The evening world. Newspaper, January 18, 1913, Page 3

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j , P ~ a —_—— ‘ieee ddeieeesiane dian sinatiecnnacemreesiatiananee “WOMAN DEMANDS $18.00 FROMSON OF MORMON CE Sues John W. Young to Re- cover Judgment Granted 15. | Years Ago in England. — | HE’S HAD VARIED CAREER Lost Fortune in Shipbuilding Trust Smash After Living in Lavish Styte. Unusual mystery is made by the law-| yereot an action brought In the Su-! Prome Court by Miss Mercedes Estelle Woodford agains: John Willard Young, aon ef Brigham Young, the Mormon elder, to recover a judgment of $18,040 obtained in an English court fifteen yeare ago. Miss Woodford, who is said te de a niece of the Iate “Oom Paul” Kruger, one tine President Transvaa! Repitdlic, is an Kn aad the daughter of Mme. Helens Woodford, who owned much | property in South Africa before the Boer war. | Miss Woodford, tarough her counsel, | Pierre M. Brown, has applied to Justice | Greenbaum for an order dtrecting Mr. | |: Young to gm certain testimony given twe years ago and also for an onder! } thet an open commission ensue to ta the testimony of four London lawye | who appeared In the original sult when it was tried in the High Court of Jus- ee, Queen's Bench Division. Neither Mr. Alfred J. Jop- vrofesved to the judgment rendered against Mr. Young. Mr Jopling intimated that Miss Woodford's mother was the original complainant against him and that tie mother had assigned the claim to the daughter, who ia now travelling in the United States. Mr. Brown said the judgment was sent to him from a correspondent abroad for collection here. MORMON LIVED IN LAvisH | STYLE IN LONDON. | ‘The London solicitors who may be! examined are George Twynan, who rep- wesented Mr. Young, and Horace G. Harwood, Walter 8. Huders and Robert ©, Witt, who appeared for the plaintiff. It was learned that in 1897, when the auit wae tried, Mr. Young's daughter! and Mies Woodford were attending | @choo! in Brussels. When the two qirle returned to London, where the Mormon was then stopping, calls we: efohanged and in this manner the \Yeungs an@ Woodfords became inti- maptely acquainted. Mr. Young at this had an elaborate euite in a London note. = ‘The only hint as to what is back of the guit came from the office of one of the lawyers in the case, to the effect thet Mrs, Woodford’ had been persuaded | e* tence against tha ite ramifications 4; by Mr. Young to Invest in certain Amer- 1e8, the 1 aceumuiated. ear cnt Wak tat etek ne MAY Sonepin Darling, the special agents, are the men whose work led tagthe amash: the investment was for stock in com- pany of which he was only an oMzcr; ford's purchase o? stock, and thar he % UNCLE SAM PUTS that he never shared in Mrs, \Vond-| 'n& of ANO LOST SLTEP MIGNTS” HEAD OF “MOVIE TRUST” ON STAND President of Motion Picture Patents Co. Testities as to Firm’s Workings. For, more than a week the operations ume was living in expensive style and| and ramilcations of the “Movey” Trust entertaining lavishly. Mrs. Woodford! nave been under investigation by two special agents representing Attorney- General Wickorsham, in the Govern- mout's nuit to diasoive the Motion Plc- ture Patents Company, and a masa of t corporation and aid to have been Fawin Grosvenor ant he Rathtub Trust efore Special United States Testimony never served waile in London in| Examine: ward Hacker at hearinx: any action similar to the one brought tn the Hotel McA!ptr esterday and few York Supreme Court. It is|phuraday tends to bear out the state fon the lawyers on tie service that the commission is now sough. VARIED FINANCIAL CA- GR SINCE LEAVNG UTAH. Mr. Young bas had oy moving pleture businer ment of Samuel Untermyer. who ohar- acterized the Moving Pioture Trust ae | "the most audacious combination In the invested tn the in the United More than $100,009,000 When the son | State, according to figures compiled dy New York he|Mesere Grosvenor and Darling, who hipbulldins t trust d promoted its c In his financl an Judge, an he Although he was inany years her sentor, It was reported they were cnxaged to wed, but Miss soon married a young Enalisa- man. About this time he was involved in the collapse of the shipbuilding trust and et many thousands of dollars. Sinve t time Mr. Young, who now lives in has been interested in many ft to the developme@it of ra:i- roads and mines in Mex!zo and th Weet. a lenin MURDER AT CHURCH FAIR FOLLOWS A CAKE AUCTION, |tne orznnization of the General Fi! Company, which subsequen Bullet Meant for One Bidder Hits | near Another—Slayer Storms Build Jnad t Jana estimated the v ing Seeking Enemy. RENTON, N. J, Jan, t clone of a chureh fi heid in church of Hightstown, sx? from here, early to-day, “Moves shot and killed Obadiah Miner effort to kill Charles Warne: -At the Dapust | niles rior : close of the fair, All three groes, were bidding on uke | when Toylor and Warmsiey oogai to Kyuarrel, Ti lrew a revolver and fived at Wari uilet entering | Miner's brain fled, but rer turned a few : inter and ate tempted to re-enie: the b a0 each Warmaley, Dut Was prevented by the doo, varred, the oveu- h oecoming 1 Lawrence | Y. Clark and a posse are now 0 pur- sult. Phe crime i? said to hove been 9, PAUL, 4 umpire, to-day #igned . re President Byne of ngo- walt League his co iP imdereiood thas toe 00 wioy ides over Gieniane Marvin, ture Patents Company, was concluded yesterday. Mr. Marvin, who {# perhans the most important figure In the trust m the Hnancing of Broad: | a plied oy NAN pinture Patents Compan: {ar ‘The shooting took pince while wel ie one af th cakes were being auctioned «M at the| ‘Thomas Matson, Ino. in the Paten |. Tes | Compa’ jand « af the Fi argapized May %, Ihe Six months late | + was foing i per cat of all the Alin lrenting in this coun primarily caused by Jealousy between | ‘Taylor and Warmsley over a ‘vornan. | There had been bad fecling between | the two men for w long time. 200 members will be in t [Lavelle of Bt. Patrel's \atnedral wit be the principal sve \“ox Wour Munderiine of Hayat nave travelled all over the country in thelr Investigation, Under the present supply and leasing avetem the Motion | Picture Patents Company, conatsting of nine leading manufacturers, controls the entire fel A three-day examination of Henry N Prealdent of the Motion witted that of the 360 firme that sup aged fiime five veare ago, only fone campanye(the General Flim Com pany (onaantved by the Motfon Ploture Patante Company) ~exiats today. prie He testified vest acau' y all Mim exchanges fn this con officials of the Patents Company estigated the te of their prop. amount was ex $3,080,000, Th neq these exchanges The second witness yesterday was Wilitam Pelzer. Secretary of the Motion and Treas of the General Film © defendants ani represen The withess develaped a had manors posed Ignorance af official re vowing the phet Ve mies organization it was doing -R per er at Kangaet. hold @ rt sntral Hotei next Mon nigh: hers who Justice Victor J THE EVEN SHOULD THE W *«DoNot Marry Until You Have Some Property of Your Own That Brings an Income,” Writes “‘C. H. B.”’ “That Is Better Than Having to Tag After Some Man and Beg for the Little You Get.”’ «Our Home and Other Real Estate Are in My Hus- band’s Name, So That He Can Will Away From My Children if I Die—That’s Why He Is So Bossy,’”’ She Declares. film exchanges ng the business of mpany, He \ veat after, “| ee bs ess tae a nag LA SALLE ALUMNI TO DINE. Mar. Lavelle to Be Principal Spenk- imnt Amsoctation At the Broadway Bishop M [Nixowa GREELEY: Tia | South and West. Tt ts this: “Girls, do not marry until you ve some property of your ows that brings in an income, however emall. That is better than having to tag some nan and beg for the Uttle you can get. Business is even in love, The recognition bur Sentimental youth suggestion that man who scorns But whether "C, | are entirely right, laws is that, (1% A HUSBANDS PLACE Bess ess even in love’ {s at the bottom of the whole Continental view of mar- rlage, with ity dowers and contracts. Is revolted by the considerations money should taint the bridal beauty of young love, Hut the noble the cash and takes the dowerless girl may grow husband whose wife has to beg him for money and who places accumulated by their his name alone, I don't know whether the injustice complained of by this wife for eighteen years Is general or not. I know of many homes property is in the wife's name alone. | situation ts general or exceptional, It ought not to} be possible, If marriage is @ partner ship, as so many men have urged, the profits as well as the work should ve divided equally between and it should not be in the power of one legally to defraud the other of her just share. If marriage ‘s uot a p nership, involving equal profits, then those persons who | argue that wives should be paid salacies | young into the property | joint efforts the partners, ans ‘The truth about the marriage elusively product of « being who self Only in his soblest and most | Generous aspect, | He leaves everytuing ion of property relating to th individ BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Perhaps the most remarkavle circumstance relating sion of the headship of the home is that I have yet to ‘from any woman who makes the is of In ane | | pusvand to perform or neglect excep: | tent in | partnership. Here ts the story of a w given eighteen seurs to ive accumulate property, . | truthfaty saya could from ver children, of @ second Wite, should e her ‘nusband. countries which recognize property salt of ihe profits of the marri the! | i » who has! ng a man! veyl awa 0 i fol Towed by # eheerful Mttle rhyme fron Dear Madan a more contented woman. | -| SHE DOESN'T THINK HUSBAND! PLAYS FAIR, © apent sevens ANG WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1913 IFE BE THE BOSS? Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). “‘Business Is Business, Even in Love,”’’ A Married Woman Informs the Girls “| HAVE WORKED WARD Tenth Article of @ Series. “MAY FATHER-1W-LAW SAID, AFTER OUR WEDDING, IR my HUSBAND GVER AmouNTED To MUCH IT wouLd BE BECAUSE | MADE HIM SO* had as much oppore family tee as I have, and he has all the property besides. cannot sell any of It without my alg- to this discus- receive a letter claim that wives are entitled to more than an equal footing in family life. On the other hand, num- berless men have urged the nec sity of the absolute rulership of the husband. There cannot be two head they say, and, only one being pos- sible, that, of cour: one that keeps the barber shops Not a solitary single woman put forward an argument in favor of the feminine autocracy de- clared by Mary Garden to exist in every American household. No wom- an, apparently, seeks to be boss. Man, on the contrary, has cited everything from Genesis to Chesterton to sup- port his inherent belief that he should have dominion over his wife. In a most unusual communication which appears to-day a woman who has been married eighteen years, calls attention to present {nequall-| ties in the laws affecting husbands and wives, and pleads for the establish- | ment of a community property law here such as exists in many States of the ‘The moral she draws from eighteen years of the partner- | ship of marriage is not particularly cncouraging. BUSINESS 1S BUSINESS, EVEN IN LOVE.” Of course ho shows that I do ré My have an Dut if € die before he does, what have I to leave to my children? Love, oh, yes, th ship mother. the property pretty much as he Mt todo. If I die first and he should ‘ould iny own children tting much of marry again, stand a chance of what their mother worked so hard to save and accumulate? the point—protecting the children. ‘Thia all could be set right, if hus- would always Dut every piece of property in both names, have the deed show the Property to be in the name of, for inatance, John G. Smith and his wife, Mary H. Smith. Then neither party could squander ti: without the consent of the oth and eaoh one could will the inter- est he or she las as he or she aces fit to do, and all through life the each had something to work for. here I am raising three children, ‘My som, cixtesn gears of age, Gays he will never treat a wife like Gea has treated me in the way of mosey and property. posed to ask for whatever I get in My two deughters, four- teen and twelve, at this carly time most positively declare they will Rover, never marry. Should my son continue as he me future wife will profit by my expertence; but how about the girls? And yet the men ‘wonder why there sing number, too, of Place @ man in should be the busy. hi worth while teen years and etght I was twenty-two years of ag ‘as twenty-seven and my husband when we married; I held a business Position that averaged month, while he at that time was W5. We are both college I was taught sew, cook and attend to housework all the time T was growing up, little by Uttle—I really do not remember learned thin or Nothing was abso- quired of me, as my father comfortably fixed finan- clally, and we always had one and now believes, unmarried women. the same situation for a life of auf- fering and hard work and see how many would hold out as @ for countl ’ I was -ery economical for years, until we secured a home heads and a little extra, too, I would Ike to commence to Ax up my home with an occasional new Perhaps window but I find that year by year {t ly harder to ‘eoted In having thing against the wishes of not on account of the young mar himself, but because his income was But 1 married him, not sufficient, better now that tue children are getting larger. day after our wedding, that husband ever amounted to much it would be because 1 made him so. thought that would be eas. I had many good resolves ma husband | re- T find tt harder to dren note this, and advice to them alw honor thelr father does not go very ceiving $300 per has over a hundred men under him, My husband T started in doing all of my houses rN i great rerson talk about the “bons of the family” c everything, and this £ kept BOs OE ae Senile Ane ihe bees y he advancen in Wien TI have a few mo- s time for reflection I gener- ally come to this concluston: Girls, remain single i some property of your own that brings in an income, howave. better than having me man and beg for the mother of four children, and two daughters, but one is dead, #0 at present the family consists of one son and two daughters, have other real estate, but T hardly fgel just f even tn love, 6 inflicted on the the husband of the average family @nould at one be my hu changed my mind? i \ THEY LEAVE THE QUESTION| ™*ToPal'* UNDECIDED. e happy yeare bedding, towels, the many odds and pousenold fur. sof our wedding ne $00 and his of bomming never entesd | Parente Kave rowan of @ mora never IT have worked hard all these years, many nights have lost sleep all night and them have to continue my work just the same the next ¥, and aside, fro; The scevtre of love Was all otther de- nt is appy and contented as the day Conmittution, | Brigham, who hax bean to who ta, hi te love ihe father just as iney love ELIZABETW @ MADE A $1000 HUBBY OUT OF HN SAS 9550 WE Court Sends Divorce Suit of Alexander Schafer's Wife to a Referee. : WANTS TO GET TRUTH. Says Affidavits on Both Sides Hint at Reckiess Swearing and Falsification. Cecilia Schafer and Alexander Scha! whom she is suing for a divores before Justice Greenbaum in the Supreme Court, eurprised the Court by their aftl- davite and counter charges regarding her request for alimony. The Justice| to-day sent the matter of Luctus L. Gil- vert of No. 4 Cedar street, as referee, with the comment: “The affidavite on both sides indicate most reckless #w ing and deliberate falsification and eup- ed by her | husband as the leading shirtwaist de- | signer of the trade, and commanding for herself a salary $12% a week, asserts that her husband earne a salary of $10,009 a year, which ts altogether due to her advice, finanatel heip ani work, The husband is the secretary and) treasurer of the Parisian Chic broidery Company tn Weat Twenty-| third street. The wife says he controls & majority of the stock. Mrs. Schafe: says whe provided t Mr, has coi sending buyers and manufacturers to Lim and telling him how to deal with) them, QUIT WORK, BUT HAD TO RE- TURN TO IT, SHE SAYS. When he became —prospero says, and they no longer had to depend on her salary for the support of thelr she) BRANDT 1 HODE I WASHINGTON BY HS ERATOR SPOASR Pardoned Man Departs for St. Paul, Minn., After Nelson Shields Him From Publicity. WASHINGTON, Jan. 16-Foulke 2, Brandt, pardoned yesterday by Gov, Bulser of New York, left here to-day for St. Paul, Minn. Senator Knuté Nelson, Who hae been one of his sponsors in his long fight for freedom, refused to reveal Brandt's ultimate deatination. Although Brandt enjoying int first absolute freedom for five years, he kept himeelf hidden here to-day ‘The former valet arrived from New York early t fon, jay with @enator Ni v two were whisked away from the station at once and Brandt disap- [oko 4 At Senator jele0i home lie jousekeeper denied that the ex-cngrict wae there, Wanntor Nelson refused te say where bie protege was hidden. or to comment on Brandt's future plans. “I go not Want any publicity about Brandt now,” le dedared. “I appre ciate the fact that The World hae helped tree him, but nevertheless in view of MMe new start in life, I can: where he fe nor tlop concerning him.’ tell you you any tnforme- 3 GR BEATS ERGO | WN SUT OVERNEKEL 13 $300 VERT capital witch put) Marie Dobbs Also Establishes; Schafer in business and that she, ntly) helped fis business by} Marte Dobba of No. 68 Hanaon place, Brookiyn, got a verdict to-day for $3,000 damages against the Interborough home she stopped work aud they moved) Rapid Transit Company from a jury be- to a home in the Bronx, where she de- Vtore Justice Scudder in tie Supreme voted herself to caring for their six-| Court, Brooklyn. year old boy, She sa: been obliged to i if and her son. “His prosperity,” said Mra, Schaefer to an Evening World reporter to-day, wi e ruin of our happiness, So longs we were happy. But as soon as he be- came @ $10,000 husband he began to neg- lect u He ran after other women to wpend his money with. Many of them Were buyers and models to whom I had introduced him. One buyer to whom I! introduced him is named as a co- reapondent in my suit. “After I introduced him he turned to me and said: ‘What a fot, ugly worn! She looks like a model for a Chivax packing house.’ Yet when my detect! broke into a hotel room the next day «he was; with him. Bah! No more $10,00 husband for me! We should have staxed poor—and happy.” Mr. Schefer in his aMdavit suyw he 1s able to pay alimony than his ble to support herself. He calls her a $10,000 wife because of her salary of 9,500 a year and her bank accounts. WEDDING GUEST HURLED | THROUGH AUTO WINDSHIELD Car Skids on Yonkers Avenue and Crashes Into a Pole. Returning from a wedding in Hast- tngx-on-Hudson early today a party of New Yorkers was in a bad automobile smash on Yonkers avenue, Paul Pugh, of Riverside Drive and One Hundred and Ninth street, @ builder, was se- verely cut by belng thrown through the wind ehlelt, He was taken home, re- fusing to go to a hospital ‘Tne others in the car were Mr. and Mrs, Joseph T. Callahan and Miss I21- ale Instone, who live on Washington ©, Brown of Hastings-on-Hudson. king « turn, the ear ak r All injury except Mr.. Pugh, and they re- mained wi him untll another car could be obtained, and In tthat they came | New York ded —_> OCTORS IN LINE. jon (0 Inaurance aw and Will Serve, LONDON, Jan, 18—The members of the British Medical Association to-day ed by @ Majority of 115 against 2% to release the British doctors from the pledge they had given not to serve |under the National Insurance act, which provides @ monetary allowance and med- ‘teal attendance to the working classes lauring #ickness rhe BRITISH D doctors t noheme was bas jthe amount to em for their | gery of mtate { It ip sus has much to do With the duciors ve4 P. expec n Tandon. ‘Phe minority at to-day’. meeting Was composed entirely of Lon dun prac and the campaign | against continues in the |“CORPSE” HAD AN APPETITE. sk to Life" by je Enfoys Breakfa | CORNING, N.Y, Jan 18.—A8 an undertaker Was preparing to embelm his body to-day, Harey Brigham, « long Ume resident of Mlyssen, Pa whook off iis shroud, straightened up in bed and asked for breakfast. After eatle righam sald he felt better than he had in several days time, was found “dead flor two hours’ effo mmyned a vote | fret calling @ physician, Heigits, The car was driven by Henry | ped | he has since! In February, 1911, Miss Dobbe bought | ‘9 work tu support) a ticket at an “lL. station. She re-| ceived a nickel change, and the nickel fell into «the chopper with the ticket, She asked for the return of the money and the ticket 1 was the support of the family | could do wan to give her a letter to the jcompany, She suggeated that he return the nickel himself and that he do the writing to the company. ‘Ticket Agent Enright | nickel change to another passenger, young woman thought it was for her. She took it and passed through th jbut Enel cbt ran after her and hi arreated for petty 8 held for Spec fi rh the company for false at- d malicious persecution. Dobbs was left an orphan at the ye of four. She wi ent to St, Paul's Convent, where she remained until she was sixteen, when she went into the world to work as a stenographer, The railroad sought to discredit her testl- mony in this regard, and had Rev. George W. Mitchell, an Episcopalian minister, hia wife, h E, | Coyle tn court to & gone to the Mitehe \three years old. All three were minds that she and during @ recess quentioned Miss Dobie. f the court they hat. They examined her hands and her hair, and were more convinced than over, Burt 1, Rich, attorney for Mtas Dobba, took tis client to the convent. There the sisters affectionately greeted the air] as “Marte.” be returned to court and told the good people of thelr mis- ‘They said that the likeness wan is, but they did not take the nd in the face of Mr. a's proof, Ani ao the vi rendered, K Marble. A ban, thirty years old, and whose name was omy known as Martin was killed while at work at the footef Alex- ander avenue to-day, Martin w@® load- ing « truck with marble jabs, with Frank Boin, twenty-one years old, when two slabs f from the truck and caught Martin, killing him instantly | and injuring Boln's right ankle. '‘ | | \ | | i That's why you like “ Distinetively Individual” 20 frl5¢ since last March. ts about te go off the”) | Pa “Naomi Mitchell," | They had her remove her gloves and! a ei, aes a aed OF YOUTHAND ARE. CUTS TE TG Young Mrs. Levey Asks Court": to Annul Marriage of a‘ ./.,. Year Ago. eg a BLAMES HER UNCLE NED, Sued for Separation First, wt Now Brings a New Action. + wat ‘The romance of eiderly Cigrenee By 4 Levey and Die girl bride of less than’ «i h hae been bumping the tess tracks of domesticity altogether, Sire. Levey, through It Aled to-day tn the Supreme Court, hae asked for an annie: ment by way of uttering @ hurry call fer» the wrecking car, ta Mra, Levey was just twenty-two yeeme so old when she was married to Mr. Levey.’ who im sixty-two, The bride was War © rena Dodge. ghe te beautiful and amie mated, a slender tte. She met Br... Levey, who wae a retired whelesaie'! stationer and a former Deputy Tex Commissioner, through her uncle, Bé- ward RK. Dodge, a lawyer, With Uneto Ned, after what ‘Mre. Levey describes’ as a frantically warm courtship, Mr * Levey took Milas Dodge to Hoboken on Ved. 33 of last yoar and was married to her by a justice of the peace. 2 ‘The arrest of Mire, Levey on the cama’ piaint of her Uncle Ned was the Grav”! intimation of trouble. This wee lee’ than @ tuonth after the wedding. Uncle Ned said that Warrena quarvelled with’ her husband, carrie@ a revolver an@~ * most wicked of all—broke Into bis rear on his bridal night (he had Just | Mr. Levey's former housekeeper) and, to quote him, “‘ralsed Can.” Magistrate McQuaid put her under 6Si0 bonds to keep the peace for six months. Mr. Levey, she said, closed the door ow.” her, under the Influence of Unole Neg. | who had turned againat ber. Y Two months later Mra Levey sued for 4 eparation. Now abe is suing t | ave the mariage wiped off the receras, She asserts, in wuppor of her petitien, ., that Mr. Levey’s premarital ardor Qed, with the wedding ceremony. He showed, her no affection, He made exouses far ‘nis indifference, euch as that her use @f. .. ordinary cosmettes disgusted him. lene Mr. Levey waa divorced eiz years age from Tronson, who was aé- judged insane in New Jersey when her tearoom in Orange was bumneé ena she wae found in the yard in her might / dress moaning @ queer story of burgtare and arson. ———> —— KIN AGAINST LUCKENBILL. Brother One of Witnesses on Whese ‘Tectimeny Wite Obtains Diveree. (3pecial to ‘The Rvesing World.) HEMPSTEAD, Jan. 18.—Eleanor Alico Spooner Luckenbdil!, member of ene ef the oldest and best known families ef Long Isiand, obtained a divorce to-day in the Nassau Coty Supreme Court from William Luckenbill of Allentown, — Mra, Luckentill ts the soprano soletet of St. George's Episcopal Church, ef which August Belmont is the Senier Warden. Mra. Luckenbilt said she wae married on Nov. 6, 1907, and on Aug, 4, 19m, Luckenbill left her without cause, Stan- ley Luckenbill, a brother of the defend- ant, teatified that in January, 1912 he went with his brother to the Windser Hotel, Manhattan, and saw htm regt {ater With a woman, Henry EB. Corn- well jr, sald he had ween Mr, Lay hy drinking with 4 woman he knew as “Charlotte” In = ‘Windsor BOGOTA, Colombia, Jan, 18.—James 7. Dubois, United States Minister te Colombit returned here yesterday from Washington and was greeted with a hearty reception. The Colem- bilan press unanimous! The goodness of pure tobacco | And the harmony of a real blend -- Fatima, Turkish-blend Cigarettes that ° the indications point to a friendly eet- tlement of the dispute in regaré @ Panam

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