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' b | I t ' neighborhood. 1 aid not think anything about this until Florence Motse of No $88 Third avenue came to me and said that the little old man had dragged Tulle into the vacant lot alongside the moving picture place long before Florence sald to the detectives. 1 didn't Delleve what she noid aout the old Man untill two friends of mine, Agnes where they Lv came and told me ine same thing. They | weld that the litte old man with the White beard who used to sit on a rook | amd watch us play in the park dragged Julia to the vacant lot Celia and Agnes knew the little oid Suet as 1 They away, old man take Julia by the arm and pull Julia into the lot. At % o'clock Saturdey night Julia and Agnes saw the same 014 man coming out of the lot, which runs back to the rear of the flat whero Julia was killed. There is a rear doo: that Jooks out on the lot.” Jacob Posner, fifteen years ol, of No. 17% Washington avenue, brought to the Bathgate avenue station this afternoon & knife he had found tn front of No. 6 East One Hundred and Seventy- third street, the rear of which faces the vacant lot where the crime was dis- covered. The hoy found the katte ‘wrapped in a newspaper. It was an ordinary kitchen knife, unstained but rusty. While the police do not believe ft is the knife the slayer used, a micro- scopic examination will be made. FINGER PRINTS MAY HELP SOLVE MYSTERY. Finger prints of the man who mur- @ered Julia Connors occupied to-day the @ttention of several experts of the Po- Nes Department who were called in to eesiet the extraordinary force of deteo- tives Commissioner Waldo has assigned to run down the slayer. A careful examination of the bath- room subsequent to the finding of the dying child in the vacant (ot adjoining the building proved that the slayer had gone about his hideous crime with amazing caution, pressing his drugge! and gagged victim down in the bottom of the bathtub so that her strugwies were noiseless and there was no pow sible contact with anything that would make even @ creaking sound. Im inflicting more than forty wounds with a double-edged knife before, In the last ecstasy of this degenerate killing, he plunged the weapon in her breast, the @layer had stained the bathtub from end to end, but only in a few spots had had aid. that #he would come home. The par-| ents, aided by neighbors and many of the Bunday-school and public school friends of the girl, then atarted a aye tematic search, They went through | Crotona Park and to all other pl coe | {they thougnt she might be. Later tae | father returned to the Tremont a@tation | asain asked for help. He says the nant told him he had no men to spare. The parents and neighbors renewed j thelr quest, using lanterns. the night they kept it up, despite the Jeers of hoodluma when the frantic j Mother would ery “Juila, Julia!" | Just before midnight Connors went | back to the police station. Was told there were |to "Go hunt the Nesbit and Policeman Mulroney, » fay the searched Crotona | with janterns for several hours, not giv- | Ing up unti! daylight. The parents and thelr friends went over the vacant lot several times, but the girl was not there then, | A dog in the neighborhood began dark- ling about 4 o'clock yesterday morning. | It is believed the murderer kept the sirl all night and attacked her with the knife about daylight, and that he was carrying her body to the lot when the dog heard him, The discovery of the body was not jo until & o'clock yes terday morning, however. About that time the youngsters started in a body to the lot to pl Suddenly they came running wildly out. Fleeing into their homes, they screamed: “There's a dead body in the lot!” WAS ABLE TO WHISPER HER NAME, THEN FAINTED. Edward McGarry, who has @ garden plot in the rear of No. 42, climbed to the top of the fence and looked over. He thought first it was the body of a boy he saw. The child was lying on her back with her knees up and her feet resting in a soap box, Ghe was absolutely denuded. McGarry ran over and felt her wrist. He in @ painter and there are so many acoldents in his trade that some time &g0 he took @ course tn first ald to the injured with the Red Cross Society. Discovering that the girl's pulse w beating faintly, he shouted to other Neighbors crowding behind him to get water and alcohol, The water came first and he bathed the child'd swollen face, on which the gun had been beating for hours. He applied cold water to her wrists and massaged her breast with the alcohol. In about five minutes the child opened her eyes and looked at him. end out, Seret. how- he laid down @ finger or thumb to make @ mark. The reproduction of these finger Prints will establish whether or not Glovanni Geress!, the young coal and foe peddler who was arrested carly to- ay, hed any hand the crime, The other prisoner, James Kelly, fifty-one years old, of No. 741 East Two Hun- rea and Seventeenth street, 1s be- Meved to be a victim of police seal, for since his arrest no evidence of any value has been found against him. Kelly was picked up in the woods of Crotema Berk, opposite the vacant lot where the dying child, stuffed in & pack- ing box, was found. BAY SHE WAS INJURED ON THE FOURTH OF JULY. He wore no shirt and blood stains were found on the garments he wore. He explained that he was hurt on July 4 and attended at Flower Hospital and that there was so much blood on his shirt be threw it away. The spots on hig trousers and coat were not large @mough to attract attention, he said, 60 Re, Rept them. The fact that he was hurt was verified at the hospital, and the police do not believe he knows any- thing about the crime, but will detain him for the present. At an early four to-day Coroner's Paysician Reigelman was sent for to make an examination of Florence. Sev- | eral times after she had told the police something she would wind up by saying he was only “kidding.” But she stuok to her statement that she was with Julla until $ o'clock Saturday night and that they were walking in Third avenue when they met an Italian who took them to « cellar, Julia Connors, the victim of the sav- age murder, was an unusually pretty girl with large blue eyes and long brown hair. She was five feet tall and weighed about seventy pounds. She was religious end quite an artist, many of her draw- fags adorning the wails of her hom Saturday afternoon her parents went to @ @e!) game in Crotona Park. Julia in- stead went to the Church of Our Lady @f Victory to confession. She and her sister were members of the choir that ings at the children's mass. STARTED OUT TO MEET FATHER AND MOTHER, he returned home about 6.15 Saturday afternoon and told Mary, her fourteen- year-old sister, sho had been to con- fession and also spoke of the music they were to sing the next day. There are twe other children, Edward, ten, and Eugene, seven. The father is @ trusted ployee of Baker & Williams, bonded Warehousemen at Nos, 274-: Water street, and for nine years the family has qpoupied the same apartment. ‘After getting @ drink of water, Julia aid she would go and meet her par ents. Her ister rad two brothers siw er cross Third svenue sod start East One Mundred and Sev- enty-second street towaed Crolona ave- nue Her mother had promised to buy ber @ white bonnet thoy had selected earlier in the day, and Jt was to get tt she was going to meet her pare: ‘When Julia failed to meet her parents er return home by 6 o'clock they b came anxious, and her father reporied her missing at 6.20 at the Tremont sta- Gon, be says. He was told not to worry Then he asked her for her name. She was able to whisper that. And then she was able to say as to hor murderer only that he wi man; a man.” Policeman McSweeney was also bending beside the child and heard her say this, He was fanning her with his hat, but she made a slight motion with her hand ae {f to ask him to etop. Then she fainted and did not regaih conscious ness, When the detectives began search of the lot, the clothing was found— &@ little white dress and chemise, un- Gerclothing, black stockings and shoes, Wrapped in these was the hair that had been shorn from the child's head. ‘The hair ribbon was gone. The police Delleve the murderer kept it for him- eelf with several strands of the child's hair—trophies of his horrible erime. PLAT WHERE GIRL WAS SLAIN 18 LOCATED. It was not long then unt! the pick of the city’s detective force was work- ing to find where the crime was com- mitted. They were certain it was not in the lot. The child never rallied after her words, “A man, @ man." She died in Fordham Hospital an hour fter she was found. Her clothing was fifteen feet from the body, behind « The body was covered with wed strips of ollcloth, Last night the flat in which the mur- der was committed was found. It ts An unoceupled apartment on the third floor of No, 3968 Third avenue. The house is on the weet side of the jot and in the backyard fence there is a gate- way. The former tenant identified the strips of ollcloth found with the body as part of that they left ir the flat. Tho bathroom @ traces of the erme, There were bloodstains all over the bathtub, with strands of the child's wir, Some of the finger-prints were hers and others are the flat prints of a man, and may ald the police if they should arrest the criminal, The girl's rubber com), identified by her mother, was beivind the bathtub, Nobody in the house had heard a ruggle or any cries murderer had placed his little Victim in a sitting posture in a wooden soap box about two feet long and one and one-half feet in width and depth, stuffed in the clothing and covered it with the olicloth, Then he carried her to the lower hallway, out through the backyard and, tossing her into the lot, hid her clothing and escaped. From the rear window of the Third avenue flat, where the crime occurred, the child's slayer may have seen the forlorn ttle searching party as it moved in and around the dark lot with lifted lanterns and noted with satisfac: tion the mother and father of the litth child with whose life biood his hands were red abandon thelr quest and move wearlly down the pathway to the atreet. BURNED LIPS SHOW CHILD HAD BEEN DRUGGED. said Dr. Joho Reigeiman, physician who performed the autopsy, “that the child was given @ drug, as is shown by the burning of her lips. It was not carboltc acid. It was perhaps chloroform or some other nesthetic. The odor has evaporated and superfotally neither the lungs nor other organs betray the identity of the poison, “I am satisfied that the innumera- ble wounds were made by a strange WHERE? ang how do the people of this money centre conduct their paigns when desiring to GELL REAL PSTATE — sHors, STORDS, MARKPTS--STOCKS, BONDS, ETC? Here's the answer: 2,840 WORLD “REAL ESTATE," NESS OPPORTUNITY” “FINANCIAL” ADS. WERE PRIN- TED LAST WEEK— 966 MORE THAN THE HERALD well as for quantity, circulation Feoulte, it's @ case of at cam- fiend who took satisfaction putting [his knife into the slender body. Un- | til the last he was careful not to deal & wound that would kill, On the child's back every ono of the twenty- one wounds ts vertical and none very deep. The slashes on her hands and arms suggest condition of frenzy when thi were made. It culminated in all proba- bility in the deep wound made in the back, the hing of the girl's throat and then the deadly wound to the heart. The weapon used was a two-edged knife~a stiletto perhaps, or such knives as cobblers use, The weapon might possibly have been an Ink eraser, though the depth of the wound to the heart rather removes that as @ possi- bility, It ts the most horrible crime of which I have ever known,” | NOTHING MORE REVOLTING, wit, to the autopsy Dr, David Gir » the ,Athologist of the ad body All during | He says he! Park | | RECORDS OF CRIME 8sHOW ™ “HE E TOMBS PRISONER FLED OVER WALL | Daring Thief Makes Getaway in Sight of Boys Whom He Rob |FELLS AGED GUARD. |Steals Pistol, Frightens Engi- neers and Scales Barrier in Melodramatic Flight. George Witeon, awaiting trial for the theft from the wife of Frederick L. Tay- lor, a lawyer, of her engagement ring @ Weeks or more ago, ought to be in the Tombs this morning under close confine- ment as an ex-convict resting under @ Rew folony charge. But he ts not there, Warden Fallon and his deputies ad- mitted sorrowfully this morning. From the first ight of morning until 9 o'clock twenty-four deputies and a number of policemen from the Elizabeth atreet station searched every corner and recess of the building, every barre! and dustbin. They went over the Criminal Courte Building, even, which is connect- ed with the Tombs by the Bridge of Sighs. Knowing Witson for a desperate man and knowing that at the beginning of nis escape he had taken @ revolver from @ guard he had knocked unconscious, they expected to be confronted with dattle and sudden death at every turn. But the only sounds they heard were the voices of the scarchert The Tombs officials had the melan- choly satisfaction of knowing some- thing of the way in which Witson escaped. He was quartered on the seventh tier, With other prisoners of the tler he was taken out for exercise it half past two o'clock yesterday afternoon and presumably locked in his cell again at half past three o'clock. It was the duty of the tier keeper, Coug- nan, to report if at any time Witeon ‘was not in his cell. Cougnan had an unhappy session to-day with Commias- foner Whitney, Deputy Commissioner Wright and Warden Fallon. MADE HI8 ESCAPE THROUGH UTILITY SHAFT. From the seventh tler Witson ap- Parently made his way to the utility shaft, through which run all the water and gas pipes and the wires of the building, Marks of his fingera on the pipes are plain. In many Places there are marks made by his shoes and some of the pipes are scraped clean of dust and grease where he sild down them. In front of Engineer Frank Kelly and two of his helpers, Witson loomed up at half past elght o'clock last night. The utility shaft opens into the engine room, There {s @ grating across the opening, but there is a space above the grating big enough to allow @ man to climb over. The engineer shouted. Witson caught up @ heavy tron nai! pulling machine, suddenly as he had come. his men wasted quite a ooking for him. Meanwhile Witson had worked his way through the coal bins to a manhole. He pushed up the Iron lid with his head. ‘The marks of his head are plain on the coal dust which lings the cover, Then he crawled out into the prison yard, Here was William Houlihan, sixty- five years old, who had beey many years in the Tomts without ever seein: a prisoner climb out of a manhole cover. He wasn't watching*manhole covers, He did not even turn to learn what made the noise of the tron scraping over the stones, Witson crept up behind hin and dealt him a cruel blow across the wide of the head with the nall-puller, He snatched the revolver from Houll- han’s belt and made for the Franklin street wall of the yard. SHOT FROM YARD; THEN CALL FOR GUARDS. Things began to bappen In the prison Just then. Night Warden Jones and Deputy Warden Drury had been “count- ing up" for the night, They could only find 68? prisoners. There should have been 8. A second count verified the first, Up from the basement came a m™ je from Kelly; “There's a prisoner loose. We just saw him down here, and now we can’t find him."* A shot from the yard followed. Kelly and One TO MAKE ESCAPE and disappeared as | little while | / VENING WORLD, How ‘ih H(t ) HE SLIDES DOWN 10 TIERS To BASE- MENT ON P)PE RUNNING THROUGH SHAFT man sent a quick call to the Elizabeth street station, while the other rushed for the yard. Old man Houllhan was lying there, sprawled out and feebly scratching the court pavement as he re- covered consciousness, Guards were quickly posted at the four corners of the prison wall outside until police could re- Heve them. ‘The yard was searched. ‘Then, satisfled for the time that the man was yet in the building and could be caught by daylight more safely than at night, the watch was kept up until the unsuccessful hunt of the early morning, Daylight brought with it more informa. tlon, The coal blackened marks of Witson’s hands are on the grating of the storeroom window near the Franklin street wall. They show that he climbed to the very top of the window and then | made a cat-like, scrambling leap to sloping top of the outer wall, From t clawed scratches and streaks on wall-top he had a very narrow escape from falling. He ran along the Inside of the wall to Centre street, climbed over the fron railing at Its crest and tried to let himself down on the St. Andrew's coffee stand shanty, OROPS TO CENTRE STREET AND! MAKES ESCAPE. While he was doin by three boys on treet. in this he Y her side of the They w too much interested drama to think of giving an Apparently he feared’ that the too long and that he might: }break through the roof of the stand, | for he pulled himself back to the wall and worked to the side of the main en- trance to the Tombs, where the drop ts short. Here he let go gradually and sipped from the wall, dropping elght feet to the street. t ran to the three boys, cap from the head of one of them and lran away through White street. Priso in the Tombs awaiting trial do not ra prison uniform, and once around the corner he could well have slowed his pace down to a walk and passed as a person who had @ perfect right to go where he pleased. ‘The firing of the shot after Houlthan was munned is not explained, The police thought It was a signal to friends |outside, but the probabilities and the story of the three boys made this seem the snatched unlikely, Nobody outside could have known that he would be provided with @ revolver. Patrick Gallagher, awaiting trial for robbery, escaped from the Tombs by way of the utility shaft and the wail just three and a half years ago, The of the Tombs are beginning to whether the wall 1s as efficient keeping in of prisoners as it Is idmpressive to the eye, and will make an analysis of her lungs and stomach and heart for signs of the drug he and the Cor- oner's physician firmly believe was d. ‘The man who committed this crime |4s one of the worst degenerates who ever lived,” said Dr, Gillette, “There is nothing in the records of psychopathic criminology that I can remember any more revolting than this crime, Unless some of the finger prints found on the bathtub and the box that held the body which have been photographed Dy experts from Headquarters can b used, there was nothing found in the vacant flat or lot to indicate the iden- tity of the girl's slayer, The box iteclf in which the body was carried out may It ve one, but it is doubtful, had contained cans of 4 cleaner man factured tn Long Island City, and the Polica to-day are trying to find out frem the concern that makes |t whe: ales were made in the neighborhood. it ls possible in this way they may 6 on the trail of the murderer, ‘Twenty of the best plainclothes men im the Department are working on the case, and every detall of the lives of the two persons held on suspicion 1s being run down. They believe the mu: Gerer was a maniac, but that his mai motive in killing the girl was to pre- vent exposure for hia earlier crime againat her, Mogt of the wounds infilcted were supermMelal, and evidently the work of an ii person, Two of the wounds woulg have been mortal, one in the back etrating the | and the one| Dorothy Taylor of New’ York), who motion of heert, The have been spending their honeymaon tn doo! @ thee offer drawing the France, returned to England yesterda) knife ‘i cally @ the girl repeet- by aeroplane. edly, the flend finally stabbed her tn the back, and then through the heart. Julla was a favorite pupil in Public School No. 4 and had aspirations to be an artist, She was not @ girl who ran around and she did not care for moving pictures and such things, Her mothe! said Julia never gave her any trouble and was always obedient, ‘The Connors have always been care-| ful about the children, There is not the | best of police protection in the netgh-| borhood, and Crotona Park is often filled with hoodiums and ruffians who insult girls and attack their escorts. For this reason Julla was not allowed to go t ‘This is one reason the parents were so frightened when the girl failed to come home by 6 o'clock Saturday evening. Besides the stab wounds on the girl's | back and breast, there were many on the right and left wrists and her head and breast showed —bruii made by fist blows, has been unoccupied since Jan. 28, door had been left open for the con- it over with a view to renting It. Friday an elderly man, @ forelgne! called and looked at it, and the poll | RAVE Not overlooked this clue, They are the murderer was familiar | with the house and knew of the vacant | confident flat Grahame-Whites Fly Back, LONDON, July &—Claude Grahame. White and bis wife (f the | The apartment used by the murderer The ventence of persons who wanted to look Last MUNDAY, JULY j SCALING INSIDE ‘au CLIMBS OVER DOOR THROUGH) OPENING For “# ' ' ' ] Wd a) 1g le eo 'G 13 te \F a + | 12 ' U SINGER | PRINTS 38, 1912. Daring Prisoner Scaled Walls of Tombs Shown by Diagrams, and Picture of Fugitive KNOCKS OOWN GUARD AND TAKES HIS REV. OLVER & 13 132 a 123 120 wee es eB oe ) 32 lad 138 | OVER THE OUTSIDE WALL SCHOOLBOY BREAKS TWO RECORDS AS HE DEFEATS SHEPPARD (Continued from First Page.) nina, the Carlisle Indian, tn th | the 10,000-metre run, as he Preliminaries: A Stenroos, Was third, The 2 seconds, Eleven runners started in this race. Only Kolehmainen, Louls Tewanina, Stenroos, Joseph Keeper, Manitoba, and | A. Orlando of Italy, finished. ‘The |others were all out of the race before the last mile had been started. Kolehmainen led from the start and | Tewanina was a close second for more than a mile. The tall, blonde Finlander, with the little Indian dogging his he: Anal of tin the of Finland, time was 21 minutes were the only ones ever in the After a mile Kolenmainen gradual ained, with his far longer strides ne Indian reached the tape 800 yards behind. The modern pentathlon, the 900-metre swimming contest, free style, wa | by Iverd of England in 4 minutes seconds; Lieut, George 8, Patton jr, America was second, in 5 minutes 56 3-4 | seconds. The tug-of-war team of the giant Btockholm policemen defeated the Lon- don police in two pulls, lasting resp tively six and two minutes, ‘The ma- Jority of the Englishmen were the same who dragged the Americans off their feet so easily at the Olymple games. tn London in 188, The Swedes were gre § evidently | | No Advertising Is needed for those who use it. This is to get you acquainted, too, WhiteRose CEYLON TEA Forty Cups for Ten Cents. merly Miss ALE OTL TL White Rose Coffee, Pound Tins, 35c, ae Irejotcea over thelr national victory, While the British complained thelr op- ponents had sat on the ground. mnastic e: all ar nis tan by Ts motre the beaten mado 3 are entit etves 19 cen: THE o American onds, Webb and Rasmusse 10,000 people beginning of when all three sult of In the hi “Laugh and “Ye rwegian and Danish teams, the sed In attractive white uniforms, throughout the day. seemed the general opinion tha: this event victory for America in the entire Oly It is the second time story of Olymple competition that United States athletes have taken lace in an event. pic programme. and then get laughed a' xhibditions by Bwedisn, oys—-Platt and Ber ding broad jump, iclittras, a Greék, ntimetres. or amin Platt t metres. AMER!CANS SUCCESS SURPRISES FOREIGNERS. 8 wore an ners of the first heat of the 10,000- metre walk, which was won by Gould- ing of Canada in 47 minutes 14 sec- of England was second n of Denmark, third, The day opened clear and warm, with a feel in the alr like that of late June in New York, the games. ‘As the crowd went to the stadium to- day every one was talking of America’s cleanup in the 100-metre dash yesterday, places were captured. It the ree foreshadowed only Transcript.) grow f men were who about the n ; Ben Adams metres and 8 centimetre ed to gold medals for beating All ang the win- There were about in the Stadium at the m= CAMORRIST JURY MAKES FULL SWEEP, FINDS ALL GULLY, (Continued from First Page.) | torced to enter the fron cage with the ther prisoners. On hearing of thelr conviction Er- ricone, the principal prisoner, made a last protest to-day, saying, “I have committed no crime. Indeed my Poor brother was literally murdered while he was a prisoner, and I myself should have died of a broken heart if all my strength had not been used to keep mo alive.” Giovanni Eap!, the treasurer of the Camorra, remarked: “Il was abroad, but willingly gave myself up, ‘trusting to the justice of my country. Corrado Sortino exclaimed Not murderers, but murdered.” Gennero Ibello, head of the Camorra in the Vesuvian villages, with eyes red from weeping remarked: “The Crown Prosecutor withdrew the accusation against me. Therefore I am practically acquitted. I have, however, spent five years in prison and lost $10,000, My house has been destroyed and my wife died from @ broken heart” INFORMER JOVIAL AS VERDICT 18 ANNOUNCED. Abbatemaggio, the informer, remained | serene and almost jovial, saying: “I have said the whole truth, T haven't a@ single word to chang: ‘Those are tifé murderers of the Cuoccolos. ‘We are The verdict in the Camorra trial to- day is the culmination of a trial which lasted nearly two years, and has times stirred the wo! by the di- vulgation of the ramifications of the | rerfminal association known in Italy | asx the Camorra. During the trial and |the preliminary investigation, which alone lasted nearly five years, a num- | ber of the leading prisoners died. | ‘The direct accusation which brought | to light the operations of the Camorra [was the murder of Gennaro Cuoceo, | one of its members, at Torre del Greco, and of his wife, Maria Cutinellt Cuoc- \colo. Their deaths were supposed to be executions ordered by the Camorra ALFANO, LEADER OF BAND, WAS CAUGHT BY PETROSINO. The leader of the Camorra, Enrico | Alfano, known as Erricone, was arrested in Brooklyn and was taken on board a steamer to Europe by Lieut. Joseph Pe- |trosino, a detective of the New York | | Polige Department, and was handed over to the Italfan police at Havre, France. | Lieut. Petrosino was afterward agsas- | jsinated at Palermo, and the crime was ‘1aid on the shoulders of the Camorrists. The Italian prosecuting authoritle | found it dificult to obtain evidence, bi |one of the Camorrists, Gennaro Abbdate |maggio, turned informer, and his evi- dence has finally led to ‘the conviction of the prisoners. Over 700 witnesses were heard during the trial, but not much was learned |from thelr evidence. The members of the Camorra accused the Carabineers of | }fabricating the evidence in order to | |fasten the erlme upon the members of the Camorra. Some remarkable scenes have been witnessed during the trial. The pris- oners were confined in an tron cage in the const and among them was a priest, Ciro Vitozzl, in his clerical garments. Among the forty-two pris- oners originally brought to trial there was one woman, Maria Stendardo. Throughout the trial the accused gen- | erally exhibited a deflant demeanor, |sSome of them raged, while on occ: sions they hurled storms of invective at the Judge. Abbatemaggio, the in- former, was placed in a cage by him- self in the court, strongly guarded by police, Altogether the trial stirred Italy in a remarkable way and caused @ sensation throughout the world. —————_—_ Indepe Wrecked. TURKS ISLAND, July 8.—The Ameri- can schooner Independent, bound from Jacksonville, June 17, for Colon, has been wrecked at Calcos. The crew is afe, but It ts reported that the cargo PREPARE FORSUMMER CAMPAIGN Whether at the seashore or in the mountains the time comes when the sun searches out delicate complexions and dainty hands and hours of discomfort and pain follow. 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