The evening world. Newspaper, December 3, 1913, Page 22

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ISR ae sie adtalailahahabatatginta, abatata ataca eit MINISTER REFUSES TO WED BALDWIN | AND HIS DURYEA Broker’s Former Wife Aided c) ca from the Duryea mansion, which fe eur- ivorce rounded dy spacious grounds. The | said. Him in Getting a Divorce neighbors had no idea of the trend of | known his wife, ever since they were events in the two hom to Marry Her Chum. EO BY MAG. BALDWIN. But in Septenvber, in order that he ‘ALL’ BEST OF FRIENDS. - btained @ divorce from his wife in i . 2 Reno. This was entirely with her con- Sees Nothing Odd in His Desire] sent, and sre did not make any pre- tense of contesting it. She knew, be- to Wed Starchmaker’s ere niaree ren errs) why it wae Neither Mrs. Duryea, the mother, nor Adopted Daughter. Mra. Baldwin, the former wife, seems to think there is anything particularly unuaval about the arrangement of a Mrs, Hthel Campbell Baldwin of Ter-| secriage in such @ fashion. Tytewn does not think thet giving up) They have both frankly admitted that “provision had been made” for Mrs. her husband, Wilbur Baldwin, so that) iol s a her boy, the latter a bright he might marry Miss Lillian Durves.| outn of Afteen years named Raymond. one of the three adopted daughters of | The lohhraey i Ra Leal Baldwin house, 'w jo & place worth perhaps ‘William Duryea of Nyack, whe agai A baa Ween. cena aly Kk toe @ fortune in stared, 18 @ proper eu®-| 214 deeted over to Mrs. Baldwin, and fect for gossip in Rockland County, | that an income has becn settled upon Miss Duryea and Mr. Baldwin, who her som (going im that indirect way to fe @ broker, agree with Mre, Baldwin. | her). 1 5@ rest of te population ef Rockland| The money necessary HA pe are Count dleen yeok busse Tangements, it was not deni oomes ceealy ite ret bi toeg piles se from the Duryea fortune. It ie maid tpeey,. wet dys about Nyeck that young Raymond intended marriage of Mise Duryes and! paawin, or his mother, 18 to receive Baléwin, and loudly praised the Kev. | 9, week as long as either of them Frenklin Babbitt, wae hes made n0/ tive, eecret of his rofusal to perform the| This could not be verified exactl: ceremony. The town 18 @o sfirred up) but Mri Duryea eas Wilbur's that it Is predicted that no mintater in| Wife and ohtld have been taken care of fo that they need uever worry about the town will consent to join the (hie Akan ciel tueare” who fe heiress to @ oon- “Mr, Baldwin,” said the Rev, Mr. Habbitt to a reporter for The Kvening mare: SE-her: Baopted Sather’ ® Ward day. sapproned menue [ewan tay cal hr st al lage 1 sae ee eee inad, net cirecmetences |' thirty-seven years old, he ta tall, hae would I marry a man who had 0 wife} stiking auburn hair ane, to quote the living unless I were satisfied that woman she is displacing in Mr. Bald- ware the guilly party In @ divorce ac- ba affections, te “undoubtedly deautl- em such as is obtained under the lawn of the Htate’ of New York, He| Mie Boldin, woe ie one and agoured me that the divorce action was | ether shor has a “sweet” face. Her father ® the in the nature of an annuliment and that Rev, John L, Campbell, once of Nyack, ‘out now pastor of the First Baptist Church of Cambridge, Mass. He ts fa- mous in the Baptist ministry, and each year receives calls to preach in impor- tam puiptte ia London and other Buru- pean cities. ‘Wilbur Baldwin te a trifle over forty, rather elonder, He formerly was & salesman for a sporting goods how wae connected for a time with an au- tomobdile concern, a now, according to Mre, William Duryea, his prospec- tive mother-in-law, ia on some “ex- change” in New York city. MISS DURVEA'S MOTHER EX- PLAINS THE OAS! fetevinge, vs A reporter found Miss Duryea’s moth- ‘the next two re alone with her servants, She is @ mem 0 oth Bentle-faced Ki laity of more than sixty, with allvery hair and @ soft voice. She was in black, with old lace st he throat and wrists. ea, my Gaughter Lillian ts going to mairy Mr, Baldwin, who has just been divorced,” she said, “but I really do not think they care to have the fact printed in the newspapers, They want to have quiet ceremony. It was pointe ading up to the marriage seemed much GK HEADACHE, COSTIVE, BILIUS, IF LIVER 1S TORPI-—DIME A Bx ! A Me. ing from me end maz. | emother woman. I do care. And f@ the kindest feelings for both F i 8g ness, can't sleep, are nervous ‘ und carry off the months. Don't forget the children, CATHARTIC. IBERNO OURO QUMOE OCU RGGI OGO U0 OKC XR RRC RC 20 ab a PIC to be perfotly happy 18 @ pretty stuoco/out of the ordinary. Mrs. Duryea residence directly acrosn Bickien avonue | ehe really didn't think so. “Wilbur i# @ fine young man,” known hun and I have He and Lilliwn have al- ways been fond of each other, and | think they will be very happy. “It haw been aid about might marry Miss Duryea, Mr. Baldwin | Mr. Baldwin went West for his divorce upon funds provided by you or your ter,” Mrs. Duryea was told. It te true th nd thelr child have been provided for so that they will no need to worry. able to pay for his own expenses.” “It has also been said that Nyack ministers wouldn't marry them because, circumstances?” UNION NOT OPPOSED BY BISHOP, MRS. DURYVEA SAYS. “That, too, is untrue. was rather an annulment of the mar- @ divorce, and some friends of mine have explained this to Bishop He, hearing that, has said that ‘any Eplecopal clergyman might perform the ceremony. They might have our the Rev. Franklin Babbitt, but he fe very oid, being more thaa Minety-two, and has just recovered from a@ serious illness. So they will Brobably be married in New York.” “After their marriage will they live in thie house, directly across the street from the home of the firet Mrs. Baldwin and her son?” was asked. DIVORCE AT RENO UNCONTEST- | 7 de hie former wife You see, this eaid Mrs. Duryea, ‘They have taken a place in Bronxville and will make that thelr permanent home.” crossed = Siokles avenue to the more modest Baldwin live Mrs. Baldwin, her son, law, William L. Bald- white-bearded man of The divorced wife said first: “You may have heard, perhaps, the ground upon which my husband obtained his Then you will unde stand why I did not oppose it and why 1 do not now eppose bie marriage to Mise Duryea. “It is unfortuna! decree in Reno? right,” that auch things must come before the public, but an long as it ts coming out it might ae well'be told rightly. there t@ no trace of scandal about the fair on the part of any one ti In the first place, DISCARDED WIFE ADMIRES MI ise Duryea 9 a splendid woman, she te undoubtedly beautiful, and I sup- pose she will make Mr. Baldwin very I hope that they will both be Yor my part, I am willing to live the rest of my life for my boy. I realize that this ts an But I think Tam My boy knows unusual altuation. acting for the best. about the circumatances. Better I should do it than anyone else. My chief immediate care ts to keep the story from the eare—or rather ¢! since he cannot hear—of old Mr. Bald- thinks hig son 4s away on a long busl- know anything different newapaper out of his hands to-morrow he will probably go on beli Wilbur ie travelling. knows about tt, could he advise me to do? my husband ts entitled to I realized that and there- fore did not oppose it.” Miss Duryea was engaged to marry, in la8, Léeut, Edmun cester, Mass, who was one of the cadets graduated In time so that out that the events EET Keap the My own father | clase of Weat Poi: advance of their might be available for service in the Young Wench- death on the firing: ‘You men and women who can't get|the stomach, remove the sour di- feeling right—who have headache,coated| geated and ferinenting. food and foul tongue, foul taste and foul breath, dizsi-| genes; take the excess hile from the liver Spanish-Ameor ley died a her line at El Can ight straightens you y mort 10-cent box keeps | your head clear, stomach sweet, liver and sword, It was said at the time, vwels regular and you feel ‘bully for given into the care of Miss Dury who, it was belleved for @ long tim would never marry. the Baldwin. | Duryea wedding has not been eet, Duryea, nor did she know where it would take place. Miss Duryea, who has |with friends away turned to-day. cording to Mrs. Bhe dented herself to all caliere, and beyond contradicting a report that ried to Mr. Baldwin, ref — Some of the Queer **Birds’’ at the Poultry Show, FEE Cnr GO OOD IO COTO OGEUNOUCIDIGOIICGDOL CR UKE TURIN ILIOOC OCCT 1 UIUC NIN A 300 ACR MR CROWNED Ages STER>_ BO RO OT im hr YO S/S Hebe a0 ae Ne UE ee ae ee ee eC | Some CHICAGO MAYOR BARS HORIZONTAL PLUMES But Lets Perpendicular Ones Go If They Do Exceed Building Limit of 260 Feet. CHICAsO, Dec. 3—Muyor Harrison|Japan also. This ts the bird you see has tesued an edict against horizontal plumes, aigrettes, pompome ér other devices which tickle or scratch eyes, ears, noses or other aensitive portions “No, they certainly wil) not do that," |of the facial anatomy of mere men who ere obliged to be near the beplumed women, If necessary to stop what he con- aidera a nutsance, the Mayor ts in favor of an ordinance similar compelling women to remove tueir hats in theatres, Among those who are prone to nap on the etreet vated trains the Mayor's edict against the disturbers of their slumbers w: hailed with Joy. “However, the perpendicular plume which I see is coming into style in all said the Mayor. long st doen not interfere with troll wires or exceed the building limit of 260 feet.” HIGH OFFICIALS OF MISSISSIPPI ARRESTED Lieut.-Gov. Bilbo and State Senator Accused of Bargaining Their Votes for Money. VICKSBURG, Gov. Bilbo and St jasippi wel a result of indictments brought againat then yesterday ‘agreed to receive ®,000 from 8. Castle- man of Belsoni for the promise of their votes in the Legislature in * * * and! wilfully and felontoualy | to use influe: to pass @ certain bill" Each gave bond of $5,000 immediately, ents, which were not made # until the arrest Bilbo and Hobbs actually received $200 in connection with After Lieut.-Goy The indi court reco wceused to-day, deat, bond, he gave meeting, the lo e Senator Hobbs of the same alleged & statement, which he said the charges were the, reault of & political conspiracy, MISS WILSON HEADS WASHINGTON ‘‘SPUGS”” ivesident’s Eldest Daughter Chosen to Lead at Big Meeting—Mrs. Belmont Speaks. Dec. 3—Miss the President's ughter, bec “Spugs" to-day at a mage meeting of more than one thousand women at which a Bociety for the Prevention of selemn Giving wae organized, branch of the Federation, was presided o Arohibald Hopkins. Mre, August Belmont and others who | herons. The cat show will be one have carried the movement forward in | me-ow ali to ited. The birde will Rave Aristocratic Barnyard Conv sation Goes on All the Time at Grand Central, BIRDS OF MANY KINDS. Bunny and Tabby Have Share Too, in Poultry Associa- tion’sAnnual Show. © the Grand Central Palace. At least, that te where you'll find most. of the aud it's @ eeremm. It is the seventh annual show of the Empire Poulty As- jSociation, Inc, It started yesterday and will be on for the rest of the weok, day and night. The finest chicks one could wish to eee are’ on exhibition, Old chicks and young chicks cackle all day long, and some of them forget to go to rovst at night. Hist to the voice of the chan Ucleer! “Coak-a-doodle-do!” Therés a fine variety of barnyard conversation teresting to the chickens, no doubt. And doubti ie breeders appreciate it. But tothe layman—get that?—the layman who approaches the dvor,’the inside sounds like one wild scream. There is everything in the Palace in the way of feathers. There in a judge Feather of Dorchester, Ma the last thirty-five years, and that he judge of pigeons. He «1 wate is one of German white runts, If | they're runts, their fathers and mothers must have been giants, They're as big as hens. LOVERS’ LANE. And here we have the turtle dov They're right at the head of Lovers’ Lane. And pipe the double-neck, doubie~ action white flamingo. He has a head and neck Iike an interrogation point and legs like quotation marks. Peacocks in 11 colors of the rainbow strut along- aide the falmingo and screech them- selves hoarse at his funny neck. Then there is the Crane family. There's the Croyn Crane, with @ gold crown on top of his head; the sacred crane of on Japanese screens, It i9 not known if this is what makes him saoted. The Crane family is full of business, As soon as you stop in front of thelr house they stick out their bill you. And they have hills as long as that of the your house. a pool, and all around them are geese id ducks, And, oh, ther swells in this gathering. They com from China and have it all over ¢ shaped ike cocked hats, and they swell up like the pictures of Napoleon. They Know they are some ducks, most important in thelr manner, And now comes the cackle, cackle, le and the cock-a-doodle-do. Chick- 4 roosters to burn, to fry, to to fricassee, After you've been Chicken Jane two minutes you fori your name. There are no clocks in there, and the roosters are continually forgetting the time. At 4 o'clock in the afternoon they crow the reveille. Thi It isn't @ hoarse show. favorites in the gallery of the famous among the downy bipeds: Rhode Island reds and whites, wyal ottes, buttercups (some of t daisies), Plymouth rocks, white rocks and old times rocks, orpingtons, cochins, mingcas, lakenvelders, dorkings, tongue-tied, there are dozens more by way of variety, if you want to pro- nounce them, The judges go over the lets glibly. Then there is another row they call Merry Christmas row. They keep the turkeys there, CANARIES AND BUNNIES, CATS TO COME. - The scriptions, Canaries in cages, in avi- aries and in mghogany houses, Some birda! They chirped yesterday, tweaked ® bit last night, and to-day they were ‘Milling the hall with their melody, ‘Then they have rabbits—gentle bunnies and the tramp jack rabbit, who once hot-footed it over the desert with a dog or a coyote trying to overtake him. Then there is the Flemish Giant Doe over in one corner, weighing seventeen pounds and sleek and fat as an office- holder, This ie no relation to the Dee family with so many Johns in it that the Distriot-Attorney te looking for, @ buttercups are etriking little chaps, with crowns em the tops of their heads and ruffe around their necks. Regular court birds. The Black Polish boys wear turbans, ie the All the judges wear dusters. After @ day's wandering among the swell fowl, they look like feather dusters. To-morrow they are going to have cate join the happy feather families. There wiil be Angoras, the House cat apices Of |and the Fence cat, Od Toms and Miss Maries. But they won't get anything bet- ser wan a peep at the canartes. They'l) make no swallows of the finches and PALACE EXHIBIT |, AN the equabe and chickens have gone swetl ones, There's a show on there Boing on all the time, It is very in- by the name of Feather—George | {years and this exhibition tops the! suppose that if detection hadn't come is never in better feather than when | he's among the other fi on E e's 8) narcombe's, in - dircetora of the association, the breed- Good judge of other stock as well. The! tears in her ¢@: first crate, or cage, of pigeons one sees | when he gets by C. A, Brown at the TURTLE DOVES AT HEAD OF) plumber who doesn't stop the leake in. Beautiful swans plume themselves in | |ings were discovered, an they were Pekingese dogs. Their. combs are | and are! that of head bookkeeper, Then I fell|of the theft of an dltonfobil Here are & few specimens of feathered | would revel by myself in good things to | eat and the rarest vint: of wine. } nT couldn't | work. I failed to get up on time ona | cf ‘morning, and I realized I was in no 7‘ red! condition to face my employers, That caps, brahmas, leghorns, houdans and | was the middle of last month, I had) Andalusians, And if you want to get| some of the Gregorian Hotel's money | irds, too, of all de- | EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1913. CHICKENS FORGET ({Cierks “Th' task o’ plekin’ out a new eult o° clothes, coupled with th’ ordeat o’ partin’ with your money, tut close communion with a triple mirrordurin’ th’ transaction destroys what little inte may have eaved out o’ th’ wreck.” : TM (Copyright, The Adame kinds o' store clerks than anythi Grafters. Thet’s th’ prececupled a] Th’ feller who you @ bolt o' bed tickin’ instead o’ cretonne while her mind | nearly allus a cowa: is on @ dance in th’ near future; th’ tall indifferent clerk | He has carrie’ home so much junk in th’ N° U automobiles ther eeeme ¢’ who looks toward Pittsburgh while you try ¢’ tell hiin|can’t trust himself. If he wants a new round crowned what size you wear; .h’ sallow society clerk with th'| brown derby jest like th’ one he's got ori th’ clerk ‘ll fieh Weather beaten throat who dreamily directs you t’ th’ socks | out @ green Fedory with a bow tn th’ back an’ give him in th’ last aisle next t' th’ tinware ae she vainly en-| th’ hypnotic eye an’ he buys it, When he gets home he deavors t’ lift her heavy eyelids; th’ pompous olerk who | gives it ¢ his wife's little brother. Some fellers part with lo interest in you if you don't buy th’ first umbreller | an’ ole hat like they wuz about t' swing int’ eternity, Did he showe you; th’ sertous olerk who dresses like a corpse | you ever see a timid feller hangin’ aro an’ assures you you can’t find what you're lookin’ fer in| nearly breakin’ his neck tryin’ tre any store in town; th’ undersised clerk with th’ bow legs | wus turned th’ wrong way? He's afraid t’ who telle you what they’re wearin’ down Enst; th’ busy | like th’ better you know a clerk ¢ clerk who slips a raincoat on you ai @n hour; th’ persistent clerk who stands in front o' you|o' clothes fits you th’ longer It lasts. when you promise t' come in agin an’ start fer th’ door, Th’ task of pickin’ out a new sult o cle th’ real 88-note regular clerk who is willin’ t’ tear down | hat, coupled with th’ partin’ © ore t' please you. fs bad enough, but y commun! 0 pleasant they mor ordeal « Some clerke at a feller knows jest what he wante when he goes in « store | bought somethin’! he's a crank. If he don't know what he wants he's aj Hut th’ woret o' all th’ clerks t* th’ one who shows you ‘ce ‘Th’ hardest thing te t' make @ clerk understand what | what he wears. Leer ee eee ee ne EaEEEEEE neem “Thie is the best poultry show I havejof Manhattan for $1, The detectives r geen,” said Judge George W. Weed. | told me that it was that which led to been judging poultry for twenty] my discovery and my undoing. Well, 1 estate of the late Alexa Standard O11 millionatr the accounting in that unc,” that way it would have come through To-night there will be a banquet at| some other means. No one can cover | Nansat etreet, for the} crime forever,” added sadly, with ers, the exhibitors, judges and members. It will be @ course dinner, 1t will start with chicken soup, humming birds for hors d'oeuvre, a squab for an entree, roast turkey and pigeon pie for dessert. But you don't want to miss the Poul- try Show. “Do you suppose this trouble will have jstatement within nine di 1 am sure that I will never} Mosky i rs. " Miss Le Gendre sald earnestly. | rocsoyty gnaministrators all believed tn me and bi Meved I was OFJERVLLAND HYDE. |Sihcanse nee oo PONTLBELFAT soy }the Gregorian Hotel. Her surety was nal Surety C the Ni npany, and to TO BE SLENDER the officers of that concern and in the| Ww CAREER Of CRIME presence of the hotel manager, she said Omen inclined to take on excess ‘erage Seer she bad erolen from every: employer | at over the Ae ool discomfort sad ui new employer, she said, to repay the former one, Dut-this was not known to|®voldall irons dest the employers who had “given her aj@od flesh, chance.” and massage may tem (Continued from First Page.) CHANCE TO PAY BACK. “My first employment was with John | peared Nov. 13 and the hotel people at M. Wolf, who handles stoves at No.| first thought she had committed suicide 742 Flushing avenue, Brooklyn. This oe was nearly sev by scores of medi EJECTED, _|fimue and improve health , {tissue and improve healt HIS DEFENSE RE. is of enerelsing Lge But I took m M ree ‘trom aigeeilfviniy love ferloriak Gay uleaie | eee eae Meeeen aeeeee e Clarks ‘Thinning Salts are tut i jeading drug and department bound to be. I begged for mercy and ach e to pay back the money I had {convict with a string of aliases, yester- |for Booklet. stolen, My prayer was granted. day was found guilty of grand larceny | Sel Amaigrissant Clarks Corporation, “Then L went to the Sing r Sewing|in the first degree before Judge Ma- Bole Ames Machine Company, with the same result, | honey in the Court of General Sessions, | us Broadway Jew York ty 1 tried hard to overcome my love for |after his attorney, Mise Lucile Pugh, | wines. But the old craving would seize |had made an attack in her summing me and I just had to keep it up. 1{Up speech on the character of Mrs. | secured employment with a wholesale | Jennie J. Barrett, wife of George H. Erocer, and the result was the same, |Farrett, an artist, living at No, 96 fest Seventy-second street. i] employers were kind to me. They | “ewls represented that he wan old | and lonesome, and Mre. Barrett and her | 1 Gregorian Hotel in the | husband befriended him. They had him | I won the confidenco|¢o ainner at their home, and she sent | of the people there and I worked hard.| him copies of sentimental poetry, for | I was promoted from a small position to| which he had asked. He was convicted | jain. I would leave the hotel on Satur- ——— = day evenings and go to the Waldorf As- toria or somé other big hotel, and there in time ¢or with me. I don't know bow much 1] Providence, R. 1. WAS ALWAYS IN FEAR WOULD BE ARRESTED. 0 nl es “Every place I went I registered un- der my own name except In Providence, Soak a piece of flannel with Omega where I took the name of Mra. G. Fox. | Oil, wrap it around the throat or lay | was afraid then that the police were | it on tne chest, and cover with apiece | I expected to be apprehended | of oiled silk. This wonderful oil gocs any day, any time. At times I was al-| through the pores of the skin to the most delirious, and thought that I would | gore and inflamed parts and usually go out of my mind. I knew I must get | gives quick relief, Trial bottle 10c, something to do. I enrolled in a busi- fess college. My idea in doing that was * FOR MEN AND WOMEN that I knew that I would show such adeptness, all of judden, in bookkeep- ing that I would be recommended for We solve Your Clothing Problem by giving you the most substan tial clothing possible at lowest & Position. prices. Also Fure and Fur Co No Money 4 . ‘ eel World ads. to the North, West—Iinto more New Y. Weerting@ 316 West, 125th St, “s* BthJAve, 2858 34 Aves Wasittitataee! Newt Deer to Vennel’s Furniture tion, worker, home, ives lost article, &¢, Ne Service.) be more different | you want if he hasn't got it. If a feller Is undecided as t what he wante he allus buys somethin’ he don't want. es int’ @ store Jest t' look around in He wants t' buy, but he's afralé. anxious he tet’ don't come back fer} sell you a coat with a cup in th’ back Th’ worse @ sult hes or a new with a triple re you. Your whole| mirror durin’ th’ transaction destroys what little Interest disposition t’ buy vanishes th’ moment they take you by|in Ife you may have saved out o' th’ wreck, th’ arm, Then ther's other clerks you hate t' bother. If|a feller feele when he gits out o' a store where he nearly ‘They will be on for the rest of the week. ', check on the New Netheriands Bank! MISS STALLO WINS AGAIN. Efforts of the Metropolitan Company, deposed administrator of the yesterday when Surrogate lordered the trust compa: any influence on your drinking in the |count was due, by the o die Wan. 4aked, order, in the middle of October. On Aug. 18 the Surrogate appointed iss Laura McDonald Stallo and Joseph BS proceedings came on the petition of Miss _———- “And I want to say for my past em-|8iallo, who alleged that through ployers, who befriended me and gave hasty sale of securities ime a chance, they never knew that I her's estate had been dai ‘was stealing money to repay them. They abdomen aad the worked for. @he stole from each | Other parte of the , causi igorous exercise, ty While at the Gregorian the young|fleshiness, only to return later. My uncle and aunt died, and I had to] woman occupied a furnished room at No.|only simple, absolutely safe treatment find work, 18% Clinton ieest Beehive: On pepene NP Lair weight pot esr day nights she forgot her dismal sur-| slender figure is to bathe wit! STOLE, BUT PLEAS WON HER A roundings and revelléd in luxurious| Thinning Salts. These famous j rooms in expensive hotels, She disap- | salts are unexcelled and are appr. ical authorities, A series of home haths—fifteen of more— from fleshy, musculer an ex-| Twenty-four packets to a box. Sead EARL & WILSON. for have taken ffom the hotel. But I went MAKERS OF TROY'S BEST PRODUCT, to Washington, to Virginia Hot Springs, ore a —$<$<$———————__ Florida resorts, to Boston and then to and | = | Here you see a picture o1 a choo” train. It is a picture that one of World ads., for the reason every medium of transportation there r) in metropolitan life to-day distributes rk Cy ho ‘or and offices, in fact, than are i the Herald, Times, Sun and COMBINED, both mornings and If you haven’t used World don’t know how easy it is to fin Always Use World Ads, ~ Qutch Results)

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