The evening world. Newspaper, April 2, 1917, Page 3

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1 ‘ PACIFIST HECKLES ~-AWOMAN PATRIOT AND GETS AFIST: . _—S— Knocked Down for Intimidat-| ing Mrs. Bedell as She Seeks Navy Recruits ENLISTM 'S SPEEDED. New York Stations Rushing .. Work to Meet Required \ 100-a-Day Rate. | \ cmecneme Mrs. Margaret M. Crumpacker and Mrs. Charles * the volunteer reerulting a; for the navy, had & lively time in thetr tour through town to-doy While they were talk. automobile to dd Wall Street and ing from Mrs. Bed: & crowd at Brood a noon a man walk at yelled ; “What are you women doing down here with your fine furs trying to make other people go and get killed? Why don’t you get your husband to make it an enlistment?” “My husband is enlisted,” said Mra, Bedeli. “He ix not, as you seem to be, a coward.” ‘The man advanced a little further toward tho car and opened his mouth to heckle her further. It was tmme- Miately closed by the fist of William Bulivan of No, 7 East Seventy- » third Street. The heckler was knocked down, When he scrambled to his ; feet he went away on the run. At Twenty-third Street and Madl- @on Avenue the women caur a boy tm the act of slashing at the tires of { the car. He got away. € Twenty-six men signed the cards | promising to enlist to-day, making a total of 300 prospective recruits en- ‘ rolled by the committee so far Mrs. Bedell announced to-day she head sent to her farm in Orange , County for tho feathers of 190 White Leshorn chickens and tat she would adopt the measure of putting white feathers in the buttonholes of men who refused to enlist. It was with a very keen determina- to make good on the navy'’s for 2,000 men from the metro- tam district by April 20 that the officers in New York and Brooklyn took up thelr work to-day. Tt means that at least 100 men must ‘be enrolled, not merely listed as ap- plicants, every day, and to this end the stations got busy. The Department's desir that the Clear, Peachy Skin Awaits Anyone Who Drinks Hot Water Saye afi Inside bath before break- fast helps us look and feel clean, sweet, fr _— ‘kling and vivacious—merry, 8; bright, alert—a good, clear skin and @ natural, rosy, healthy complexion are assured only by pure blood. If ‘only every man and woman could be luced to adopt the morning inside bath, what a gratifying change would take place, Instead of the thousands of sickly, anacmic-looking men, women and girls, with pe or mui dy complexions; instead of the multi- tudes of “nerve wrecks,” “rundowns,” “brain fags” and pessimists we should see a virile, optimistic throng of rosy-cheeked people everywhere. ‘An inside bath 1s had by drinking each morning, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kid- and ten yards of bowels the pre- fous day's indigestible waste, sour Reementatlon and poisons, thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before utting more food into the stomac jose subject to sick headache, bil-| fousness, nasty breath, rheumatism,) colds, and particularly those who | have @ pallid, sallow complexion and who are constipated very often, are urged to obtain a quarter pound of) limestone phosphate at the drug] store, which will cost but trifle, but is sufficient to demonstrate the quick and remarkable change in both health| and appearance awaiting those who! practise internal sanitation, We must remember that inside cleanliness is) more important than outside, be- | cause the skin does not absorb the! impurities to contaminate the blood, | wi the pores in the thirty fect of| bowels do.—Advt Gives your skin For 30 yee | ¥ 50¢ oF $1 powder Sample masled free. a Perfume Co, ‘Cinetnnat’, Obie The Fr: | be declared, but was brought to this port to-day by the steamship ‘Tenadores of the United Frutt line trom Cuba and Cen tral American ports, The Tenadores returned from one of the regular! | twenty-four day cruises. Ss had eighty-nine passengers aboard when she started from New | nen for the servi, shall be thors y fit physically bas resulted in entistinent of only 547 of the 1,704 who applied in Brouklyn and Queens fn Javiuary, Pebrtary and March, as shown by the quarterly statement published t Quariermaster George B. Marttnson of Brookivn's chief recruiting station o. U5 Flatbush Avenw tha Said to-day he needed automobiles and hoped | persons offer them, Many nen, ne said, who had p wed the physral examination, had not reportet for} awearing in. These men, he added, ne Wanted to reach, They would come} in soon enough, hie felt, if war should they had good jobs just now and did not want to enlist unless there was to be some action. The examining surgeons at No, 115| Flatbush Avenue stated to-day that they would inspect applicants every day up to 6 o'clock and after that would transfer them to the Manhattan Station at No, 34 East ‘Twenty-third Street, where examinations would be held from 8 to 10 every night. Gunner's Mate Shields, who charge of the Brooklyn Station hi at Horough Hall, started out to-day in a motor car to make a tour which would include Jamaica, Whitestone, Flushing, the Rockaways, Ridgewood, Williamsburg and Bay Ridge, He carried with him a great batch of havy posters which ho will hang in windows. Also he was prepared to make speeches wherever ho might be able to collect a crowd, As Billy Sunday has said he would give his efforts to obtaining recruits for the navy, he Is to have a chance to do so, because a new recruiting station was opened this afternoon in Broadway, directly opposite his tab- ernacle at One Hundred and Sixty- elghth Street Miss Marie Dahm, who sald she lived n Bay Itidge, Brooklyn, reported to- day at the Naval Reserve headquarters, 26 Cortlandt Street, with an order from the Navy Department directing Capt. Patten, in charge there, to enlist her as a first-cla: man. She left the station, saying she would return later and be sworn in, A station for intensive training in handling small calibre and rapid fire pieces is to be opened to-morrow at No. 44 Exchange Place by Mason C. Peters, who says he has received the offer of a number of vacant stores where gun crews may be trained. Two weeks of training, he added, would qualify a man in at least the rudiments of handling the pleces and these “Naval Rough Riders,” as he called them, would then be taken to sea for a week's practice at shooting at dummy periscopes and floating mines. At the Twenty-third Street recruit- ing station of the Naval Reserve to- day enlistment records were broken when twenty-six men were examined and accepted for service. The Women's Naval Auxiliary League this afternoon moved its head- quarters from the Hotel Webster to the Hotel Biltmore, where a suite of rooms was engaged for the campaign, THIRD BATTALION OF 230 PUT UP IN CHURCH HALL Four Compantes Already Doing Guard Duty Furnished Quarters by Patriotic Rector. HEADQUARTERS OF THE THIRD BATTALION, Twenty-third New York Infantry, April 2.—On its ar- rival here from Brooklyn last night the four companies of the battalion went into temporary barracks in a church hall offered by the patriotic rector as goon as he knew the soldiers were coming. ‘There was no string on the offer of the hall. Major Sawyer, commanding, was told to make such use of the building as he saw fit and to feel that it was the home of the command for as long as it was sta- Uoned here. ‘The immensely valuable properties within a short distance of this place will require the full strength of the battalion distributed over several | niles me | WAR SPURS RECRUITING. | Army Gained 2,800 Men Days of March, WASHINGTON, April 2—Army crulting reflected the threat of war dur- Ing the last ten days of March, when more than 2,800 men were added to the Last Ten ranks through the general recruiting service. Reports from other sources will in- crease the number. 92 COLD FEET QUIT SEA ON A RUMOR OF WAR Liner Tenadores, Here From Cuba, Brings Story of 46 Scared Passengers, A chronicle of ninety-two cold feet York for the Carribean, All through | the trip the talk was of war and ru mors of war and submarines, When the boat reached Havana a few days ago there was a report current there that Germany had declared war on | engaged in taking j time within the United States Right there developed the ninety- two cold feet—in Havana, of all places! Mear of U boats lurking along the Atlantle coast prompted forty-six Passengers to abandon their trip Havana, take a boat for Key W. and come to New York by train, The forty-three passengers who stuck to ihe ship had a delightful trip to New York, Among them were Mra, Donald Brian, wife of the oper- ite stor and her nine-year-old | daughter, Florenc name Patnter Killed by Fall om Ship. Ante Dolan, seventeen years old was killed this afternon aa a result being thrown from a one-man scaff \ he wae painting the st anchored at the foot of Van Street. Brooklyn, to the deck of a tugboat which struck the i IOGAMUT, trom, Ne ees Fh of One of the efficiency tests of a warship fleet is to control ofl and coal firing so as to make the least possible smoke. Excessive belching THE EVENING Wout 1 MOND AY, APRIL 2, 1917, Toa MOSRR of smoke 1s now considered gross ineMclency on the part of the engl neering force, TIST RECT. GUARDS BIG SLICE OF STATE: “WEL ANDY” New York Soldiers Spend First Day in Field Having “Time of Their Lives,” (Special from a Staff Comempondent of wan oe HEADQUARTERS OF THE SEV- ENTY-FIRST REGIMENT, Some- where in New York, April 2.—The Seventy-first New York Regiment is guarding @ big piece of the State of New York and having a lot of fun as well as military practice, The var!- ous units are scattered over 60 much country that a man in an aeroplane could not look them all over in one day. But it !s a pleasant country and well-watered, “I don't mind doing my bit up here in God's country,” is the way a sun- burned veteran of the Texas expedi- tion said it, and hundreds of his com- rades agree with him. They are in the real old “land of milk and honey,” one of the great pastures that supply New York with dairy products, There is not a man on the sick list. Everybody is happy and working enthusiastically, Even those families who have not yet re- ceived a postal card from their boy “at the front” may rest assured that the boy !s enjoying life, Col. William G. Bates, commanding the regiment, has been out with his staff on @ hiko sirice early breakfast It is a little different from the “hikes” they used to take on the border last fall. Instead of riding tired horses through the sun-baked brush or ploughing in automobiles through rotting waves of burning sand, how- ever, they are travelling in a special car that runs by gasoline power. They are inspecting a section of country about as big as the State of Rhode Island, and, in between in- spections, they are zipping along tho rails at a mile a minute or better, This is one of the finest places in the world for raising bridges and digging tunnels. It is not so bad when the thing rumbles over a lofty bridge 1 a thunder storm over a hilltop, | when she plunges in a tunnel tha bores for a solid mile through the heart of a mountain, so dark that you can feel the blackness beating up against your face like the brushing of a mighty wing, the passenger is apt to wonder very earnestly what is coming next. It feels like submarining on land, But it's a part of the job and nobody minds. ‘The regiment {s luxuriously at home in the armory of A Company, now are of a large part of the Aqueduct that carries New York its supply of drinking wate: The third battalion under Capt James E Eben is camping tn the Armory, which 18 also regimental headquarters, with Capt, H, L. Kel- lenbeck as adjutant in command dur- ing the frequent absonces of Col, Bates on inspections, ‘The armory {s a handsome snodern red brick building at the top of a high hill guaranteed to add an inch to a man's calf and two inches to his chest girth inside of a month, The Jads go skipping up and down the hill as if they were born to it ‘They just went through the hardest kind of physical tests by regular army surgeons before being mustered into l service for the a year, and the < the long, steep hill is only a them There was no horse play by New York soldiers that the strict ritle could find fault with, though most of the soldiers are of the age of college boys, Until the company kitchen outfits were set up to-day, the problem of feeding 400 hungry soldiers, thet appetites sharpened by the chang from the sea level to these helghts, was one to worry about. But Adju- tant Capt. Keslbeck found a restaur ant man who had half a dozen tables ind a long lunch counter and equip soon was doubled Some of the # wer for practice march t ernoe others took little railroad points here and there, Four Fords, each carrying its T machine gun, and t notorey cles each packing a similar weapon on ita frame, are drawn up in front of the cond imb up ° joke tt nd to rides wis armory d the community has nettled down to nditions as If t were play. Lloyd Ge: n Plotters Are Refused an Appeal, LONDON, April Appeal was t refused the cted of conser te kill e¢ and other Members. are Mra A kien and Their Parti Mrs. Juliette Low's Organiza- tion Bound to Be a Na- tional Force. A POWER IN ENGLAND. Women’s Work in Nation’s Crisis Becoming More and More Important, Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “Every girl in America can be a Practical patriot and give her coun- try service no less valuable, if differ- ent, than that of the boys.” That ts the message to all girlhood, from the Commander. in-Chief of more than ten thou- sand American ¥. girls, She its . Mrs, Juliette { Gee ot Low, founder and President of the National Girl Scouts, which bas organized troops in almost every State and in which about a ; thousand New York girls are already | enlisted. In fact, the New York de- tachment is so strong that plans are being made for forming a New York |Council following the interesting | demonstration of Girl Scout work at the Cosmopolitan Club, No, 138 East Fortleth Street, the other afternoon. Mrs. Low camo to New York to ad- dress this gathering, and I found her | at the home of Arthur Osgood Choate, No. 30 East Seventy-fifth Street, Mr. Choate is a nephew of Joseph Choate, | and his wife is Vice President of the | Url Scouts, Mrs, Snowden Marshall| is another of the national officers. “We have heard so much about | patriotic service for men and women, | and even little boys,” I told Mrs, Low. | “Therefore, | wish you would explain | what young girls can do. I believe! “At the time when villages on the English const were shelled and when Zeppelins were dropping bombs on English towns, Sir Robert Baden- Powell suggested that the Girl Guides open emergency shelters, An emergency shelter {s simply 4 cellar properly equipped. So all over Eng- land these shelters were established ‘The girls placed in each cots and bedding, a first-ald case and simple | cooking utensils, And two Girl) |Gutdes were on duty all the time in| ach shelter “In the morning the older gtrls—we have them from ten to seventeen |who were not obliged to work for | \thetr living, went on duty. In the! Jafternoon the school children served | And in the evening the business girls |did their bit “phere are several rest camps in France, where soldiers may find tea, tobacco, newspapers and magazines and a quiet haven for their tortured nerves, camps financed by the Girl uides, although the actual manage- nent necessarily is in the hands of elder women, ‘The girls have done laplendid service in the canteens for laborers throughout England, For in- stance, Lady Asquith was assigned the task of providing canteens for the dock workers, who could buy| drinks in plenty of places but no food, | ‘The Guides went into the kitchens of the canteens established by the ¥ W, C. A. and helped prepare the| meals and ciean up. There waa an adult cook, but the girls soon acquired knowledge of how to feed large de achments of men and were most pful Another thing the @irle did was to form & semaphore cordon when the i 10,000 Girl Scouts Ready As Practical Patriots for n War Service ——— this morning Can Mrs. JULIETTE LOW... fours have been placed at the disposal ot Admiral Usher of the Brooklyn ———— | Navy Yard, and will make all day wires were down between certain |irips through Lirooklyn and Long Isl- English towns, A line of girls at}and to stimulate recruiting for the stated distances apart—the country|navy. The surgical dressings class Was flat and they could see each other|of the National Special Aid Society —was stationed between two com will meet at the soclety headquarturs, munities and kept up communication | No, 26 Fifth Avenue, at 10 this morn- perfectly until the telegraph lines) ing,” a course in wireless telegraphy Wire repaired. A number of women. | ‘oe members of the scoclety bexins who in fonne ears took the Girl caday and| ‘ this week, meeting Wednesday an Guise, Halning, were so quick and! citurday morning at 10.30, under the skilful in thelr signalling Work that ety eon ne xport, i they actually were allowed to train men recruits, “If we have a real war tn this country, lines of communication be- tween towns are sure to be broken,| tactful but thorough investigation of and girls trained for signalling can| the condition of the families of the render inestimable service, Some of| 2,000 New York men who comprise my girls gave an exht jon of their » Naval Reserve, for the Militia of work at the Navy League Service| Mercy at No. 4 West Forty-ninth School in Washington last year,"|Street, Secretary Daniels has accept added Mrs, Low with pardonable} ed the Milithvs offer, im through pride, “and Admiral Wainwright| the President, Mrs, John Hays Tam and Admiral Schroeder were good| mon to take entire charge of the enough to say that they had no idea welfare of. pendentsa of the Naval there was anything like it in the| Reserve while the men are on Gov country, ernment duty reantzation will “These are some of the distinct and! be Informed re prepared specific things girls have done in aj to render moment the} nation at war © is no men are called t \ why American girls should not the or many of them would be eager to serve | |” rhe Girl Scout movement empha- | be inn t indus trial Sam if they only knew how.” | me eaniae portance of patriotism, | warkers = a “Let me tell you of some of the) pho first pro out has | noon by Miss Marley of Red Cross | | things girls have been doing in Eng-|to make," roplic ; t the factory of the B. Steher Jiand,” she said. “I have been over | the scouts, “is ‘to do my duty 1] Company, No. 49 West Twenty-firat ie 1 ‘ jane hy cou ‘j ned nia 4 a Stre Although im ve he wom seven times during the past year and sharelt) ‘ YO ANd thin’ fe what) ES SOUS AT debi a 1 am closely In touch with the work |" s-you belong to the great Uniter | Americanizat han been hastened of the Girl Guides, as they are called | States of America, one of tha great |@mone them hy me of a factory | in Great Britain, ‘They were founded | World powers for enlirhtenment and | Sehool maintained ae Sh . er of Sir Robert Baden- |!iberty. It did not just grow as cir-} Mdueation with th by the sister of Sir 0! Jaden: cumstances chanced to form tt It ta the firm. oe | Powell, at the time when he started | thy work of your forefathera who _ | his world-famous organization of boy |apent brains and blood to complete it.| BRONX GUARDIANS PREPARE. scouts, The Girl Scout movement in| ven when brothers fought they | , ne son develop os | fought with the wrath of convtetion. America has been developed on Ines | ora aon menaced by & forelen foo rift Orders Hix 600 Deputies to| identical with the work of the Eng-/tney swung into line shoulder to | Assemble To-Ntght, ish body, and lam eure that the girle| shoulder with no thought but for| sheriff James F. O'Mrien of Rronx of my country would be equally effi. | thelr country County has ordered the 600 deputy cient in an emergency, Tn all that you do, think of your | sheriffs and apecinl deputies of hia stat country first. We aro our great wholo nation “Don't you think, too, patriotic influence of very great?” I sugge: girl would make it « that, sho does not approve of quarre that the while me- & YER a om 1 twigs tn the anme fagot, and every little girl goes to make up some part or parcel of , Ness, she nevertheless hates @ coward, a man who will not strike | blow tn defense of his fag, we per- haps should not have high school boys expressing ® moral horror of military training and callow college youths who loudly proclaim them- Ives too proud to feht “That ts rfectly true,” assented Mrs, Low, “Kipling Kim,, says that there are two kinds of women— one kind that builds men up, and the ‘ther that pulls men down—and there is no doubt as to where a Girl Boout should stand, She must and she docs uso her influence to strengthen the characters and to support the honor of the men and boys with whom she 8 in contact The motto of the Girl Scout or- ganization is ‘ise Prepared.” And for the five years of its existence in this jcountry the girls have been practising Jall this preparedness which others have just berun to take up. Girl Scouts hav urned first aid work, canteen ¢ nursing and much othe work which falls on girls ar women in time of war We now have offered our services and had them ac- copted by the Red Cross and the League for Women’s Service, and just ag soon as Wo can raise money to open utive office for our New York Council we shall put ¢ little girls hero directly in touch with rellef work and tell them just what to do, So If you are a girl who wanta to do her bit, or if you want to help some girl to do it, write to the Girl Scout headquarters at No, 627 Fifth Avenue, an oxe Large numbers of women In the National Special Aid Society, who have promised thelr automobiles to the Government in timo of need, will redeem the pledge for the first time and chauf- Bicak. Trained workers are now making a r-day t Red Crosa to meet sronerta Court of the lined to-night In the ¢ Bronx, The Sheriff and deputies to discuss the reason for the but it Is under its pur- pose 1# to have the men ingtructed as the part they will be expected play if trouble develops following the Remember “Bayer” —it has always pro- | tected you against substitutes— 4 Demand | Bayer-Tablets | RUSSIAN CABINET VTS THE FRONT FOR CONFERENCES Crowds Cheer New Ministry as All Members Go to See Commander-in-Chief, PETROGRAD, April 2.—The entire ‘abinet of New Russia was at the front to-day, In conference with Chief of Staff Gen. Alexleff of the army, now Commander-in-Chief, according to despatches received from Mohileff, Minister of War Gutchkoff had been at the front for several days, but his colleagues did not arrive until to-day, ‘Tho Ministers were accompanied by attaches of various Petrograd em- bassies and by deputations of the people. a ‘Their arrival at Mobileff met The thi tremendous ovation. people had a band at ratiroad station and cheered tne leaders vig- vo assemblage sang towna- myportant ‘onferences” are progress at the front, it was de ‘harles H. Boynton, Pres the American-Russian Chambs Commerce, who arrived her after a journey across Stberi that the revolution had been gre with enthusiasin at every through which he had passed, "The man Emperor and Chan- Bethmann-Hollweg wore 1 by Deputy Skabe- loff, Vice President of the Council of Workmen, widiers and De ates, durin nonstration in front of the Duma Building. Deputy Skat loff, addressing the thousands of sol- diers and clvillans who took part in the demonstration, sald: “To the hypocritical greeting sent the Russian revolutionists by Wilhelin and Bethmann we can only reply with the bayonet. We cannot shake hands with the German people until thoy have rid themsolves of the cursed Hohengollern and Bethmann.” A manifesto adopted by the Com- mittee of Workmen and Soldiers’ Delegates to-day read: “After conquering Russia we will free other people, Let Czars, Em- perors and thetr followers fear us— lat let peoples desirous of lMberty turn their faces toward us with con- fidence and hope,” in lared. t of of to-day sald ed town At the Four a Downtown: Select FromThese Your Easter Suit! *25, 35, °50 Tuesday’s Big Spectals Bedell-Paris Models ~-.»., Latest Plaited Models Nineteen West 34th Street Brooklyn: PF 14-16 W. 14th St, | 460-462 Fulton St, | Broad & Park Sts, 0,000 IN COUNTRY |yositstrnean SMOKELESS” U. S: BATTLESHIP GOING AT TOP SPEED | FACTS ABOUT MY LOW FEES When the first cut. Opened the other dru vince the people thal store oid Inferior dru against a he people noon foun: the drugs were just as good in the cut-ra' were doing the bulk of the business. The cut-rate drug stores sold on email profits and advertised. The other drug stores charged high prices and did not advertise. When I placed my fees low and adver: tised the fact, it became the custom .of other doctors to way all the mean things they could about my practice and warn People againat being treated by me. The People quickly found that my resuite were 48 good as the other apectailsts, and that my fees were about one-third what the high-priced apectaliate charmed. The great number of people I treat makes It possible for me to make @ small Profit om my practice. I am perfectly satisfied with this smal protit at this time, when it takes two dollars to serve the purpose of one dollar before the great war began, ARE YOU GOING DEAF? My specialty ta treving treating deafnem and head pote fore plac in the breathing tubes, I have Uhirty” yearn aturying. the way. to do Foca iasially fiw, “the “norte aa tilt lanes, of he nose, "thus Tearing important wirncture that ure to strain dirt and ‘The came of Mr. Allen strate the value of my method, Clogged Nostrils, Droppi in Throat, teolend: 4 and Head Noises Robert Alten at N Avent, New York he fire come ent Ye cn ‘the ie stata ame tae Serud my head like steam eeaping. It wae hard for me to understan ha Peo ie yn eat re free aml open, that he can ‘sleep “ot demon. wetehont the tree tiiroat' tine gone" The, tolerw have ett he. ears hevean via Atholl la reeuenng. If you utter from clogayd _nowtetla Ing. deal tle, or ©. dlechan car, ‘or have a tmd throat, of ff Jou. tare ther form of catarrhal diséane, Twill be to ‘my. office, It "witt oose hething for an examination snd edvicn 4 7 REMOVAL TO FLATIRON BUILDING, 1 have moved to my old office in the Flatimn Building torn ths, following “repos: “fe owt kitowne bullting. in Mew''fork. Tt ig te carieat tnillding to tach by mubyway,” el Surface ‘cars, “Mty office te’on the soceusd Toot DR. J. C. McCOY 213 Flatiron Building Broadway and 234 St., New York Scores of specially priced suits for tomorrow's selling—the newest things that Paris has designed and Bedell has cleverly reproduced! Modified Norfolks Serge Tailleurs New Pointed Jackets Just from the work- rooms— specially de. signed as Easter offer. ings—velours, gabar- dines, Poiret _ twills, checks, Gunniburls,: homespuns, Burellas, tweeds and men's wear serges—in all the very newest and most desir- able shades. Fashion Shops Newark: Aspirin ay Your Guarantee tisements published in one with Interesting Poultry and Dogs FREE At All Branch Offices of The World A handsome compendium of all Dog and Poultry adver- rticles by experts on the breeding and ng of fancy birds and cani May be obtained by mail by writing The Dog and Poultry Dept., New day—Sunday, March 4th-— York World 4 t +

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