The evening world. Newspaper, September 9, 1916, Page 3

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WTO ROUMANA Fifty Miles Revond Fron if in Operations Along Black Sea Coast SHAREST FEELS SAPE, te Retreat of Roumantans, pital Does Not Believe | Enemy Can Reach It » Hopt 6 troops advanced than fAfty mile beyond the! ® frontier in thelr opera. slong the Mack fea coast, Ger. War correspondents reported Cerman and have German-Mulgerian advanes, h carried the Roumantan porte ot | and Batrtek (evidently Mat ), explains why the Roumantans, | r crossing the ‘Tranayivantan * Wow limit thelr operations to jerations with small achments, correspondents reported. The ani weom trresolute, not im what the future will bring, act that the Mulgartans have Wound defeated the Russians tn ja destroys the allied legend Higarians woull not fight The Rusatan cording to the jelal news agency, In dissat- th the Roumantan general hich seeme o pay no atten- the Bulgarian frontiers en) Beneral stat forces t) ¢ jer to check the has southes German-Bul- | ern Announced the Dobradia. A further retire mt may be 1 ary both because jo Dobrudja territory is diteult to wuse the enemy has forces on that front thorities declared | © to-day that the uble to throw an force across the Danube for an | ance on Bucharest | The Roumanians wero forced to render Tutrakan r four days role resistan out pered four to Oltenitza, kan Yombariment & so terrific that the one, 4 oss the river from | spatches ne | ar of the vould be ttle listinetly ¢ Roumanian tal, less than irty-five mile “ | Phe people of Lucharest received | news of the fa ly ci Tutrakan ar victory | regarded as insigniticant in the Old)" World “poles “ang suerte ticlans please note the traditional on with foteane in com | pown who saw Lady Gregory when] REASONS THAT BRING WOMAN'S ‘itilification), closely seconded Miss T onithe fur hantien she was here with her Trish pla: PARTY INTO FIELD. Clay, And when the dual policy was on the Hungarian frontie Ailes +1 meant fact ofl! ae. : esented by Mrs. Raymond Brown of! fasting ta th ruddja tore | Wil know what T mean; an Tho Congressional Union, whicn in Presented by Mrs. Raymond Brown of! TM ndment aap J boing quite at home with life and On! yack of the Woman New York, who ought to have been aides eager dy very good terms with it, The] g¢ man's party, has a mentioned as one of those heralds of formed, ors ne@l engagement rie wnatocracy. of |{tTOne following in the enfranchised the new tyr owed by Miss Allen with t Noarly 100 miles. qnverging American Sie States, but the numerically greater Of Oblo, it looked as if the National | other c adiwaes trom social etticioney disenfranchised Natio! i organization had been irrevocably | being # Lol expla = sed National party has Committed to the middle of the road. |e ting 1 *Bussians the ene} of Dobrudja and force their wement behind the D in @Pransylvania the we, resumed thelr advance h After a threo » outtank th Roumantans in ays’ Hight in the th, in which Austrian resistance finally beaten down. The Rou jan advance guards have now hed thirty territory, _—_——__— RBIANS ATTACK IN MACEDONIA ; CAPTURE A HEIGHT mneeenentnene: miles into Transylva- PARIS, Sept. 9.—The Serbians on le Macedonian front took the offen- ve last night in the region of Lake trove, The War Office announced day that after a violent engage nt they captured a height west of le lake, AMERICANS BACK jin conneetion with reformatories, prison wards, political cabals and tho! | turer Convention “Called for Partisan Pur- poses,” and With Strong Arguments in Favor of Action, “ls so Non-Par- tisan That It Leans Backwards.” { “Temptation Is Great, for if the 4,000,-| 000 Votes Now in the Hands of Wom- en Could Be Controlled,” They Could, Decide the Presidency. | Noted Writer Summarizes Action of the Convention In Atlantic Clty “Woman, Never Susceptible to the Party or Gang Spirit, Instinctively Avoided Perils of Future Political Oblig and Maintains Inde- pendent Cours Final Action “Shows Woman's Move- ment May Be Trusted to Run True to the Instincts That Gave It to the World.” BY MARY AUSTIN, (Copyrighted and written exclusively for The Evening World.) ATLANTIC CITY, Bept. 9 The first thing that strikes the observer, not too much involved in the! convention to view it from the outalde, ts that there tsn't any auch thing! as @ sulfragette type, That there was once, | am informed on the author- ity of Adelaide Johnson, the sculptor, who has made portrait busts of all the notable advocates of Votes for Women of tho last generation. This, according to Miss, Johnson, was the type represented by tho noble homely face of Susan H, Anthony, which was beautiful in the way Abra-| ham Lincoln was beautiful, strength modified by tenderness, a combina- tion which, fn women's portratts, men artists have consistently missed. To prove this type has disappeared one had only to glance about the reception rooms of the Marlborough-Blenheim, just off the Boardwalk One had to look for the yellow badge to distinguish the delegates from the other hotel guests. That was the first impression—tho extraordinary likeness of the “Suffs" to other people e An hour later you must have arrived at a new impression that an- \ Other type of Suffragist is rapidly shaping. NEW SUFFRAGETTE UP TO DATE IN STYLE. T Miss Katherine B, Davis, of whom you are accustomed to think | page of our social organization, Commissioner Davis, in a soft gray gown with a Jewel at her throat and her hair fluffed over her temples, and to see next to her the deep-bosomed maternal grace of Mrs, Catt, and | the well-cut, well-carried gowns of women lawyers, artists and pioneers of | social welfare, was to have some of the sensations of Balboa discovering a now ocean “silent upon a peak in Darien.” Only I don’t propose to be silent about tt! | There was Charlotte Rumbold, who talked the ven | Massachusetts rising to a question | | Permitted to the side which opposed | City of St. Louts into | Ciay and heirto the cloquence of the plained that they had heir personal convictions, Surely a procedure of strict fairness would have indicated that the measure ought to have been defended by some one who believed in it. On all the question arose why some momber of the Congressional Union was not invited to expound the prin- ciples for which the union has declared. No such half-hearted espousal wes} country eral action, Miss Laura Clay of Kentucky, daughter of Cassius M. arrive, About je more to do with the Woman Suf. | frage Party's reluctance to de- |y clare even for the party which must always be a little closer to | t the spirit of things than men they must be free to catch Inspiration of the times. He would » ;he would not be a wi Nothing of the right direction of their spiritual intuitions, And the next worst thing is to de- prive them of the expressing those intuitions when they And think how uninteresting life would be under those conditions! for men, after all, undertaking the largest and most successful communal art enterprise 1 y, a chieved In America; there also was Dr, Kate Barret re WySr |Mamertal Henry, steered © OLR! | sosssing, a ‘ : ‘ arreit, who carries on the |course by the doctrine of States’ {lization Florence Crittenton rescue work in seventy-three citte Rights. Miss Clay ts a spellbind another? at once, and man- | augos still to keep a sense of humor; Mary Wolf, the first woman ever to bo superintendent of a asylum for the insane; Mary Johnson, the Louise Grant, who actually gets people to accept her as a lec- nd pay for it, too—on the Economic Basis of Modern Diplomacy! was Anna Shaw, and nearly everybody, in fact, In the National Suf- world excopt Mrs, Medill McCormick, who had to stay at home with made novelis: There frage her newest young voter, but who, if she had been there would undoubtedly + share to convince you there ts a new type of Su It to say just what the]™ — acteristics of this type already it has a touch have done h Ir is diftic physical will be, b have been standing to their work in @ way that party leaders have not been slow to feel, CONVENTION REALLY POLITI- CAL IN ITS PURPOSE, This is as it should be, for this ts convention, come to no such conclusion. nptation, however, great, has been very an emergency First there are all the reasons which have influenced the Con- Gressional Union; the burden of State campaigns, a heroic Mar: thon of effort, carried on at a | bor and expense society Soarcely afford, and the lo: Power in other directions which women's activities could be | profitably turned. There is the | me feeling of a want of dignity | in being obliged to plead for what is given to others less competent It was called two months in situation, It was to con: ider the advisability of throwing the weight of the organization, ite funds and its enormous working force on the side of one candidate or the other! This was not so stated, but that what it amounts to. into | quarters in Washington, devoting its energies mainly to the business of securing tho Susan B, Anthony amendment to the Federal Constitu- tion: the other known as the Na- tional Woman Suffrage Party, with its headquarters in New York, and things going on in which women have the need and the right to ex- press them: for which they demand the vote as an instrument. And then there is the natural desire to give to their opponents @ well deserved jolt; to show Everybody knows in a general WAY] and alien, Then there is the ter- | that there are two wings of the) rible urge of the present crisis in | Suffrage Party, One, with Its head-] world history, with so many | | | WEARING WAR MEDALS GHlcago of the French Line, ays lato in leaving Bordeaus, d port to-day, bringing 198 cab- spengers and a lurge amount of young mon who have been i with the American Ambulance al on the Verdun front, re- Two wore the decoration » ge the “Cross of War’ with {conferred only for sonspicu- bravery in the fleld), Ihe two Who had won the decora- rge Fish of Los An- is C, Hammond of San { With them was Kenneth tel @ Chicago, also attached ance section. y told of heavy fighting on the yh frémt and of the determina- and \ resourcefulness of the Philib Kilroy of Springfield, » Who spent six weeks at the front, said the present medical fons and improvenents of the lapproached the marvellous and wonderful strides o last «He declared that war seemed rma} condition for the French 165 xe that they often went into eering t in face of certain| whoso chief effort has been to secure the vote cate by State, Much of the work of both has been| to, Intercha..geable, but gradually the] yor tf the four million votes now in younger and more militant group &tl ine hands of won Washington has abandoned the pro-Jang swung by the National suff. | paganda to play with the | organization, there isn't a particle of| Jecards as they are dealt, doubt that the next President of those | They have taken up the game [united States would have whiskers. just as the men have laid it out for And if the main body of Suf- | them and have had so much suc- frag have refrained from this | cess at it that they took another short cut to power, it must be be- leaf still out of Adam's book and cause they are actuated by rea- wont off and made a Woman sons and urged by instincts deep- Voters’ Party. They oreated a er than any consideration of mere firm but flexible organization, political expediency, The real raised an adequate fund and set question, however, is not the reason out to get that amendment, by but the fact. Have they refrained? | the same means men used to de- There seems to be some doubt feat it. about it in spite of the circum- ‘nding three parties in the field,| stance that they have voted to Prohibition, Socialist. and Republi-| continue their dual policy of State them what women really could | do, politically, if they had a mind | method can, all of whom belleved in their] and Federal campaign, and politi- ‘amendment and agreed to work for] cal non-partisanship, it, they turned their forces against) QPPONENTS LED BY WOMEN| the one remaining party which op: DEEPLY IN EARNEST. | posed it, and came out squarely tol In the beginning it leoked as defeat that party, Believing that/though the National had b com. | | tne enfranchisement of something like] mitted to the non-partisan poliey in half the population of their country} a very partisan manner. In the threo | |transcended every other issue in im-!cornered debate the policy of direc | portance, they put aside their per-| Federal action was support: 1 by Mrs. sonal predeliction, for they were} Ida Husted Harper of New York, sec many of them born Democrats, and’onded by Mra. Glendower Evans of 1 could be clubbed | It made you wonder what F could have been like in his best di to see her satling like a with opposition curling prow of her keen mind. finally that th, the fore It was an unconscious tribute to the quality of her performanco that some of her| given weight to the opposing side | audience almost forgot that they wae materially Moeies See totally disagreed with her, Miss Kate] Candidate, which developed Fre jordon of Louisiana, who h the right to speak for her “distinguished service” ned ate by (old ling poll- Opposition ~ Everything color of pai Congre: day morning, was finally def with a ringing speech from Dr. | Shaw. was 80 determinedly non-partisan that it leaned over backward. And still it was impossible All their platform and polic Did they divine, 8? Personally, this has much t For women | a clover politician in binding them, but | ¢ statesman, could be worse for any than to deprive its women to move freely In. the means of frenly | the best thing women can is to keep them For wha: but just sues: to Mra. Catt's motion loped to such an extent resolution vee wt resolution that by i ‘on the methods of the jonal Union might have je In fact, the convention not to! sce that the Woman Suffrage Party } was confidently expe Federal shortly. | 8 were ed to an outsider, | etation, Was this a of the instinct of women r than thomselve: to matertalia MRS. CATT'S RESOLUTION SETS| Wilson's THEM GUESSING AGAIN. | sees an | Then Mra. Catt, ali of whose former| ‘Tt would | And when t pre At she was oppo! rose ¢ he aptly termed th pol ederal action ta dence of separate State action, gave another turn to affairs by introduc- ing & resolution that the pledges of | the auxiliaries be interpreted to moan that all State campaigning be re- garded as preparatory to tha passage of the Federal amendment. Around this resolution, postponed from ses- sion to. session, has developed the| afford a common ground for men, “emerge! which called the con-| women and politicians—'"visions vontion out of its du of duty” higher at all times than practical any expedient. | doubt enter into the gene Altogether the occasion has gone to show ubli may be trusted to run true Promised the amedment, Seinally Inatinety that gave it to the world, ction of a Republican Also {t seems highly probable, at jent does not inevitably this writing, that the next President mean a Republican Congress. will not have whiskers, But these have almost no place in the discussions. Neither does the doctrine of ’ Rights, notwithstanding the able exposi obligations contrary to their in stincts and therefore opposed to “wholesome contagion of the o casion,’ tt to feet with the assurance that tide would not fail to rise to the The P meet expectations; he made them @ present of a phrase which will that | Wy damaged by fre and smoke, and br hat instinct scemed to be nt did more than” the Suffrage movement to. the _— the theatre was sl RUSSURS DREN DRVEON Keep Politicians Guessing, Says Mary Austin BACKFROMHALICZ | have bero driven back of Malies by heavy counterattacks after penetra ting German trenches, it wae offi elally announced to | who are again operating with the Germans, drove beck troops, taking one thousand pris onere. Kui Lemberg that reinforeements i abandoned and & perately to stop the adva Russian right: wing, ready reached the Gnita Lipa River and is now attempting to move west. ward against the Gpita Lipa to fank the Germ 3 HELO, 6 CENSURED | in, the members decided that the evidence |ghowed gross. but not criminal negli- gence on the part of: dred and Twelfth Street and Samuel 144 Clay Avenue; William Heath, fore man of bricklayers, of No, 29 spector of masonry in the Rronx Bu- |reau of Buildings, and Ralph &,| BY TURKS TROOP Ayain Aiding Germans, lake One Thousand Prisoners FIGHT IN) TRENCHES | Battleground Is the Gateway to Lemberg, Capital of Galicia BERIAN, Hept, 0—The Russians! yy. The Turks, the Creare Thie ts the second time since the ane bewan closing tn apout the advance on the Jattcian Capital was stopped by the Turks, Several weeks ago Turkish halted a drive amberg from the east. + An offfcta) statement fr uses the Roumantans of t on of mi irtan Inhabitants. efugees bave wrrived at Kalbunar Turkish the reating Hub Three thousand PETROGRAD, roops have been shifted lalica front to retnfores the nang, being slowly preaved Russian assaults, It was officially announced to-day hat the Turks and Germans are at acking Russian positions of Halicz and along the Naratuvka River © the north, They are attempting to trow back the Russian Ines, now Sept. o - onst within less than four miles of Haltes, he southern gateway to Lemberg. Northeast of Halicz the Turks and Jermans are counter-attacking dos- 6 of which has al- ns out of Halles. ae FOR BRONX COLLAPSE Coroner's Jury Finds Contractors and Building Inspector Guilty of Negligence. As the result of the verdict of a Coroner's jury, of which Georg B. Cortelyou was foreman, threo men to-day were held for criminal negll- gence and six censured as responsi- bie for the collapas on Aug, 26 of @ buiyting in Marion Avenue, near One Hundred and Bighty-ninth Street. Two mon Were Killed when the bulld- fell, Phe jury's verdict after a session that lasted all night. It held Alexander Loewy and Jacoo Polstein of the contracting firm of} Loewy & Polstein and Joweph J. Dunne, an ins) tor in the Bronx Bu. f Buildings, guilty ef criminal was returned negli Coroner William J. Flynn ordered that Loewy and Polstein be held un- der bonds of $10,000 each and Dunne in $5,000 to awalt the action of the Grand Jury, In addition to the criminal chargos, ck of No, 298 West One Huns Max M. Chase of the firm of Chase & Beck, owners of the building; Joho Petersen, carpenter and framer of N Sixty-fifth Street; William Shary, in- Smith, an tron inspectar of No, 207 Daly Avenue, —_—— E. Hosworth of Boston to-day wi appointed & special agent of the Di partment of Commerce to conduct an nvestigation of Far Eastern markets for MAN BURNS TO DEATH = | American boots and shoes, An announcement by the Department sald it Was thought that at the close NEWPLANS FOR WAR HOMECOMING OF BY CAUSED DOWNFALL Rerlin Reports Sultan's Men, Chief of German General § hae Ahn, VOALKENIAYN CHORE SPREADS PARALYSIS NGHTY at Rureay Experts Urge Urged Withdrawal From That Summer Vacationists French Territ ' Away Till Oct. 1, TONTDON fen 6 A dine " a ther reese toodey 9 the gow ports from fecoiwed @ sof r id om te th U Hlth) Department ta ete Pree. f tie ’ J sprem the b ‘het children @whe eon Pate t|@ore | “back tw New f the Ger t y tr ne resorts ~~ ‘ t ’ t * furl for the epidemue. fn Germany's war pla which Hav , f (he Vederst eurgeonea here indignantly reject (he epidemie reported tagt plete downfall of yt Senter Surgeon Charles tacks from the north avd to the end a « of communications with Turkey «that large Mumbers of emit. were below returned to the etty, added ‘why (hing for parente nsequent tnterruptty vou Palkenhayn urged that the wh Ae the renuit of theme home= Balkan campaign be abandoned, t) trem, To predict Chat there will be the eastern line be shortened and thar [oro ere" ln The sew cases of paraly. the occupied territory ta France ve " © the neat week.” Hig pres evacuated | diction now tm being tulfitbed, The Genera expressed the opinion be fe were fiity- five new @anee of that the transformation of German! Tne | parvivate a — strategy into a purely detevsive cam-| ©" y y 0 deathe paign op a shorter front would par-| : and Gina yes alyae the Entente Allies and t Gern resistance unless they fou c N With uniimitéd resources and then for] Deaths ton yours, Persistence in the pre Hroekiyn rie r plan of campaign, bo maid, would | Malatce H u lead to dis | * H § a Ma I von Hindenburg dee | 4! i H , nounced this advice aw childinh, cow ” hd ardly and unwortiy of the Gormans. | yoraty 0 ¥ Roa ert tot, He) surgoon Hanks han adviged that yn." chiidron who | ve been out of the elty during the epidemic be Away uotl! Oct. 1 at the earitent BERLIN DECLARES Healih Commissioner Emerson eat@ ns . “© to-day the epidemic has coat the alty ATTACKS OF ALLIES cog |SLOLTIO®, outelde the ordinary cost ON SOMME SLACKEN | ot running (he Dopartinent of Health, che! t include the em- BERLIN, Sept. %-—The allies’ tn fantry attacks on the Somm front are slackening, nounced to-day the War Office an- | je. ALBANY, Sept, 9—Reports of thirty. Tho official statement says canon oF tatanae dopo} “Enemy infantry attacks on the deaths from ecations ef the State Somme slackoned during the day. | iia ow York wore received. hy An English local enterprise at |feaith authorities up to hoon. tot Foureaux Wood and night at- (This ig a deccease of seven cases t rench against the |yestorday’s midday report, while the ourt sector failed, |mimber of deaths remained the seam red small portions of our |Urntha were reported from Hi which previously had Pn. remained in thd hands of the enemy.” Isher Roun pose main ho seri the LO day. ort bero, “Oral with, After bero, No. back i} tion of some of the Southern dele- lof the war American manufacturers ing con! © South. | \ trol of the beat phon trade in the Far a | Haat and keep It r Bosworth has ern delega heard openly Vira ont are’ exporienc ° grouping She jonored doctrine George Bambores, who kent a fruit | had, nine years xperience In thi with the “Southern Chivalry,” | and candy ut No, 181 East For- | JL.) Sa which has so long blocked the | ne , was burned to death -#ocond “ yur Body Found ga Beach, ‘ath of the Southern Suffragist, | ‘> ¢ af Shnosition to the aie Ha! Main bis be 1 back of the store to-}) phe pody of Annie Tito Gases anda Union Is not. enough {day in sight of rescuers, who franti-| hal years old, was found on Huguenot the reluctance of the|eaily tried to chop away the barred | fexch, Huguenot, Richmond Borough bey LAT es pes a te ‘ for] windows and inade brave rushes to]enrly to-day The child, lived aboard million dollar emergeney) fund ng | ash through the flame curtain whl 4) Valley Lighterage Company, Aw the the transfer of the National head ut him off jboat was passing up the Staten quarte to Washington are move 1 ‘ie who has an expre Isiand Sound Thursday the litde one Jwhich do not at Any strenuous | na partitioned-oft halt of the fell fran the barge opposition to Federal pro f Fveryt Aa hae toes went Into Bambores's place to | = Atlantic City goes to show the gas stove a water EMBER Tenders of thy Woman Suttr 4 f oil and paraffine| are gradually shaping it tow : eset: piel aecneummacion, What, th t with which he| To-day when ordering your the reluctance of th : rt ids on his Wagons, The Iood supplies to to commit it| miture boiled over and caught fir | ‘ « ployees meraly a superior Kind of Sar Rukasn tae it seeming to do ! t a Junteer fire tf , fe . 7 to smother the flames When they ISTINCTIVELY FEAR ANY BONDS|!)) 8!" Riled ths feene OF PARTY, hop and it was impassable ; Women have never been sus D larry tried twice t ceptible to the “party spirit,” the ' t spirit of the “gang.” which is on badly scorched of the most potent instincts of ’ 4 Was out a door in men. Do they hositato to commit Htition between the two stor themselves to a party arrange ocked, Wile losed. — Hambores ment which will involve future | hud toreotter 4 panic Everything (or your table is put up under the Sunbeam” label. GREECE AND BULGARIA STILL ON GOOD TERMS BERLI Bayville).—Tho Cologno Gazette pub- Radoslavoft plained that the delay of a few days in Bulgaria's doc movementa in secret Bulgaria's relations with Greece re- Powers and their allies BRITISH DROP BOMBS effect in the RUSSIANS IN NAVAL ATTACK ON BULGARS PETROGRAD, naval forces were engaged the Bulgarians yesterday for the first timo, Roumanians by the Bulgars), sinkiny | twenty-one barges loaded with bread, | Desed i Nota DOLL COSTS GIRL’S LIFE. girl to-day Market Street, \THIRD NOW EW ROUTE TO CAMP WHITMAN List of Regiments Ordered Home Entrains With 1,500 of 4,588 Men in Outfit. HEADQUARTERS SIXTH DIVi- SION, U. 3. A, M'ALLEN, Tex, Sept. 9¥.—The Third Infantry got away yes- terday for Camp Whitman, a day ear- er t it had been feared would be pt. 9 (by wireless interview with of Bulgaria, Premier who ox- san ration of war on mania was necessary for the pur of comploting cortain strate ‘agnicable, the Promfer waid. The] RaMin Heea ues of foeve 5 cones sntrance of Roumania Into the wir | ei oe Wie apse anes with hikes paracterized ay the last of the of events which will lead to defi victory of the Central Hlopes Lnat orders for the movement north of other New York regiments soon might b® at hand were somewhat dampened to-day by the announce. ment from division headquarters of @ atch of ten furloughs and nineteen diseharg' the first since the Thiré, ON ENEMY IN EGYRT vourreourn and Seventy-frat were or- | dered home, Of the furloughs, sever “Pires British | the NDON, Sept. 9. £08, of paratyphold reached @ to- aeroplanes,” says a British offtcial narats : as it enty-nine yesterday, statement reporting mallitary pare, | He ners miele anpranenee Gaell tions in ‘again bombed i troops have experie Mazar y Eleven of the twen rked the day's march an ty bom a « heavy toll of the engineers, SINK 21 BARGES 9.—Russian aga! Rept. it was officially announced to- ‘Torpedo boats bombarded the! of Balchik (captured from the Gooary| She Vall A five-cent doll cost the life of a Het 7 It was because Re Miga ae emma HEALS QUICKLY ndmother’ Micabero, at No. 65 “ONE BOX PROVES IT 25¢ Her six-yoar-old sister na and her brother Joseph w her owing the doll to M the trio started for thetr 22 Monroe Street. Hut for a last ay of the eaned over Mix R Beauty toGray or towand Grisan Tn the Metropolitan Section of Comorrow’s Sunday World Escorting the long-haired heir to the throne of the Ancient Toltee race among the assem- bled gods and goddesses in the Aztee wing of the Museum of Natural History. :: é

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