bas gone? I didn't DISTRESSING CASE OF HIVES CURED Body Covered with with Large Red Marks. | Face Also Affected. Cuticura | Ointment Eased Skin Right Awayand Completely Cured. “I retired one evening and after sleeping | | Kesetcditene ts Gece ican usar | NIX ON CONGRESS, “SAYS JOHN," | HIS TALK ON TAF . Continued trom Fifst Page.) ‘When daylight errived I wow that 1m tole bedy was covered red jai A, ebout ap inch or imo spark. My stayed homo that | iy ay baer 2, by ect 16 poison: | tun and That he hives, Ble preserved 8 medicine and also gave me some ointment. | “As the days went by I steadily grew worse, the marks changing from obe part of my body medicine and olstment ot ‘to o and fet gral ppd 4 until one even! ance r papers T saw the Guileure Remedies adver- tised. 1 isimedatly procared tome Cuticur ton to bis second’s advice, tt tone | ‘fer ible bat aN souined (9 awe tay ee he was running into a knock- | | guia right ones, ont’ Without even a hint from the reporter, | John started his next thesis, ‘Look at Henry Cabot Lodge—ba' hat guy cried his way into the United States Senate. He was @ schoolboy vhen they had him hooked for a inute, Why didn't he stand up and ell them all to go to Of course, \e was on the wrong end, but he would | ave shown his gameness. WHERE ARO THR STATESMEN) WHEN WORK'’S DOING? | “Gov. Foss? Well, the only thing 1/ can say is, it's a funny thing to call | him a Democratic Governor. He got kicked out of the Iepublican party. | He !s Governor because he wants the} honor of being Governor, not because he 1s looking out for the welfare of the State, or because he needs the money. on using the Cuticura tect ont ean say thet ft catainiy. aa the finest preparation I had ever used. It completely cured me, pare pot been troubled since.” (Signed) ym Waterman, 120 F. 100th St., New Jone city, Dee. 8, 1910. Although Cuticura Soap and eure Ointment are sold by druggists and deaters everywhere, @ Iiberal samplo of each, with 32-page booklet on the skin and hair, wil! be vent, post-free, on application to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. 23A, Boston. for return of He's got all the inoner he wants, and Lo: t P D he probably thinks the State has all S et og the welfare it needs. French bat-ear brindle bull; no white marks. Answers to name of Duke. Lost in vicinity of. West 86th Street. Reward given if re- turned to P. J. Bonwit, 334 West 86th Street. FURNITURE CASH oF “What's the matter and Congress, 9 with the Senate d all the rest of them? Do you enjoy a cup) of good coffee + with your breakfast? The appetizing aroma, aud . delicious flavor of our cele- brated BROKEN COFFEE give gus o to the entire meal. Because the beans are small and broken, you get Nothing less than 51bs, sold, Free delivery, Order by Postal,or Telephone 8471 Cortland | GILLIES COFFEE CO ESTABLISHED 1840 € 237, 239 Washington St, N. ¥. ‘ Plage and Barolay St, $1 WEEKLY OPENS AN ACCOUNT NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED | 107-|O9 WEST 125™ST OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS HELP _WANTED—MALE, - 3187 ANT SHIPPING AND. RECEIVING ay RK wanted; experienced. Kindel Bed Co., bua ed; “ire FINISHER foreman wa | Tied ton. abe Norman a, del __ BUSINES: is OPPORTUNITIES. Special for Thareday, the SOP RAY Bol 10c | ‘D apn DOL is the first and only preparation for cleanmng the mouth and teeth which exercises its! antiseptic and refreshing powers, not only during the few moments of appl cation, but continuously for some houre | afterwards GEO, BORGFELDT & 00. New York, Chicago, San Franclece, ———— Cor + Perk Bem In ora ie lk Chocolates Assorted Here we have In a Single box an assortment of our varlous milk chocolate specials—an unusual col- lection of deticious daintles whieh will certatnly make a hit with you if you have a taste for sweets. ig now YOU from 25% to 40%, but also: get the ad- ceneege of a BETTER SE- LECTION of BETTER MERCHANDISE. Furs bili NOW will be ture delivery WITHOUT” DEPOSIT. RUSSIAN PONY COATS 52-inch length; extra quality, beautifully marked, scleetes fits large rolling shawl col- far jare cuffs; lined with either brocade or Skinner's eatin. Actual value $65.00. “E °37.50 selection of Sc Muffs and Coats at equally low special prices. 18 WEST 23D ST. NEAR PITH AVENUB, NEW YORK redler os neice aS cy. “Your miosey’s worth aud entire satistaction guaranteed.” 1437 Third Ave. Bet. 81st & 82d Sts. Grand Rapids Furniture “Direct from Factory.” Convenient Credit Extended to Everyone. $1.00 a Week on $60 Worth ne Vandam meat at Greenwood, BARBER BHOP f ao aoe dma Fe. Ths | Sarertionmeat, ts WP Chisnoi at Cost 00006-0-04-64.0.0 6. GieteBY the 218i) Special tor Friday, the 224 ON, SPBERRY ¥ PER aT exp Box BBC | Weidates: ke sarees “Seening nth Te cet Lt otelook, Pound ure for 39C ‘The aperities eg te eet Inaiance inclades $1.60 a Woek on $160 Worth Everything ter lonsehonmiia Oreo. HENRY A, M'DONALD. from his late home, No. 30 Saturday, Sept. 23, Later- DOO9OO65 440-1 9-6-1600040000O rity oh} ark bares tlowing tite o ORANG! rite PA ratte 10c 19c¢ kinds, UND Ox AZ MASZAU ST.