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reault on * ‘of the Harmon-Wilson fight. 'TAFT’'S NOMINATION ‘(MPOS- . HOLE NOW, 16 CLAIM. 4 Walter F. Brown, Chairman of the . Republican State Central Committee, * this afternoon issued the following | gtatement: } "Out af the forty-two national dele gates apportioned to Ohio's twenty-one { jonal Districts, Col. Roosevelt ected thirty beyond any question probably has elected thirty-two. In the Roosevelt delegates had « majorty of from %,0W to 3,000. it makes Mr, Taft's nomination Jest ae certainly it makes the nomination of any of the Deen identified with the it in the contest.” ; Taft's campaign managers had no £ etatament to make excent that the Pres! Gent would surely control the state _ Convention and secure the six delegates- “2 am pleased with the result eo far,” ‘ Gov, Harmon to-day when he re- to the executive office from his { Rome in Cincinnati, ‘out 1 want to ‘now more. about it before I make « eye * TAFT CARRIES HIS OWN HOME DisTRICTS, i i i j A 2 i BES il 3 5 carried the Third, Seven- leth and Twenty-first Dis- fejif | Kighth—N. L. MoClachnan end Lewis | Ninith-George E. Hardy and C. D. j 5 a M. Gtreich and Sherman Zenner and James ‘Thomas. ‘Twoeltth—Karl T. Webber and King G. ‘Teompeon. Fourteenth—A. L. Garford and H. @. jammond. + Bixteenth—Cook Danford and E. EB. Erksine. ; Seventoonth—E 8. Soucrs and A. 8. © Mighteensh—H, A. March and Emil ‘Nineteenth—Edwin Seedhouse and W. pectic iJ. H. Speedy end A. J. Al- ‘Twenty-first—J. W. Conger and J. J. Bullivan. ‘~The Taft delegates, according to re- turns received earty to-day, are: brand. Gevonth—Johi L. Bushnell and lL, EF. ‘Thirteenth=T. J. Maxwell and Carl _ Guster. HARMON AND Wi! Date. +. GATES TQ CONVENTION. Following is.@ list of the Med the National Convention mud Murray and Joba Wold © Becond—John W. and grourth—Joeeph Barnes and W. H. Fetth—J. W. Smith and John 8. Gnook. Bizth—J. W. Linge and M. R. Denver, |. Beventh—Jefferson Coombe and P. J. @hovviin. ) Righth—-H. W. Brown and J. D, ‘Ninth—James W. MoMahon. Tenth—Valee Herald and W. 8. Eleventh—Van Snyder Dean. | Gelegates ‘by distrio Devanney wnd Jacob ‘Twelfth—Reed J. Hoer and Benjamin ‘¥ }"Vourtesnth—Charles Beers ang Don Weitone—novert Scott and Dr. H, . o~ Seventeonth-—James Fitzgibbons and EE er et a car igiting®—W. © atitoheli and nartes \ tne Wilson delegates to te National Third District—Haward Hanley and “ Mawara Benth At. Washioy. leth—Thomas B, Schmidt and fen ity-first—Newton Baker and R. B, iy. ata TORONTO RESULTS. Inspector Lestrade, $122.40, ehow $19.90; Yankee, place $4.8, show $3.0; Baw how four Aprons Made for You Fer the Cost of the Materials We make « thousand a.tractive styles of aprons—make them as carefully as could make them yourself, with Dean lockstitch, seams neatly cov- ‘We sell them for what the materials aloné would cost YOU. corres MILLIONARE'S SON ELOPES WITH ACTRESS GLAD AS BOY ONA FREIGHTER FOR GHINA live his life ae he saw fit, and his gather might be hi |. He prated of bored! society Iife and Young Mott Signs as Purser and Wife of Flushing Man as Cabin Boy. fo far as the Mott millions were con- cerned. In anger the elder Mott ordered him from the house while the toy’e mother wept. Young Mott communicated hie inten- ELUDES CLOSE GUARD. tion of seeing the world to his mother over the tefephone and asked per mission to see his father again, This was denied and the ultimatum wae delivered. ‘Then credit destroying process began. On every hand trades- men were told to supply him no longer. Six trunks of clothing were held at Vilantry, leaving him only two euite, At first he took Iron-Master Planned to Send Erratic Offspring Around World Under Restraint. Allowed Supposed “Drunk” to Middleton’s Widow Sues Third a joke and hired | Teturned to-day against the Third Ave- HE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, M KIND CONDUCTOR'S COURTESY COSTS COMPANY $20,000 Ride Undisturbed and Dam- age Suit Follows. Avenue Company and Gets Big Verdict From Jury. A verdict awarding $9,000 damages was AY 29, 1919, iannanee by his vi “Milltonaire Baby’ | Christmas tree MAN WAS ILL AND DIES. | ‘ Jordan Lawrence Mott jr., son of Millionaire Jordan Lawrence Mott, founder of the Mott tron V’orks, has dam avenue, near One Hundred and Tenth street. He engaged a table and ordered dinner for fourteen et Del- monico's for last Wednesday night. Thin became known by Fuller, who sailed as purser on the British freighter Indradeo, bound for China, trailed him constantly with detectives, and Delmonico's informed him he would oh to pay in advance. There was no inner, ' | World Monday. Young Mott declared, .| in an interview, that he was tired of following his break with his million- aire father. His intention to “bat around the globe for « little while” was told exclusively in The Evening tion. He would sail on the oark for Mott became suspicious. ration a plan was arranged ai the young recalcitrant. He with drink under and young In being a society man, hanging around clubs and playing the social game ac- cording to the wishes of his father, To-day it became known that there fs @ deeper story hidden in the young man’s utterances. With him on the steamer, disguised as a boy, is @ young actress, the wife of a wealthy resident of Flushing, L. 1, and after him started last night on the Mauretania, Hector Fuller, some- time war correspondent, author and soldier of fortune, who has instruc. tions from the elder Mott to bring the “young /{pel" back*at any epat. The woman {s elgned on the ship's iporedcelighersi at tho man signed on the ship Fuller will intercept the Indradeo at Gtoraltar, and, from all tndleations, |pnder the name of “E, Matting young Mott will be forcibly removed, as Mott, im a8 ‘was planned before he escaped from the % house on Amsterdam avemue, where he| Then the Aight began th oe mw et his} Fuller, with a letter of credit for $10,000, left on the Mauretania last night. His YOUNG ROMANTICIOT HAS | instructions are to rush to Gibraltar, “LiveD MUCH.” Meet the Indradeo and take young Mott Not even in the adventure fiction of the’ from the ship by whatever means may be necessary. a, “pea blood” which the young man Jordan L. Mott ir. is powerful, in spi has written for magasines exists a ‘of his dissipation, but Fuller, who is nearly fifty years old and has lived « stranger story than his own career with this added sensational chapter. Mott is rough life, hae whipped him in a fight. ‘he latter thirty years old, but in active life and Influence over him is al- enough to make the young mill- the darker experiences he is a hundred. Born to millions and a social position was reooneiliation tramp et to keep him away for the prescribed year, But fortune, either good or bed, in- tervened. The woman procured $900 from some source and the young mai &@ magazine, getting 3600 in advance. Nvery of the story. had dis- nts on Am- It was Sunday and sterdam avenue. No tra Inéradeo was abdeut to sal A man and a seeming boy boarded the money was passed is not fonaire come to terms, especially under the promise of collaboration in writing sea tales while on the sailing ship. Meantime, London agents of the Motts have got into communication with all ‘Then, with credit tightened to the hia eeat, hie head bent forward. The Umit, he came to Fuller with propoal- | Conductor thought he was intoxicated, Australia, on condition that he might | car line, the conductor ehook him and he tke the woman along with him as @| mumbled, “Oh, I'm all right.” The oon- cabin boy. Fuller assented too readily | auctor then turned ¢e the motorman and said: “He looke like pretty good sort of a fellow. Let's let him stay on.” Mr. ‘a| Middieton remained huddied in his seat ‘and taken aboard @| all the way back to the Post-Office. ‘After that Fuller agreed | At that point e passenger remarked, “I've been that way myself. Let him wtay on the car, Tdi ‘a back to Fort George, When One a ‘for the sale of his story to|#undred and Twenty-fifth street was Foiraiine, gett nce. |Feached on the second trip back, the He gave his note to secure the de-|car crew decided he was in @ serious gondition. The car wee stopped and a ‘When this became known to the elder! policeman hailed. Mr. Middleton was (stl and Fuller they went iooking fF! taxen to the station, where the sergeant aid at once’he was ill, not drunk. He was found| Was then taken to the Harlem Hospital of him until Monday evening, when the/in an ambulance and died in « few i houra of apoplexy, eteamer and went to the captain. weet sued the company on the ground that lown, Dut lits employees were negligent in not summoning a policeinan as soon as wwrenoe | they discovered: Mr. Middleton's condi- L, Martin and the actress | tion was not normal, turned to-day was in her favor. $9,000,000 BABY'S nue Rallway Company by « jury befere Supreme Court Justice Gavegan, because | When the Black of the death of the late Louls Gtiddleton, member of a freight forwarding frm, In May, 1910, Mr, Middleton started for the American League ball grounds in a ‘Third avenue car, but instead of alight- ing at hie destination he remained in At Fort George, the terminus of the ‘Mr. Middleton was then taken all the His widow, Mrs. Nellie Middleton, The verdiot re-| , solids: FATHER SUED BY GRMDMOTHER other body by outcome Cummins lost dis own taine and added: “President Taft the stump in Massachusetns, only begun.to fight’ hat sta The outcome in Ohio, all on the Taft etre tion, has only ‘aft lines and mi Taft outcome. “The President will have a majority of the delegates in the Chicago con- vention from every section of country, clearly indicating that he is ity the elected this fall. BPirieentet 2. ronious and Gores geemion. | several friende, determined to ship his n| around the world. Some one must go from Lawrence vard with Mi ‘olyn Pitkin, daughter of a Thayer Academy professor, he was forgiven and turned to writing fiction stories of adventure. He achieved a rep, utation remarkable for bia years and, ‘wae hailed as @ comi: uthor of great ‘Then he began the life which led him, several yoars later, to shoot up the front lawn of his home in Tarrytown, declaring burglars were attacking him. Several times he fired at imaginary enemies with revolvers and rifles, His wife fled in terror and sought protection from the elder Mott. Since that time, three years ago, she has been under her father-in- care and has ecarcely ever seen her husband. Young Mott was tretated by a doctor and recovered from the conditio’. of mind which made him, see enemies on every hand, A id more stories sold to Mott, senior, finding ways to check his son. It was then the new chapter which reached a climax day had its beginning. The father, after @ consultation with son on @ sailing vessel for a trip with him to prevent him by force, if necessary, from drinking for @ year, ENGAGED FULLER TO KEEP SON FROM DRINK. Hector Fuller, who had a reputation for devious doings which extend from South Africa to Japan, take the trip, and a bari truck whereby the elder Mott was to fulfill several obligations in return for Ful. ler'e services. At the end of @ year he was to receive $35,000 if young Mott had Knowing not touched @ drop of liquor, the reputation of Fuller, it w & foregone conclusion that y: would not have @ drink of anything stronger than water for the allotted time, At a family conference young Mott was told the ultimatum. He was to start on a four-masted bark from Brook- ‘was engaged and the frat ould be Sydney, Austral several typewriters and rite flotion with Fuller, who had sold the story of the trip in advance. The scapeer: accepted and bark was young Mott and] at Pilantry, North Carolina, week of bunting, for a) rything went wi ~— WALL SREE ani willing to Hd Mi Tw A Hector Fuller went to the Mott estate | shares” cutting off any possi- oung man getting money family name. ‘What happens in Gibraltar when Fuller meets Mott and the woman will| /°sal action against Russell and because be the next chapter, former war of It ts up to the apondent to fulfil his ‘Thore is $26,000 in it, a! woman stands in the way. » Laat chapter et Gibraltar will be th witnessing. ‘The Clostag Pri. ek iets ge iam why ES By Ta "ays aR oO hy —1 as aT ay + Ue ‘ty ‘hee = agin 42) ¢ = Cr. ae + % 130, 128%) 1% — 2 5" 13) td i oe ia) } + + + eubsui gen seezety & oo PES FSEIE ETEE BE ty 4 13% ug * Qat. Hie Hat if pessayivants ae ‘tn ‘at * Re Bs BS 2% F, t+ aes. . Tuk and American Smelting, ‘Two of a K woman was not at was known & M Informed by Faller, the} wite. "Then young Mott grew defiant. "Hi aged in Ape Putian (From the Buffalo ‘Your money your I! 4 appearing from be- ‘dare touch me!" exclatm- ed Pecten; "I must take my money home to my wi ‘All right, stranger,” the masked led, wanted it for my wife, but maybe youre has firet claim, Go head,” /COTICURA SOAP (Continued from Firat Page.) _ of his disappearance with her grand- daughter and great grandchildren Mi Lawrence has become ill and is co! fined to her bed and the care of a Dhyalchan. Mra. Hopkins, who ts only twenty-one years old now, eloped with Hopkins on his yacht Uno to Pesksitill and was mar- ried there in 1906 when he was sixteen. She wee the only chfid of Dr. and Mra. Lawrence's only deughter, Mra. Henry Siegrist of Bt. Louls, who died svon after her infant's birth, She was brought up by her grandparents, who were devoted to the beautiful girl, Hop- kins met her when she was in echool at SAYS HOPKINS PREYED ON HER DEVOTION. Mr. and Mrs. Hopkins have two chil- Gren, both of whom were born at the Hotel St, Regis, They are Josephine L. Hopkins, the pet and delight of her great-grandmother, and John Randolph Hopkins, born last fall and gaid to have started life as a 95,000,000 baby. In her allegations that Hopkins mis obtained from her two promissory notes for more than 612,000, She is su- the cancellation of these notes Russell Hopitins ts not at pres- hin the juriadiction of the Bu- orene bait loaned the ier « te one roof of Oculists (registered cour ins neg ion i actes Was served last night on Patrick een and are Ry Rae a ee i inston-on-Hudson” | to all Harris Glasses, whether Bhe also asserts that he brought a the cost be $2.00 or more. titfous sult against the executors of her husband's estate, and induced her to make a private settlement of it. By that ¢ ways, he obtained other | m her, together with an nt under which she was to pay him $1,600 a month, INDUCED HER TO BUY AND FURNISH TOWN HOUSE. Mrs. Lawrence further alleges that by threatening to take his wife away to California, Hopkine induced her to con- tribute to the purchase of No, 100 Fifth venue as a town house for the Hop- SHAVING STICK | For.Tender Faces Indwspensable for thore subject to red. | peas, roughness, and ph anhed ied tore. At his Irvington with a handsome rcsiden: gardens and othe: the river, he main the choice of @ large majority rank and file of the country and Republican can statement that the Roosevelt backers in Ohio expended $300,000 in the campati that State alone. pended $25,000 all told from their quarters.” ‘The Taft for: tate, dies helt of the roof of the Fifth nue house has also been converted into | @ B00, where the Teddy bears are real, | Mens, tigers and bear cubs, It 190T that Hopkins created enn Sacra icine 600 TAFT DELEGATES 1S M’KINLEY’S CLAIM. ‘WASHINGTON, May 22.—Director Mc- Kinley of the Taft National Campaign Bureau to-day issued a statement de- claring the President would have at least 600 delegates in the Chicago Con- vention. The statement, in part, follows: “The outoome of the Ohio primary yesterday has in no degree altered the felative strength of the various cand- ates in the Chicago Convention. Presi- dent Taft has gained enough delegates in Ohio to assure him of at least 600 delegates in the Chicago Convention. He ts already agsured of contro! in that ubstantial majority, and the Ohio, whatever It may be, has not in the sltghtest degree altered Ituation except to add President Taft to Theodore Roosevelt and Senator other candidate who has ate, “Roosevelt lost New York by 83 to 7, and Senator Cummins lost Iowa by 16 , both going to Taft, id when he took ‘I have hope said ————_ In Dan (From the ination (and usually another fee), and to the Optician for a change of lenses. The double services under Broadway, near Willo’by, Bklyn Uo rater Bt. opp. A. 4d Bklya ph 1 RB, 697 Broad St.. near Hahne's, Newark SHO Sata, Veiv SPR! a Boston Transert Grigse—fo Bacheller ts sick pital? Ie there any cause for anxiety? Briges—Yeo; he has a deucedly pretty nurse. pt.) Itwas the custo years ago to consult an Oculist in his private office and pay him $5 or $10 for his examina- tion, and then to take his pre- scription to an Optician and pay him for the glasses —a used her trust and confidence to de- divided responsibilit i soca attr ber bucbeasie death Hopuins |. If the glasses were unsatisfac- began tmportuning her for money ani| tory, it meant another visit to by fictitious assertions of being in dedt| the Oculist for another exam- RT VAMP SHOES Cuban and French Heels and All Leathers iG J. GLASS , STYLES AIH PIICES. BERG private m ‘| of the that no | 17 West 42d—Bet. 5th & 6th Aves., New York to be Bi The defeat of Theo- Gore Roosevelt for a third term {s as- The MoKinley Roosevelt managers had concentrated their enengtes in an effort to carry Ohio “It is reliably reported the ‘at the hos- Bivens | kinaes, and that tn that way he obtained some $90,000 from her and a further 47,000 for furniture. The amounts which she accuses het Brandson-in-law of obtaining from ler by misrepresentation or coercion total up, she says, to $775,000, Ali the charges he makes were set forth in full in the ourt order served upon Mr. Kelly at Irvington last night by Earle & Russell of No. % Liberty street, attorneys tor Mra. Lawrence. Pursell Hopkins, who te twenty-cight years old, has kept himself continuo’ jin the public | ploits, whother it was drivin; the streets of New York or wanting to race @ yacht to & wager of men to carry the } @ach child had 30 le pe the stomach, ‘liver. and | sixty acres 4 Tal the suspect it, Ehrlich &Sons Far More Often Than oculists. We charge for glasses only. pahahee d ps Pity to ae ill ifocal 60 to $18. Fry te for Wednesday, 223 Sixth Ave., 15th St. 217 B'way, AstorHous |] j»sORTED HARD. ¥ 350 Sixth Ave., 22d St. fassau, Ann St. | CANDY) 2Be, value. 10c ..| Liver and Bladder Remedy will do for IF YOUR CHILD [NEEDS A PHYSIC If Cross, Feverish, Tongue Coated, Give “Syrup of Figs’’ to Clean the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Look at the ton, coat ¢, Mother! If t isa sure sign that your little | t of bowels are clogged up with putrefying waste matter and need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When your child is ret drooping, pale, doesn’t sleep soundly potest or is cross, irritable, feverish, stomac! sour, breath bad; has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, or is CO nm ‘e, undigested food and sour feat, move on and out of its little wels without nausea, griping or weal ness, and you surely ‘will have a. well, happy and smiling child again shortly. ith Lae | of ou are not drug- ging your chi!dren: r of luscious figs, senna and aro- | matics it cannot be harmful, besides they | dearly love its delicious taste. Mothers should always keep Syrup! of Figs handy. It is the only stomach, | liver and bowel cleanser and regulator ceded. A little given to-day will save sick child to-morrow. Full directions for children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the pacl , a cAtk your di ‘Syrup of Fig: repared by the ‘0. This is the deli ine old reliable. offered. Usually $18 & $20 ggg rapid. and many mixture effects. Usually $25 & §28 ist for the full name, ir of Senna,” Fig Syrup sting, genus ous Refuse anything elec |} | | New, browns, checks and plain and novelty weaves. Usually Speci $ $28 & $30 Pee! Oculists’ Opticians Half a Century in Business. “When You Think of Glasses Think of Ehrlich Service.” Eyes Need Glasses serges, cassimeres and worsteds. Is Believed How is one to know that lasses are needed? ature warns of their need by unmistakable signs — eyestrain, head- ache, nervousness. “ Ehrlich” 265 Broadway Near Chambers St. WEDNESDAYS OFFERING and Cortlandt Stree’ ‘All our stores a} 498 Fulton St,, Cor. Bond rooklyn., Vark Row ptor Satur SWEETEST-TONED MOST DURABLE H Milk Chocolate Covered made mery table butter and @ thick coating of « 39c i} NEW Pianos, 8150 up. 88 Note Player-Pianos, $265 up. Player-Pianos to Rent Premium Milk Chocolate, POUND FREE ™: | BRASS - Red |i; —CASH OR EASY TERMS— Btop to think—o much for vo Little, “The Player that weare— No trouble; no repaire.”” | Schubert Piano Co. | | 5Wast32dSt.,»* NY. i Fe $7500 WT PURCHASE ‘A Week Opens Ain Account CREDIT TERMS Important to All Women Readers of This Paper. Thousands upon thousands of women have kidney or bladder trouble aad never Women’s complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy con- dition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. You may suffer APARTMENTS FURNISHED COMPLETE FROM $49.88 70 $500.00 SEE SA TURGAY Bn at COaneR FISHER BROS. COLUMBUS AVE BET. 1032104 ST eat deal with pain in the back, bearin, n feelings, head- ache and loss of am n. Poor health makes you nervous, irrita. ble and] maybe despondent; it makes apy one 50, But thousands of irritable, nervous, tired and broken-down women have stored their health and strength by the use of Swamp-Root, the great Kidney, Liver and Bladder Remedy. Swamp-Root brings new life and ac- tivity to the kidneys, the cause of auch troubles. Many send for @ sample bottle to see what Swamp-Root, the great Kidney, ONE CAN BAVE GOOD : LOOKING FACE AND BANDS Perfectly Easy to Keep Com- plexion and Ha: Soft, Smooth and Flawless. “Why! ca and hands?" them. Every reader of this paper, who cod-looking face an athistic girl of has not already tried it, may address Dr, 4 etic girl of her Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and | cqually athletic friend. “You can," was receive sample bottle free by m You | the reply, “if you would give the time and the regular fifty-cent and bottles at all drug sto: attention to your complexion that you do to your hair, teeth and figure. Use Velo- gent. Night and morning and when going ttle into the skin of your face and hai in.a very little while you will he delighted to see how fine and soft your cinplexion appears,” Vilogen’ hee a hundred household uses. For burns, abrasions and little cuts there is nothing better. It soothes the skin and paves the way for the healing process. Its is a fine habit. Contains no grease to » At all druggists, in le tubes 25 cents. out of doors rub CARPET CLEANSING & ssed Air Pay Alay ig bl FIRE-PROOF STORAGE for Household Goods. \ T. M. STEWART row Pom iiVeiuide Dorin, World. Wants Work Wonders \ oy ou eincnengaseeeaenstantestinnenaneestnign yan BE. koh Carhart s Ges “The Most Unusual Suit Opportunity Of. The Season—” *13.50 These values at this propitious season of the year will make de- The Ocean Blue Sérges, Gray Ser fancy weaves in the English and conservative models. VERY SPECIAL, - =: $17,50 These suits are remarkable in their completeness and high sf rays in diagonal weaves, pin roll lapels and short coat effect; an extreme value. ___Many sssociated colors, hertingbone effects and exclusive de-’ signs in the predominating English and American styles; velours, These suits “impersonate” custom garments and are considered a “rare” value at this price, Buy! Suits $15.00 to $45.00 | 841 Broadway | 119 West 42ndSt. Cor, 18h St, Near Breadway Harlem and 42nd Street Stores Open Evenings Bind | Special tor Thursday, MUETE crea, a THURSDAY'S OFFERING The specitied weight in each instance New Upright Pianos SEEK RY sss! CLEANING 353 West S4thst. |= RING UP 5567 COLUMBUS = LS = I Advertisements for a8, y and mi ancy worsted chalk stripes, The popular English soft front, 1 ‘10¢ value BOX ID Bi cludes the container. ‘ make WISSNER' PIANOS WAREROOMS: 65 and 57 Flatbush Ave., Breek~ lyn; 0¢ Fifth Ave., New Yorks ‘Women | ‘Appreciate | the value of good looks—of a finecom> plexion, a skin free from blemishes, bright eyes and a cheerful demeanor. | Many of them know, also, what it meena to be free from headaches, backaches, lassitude and extreme nervousness, because many have learned the value of BEECHAM’S PILLS ‘as the most reliable aid to better phys ical condition. Beecham's Pills have an unequaled reputation because they act so mildlygbut so certainly and so beneficially... By clearing the system, regulating the bowels and liver, they tone the stomach and improve the digestion. Better feelings, better looks, better spirits follow the use of Beech- am's Pills so noted the world over For Their NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR IT, bi eee ( 190 | Name 379