The evening world. Newspaper, July 28, 1922, Page 2

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— Mier employees, as many, fearing the ith of union brethren, have come under assumed names, Their od of work, however, has con- thelr superiors that they ‘worked for railroads before, as they geem to know their jobs. * The railroads have therefore been tm a better position to fight the strike than ever before and the executives are confident that a prolonged fight ‘would surely mean ultimate success. Government isn't going to permit ® prolonged fight. President Harding insists that it must come to an end “within a few day: 2+ The vexatious sentority problem can be settled through the United States Labor Board after the men go back to “work. If they do not like the decision they still have the right to strike, ‘though railroad workers point out that ‘the Labor Board's edicts must be made ‘Dinding upon carriers as well as em- Ployees if its decisions are to be re- pected in the future. Concessions on both sides will be hhecessary on many smaller points be- fore a final settlement is actually signed, but the basis presented by President Harding has been accepted in principle by the spokesmen of the contending parties and it remains only for them to bring their respec- tive followings in line. _ Presidential influence ts having its effect at last in the railroad strike. 4SHOT TO DEATH, SEVERAL HURT, IN RAIL STRIKE RIOTS Violence on Increase as Roads Continue to Hire Men. CHICAGO, July 28 (Associated Press).—There was a noticeable In- crease in ¢he number of reports of rail strike violence reaching here from as far West au San Francisco, Cal., and as far East as Concord, N. H. In San Francisco a special guard employed by the Santa Fe was shot and killed. At Concord five shots were fired in a skirmish between un- {identified assailants and New Hamp- @hire State troops who are guarding the Boston and Maine shops there. Chicago added its bit, One man was taken to a hospital suffering trom cute received when six white men attacked two non-union Negro shopworkers in a crowded street Car, causing a panic among passengers. Three white men and a Negro were arrested. The homes of two non- union shopworkers were attacked with bricks by three men who rode in an automobile. Police arrested two of the men after several windows had been broken in each of the hou “A striking shopman who was" shot at Creston, Ia., by a railroad guard, died in @ hospital. A white man and Negro were wounded and several Negroes injured when the Negroes ‘were attacked by unidentified men at ‘Macon, Ge, About fifty, shots were fired. \ A white man and a Negro, both ‘Striking shopmen, were being held on thurder charges at Memphis in con- fection with the deaths of two Negro ‘car repairers who were shot while leaving the Illinois Centra) shops. One man was cut severely in a fight at Denison, Tex., between a Negro cook and a party of white men, The Negro was said to have escaped into Oklahoma. “ A restraining order to prevent in- terference with operation of the St. Louls-Southwestern in Texas was granted at Texarkana, Tex. At Maysville, Ky., a restraining order was granted to the Louisvitle and Nashville to prevent interference with operations. Twenty-six disputes involving ‘wages and working conditions on various railroads were filed with the rail board by E. F. Grable, chief of the Maintenance of Way Men's Union, in accord with the peace plan adopted by him. The Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul has established employment offices at a number of points along its various lines and opened an employ- ment headquarters in Milwaukee. Shops of the Chesapeake and Ohio at Covington, Ky., were opened with full force, the railroad announced. Thirty Negro laborers employed in places of strikers at Milwaukee, Wis., disappeared as a result of firing at midnight by a crowd of 200 men, ac- cording to the Chief of Guards, who said men broke into the bunk cars and wrecked the interiors. Women at Janesville, Wis., at- tacked the Chicago, Milwaukee & Bt Paul roundhouse last night and threw stones at the windows. Later a big crowd of strikers gathered and pum- melled three men who, with seven others, attempted to flee from bunk cars. ———= STAFF OF 77TH HAS PLAN TO SUPPLY FOOD HERE IF ROADS ARE TIED UP CAMP DIX, N. J., July 28-—Problems . that might confront Reserve Officers if y are called out through « national strike were discussed to-day by Major Bihu C. Church, Assistant Chief of Staff of the 77th Division, who spoke before 400 Re: ofthe 77th and the 78th of New Jersey. “As @ result of our experience abroad fe equipping and supplying 2,000,000 Men,” Major Church said, “we h heen able to draw up plans to feed “and supply the metropoli(an district in se of an emergency which would ralyze the railroads, which carry 90 per cent, of New York City's food re- ROADS ARE BLAMED BY STRIKERS FOR SETTLEMENT DELAY Ready .o Fight an! Win if Eastern Executives Won’t Negotiatc, They Assert. WHAT i:AIL CHIEFS SAY. Give Aliwuae Against Restora- tion of Certain Rules Under Forni. Agreements. “We are prepared to fight and win if the Eastern executives will not negotiate."” This was the essence of a telegram sent from here to-day to Bert M. Jewell, National Director of the rail- road strike at Washington, by Chair- man John J, Dowd of the Central Strike Committe The telegram said that statements emanating from railroad officials in this district relative to the number of strikers returning to work and im- provement in the service are abso- lutely unreliable, Last night," the wire continued, ‘John G. Walber, spokesman for the Eastern executives, stated publicly that the Issue in the strike was not the grievances of the men but ‘whether the roads or the un‘ons were to run the shops.’ This is a fair sample of the point of view of the small group of the New York execu- tives headed by Gen. Atterbury of the Pennsylvania who are holding up a settlement. ‘Gen, Atterbury and his clique are playing for victory by annihilation— annihilation of the other party to this dispute, and collective bargaining as well. We know, however, that this policy represents only a small mi- nority of the executives of the country. We urge you to continue your efforts for a national settlement by peaceful negotiation, but under no circum- stances to allow a settlement which will permit such roads as the Penn- sylyana, New York Central and Erie to make headway in their un-Ameri- can campaign against labor unionism and bona fide collective bargaining." The Association of Railway Execu- tives issued a statement to-day show- ing their attitude against restoration of certain rules under the former na- tional agreements, “‘under which the railroads were required to pay out large sums in wages for labor not performed, or to make wage pay- ments disproportionate to the hours of effective labor."’ “It was the judgment of the Labor Board that the continuation of such methods of payment and of such rules and working conditions would be an unfair imposition upon the shippers and consumers of the United States who myst pay, the cost,” the state- ment added. Samuel Gompers, President of the American Federation ot Labor, who is here in connection with the garment workers’ troubles, expressed the be- lief that a settlement in the rail strike is not far away. “[ want, for the benefit ot the whole country, to see the men back at work,” he sald, “If the parties can be got together without the Labor Board or anybody else, and left free to settle in their own way, an agreement can be reached, 1am sure, But it will never be reached if a condition precedent to settlement is the surrender by the men of their seniority rights. Mr. Gompers spoke at some length of J. Cleve Dean, Chairman of the Rallway Employees’ Publicity Asso- ciation, to whom President Harding sent a long telegram explaining the Alministration'’s position on the coal and rail strikes, Mr. Gompers thought Dean was “a man of straw, set up for the purpose of being knocked down by interested persons. A despatch from Chattanooga last night explained that J. Cleve Dean is a flagman on the Alabama Great Southern Railroad and is a sort of ready letter writer. The so-called Railway Employees’ Publicity Com- mittee was organized in Chattanooga three years ago, und so far as known 1s only the mouthpiece of the fed- erated shop crafts there, Dean will be called before the Chat- lanooga Federation of Shop Crafts and asked to explain why he sent the telegram to President Harding. Union men there severely condemned Dean's action and it was stated that an effort would be made by the labor organiza- tion to curb his utterances. —-—— RAILWAY HEADS TO MEET. IW NEW HAVEN OFFICE, Arrangements are being made in the executive offices of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad in the Grand Central to take care of the meeting of the railroad executives to be held next Tuesday to settle the strike. It is planned to hold the meeting at 11 A. M. in the directors’ ¢room of the New Haven Railroad, wher Hordering Out Disorders Spre' \\ Believed aC in Washing’ ‘Supplement Ss malted Inevitable a5 Called ‘ \ APPREHENSION 1S FA If States Canno Prevents Disi THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1922. Harding's Wabbling Policy In Dealing With Strikes Headlines Printed in Evening World Since July 10. Gov, r _ a ne in Plork » MONDAY, JULY 17, 1922. = ——ES OPEN WINES WITH U.S. FLAGS AND VOLUNTEERS t Furnish Ad turbances, Fy Them— Uupport of Pol; seal TO GO IN EFFECT IN 48 HOURS rding to Decide To-Day Action in Coal Situ- equate Forces io ‘ederal Troops Wig inet Ls ae ecutive Quoted Without Hoje in Shop- men's Deadlock. IS POLICY as Not COAL STRIKE WOH, SAYS LEWIS; NO WAGE REDUCTION Interstate Conferences Alone Needed Now to Com- plete Negotiations. BY JOHN L. LEWIS, International President of the United Mine Worker: (Copyright, 1922, by United Press Ass'n), PHILADELPHIA, July 28.—For every material purpose the present strike has been won, It is now gen- erally agreed that there need be no wage reductions in the mining in- dustry The public has come to ree- ognize that a wage reduction would not necessarily mean cheaper fuel, because prices are largely regulated by the laws of supply and demand and many operators follow the prac- tice of levying all the traffic will bear. ‘Thé Nation’s fuel needs for the com- ing winter will require continuous operation of all mines in the anthra- cite and bituminous coal industr: limited only by transportation facili- ties. The welfare of our Nation and its citizenship require,s that the strike be settled af the earliest possible date and it only now remains for inter- state confernces to be arranged so as to permit the negotiation of a wage scale. Large producing units of oper- ators are ready to meet and the situa- tion is only held up by certain ir- reconcilable interests who should be made to fecl the weight of the out- raged public opinion. The miners are fighting for the principle of collective bargaining and against any reduction in their wv es below the present inadequate stand- ards, They are determined to make and are making every personal sac- rifice in order to win, and there will be no faltering in this dauntless at- titude, —»- RAIL BIG FOUR TO PASS ON MOVING _ NON-UNION COAL Report That Trains Have Been Stoned in Ohio Brings Action. CLEVELAND, O., July 28.—A new crisis in the Nation-wid mine and rail strikes appeared here to-day. Officials of the Big Your brother- hoods were expected to meet to deter- mine whether thelr members would continu to handle coal from non- union mines. The situation was brought about by reports from Glouster, Jacksonville and Trimble, Ohio mining towns, that mobs of striking miners and sympa- thizers have stoned trains carrying non-union coal from West Virginia. In a letter to D. B. Robertson, President of the Brotherhood of Loco- motive Firemen and Enginemen, members of the organization at Mid- dleport have appealed for a decision as to whether they should continue to operate trains transporting non-union coal. Robertson probably will call a conference of the Big Four brother- hood heads to discuss the situation, W. G. Lee, President of the Broth- erhood of Railroad ‘Trainmen, clared that the brotherhoods would demand that thelr members be pro- tected. Warren 8S. Stone, President of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, stated that the brotherhood members will continue to handle the non-union coal. FARRINGTON CALLED TO CONFERENCE BY MINE WORKERS HEAD Illinois Federation President Will Complete Circle of District Representatives. PHILADELPHIA, July 28.—Frank Farrington, President of the Ilinois miners, has been summoned to Phila- delphia for conference with John L Lewis, international President of thi United Mine Workers, and will ar- rive hera to-morrow. His presence will complete the representation here of the district Presidents of the con tral competitive soft coal flelds, the others from Indiana, Ohio and West- ern Pennsylvania having been in Philadelphia in consultation with Mr, Lewis for two days. “Bathing Suit Parson,” Guilty, Is Suspended by | Presbytery “May the Lord Have Mercy on You,” Reads Verdict— Waded Into Pool to Marry Oklahoma Pair. Rich Husband S False Affidavit Cost Her Alimony, Wife Cha James R sk, 68, Cotton Importer, Deceived Justice About Finances, Mrs. Reed, 40, Tells Supreme Court Mrs. Florence L. Risk of No. Supreme Court Justice Lydon to- that it was a false affidavit made by her husband, But Park Place, Brooklyn, charged before | Was his James Risk, sixty-eight years old, a wealthy cotton imporier, that caused Justice Finch to deny her application for alimony. sted to-day for a counsel fee of $7,580 and alimony suitable for her support Justice Lydon re Mrs. Risk charg ryed decision, She again b that her welathy husband falsely swore to his own fin- ancial circumstances and that she was amply supplied with means of her own. She is forty years old. The December and June love of the Risks was aired in the Supreme Court “ year ago when she sued for separa- tion on the ground of abandnment The Appellate Division, on an appeal, decided that Mrs. Ri , while wife in name only to the grizzle al wife under a pre-nup- tig agreement and seot the case back to Supreme Court to fix alimony and counsel fee In letters produced at the trial, Risk wrote to his fiancee, thirty years his junior: “You and I are no longer children and know that there are things in life beside love and It is the other things that I expect to give you, The veteran lover also lapsed into poetry, penning these lines, as shown at the trial: Come, grow old with me, The best is yet to be The last of life, for which the first was made. Our times are in His hand Who saith, “A whole 1 planned,” Youth shows but half—trust God, all, nor be afraid, The Risks formerly lived at No. 549 Riverside Drive, brower, still see COURT WOULD IDE LOCATION OF BOOZE FROM DRY AGENTS “Too Precious,” He Says, Telling Attorney to Whisper Its Whereabouts, “T will require you attorneys to in public the quantity of intoxicating liquors nor where they are now located cious and the Government might go after it, You can tell it to Mr, Chad- bourne in confidence That is what disclose these It is too pres Surrogate John P. Cohalan said to At- torney Edward Hirsh, counsel for Louis Goldstein, whose removal was sought to-day as executor of the estate of his brother, Bernard Gold- stein, Mr. Goldstein's removal was asked by Sadie B. Smith, No, 258 Corbin Place, Manhatan Beach, as adminis- tratrix of the estate of her sister, Mrs. Hattie ldstein, ‘widow of Bernard Goldstein. Miss Smith charged that she has been unable to obtain any satisfactory nformaton re- zardng the estate of Bernard Gold- stein of which her sister was the residuary legatee. Mrs, Smith further charges Gold- stein with removing large quantities of intoxicating liquors, which be- longed to her sister's husband, with- out a permit from the Federal au- thorities, and refusing to surrender this liquor. Attorney Hirsh denied the allega- tions, except to admit that Goldstein had removed the liquor from the cel- lar of Mrs. Goldétein's hom tended that it was his property. but con- Surrogate Cohalan suggested that Goldstein give William W. Chad- bourne, counsel for Mrs. Smith, an inventory of the liquor and where it is located, Attorney Hirsh was about to tell the location of the liquor when the Surrogate suggested the in- formation he imparted confidentially. Following the verbal agreements the motion to remove Goldstein as ex- withdrawn, > CELLULOID COMPANY ecutor was SUMMONED AFTER FIRE Found in Bollding. yn Inspector. Combustibia Following an investigation by the Fire Marshal and the Bureatt of Com- buckles and buttons, charging th poration with unlawfully having loid in its premises without a permit The summons is returnable in Jefferson Market Court next Wednesday, According to Callahan, about half a gross of cellu loid blocks for use in the bustibles of the [Fire Department, simmons was issued to-day against the firm of A. Reinheimer & Co. of No. 11 West h Street, makers of celluloid n Combustible Inspector manufacture of buckles was found on the premises following the fire yesterday, which, ac cording to esti damage. The Fire Marshal's offer its Investigation disclose re was caused by an over heated heater , did about $50,000 —_ AMERICAN DEMAND BOOSTS COAL FREIG! RATES. LONDON, July 2 FRENCH GIRL SAL ONLY TOPRESS SIT FOR BROKEN HEAR Still Baron de Roth- schild, but Abandons Hope of Marriage. Loves Mile. year-old French w York and filing here of $5 breach of de F banking ie Porquet, beautiful girl Paris society 0,000 suit for 24. startled by the alloged James of the route who promise a othsehild, ninst Henry scion family, French is en back to her Paris home on the ship France. “She is disheartened back her thirteen pieces of baggage, twenty evening gowns, tweity-one af- steam and is taki ternoon frocks, nine tea gowns, six street suits, nine coats and thirty seven pairs of shoes, but she will not upon her arrival at Havre ling, as was reported in some of the New York newspapers “Her generous wardrobe and $25,- 000 worth of jewels were her trous- 3 declared former Supreme Court Justice W. M. K. Olcott to-day, “and she took them all back to France with her after being cleared by the customs department. 1 was informed personally of the untruth of the smuggling report to-d: said Judge Olcott. Regarding the secrecy of Mile. Por- quet's departure, Judge Olcoth suid to-day he was fully aware of Mr in- tentions and was sorry that he could not inform the reporters when he was. interviewed on Wednesda “Mile. Porquet wished to escape the notori and the newspaper men. While she was at the pier she called me on the phone and thanked me for maintaining the secret. 1 told her the suit would not come to trial for six or seven months at least and said she might as well return to her home." Judge Olcott laughed heartily when shown a Paris cablegram quoting friends‘of Baron Rothschild as saying the nobleman “had not even been on terms of friendliness with Mlle. Por- quet."" lly ronsense!"* declared Judge Olcott. “She has scores of letters and cablegrams, all clothed in the most endearing terms, telling of their proposed marriage and of the Baron's great love for her.’ Judge Olcott also discounted an other report that Mile, Porquet had gone back to France upon th eceipt of a wireless from Baron de Rothschild intimating a reconciliation When she left she had no inkling of any such happy conclusion of her present troubles," declared her counsel. “She is a heart-broken girl and merely de mands that justice be done. If a onciliation should take place in France nothing would suit me better, as 1 am entirely convinced of the deep sin- cerity of this young woman, There is the possibility that there might be 1 money settlement in France and the ease withdrawn from the American courts, But all I can sal now is that when Mile. Porquet departed on Wed- nesday it was with the firm intention of seeing the whole thing through to .—American demand for coal, brought about by the strike of the United Mine Workers of America, has caused ocean freight rates from doubled, it was announced to-day. 1 lasgow and other Scottish ports to be the end."" ee K. OF ©, GAINED 24,250 MEMBEK- SHIP IN YEAR. NEW HAVEN, Conn., July 28.—The membership of the Knights of Colum- bus in the United 782,400 on 30, of 24,280 in a rding to a report prepared by Supreme Secretary William G. MeGin ley, which will be submitted at the Su preme Council Session in Atlantic C next week States was June an increase year, acc ty IN Vacation have Thi REE STATE SQUAD 8S AMBUCHED BY IIH REBELS; TWO KILLED Man Dressed as Priest Decoys Troops—Republican Lead- ers Captured, D ~The ambush of a of Wree § troops was reported to-day from Glenties, Coun- ty Donegal. They encountered a man dressed as a priest, who assured them there was no danger in the locality. Suddenly seven men emerged from behind a hedge and opened fire upon the National soldiers, killing two of them. Four of ‘the attacking Repubficans were ptured during subsequent fighting. James Williams, a Republican er, Was arrested at Waterford, ac- cording to a report, which also sald the residenoe of Lord Leitrim at Mul- roy, Donegal, had been burned by, Irregulars. DUBLIN, Press).—All_ the main Connemara district cleared of insu July 28 (Associated towns in the have now been ent teoops, and rapid progress is being made by the Na~ tional forces in the west and the Munster province, says an official re~ part issued to-day. The report says there !s good ground for hoping that within the next fortnight the organized resist- ance of the Republican trregulars will have been so broken that further postponement of the Irish Parliament will be unnecessary. At present five members of the Provisional Govern- ment Cabinet and sixteen other, mem- bers of the Dail are actively engaged in the sup) ssion of disorders, Oscar Traynor, a prominent Repub= lican insurgent leader, who escaped at the time of the Four Courts battle, has been captured here by National army teoops. The Clifden station on the coast of way has been put out of commis- sion by the irregulars, who destroye a large part of it, it was announced to-day. It was the first long-distance station on the Irish Isle: id main- tained communication with Galway Bay and with ships at sea IRISH DISCREDIT DE VALERA REPORT mon De Valera, Reports that ¥ recognized leader of the Irish insur- gents, was on the high seas on his way to the Unt States were met to-day by representatives of Trish organizations with disbelief. How the reports originated none appeared to know At the American Vommittee on Irish Independence, No, 411 With Avenue, it we said the reports ore not be- lieved, It wus added, however, that scores of inquiries had been .cceived about the reports this morning At the offices of the American Association for the Recognition of the Irish Republic, Major Michael A, Kelly, director and Secretary, deted the report. Major Kelly, who was an officer of the Sixty-ninth during the war, deglared that if De Valera had left Ireland they would have been ap- praised of it Major Kelly pointed to a report eir- culated about two weeks ago in which it was said that a man who knew De Valera well had seen him in a hotel lobby talking to a prominent Irish- American. This report was disproved ——$<———————————— At the High- est Pinnacle of Quality Regardless of how little you pay, but this does not mean fancy boxes and ribbons. Advt. on Page 5 ‘THE WORLD'S | Harlem Offic Now Located at 2092 7th A Near 125th St. GOTEL THERESA B O1eEo DENIKE.—AMANDA L. CAMPBELL Fue NERAL CHURCH, Saturday, 2 P, M quirement : ice elimina it Is belleved, comfortable seating ur- LAWTON, Okla., July 28 (Asso-)the Lord have mercy on you," read World follow you. Mailed) | pein. —wiLLi as. CAMPBELL vue rangements can be made. - —— ——- = = 5 the verdict of the trial body NERAL CHURCH, Friday, 6 P. M. OKLAHOMA MINERS - = ciated Press).—Unanimous decision} “\7 7) win, on advice of his counsel, WALTER.—FREDERICK W. CAMPBEL -RENEW CONTRACTS |TWO CONTINENTS [STEAM PIPE BURSTS, j,i cusingors, amiatance, and) enat the Rev. ‘Thomas J. Irwin was| refused to comment on the verdict Ma GaURoe, Muri ae FOR UTILITIES CO FEEL EARTH kK TWO ON TUG BURNED Jon the hands and mms in making the | guilty of conduct “unbecoming a min.|He had previously announced, bow-| WORLD SUMMER RATES|] | wixcw.—cuantes FARL RY. caup- 0 AL QUAKE ER leer nome S fester"? was reached in his trial before aren Aue. Ay Sen Reng et ibe wt, tts BE FUNERAL CHURCH, Friday, 3 MUSKOGEF, Okla., July 26.—Con-]| GUATEMALA CITY, July 28,—An SPECTATOR HIT BY FOUL |the Judicial Commission of the Et byterian Chureh if the outcome] |}Morning & Sunday. 35 $1,00 7 Qracte with mines supply soal rer} earth shock of considerable intensity] Joseph Ke ' SUES LOUISVILLE CLUB| Reno Presbytery early to-day. The}or his trial was adverse. aa porns A Ca 25 2 FUNERAL DIRECTORS, public utilities and institutions, can-| Ws felt here last night, but no damage] engineer, and No. 40 minister, Who Was formerly pastor of] ‘The suspended minister faces arson vening Worl ¢ 7 a led by the United Miners, District] ¥#* Teported, Bucket Street, Brooklyn, fromiy, were], VOUISVIULE July 28-—George lene Hirst Uresbyterian Church here, |< aes Hee eee ce an allenen i |.]] Sunday World 10c. per Sunday THE FUNERAL CHURCH ad r| red oday wh " a pulaville jase e € suspended rol ne ts ee ” Li yw fo be " . 2 °. i were renewed at s special meeting) scapnip, July 34—A brief carin. | Mrioualy insured to-day win » steam the American} was indefinitely suspended from the]condiary fire in the Lawton Church | |} Qyuseube.nom for eng length of ting. ‘Americas New Burial Custom" ered th ase Vas quake was felt late Inst night at Gra- ite tine at the: IrMlonst leging | presbyterian Church, United States of }lagt Apri, while Mr, Irwin, was pas Xour nowadenler will arrange Call Columbus 8200 na causing considerable alarm. No 1 defective tor, lor you, OF remit direct .The order affects ono mine in Arkan-| damage was done. Hn ' test with the | Amer!* saa wae oho tu ue : FRANK E.CAMPBELL gasand four or five in Oklahoma, em-|s* “22 SO " iinore tater lewxue club) sou ate nilely: sup ia " Seber ta Be St hat aati New yore Wards “ne Funeral Church'm @ 0 Or ' " junior world’s ' ytorian Cha W Le nto ww, New ‘ity. (On- SECTARL) Ploying approximately 600 wen and FOR SUMMER COLDS whieh burned tile hand: : cu HAH) yinister of Vreshyt hurchyeiit and married a couple similarly ad edad] Ea ¥ Broadway at 66th ucing 2,200 1 wand caused a ro y at oe. (prod: jons a day. Take Pather John's Medicioe,—adve. Perry and Capt. Charles Richi Light Concussion of brain, United States of America, aud muy attired,

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