The evening world. Newspaper, October 24, 1913, Page 2

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his clothing, Oe Gaeta then found th sivuck by debris shot thropgh the shp by the explosion | The building in which the fire ortein- ated facen Harry Howard Square, There | ‘owded tenemente in the emen drove the tenante from | ss af the fite broke through the back windows of the factory and be gan to spread upwards. The neighbor- ———__— hood war filled with fying burning em- bers and choking fumes Although there was a big array of fire apparatus on hand in a hurry the fire- men hud great difficulty with the blae ‘The building was thoroughly soaked with grease and oils and the first streams of water turned on served mainly to apread the blaze. Again th anger happened to he pasaing the building at the time of the exploaion and took large of the police arrangements until, Conmissioncr Waldo, who had heard! Ql egies om gee the former Gov- and felt the explosion, hurried over| grtop indtoted.” from Headquarters, The reserves were | yoy haven't ordered out from the Mulberry, Wwilances were calied from Hudson Street, Gouverneur anc Bellevue How | pitain, There were forty airia at work In | factory of the Specialty Knee Panta) Company on the sixth floor, When the explosion occurred there waa a panic tn thia concern, but the male employees succeeded in enforcing some @ort of | M'CALL The giris were helped to the fire ex capes and guided down the Iadders by men. Some of the women employers were wcorclied by the blaze, but «o far ae is known all reached the @treet in HN. Police Commis men have been employed to intimidate | © a te to answer no questions votera on election day. Ho han detailed | __“Z intend Ldeut. Scherbe, who in in command of a| Teeerding this gentleman through the columas of the press,” said Investigation and if the report is true to | pts jleegey “That is al) Z will take the proper steps to protect voters. thts.’ The policemen investigating lodging “Judge, will you make any an- Gwer to the demand of Collector house registration reported 22 suspicious) Sek, 1 Uke Oettate whether you Gre for or against Murphy?" “% will pay no attention to such challenges as that.” “Will you say Staten Islanders last night that there is no chance for a connecting tunnel with the island if you are elected "T certainly did special eHadquarter: eases to the District-Attorney to- a WINNERS AT LAUREL. FIRST RACE—Selling: two-year-olds ve and a half furtongs.—Brave Cun- | arder, 112 (Buxton), 6 to 1, 7 to 6 and 1 to 2, Gret; Galaxy, 1% (Wolfe), 19 to) 1, 8 to 1 and even, second: Gallen, 1% | thing.” (J. MfeTaggart), 6 to 2 3 to 6 and 1 to/ CRAM SAYS ONLY LITTLE SUMS CAME TO HIM. lao ran, J. Bergeant Cram, ixsloner, was ask Hennessy’s reference to him as a Mur- & third. Time, 1.001-5. Water Lady. Executor, Lennie D., Fool 0’ Fortune = Co LAUREL ENTRIES. ph LAUREL RACK TRACK, M4, Ort, 24, The eptrion loanorron's veces ate follows, Cs FIRST RACE: For three-searolie and upnard; |@S such It Is id one-half Nha Adbollit 108, Trifler, Moacre Bink Chet, 102; Nelly, 8, Ai ‘Detwcion, 111; Piriae Tanker , lnisant, *York Lad, 35, “Deborah, 8: Rattery, 100; Joe Knight, 113, ‘Campeon, 116; Jim L., 1608. | th Teveniic Bakes; aa tot ne yee fur! gs, ‘Addie M.. 10; 4 apeens hus, 114; Bprarbead, | Uiroush me. Bri Surcambal, 11 1 it lpes Gold, 114, Surprising, | “During the = For tam searolda. saline: atx | --Latab'a Tall, 10% Polly H.. 110, Lennie D., ent tay Grant, 110; jezall, Heaevet, 200; Helvation Nell, 9F, Sunamit, Pere. RTH RACK For maiden filtien and geldings two years old; five and ome-half furl (Continued trom neeey Will not have the euance te came | back at you.” one of the reporters satd od a flash of Chie “That ie not truth, he snapped. “Buleer defies you to go ahead piven | jared, “What are you going Demity Police Commiasioner TION | 96 ao am that line?” of no move to indict about retiring, then, deth and Oak street stations and am! "ae aubject of this unwonted mental exerciag wan all emiles again, “Not at all—not at all, Mr, Murphy?” he murmured. LIP@ SEALED ON THE PLUNKITT STORY. "T shall not answer anything Hen- easy says except in my own way and at my own time and I shall not give any information as to how and when order, and In what manner T will make ana wer,” declared Edward bs, day in his office in the Public Commission, The Tammany candidate rently Inboring under @ self- imposed restraint. “Have you read what Hennessy raid the purchase ination for the Supreme Court, LOOK OUT POR “GUNMEN. Y vara replied the Tammany candidate | Parts of Hennessy's speech referring to a meeting In the F Joner Waldo announced | Which former Benator G. to-day that he had recetved information | 494 another man was present and at from various nources, including Fusion| Which Mr. Plunkitt wan mud to headquarters, that professional reun | received $95,000, wa read to Judge Mo- night about ffman House, a going to anawer anything until aft election, Then I'll take my own way not say any such | of replying to Mr. He an of the Demo! In 1910 | war Cha! tte,” he maid, paign contributions we were (rifling {promptly turned over committee by whom receipts were given. 11 was m candidate for the > that year and it wan Jetated that 1 was disqualified becau the majority of the campaign contribu. tlons were made ught and openly |any Mt is The Irish-American Municipal Union|! tune Governor 1 had no communication with | ‘nim of any kind, either directly or in- directly, and, of course, gestions of any pointmenta, Any statement to the . 108; |trary is wholly untrue. “At the Hultimore mn |Sulzer, In my absence from Wa. “Beau | vention hail, impersonated me and voted rere eR THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 19138. ___ MOALL IS lL SILENT; no my name for the candidate of the | tion to whom 1} | Waa opmored. ‘Tif act, as he was not! Ja delegate, was not only improper, but | unlewa corrected, made me majority of the de practical ullty of duplotty ana double dealing. I had this corrected and told Mr. Sulzer plainly of my disaproval of hin act “AL of any kind to him as Governor.” PLUNKITT ANSWERS HENNESSY —CALLS HIM A LIAR. George Washington Plunkitt, the Weat Side politician and defender of “honest graft,” whom Judge MoCall paid monvy, according to Hennessy, was found in the County Court Housa, “Senator, have you read what Hen- Nessy @aye about you and another man Meeting Judge MeCall in the Hoffman he was asked. returned the politician. “Why an- ewer Mennessy? I'm the father of the upper part of New York, of the parks, playgrounds, bridges—who 1g Mennessy?” ‘Are you aoquainted with Judge Moca" “Yee, I know him; but be is not & resident of my Assembly District. ‘Me lives in the district above me. I know them all, high aad low. Some of them are my boys. There's & United States Senator who is one of my boye—Jimmy OGormas— but Judge MoOall is not ome of my boys.” “Are you to eee Mr. Munphy to-day about this charge made by Hennessy?” For the answer the veteran ex-Sena- tor burat into laughter. he echoed, “What Mur- e got troubles enough “In that all you care to say about) the Hennessy allegations?” “He'n a —— lar and no one belleves him." characterization? was asked. Jena than five any- “Look here, I'm not y M'CALL MAY REPLY TO HEN- NESSY IN TO-NIGHT'S SPEECH. McCall | as promiaed to introduce some new matter Into the apeech he tn to de- liver at @ mass meetin 1 to-night under the at Carnegie spices of the | Iribh-A. crican Municipal Union. It is| lexpccted that Judge McCall will have something of Interest to aay about the charges tl .t have on made against | \him by John Hennessy and Willinm | Sulzer. Poilties Is not te be excluslvely the | & magnet at the meeting this evening. There will be muste and singing eand- wiched In with the speeches, The man- agers of the meeting expect to have; the largest crowd that has attended Yall meeting. fs a non-partisan organization with headquarters tn the Hotel Marlborough. esident, Plerce K. Moore Secretary, Eugene J, Flood Treasurer, and Col, Executive Committee. Col. Crowley Will preside at the meeting to-night, hatha menos tease: Cram and Mack Named 108; King Matehal, 108: Mardell, 108) Hudae Brother, 108 Papwientice | med. ‘Track leary, | — LATONIA ENTRIES, are as follows “baginen” for sila —Rarhead, (OT sEsine take, OB: Tomy Hor, lan, Bol Henales, 101; ty on Jor; Duke eed; etx furtones. Koroni, 190, Mana, 101, | 102, amen Dockers,” 10% i Tea, 100, Camel, “Rut when ¢ Inlan, wpmard; one mile and one sixteenth, Lather, 14 Ramuet Meyer TS town, 112.) Hampton.” FOURTH RACE. Mandican; Fort ‘Thomas ‘Menne sy mentioned the aames sige of John ... Bensel, State Bugineer) iid Mader TT. Wg | ©: @ordom Reel, State Superinten- iret, 128, ent of Mighwaye, whom Sulser re- moved; Duncan W. Peck, Super- ‘ ‘ iutendeat of Public Works, whe cass Thoeve, 106 eretend, 105; ‘Toe Wear, ‘108; testified at the impeachment trial Trquenne, 108, that ulser urged him to swear mee: eis furiongs Lady Moomiet, 5; 01 hes) ‘Wing, 108; Bria Brother, Maiata anct Tack. ponies ‘three-year-olds and up; WACO, Texas, Oot, 24.—Txperienc thelr way out of the besieged city of Mre. T. J. Davis, wife of a mi ne en- from Torreon to Monterey, ordinartiy @ Journey of eight hours, required two weeks. The men of the party w convinced that they were heiag 4 tained ax possible hostages by the de- feated federal, During the trip Mea Davis sald several little children diet when food gave and @ number of women gave birth to bavies From Monterey the party tried to reach Laredo, Texas, but was turned back by destroyed railroad tracks, The return trip was made with an American official of the railroad walking in front of the engine, once he found a charte of dynamite on the track. Conditions| having were horrible in Torreon during the eege, said Mre, Davis. Many poorer , Mexicans starved to di onvene @ ie Albany ( vestigate the ttle bos: net if wu ATONIA RACE TRACK, Ky, oct.) Norman BE. Mack, M.—The entries for to-morrow'a racea|and J. Sergeant up in his direct primary fight, Shells, 10 | Mished the evidence of a similar pledge AECOND MACK —elting: three rear ohls and! from Norman E Heck Ahead with direct nomination Bar, 107, Quarier Master, 109, ‘why, Mack ran awa. HIRD RACK Handicay: threeyearolte emt! hie newspaper ignored dire tions and McCall played golf in * felsely; John M. Delany, Commis- in eighth pertown, Hn (Ol; sam With, Wos,| eloner of Bilclency and Boonomy; 4 Aaron J, Levy, head of the Board of Impeachers, and Thomas F. Mo- saree seek, Te AMERICAN CHILDREN adie CHUNG ee DIED IN MEXICAN FLIGHT.| served, nad deen Wiackmatiea vy Murphy's followers into making ot | ™e contributions, three hundred Americans who made ra Peep 4 soerese ae Mexico, id to-day vy | Mitt Nad received part of the Torreon, Mexico, were told to-day ly eg aah pela toe Meodeii'e neat iv Ration for the Supreme Court, = Sineer, upon her arrival here, ‘The trip| Seon fon the sup was not in the Boman the time the nomination of Modall As Bagmen for Murphy Join A, Hennessy in his speeches last night brought fn the names of Democratic National Committeeman from New York, member of the Public Service Commission, as “The Chief,” Charles F. Murphy. He desribed in dramatic , FIReT BACK Selling, tworearaiie: ome | fashion how McCall had pledged himself to Sulzer, that he would back him | Suprem -}tlon, He ts certain when It is made public it will raise a big laugh in New | w York, except possibiy in Tammany cit | cles, we Syracuse convention I wie oppowed to Mr. Suizer'a nomination and did not vote for him, leaving the hall rather than do fo, Under these cir- cumatances It Is obvious thay I would not and did not make any suggestions low many dashes would you have} us uve, Senator, In emphasizing this! that since May 16 he and his wife and his nineteen-year-old Weughter, Mar- Guerite, have been constantly shadowed. ‘Mr, Hennessy sald he waa not pereon- ally afraid of violence, but “I am afraid of a frame-up from Tammany Hall.” As & consequence he has never gone anywhere alone since May 15. In discussing @ “Tammany frame-up" Mr. Hennessy warned Tammany Hall oMl. to hold off if that was their |tntention. He aa‘d in making it @ point never to be alone, he had selected an- soclates who were keen witnesses and trusted friends. One, he said, “ha: been my companion since my fourteenth year, and I'm fifty-three now. The other I have known ir twenty-one id they @ hired with him the day Service Commis. when he says he remained with Judge McCall for more than an hour, while Mudge McCall says it was ‘en or eight minutes. “Now, precisely what I sald about this $35,000 note was this: That I had held in my hand a@ote for $%,000 algned by a member of the Supreme Court who jad been an alternative candidate of | Murphy's for Mayor. I did not say that that $8,000 note was ever paid to any- body; I did not say whom it was made payable to; I did not say that it was {® campaign contribution. with those who heard me last nig! | Charles J. Crowley Chairman of thy, Wi#h to leave the game inference to- |the Supri “Ot course, if I left that int night. In all probability it was a cam- paign contribution, but I could not |prove that now, and I could not prove it when I held the note in my hand. | Perhaps the exigencies of this cam- ‘pl en, later on, may call out the ques- tion, and they do we will bave to meet that tesue, “But up to now all that I say about that $8,000 note ia this: That I held that note in my hand, that it was signed by # Supreme Court Justice, that It was for | $25,000, and that the very time I held it in my hand was @ little more than ons year after he had been elected to the Court. "t wuxpect that this Court 1 don’t suspect him of any “ld 1 at cy |vices that would induce him to borrow $35,000. I know very well he is a good He told for the frat time tas: ight | cltisen, and if he had to pay $35,000, or from Charles F, Murphy, police inspector, Murphy. Mr, Hennessy called extraordinary sess [tributions He inet os milghe an inquiry {9 made. Sulzer had consulted » for the purpose of | That Judge MeCall summoned Hennessy to the offices of the Public commission in the Tribune Building and bade him carry to Sulzer the message that unless Palmer was appointed Sulzer would ted that big and | connection he sa with Henry A, Wi ag such proceedings started, The tantalizing feature of mpalen Tammany | here he Is Kolng to strike next. He usually portfollo of docuwentas, only @ few at a time, ia holding back, he said, is a | ft &. M,| the expenses in the Kxecuilve Mansion fm Albany during the Dis adulnistra- One of those he made Labor Commissioner, CHARGES MADE AGAINST M’CALL BY HENNESSY NOT FULLY ANSWERED. | That Judge McCall bought his rioestiaton to the Supreme Court in 1902 That Judge McCall paid his “assessment” to George Washington Plunkitt, who was formerly a district leader, and one other person. That Judge McCall borrowed the money for the assessment from a po- lice inspector (this charge Hennessy says he cannot prove). That there was a dispute over the repayment of the money, that the mat- ter was given to a “referee” and the referee decided in favor of the That the late Anthony N, Brady used his influence in getting Judge Mc- Call nominated for the Supreme Court bench, That Judge McCall, after William Sulzer appointed him a Public Service Commissioner, acted as confidenti: That Judge McCall took Sulzer to Murphy's house at 1 o'clock on the morning of April 4 for a conference lasting nearly three hours, at which conference Murphy said he would “destroy” Sulzer. That Judge McCall went to Albany and demanded that “Jim” be made Highways Commissioner and that The" Me. | That Judge MeCall, in the Executive mansion in Albany, demanded that Sulzer appoint George M. Palmer Chairman of the up-State Public Service Commission or be driven from office. Service be removed, signed “Southampton” Mennessy says there lo mere tc come, =. ya} That Judge McCall suggested that in telegraphic negotiations with ihe | Governor over the Sulzer appointment the MeCall telegrams WILL SvKGE MCCALL ANSWER more, for his nomination, why, he sim- ply followed a tradition in the or: “McCall said last night that he wasn't | going to answer Sulzer, and he wasn't | going to answer Mennessy, going to stick to the issues of the cam- 1 think the only Issues of the the issues that I have If he does not him, and which . shail continue to ask him, it means that if he answer them he would have to muke @ confession of guilt. “He has not yet answered where he} got the campaign monay which he paid for his nomination for Judge. I asked him three nighte ago if he got that from an Inspector of Police. I sald three nights ago that perhaps it | Would be vary hard for me to prove that | he did get it from an Inspector of Po- live, but I asked him to tell the electors | of the cliy where he got !t. WHY WAS BRADY THERE? WHO GOT THE MO'NEY? “I want to ask the Tammany candl-| date for Mayor when he saw George Washington Piunkitt, then leader of the Fifteenth Assembly District, best known tory as a man who defends I want to axk 4 Tam- Supreme Cour; ‘honest graft.’ many candidate George Washington Plunkitt a @ OOM AL yoy in the Hoffman Houne, in a room then a third party who brought r “I want to ask the Tammany cand: date if on that same night Anthony Rrady was in another room on another ask Judge McCall Charlie Murphy, | Brady tn re- whether his sponsor, had not seen Anthony N. to McCall's nomina Hoffman House, Judge McCall if the man who brought Plunkitt together to discuss that nomination did not aino have some- thing to do with Mr. M Brady in respect to ¢ “Ana now that I have ? “I don't know whether h I don't know whether he pald somebody who paid Mr. don't undertake to assert anything In respect to that, but I do say th! going to have a candidate big enough to look after the interosts of a city of more than 6,000,000, he ought not to remain allent for four days when he ts asked the question: pay for his nomine- et tt How much did tion and where did h “BIG MONEY” WAS REFERRED TO CRAM, HE DECLARES. Calling attention to the fact that Murphy had made no reply to nis that the leader had accepted a contribution from Judge Bam- uel A. Beardsley, Hennessy sal “1 will ask him about som contributions that were made and he) can answer all at the same time. These contributions refer to the years 1911 I also want to ask him in ation to the campaign of 19) “When men went to him with money, with big money, didn’t he tell them to go to J, Sergeant Cram With it? Mr, Cram of any dishon- messenger between Sulzer and Gatiney nus be nd a he is Just as good a man to hold money for any speciile pur- pose as anybody in 7 To want to ask Mr. Cram what ne did | many Hall But campaign of 1910. Into whose po: did tnat money go? W as it accounted for publicly in the !Hennessy Daring McCall or the Chief To Answer His Charges or Sue for Libel « (Drawn Especially for The Evening World by Staff Artist Johnstone.) ~ JOHN A HENNESSY VS. TAMMANY for Wov. Glynn to shi up the entire situation by calling an extraordinary Grand Jury in Albany County to inves- the paign of 1911, when e great amount of | money was collected in order to ¢ & Democratic Legislature for the pur- pore of sending William F. Sheehan to the United States Senate. Mr. Hennessy named nearly twenty up-State contractors who had patd ney during the campaigns of 1910, 1911 and 1913. ASKS MACK TO TELL OF CONTAI- * BUTIONS TO MURPHY. “l want Mr. Murphy to tell me Whether he or Mr. Mack, or sumebody .000 In bills from dames Svewart In 1910, And I want to tell Murphy that 1 know the man thut James Stewart paid the $25,000 in cash to. “And T want to ask Mr, Murhy and Mr. Norman b. Mack and McLean of Newburg why they went to the Barge Canal contractors and Slackmailed them into giving up their money. Is that the reason why the lumber owned | hy the State of New York is used by the contractors without payment? Is that the reason that Kerbuugh, who wave $19,000 and $5,000, whlen Is not recorded, was permitted to use th gravel of the State with which to make his concrete. 1 want Murphy, now that te has impeached Gov. Sulzer for not reporting campaign ds, to tell us Where this money went. “And I want to ask Murphy one about his friend Mclean of Ne burgh, ‘They have a fake list in the office about con. Paign and they nave of New York down thera for m. You can bet he did name} hide tne name of n't dare make Dlackmatied out Secretary of Stat tributora to the va contributing: $2, not contribute 2,000 cen wn there man that th But } Y WhO was on public works. “and Mos $s a very good vitiaen, to 4 right back & wher who he pald it to, will, 1 do not belt mentioned in that Hat of au ‘honorary mention. aereeitiensois APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. ple Bowdoin, died Aus. entate, $190,296; net value, net value, $! M ‘otal estate, $19.4 irs, Blizabeth Hunntcke, died May 31 estate, $16,337; net valu | the brain, | | FXose he | oMice of the Secretary of State? "Tair money ne sareotived, and it is ° only name down there that Is a bogus one and nin the #Worn to by MeLean of Newburgh. And | Lif T da any Injustice ta McAvoy, who has a chance Mra. Helen F. Bowdoin, ihe of Tem- 12, Total Louis Ober, died June 23, in, Total estate, deposits and personality, $2,492; Fannie Wiliams, died Ort. %, net value, | worth dollars to the business man | 4,600 POISON PILLS SOLD BY DOCTOR ~ TO ADMIRAL EATON All Contained Aresenic, Which Witness Says Were Pre- scribed for Him. PLY MOUTIL Mase Adiniral Joseph G. #6 et Rear bought from Dr dacot Wo Rrown 4.09 tablets, each ing one on “hundredth graiiy of aecording te the testimony of the physician May Katon tod, When cautioned e use of the Atwente, the Ade Baton sald "he did not ev did not get back lie former visor finish the Job himself” Laver the Admiral brought some of the fille to the witness, euying that a had dled her time the Adiniral showed rom eating one of them, An- ® treules, whiel. be said, conta ie and which Wy DistrleteAtrorney Bar nation was directed chielly to showing that the wit vald not give similar Ne regarding other tied that he did ne: f nee unt within a fow weeks minat when he called on him, Ae the prosecution has failed to cone nect Mra, Eaton directly with the poison ind has not shown where the poison Was purchased, the evidence of to-day was a big victory the defe District. yohey Barker appeared Jat the new turn events, Mra. Baton, w exe Knew what was coming, wis very exceptionally eatin The anpearance in Piym vith, shortly after noon of June Keyes, daughter of ation aa to Mrs. i “oto ® Mher 9 ory, should she testify [It ts thougit Mkely that the case may brought to a close in another day m= MILDRED 1S MISSING | FOR THE TENTH TIME . ‘il | js a Habit With Her, and Never- theless It is Duly Reported to the Police. | Milde Madd haa gone and did | again Done what? rin away, Of course, | You sev, Mildred bas a habit of ning away from her home at No Morris avenue, the Bronx. She Is whenever novuing t When news i y editors have a thelr Bronx reporters and asking Mildred has teft home, Usualy she has Thia time she went away on Oct © poll She had with a. brother mont street 1 diamond th anoulinent of er cvarria bel oe GULDEN'S MUSTARD HAVE YOU TRIED IT? Te OLATK ait Manan seek stot Itnetoane ithe an A und Brooklyn st: oven Saturday eve SEEMAN BROS., NEW YORK, | | Proprietors WHITE ROSE Ceylon Tea | ROOME ST. 409 BA B . North River Pier ust 1s SERERT oy Bega ea i a || “hs COURT TURNS DOWN COUNSEL FOR THAW Halts Proceedings to Admit Fur tive to Bail Until Jerome Can Be Present. appeared before ye Suprema Courr enter a plea at his eHent foy conspiracy in con= criminal braneh « 6 purpose was (ha be Axed for Taw y-General’s office had Diatelot-Attorney the telat of Mra, Jenin over wit! be heard when the prosecuttoy under the atatnte a p If hela misdemean rcould enter a plea witi- wd bout being ne \, JEROME IN ALBANY; WANTS NEW PAPERS TO GO AFTER THAW. tion papers should got > digcuex the case with will be Kent to Concord by the he sald that wav often intoxivated and ot ver papers, bu. outlined this morning, expected to parttelpate orney-General vernor thinks wal papers will st eli CHILD DEAD, SHE ENDS LIFE. WILKES BARRE, a"? usual tragedy occurred in this city yes Mary, the threes: ter of Mrs. John Mos ee when her » doubt was playing with lothing caught fir her heard her cries and . The daughter, however, died in @ short time. ‘The mother rushed to her room, pro- cured a revolver and, standing in front of @ mirror, shot herself through the head, dying almost instantly, eerere aT THE SIGN OF TEE TRAPFO' 9s ly Ritidas gic ere Ue. to BE a diamom! locket OBINS ON 55 LONVE NEE ria PAW MEmwT=s . with Micarl was t only a Makes Hot and Cold Meats Tasty A Fine Balad Dressing by adding vinegar. |inguaticn when To say that his nan ‘At Delicatessen and Grocery Stores, ecribera ia what Is known in Tammany Hall as ued ‘Resa Bios cmoco for Saturday, Oct. 36th DVERED EN OUR. That | refed mystery bo’ vent ‘white enter POUND BOX 206 BRO ADWAY

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