Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Nov. 9, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
. j . -' ..'. ' ' A A THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES LAST EDITION. 4:00 P. II Weather rvrec&a;: Cloudy ind Wirmfr. VOL. XIV. N , 5. ASHEVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 9. 1909. So PER COPT CHESTER'S mfcvTODOni M Queen of the Dreadnoughts; Fastest Vessel of Her Type Now on the Seas OH DR. F. A. I HUNTED THE B AR IN NATIVE WILDS 1. CtOflS TO ADVISE PRESIDENT CIRCUIT C The Admiral Does not Hesitate to Call the Explorer a Faker, in a ' Recent Address. Cost of Marketing the Wood, Condition of Trade in 1 908., etc., Consider ed in Trial ol Big Damage Suit SUN OBSERVATIONS PROVE COOK WAS HEADED SOUTH WHAT IS AN EMBARGO? ALSO IS A PROBLEM CONSIDERED lie Arrives lit This roiirluxlon After a Study ol Dr. Cook's Own State meiit to the l'rcxH. Washington, Nov. 9. Scientists here arc discussing an Informal speech mnde by near Admiral Colby M. Chester, U. S. N.. retired, at the Uni versity club. In which he characterised Dr. Frederick A. Cook as a faker and declared that Dr. Cook not only did not reach the north pole but did not npproach nearer than a distance of about 604 miles from the pole. The Importance of Admiral Ches ter's accusation lies not only In the fact that he Is an eminent astronomi cal authority and was formerly ur Intendcnt of the United States Naval observatory, but. In that he was one of the special sub-committee of three appointed by the National Geographic society to examine the records of Commander Peary and report on his claim to polar discovery. The sub committee declared that Peary had reached the pole. Prof. Willis L. Moore, president, and O. P. Austin, secretary, of the so ciety, declined to discuss Admiral Cheater's speech. They took the ground that It would be Improper for them to talk about It because both Commander Peary and Dr. Cook were members of the society. "My speech," Admiral i Chester said, "was informal and extwnporane ous. I had been In Nevtf York for about a week and was called up on the long distance telephone and asked If I would 8penk upon the polar ques tion before the club. I agreed and arrived In Washington from New York nly r few hours before I made the speech. '.i"It I true that I referred to lr. cofdcas aTner. I used as the basis of my research the data used by Dr. Cook In his copyrighted stories of his polar expedition printed In a New York newspaper and carefully studied these observations. I base my argu ment that Dr. Conk did not reach the north pole on the disagreement be tween his observations and the known declination of the sun on the dates referred to In his narrative as shown by the Nautical Almanac. "Where Dr. Cook states that on April 1 he first saw the midnight sun at 88 degrees' 38 minutes, a distance of 225 miles from the polo. In reality on that date, according to the Nau tlcnt Almanac, the midnight sun would have been visible as far south as 82 degrees, a distance of 664 miles from the pole. "In his narrative Dr. Cook, after assuming thnt on April 7 he was as far north ns 86 degrees S8 minutes, baaed his claim of reaching the pole nn an average dally Journey of 14 miles a day for 14 days. As a matter of fact he would have had to travel 40 miles a day to cover the distance from his real location, according to the Nautical Almanac, to the pole. "Following Dr. Cook's first state ment concerning his Journey, Prof. J M. 8tockwll of Cleveland showed that If his supposed latitude were cor rect Dr. Cook ought to have seen the midnight sun above the horlson on April 1. Dr. Cook's own account fixed this date at April 7. In trying; to ac count for this dlscrepency Dr. Cook sta'cd that he did not say that the sun was on the horlson at the time spec! fled and that there were many days In which the sun was obscured by cloud. "The Inference drawn from the de nial was that the midnight sun might have been seen above the horlxon If the weather' had been clear. But In his later and fuller narrative Dr. Cook specifically stated that on April S the barometer remained steady and the thermometer sank, the weather be' came settled and clear. At noon now there was a datsllng light, while the sun at midnight sank but for a few momenta Waving the frosted blue bathed In noonday splendor.' "Of the weather between these two dates he wrote: There was at no time a perfectly clear horlson, but th weather was good enough to make frequent nautical observations.' If frequent nautical observations could be made between April S and April 7 It Is pretty certain that the sun was not altogether obscured In the middle of the nights, and It Is certain that It was slowly rising from total obscura tion on the early data to clear day light on April 7." Not only did Admiral Chester main tain that pn April S Dr. Cook was far south of the position he give himself In his narrative but that on the four subsequent days. Dr. Cook was headed south, away from the pole, which, ec cording to his own acounta, was at least JI5 miles away. Admiral Chester based this teductlon, he said, on Dr. Cook's statement that on April t the sun sank Just below the horlxon and that four days later, on April 7, the sun showed a short distance above the horlsgn. According to Admiral Chester, If Dr. Cook had been traveling northward during those four days his change In location, combined with the steadily Increasing declination of the sun, would In four days have caused a far greater change in th sun's position relative to the horlson than that re ported by Dr. Cook. "If It really took, as Dr. Cook said, for ilnvs far the sun to change Its iia.in :,.i,t p. ,n from Just below the l I on page I. Maiiitlfr in nriM'kfniMtniiiKli Caw Con- eludes 111k Testimony, and Jack (inrst Regius. The conditions of the chestnut wood market in IstOS; how mueh It takes to buy a cord on stump, "snake" It out of the mountains, and haul it to the railroad, and place it on cars; and besides, the old time question, "What Is nn embargo?" were matters con sidered In I'nited States Circuit court this morning In the process of the trial of the (61,000 damage suit of Edward H. Hroekenborough again the Champion Fibre compnny. The examination of Edward H. Rrocken borough, which was begun yesterday afternoon, was concluded this morning and he was crosH exam ined by L. M. Bourne of counsel for the Champion Fibre company. After being questioned considerably about what equipment, lands, etc., he owned In 1908, witness stated that he thought he was worth between jr.0.00 and 160,000 above all liabilities. He ad mitted that he had no equipment In North Carolina in 1908, nor dldi he have any wood ready for shipment at the siding on October 14. 1908. Wit ness is a resident of Virginia. IP' stated that he came to North Carolina with Mr. fiurst. In good faith to begin the contract to deliver a 3000-cord minimum and 8000-cord maximum of chestnut wood yearly to the Champion Fibre company at Canton, the wood to be shipped from within a 100 mile radius of Canton. Jack Garst of rTnnklln cotiroty, Va., told of coming to North Carolina with Mr. Hroekenborough to look the Held over. Upon going to Canton, he did not llnd Oma Carr. manager of the extinct department of the Champion Fibre company, but did me Mr. Ha I ley. a bookkeeper, who toM film thnt mi embargo had been placed on all ship ments of chestnut wood. Mr. Urock enborough was with him; and together they returned to Ashevllle, and Mr. Urockenborough telephoned Mr. Carr. The- witness returned to Canton the next day bearlnsr a letter from Mr. Hroekenborough to Mr. Carr. He snld that he had a long conversation with Mr. Cnrr in which he told him thnt an embargo had been placed on all shipments of chest nut wood. WHness snld, !'I asked Mr. Carr what Is an embargo?" to which Mr. Cnrr replied. It was to stop people from shipping wood when the Canton yards were crowded. Witness testilled that Mr. Carr told him thnt he could place the embargo at any time; that he did not 'know how long it would last. Witness said he had 14 muUs. and wagons, saws, etc., for getting out chestnut wood, none of which he had moved to North Carollnn. Ho testi fied that Mr. Carr wanted to know If If he had anything to do with the Drocken-horoiigh contract, to whlch4 witness replied that he did not. he was simply looking around, nnd might go In with Hroekenborough In the contract If things were favorably. Vp on returning to Ashevllle. witness tes tified thnt he told Hroekenborough that he did not see any chance to ship wood to Canton; that an embargo was on, and he did not know when it would be raised. On cross-examination witness said that he returned to Virginia after see ing Mr. Carr and Mr. Hroekenborough. Witness did not recall a conversation with Mr. Carr In the presence of Mr. Bailey In which Mr. Carr stated thot the embargo was only temporary, and would be raised within a week or ten days; - he did remember Mr. Carr showing him the Canton yards. He remembered that Mr. Carr had told him the shipper had nothing to do with the embargo; that Mr. Carr would place or raise It any time he wanted to. Witness did not know whether the Fibre company was re ceiving other shipments of chestnut wood at the time. U W. Williams. John Walker and Reed Queen were witnesses to the price of chestnut wood and the gener al conditions of the trade In the vicin ity of Marlon and Old Fort. One wit ness said there was a slump In the wood business In October, 1908. Wood cost about IS to 60 cents per cord on stump price depending upon distance from the railroad; it cost 71 per cord for cutting, tl to IS per cord for haul ing, depending upon distance and sbout $1.50 to load a car of It to 14 rords. Mr. Williams declared that wood In large quantities eould be de livered on cars at Greenlee for It to II. tS per cord. Defense Take Testimony. The plaintiff rested today and Oma Carr, manager of the woods and ex- COntlnuea va page I.) 7 4 rfcU ' ( , '; 6 i .;.,: ... "... .. ,.,'T1 - , '.' r-"'t'V The Awfully Exciting Experience of Messrs. Raoul, Burckel and Bostic. TRACKS FIRST DIRC0VERED BY THE ALERT VAN BUREN Tin ! THE U. S. S. NORTH DAKOTA. E North Dakota Is the queen of the Dreadnoughts. Hhv has demonstrated that she is the fastest battle ships of her type alloat, us well tut one of the most powerful battlesh tpa in. the world. She developed a maximum speed of 22.25 knots and an average of 2I.S.U. Iloth marks are in excess of the best perform ance of either her sister ship, the Delaware, or the Hellemphoti, the leatler lrt adnougbt of the lliitlsh nuvy. In attaining the surprising spe"d the turbine engines of the North Dakota were horoepowrr than lias Ix en reached by any other bnttlesiiip. A maximum of while horsepower was the mean amount. The maximum number of propellors was 2Sti' a minute. It was found thnt 263 revolutions In this time tract speed of 21 knots. forced to the rieveloptm nt of more :i,1T0 horsepower was recorded, revolutions of h r nickel composition were sutlleleiit to maintain the con- RECORDS SMASHED UN NEW SPEEDWAY t ! MELTED JEWELS TO HIDE THE PAST Lewis Strang in Fiat Lowers World Madame Steinheil Makes Further Ad- i Mile Record and Aitken Ten i missions and Appeals to the Miles Record. Court for Pity. Atlanta, (la., Nov. 9. on Atlanta's i new $250,000 motor ear speedway. IjcwIn Strang, In a 200-horso power Flat, shuttered the world's one mile record today In 37:50 seconds in the Initial event of the opening day of the automobile races. Five thousand pen- to saw the smashing race. Purls. Nov, 9. "Have pity; I am an unhappy woman, b' should not he tin lured," cried M iilanie Sl iuhi ll. mi the resumption to,l: v of her trial for the murder of her biiHl-aml and step mother. She told al t Jewelry which she originally claimed was stolen by the assassins. 'M ol.illie Htelnln II :ul- John AitKen... starting from scratch ' mitted anew thctuw hail Jewels, the In a 00 horse power National, lowered j (jlfts of admirers melted the being the world's truck record for ten miles. going 8.02:41 as compared wilh pre ious records ((lldllelds) of S:K, ;II0. Cincinnati, Nov. 9. It Is rumored in railroad circles that the shortage in he financial department of the lllg our railroad, which developed through the alleged defalcation of barbs l Warrlner. the deposed treasurer, may reach f 2.1)00.000. War- iner astounded his superior with the etulls of how he spent the money. le says he has not one dollar left. Refused Admission to Vnlted States. Washlna-ton. Nov. . Because of "progressive muscular atrophy sf fectlng her ability to earn a living" Kate Stirrer, a domestic, 14 years old has been refused admission to the United States by Immigration officials. 8he Is now at Ellis Island, N. T. IxmI In River. Chicago, Nov. ." The absence of Max Cohn. a clgas manufacturer, and lteatrics Bhaplero, his nance, renders it almost certain they were passen gers In the automobile thnt plunged Into the Chicago river Sunday nlnht. . TAFT IN THE OLD NORTH STATE He Is Spending the Day at Wilmington, and Will Speak There This Afternoon. HARLES WARRINER SPEN1JLL1S nvestigation Being Made into the Af fairs of the Deposed Treasurer of Big Four Railroad. RIDE WITH CAUSED GIRL'S DEATH Before Death She Admitted She Was Forced by Men's Conduct to Leap from Motor Car. done to obscure her past life from the knowledge of her daughter. Madame St. nihcll's aliunde was au- ! (trcsslve throughout the examination, and she had lively tilts with JndKei DeValles. W hen reproached for con - ! eeallng from the authorities that she i possessed imitation duplicates of her , Jewels, the woman defended her se- j creey on the ground that she .wished : to hide from lo r friends the real , financial conditi n of the family. i Wiliulngtcii. Nov. !l President T.ift is spending .In iluv here in fullillment of a promise made last spring to visit aejnu the old North State. His train arrived b-fore ,la Hubt from e'lorence He slept until S o'clocU. ami then met a committee which escorted him to the home of .lames Sprimt for breakfast. Knroute the president passed through the court of honor arranged with white columns nnd yioini) pine tr's. IjiI'T he went aiiloiiiobllllig. : At li. ID Mr. Tall boarded the rev-j emie i utter, SemiiHde, for a four i hour's sail on the Cape I'car river to! Km t Caswell and return Luncheon was sered cn the Scmimde, und the 1'tvhldriit returned to the city at It o'cPn k for tlie parade through tile principal streets and to deliver an address in Hie city hull. NIKE T PRESIDED TO KING T TIFT E WS RDM TOD Isirlng ltaoul Led the Chase Must of Hie Way, Klglit I p to the DIs coxcry of Their (Juurry. Tile three Ashevllle gentlemen who last xveek made such a rapid ascent, and likewise descent of Ml. Mitchell, also paused on their way to give chase to a bear. In the party were Luring Kuoul, J. A. Hurckel and Van liuren I lost Ick. The. mountain-climbers were carrying each u heavy knapsack, ami atfer ascending the steep climb to the 1'ilinaflo, and reaching the level stretch in the trail, they paused to rest u moment. As Mr. Unstick was pulling off his pack to sit down on a roek for a moment, he looked down the mountain, towards the city's vast watershed; and Just u few steps from him wits the barbed wire fence which surrounds the boundary. He noticed the fence wus somewhat broken, and going nearer he saw- a well-defined trail lending throiiKh the weeds. "A bear has Just been along here," he exclaimed, wilh some excitement, "There go his tracks thrnuKh the weeds." To this both Mr. Kuoul and Mr. Hurckel replied, "Let's chase him." 1-euvliiK their packs by the trail's side the three young mountain climb ers dashed away on the trail of the bear; the farther they went, the more excited they became, each trying to get the Mrst glimpse of liruln. The chase resolved Itself Into u race be tween the three, und Dually Mr. ltaoul by a sprint got Into the lead. He wanted to see the bear first; see him in the native stale, far removed from the dann omau grinder ami the chain, or even the close coullucment of h city park, of course the men were armed, but the difficulties of killing a bear, the ferocity of the benst and the personal dangers encountered, did not enter Into the minds of the chas ers; it was seeing the bear In nature that was uppermost In the minds of these young hunters. When the trull led across a barbed wire fence again, It became plainer, for where the hear had crossed the fence he had left his I mark; the discovery of the freshest bit of evidence Is accredited to Mr. ltaoul, who, heading the party, was llrst to reach the fence. Pulling from the fence a large clump of black hair, Mr. ltaoul shouted: "We are close upon him; here Is some of his hair. Hurry up, fellows." The chase then became more exciting; they were close upon the benst. They "hit up a trot" as they approached a small hol low well covered with hushes and weeds. Mr. ltaoul still lending, they The Iowa Senator, Leader of Insur gents, Has Been Asked by Presi dent for Suggestions. ; . i'j THE WAR TO BEGIN AS SOON AS CONGRESS MEETS Mr. Ciiiiimlngs Says That Both He lmut a lxi Itcady to Fight Out the Issue llctucrn Them. DWARD were getting near a spring, and the A Reoort Circulated That Patten Had1 hear must be getting water, they The King Is Celebrating His Birthday i Today and Mr. Tart Wishes Him Health and Happiness. Gotton into the Game on the Long Side. New Tork. Nov. S. An autopsy of the body of Dorothy Hyrnea, a young girl of a well known Hrooklyn fam ily, who died at llluckwell a Island hospital yesterday, brought to light another mystery. The girl admitted before her death that she was In a motor car with strange men and was forced by their treatment to Jump for her life. In Jumping she fractured her skull. London. Nov. 9. King Kdwnrd to day celebrated bis sixty-eighth birth day. He received congratulation from all nations. President Taft sent hla majesty the ; following telegram: "I warmly con- j gralulate your majesty on your happy, completion of another year, nnd wlsh j for you nil health and happiness In the long years to come." New York. Nov. 9. W hile less ac tive, the cotton market wits decidedly liriner today, and before midday si ll ing was iu .u k half a cent above the low level of y sterility on recovering I renewed support from western bulls.! This ted to the report that I'lttten wilb j re-entering the market on the long , siil", und reassuring advices us to the southern spot sltuutlort. thought. As they approached the place, the bushes moved slightly: the three became more excited, If possi ble, they brought forth their weapons, in preparation for the attack on the hear. The bushes moved again, the guns were raised, cocked and ready to fire. They were now all entirely excited. A greut moment It was to them. All were going to lire nt once, so as to be sure of their quarry, when from nut the hushes Jumped u black calf, which hud wandered astray, and had been badly cut by barbed wire. The three hunters retraced their Washington, Nov. 9. A Chicago special to the Post says that Senator Allien A. Cummins, tremendously pleased with tho reception accorded him and his progressive Ideas by Chicago republicans, goes to Wash ington prepared to begin sn active battle between the progressives and the standpatters tho minute congress opens next month. Senator Cummins heads for the na tional capital this curly at the request of President Taft, to give to the presi dent certain suggestions concerning amendments to the Interstate com merce law. and to public questions In general, which are to be discussed In President Tuft's message to con gress. Senator Cummins modestly admit ted he hud no Idea of being the sola adviser of the executive In laying out the framework of the message. "When President Taft was In Des Moines we discussed certain affairs," said Senator Cummins. "I Imagine he Is to try to reach the sentiment of tho country generally. He naked me to talk with him upon his return to Washington after his trip around the country, nnd for that reason I am starting for the capital at this early date." Trouble IVimi the Start. From advance information which hits come to the Iowa senator he said today he wus certain there would be trouble from the start. "The Issue Is clear between the two elements, und everybody appears to . be ready to light It out," declared Senator Cummins. "We are In readi ness to begin an soon ss we get to Washington." Senntor Cummins thinks the two big bouts in the approaching congressional-sessions will be over the Inter state commerce commission legisla tion and the proposed amendment to the Sherman law. The attitude of the insurgents, he Intimated, will be de veloped after President Tnft discloses the policy of the administration In his message. EDUCATIONAL DAY The Observance of the Day In Greens boro a Notable Occasion Am bassador Bryce There. Correspondence of The Oaxette-News. (Ireensboro, Now 8. The observ ance of last Krbluy as an educational day in Guilford county, not only among the county schools, but also by the Normal and Collegiate girls and the girls from the Greensboro Female college will long be remem bered as a great day by the college GERMAN COTTON SPINNERS ARE ALSO URGED TO CURTAIL THEIR GENEROSITY TO BEE DOOSED To lrevent Furilicr Itlse In liice of llaw Mulcrlul and Conserve Supplies. iterlln. Nov. 9. The German Cotton Spinners association has Issued a circular urging mills to curtail yarn production In order to prevent s fur ther rise In the price of raw cotton and the exhaustion of supplies. President of Southern Medical Associ ation Says Messrs. Rockefeller and Carnegie Should Bo Thanked. i An Appeal to Be Taken For the Labor Leaders New Orleans, Nov. I. Five hundred physicians are attending the Southern Medical association which convened today. Discussion focused on the hook-worm distase, consumption and pellagra. 1'resldent Pvags urged the association to endorse the generosity of Carnegie, Rockefeller and Mrs. Sage for their gifts to suppress the diseases. steps towurd the Pinnacle and their girls who took part. The especial packs. FOUND MAN'S FOOT S MOUTH Mr. Penland Brings Grewsome Find to Asheville, to Find Out What It Is. Toronto, Nov. 9. The executive council of the American Federation of labor has recommended an appeal from the United States Supreme court from the jail sentences Imposed on Qompers. Mitchell and Morrison for aUeged contempt The council recommended that the convention express a vigorous protest against the execution of , Frsnelseo Ferrer of Spain, who was termed "an other martyr to the cause of free speech, a free press and free education." Three Trainmen Killed 1 Today Near Knoxville Knoxvllle, Tenn., Nov. 9. Three trainmen are reported killed and IS persons Injured In a wreck at Klell srts, 20 rnlb-a north of here, as a re sult of a collision of a southbound freight and a 1 northbound Ioulsvllla and Nashville psssengsr train. The men killed are Knglneer Pierce, Fire men Icmmor.s and Powmnn. 110IIK.IIT .MIKO I DF.AD: VICT1H OF KXPKHIMKNT Somervllle. N. J., Nov. 9. Robert Simpson Is dead, the victim of a hyp notic experiment before a large audi ence. Prof. Arthur Everton was ar rested. An autopsy will be held to determine the cause of death. Oral Hctllng Not Itook Making. Albany, N. Y Nov. 9. That oral betting does not constitute book mak ing, within the meaning of the so called antl-racs track gambling laws. Is decided by the New Tork Court of Appeals. THE WEATHER. , Former Deputy Sheriff Dick Pen- land of the Hominy section of the county was In town today bringing with him, wrapped In a newspaper. the foot either of a bear or a human. Mr. Penland showed the foot skinned and torn to a number of persons, some of whom were of the opinion that It was the foot, of a big grlwly bear and others that It was the foot of a negro. The foot was found In the mouth of a dog at a house not far from where Mr. Pen land lives In the Hominy section and when taken from the dog's mouth there was such a similarity between It and the site of a negro's foot that Mr. Penland was asked to bring the "And" to Ashevllle and have a physl clan pass upon It. The foot was left with a couple of local physicians who are of the opin ion that It Is a human foot. Just how and when the dog found the foot Is not known. The foot was apparently not a par tlcle decomposed. Forecast until S p. m. Wednesday for Ashevllle and vicinity: Partly cloudy and wsrmer weather, with possibly showers tonight or Wednes day. ; feature for the day was the address f Ambassador Itryce of England, who addressed the students upon school work and college friendships. The students of the mate Normal and of IreenslHiro Female college, dressed In white, marched to the sudltorlum, in columns of four, where they held a song service before the addresses. The songs were well received. Another event of great Interest to the girls of the State Normsl was the Initiation oi candidates In both the Cornellnn and Adelphlan Uterary eoelctlce. After the Initiations of the Corne llnn society Friday night, the mem bers, faculty and visitors adjourned to the dining room where an Infor mal party was held. The dining room was decorated with autumn leaves and Jack o' lanterns, while bunches of bananas and table of fruit were arranged about the room. Thu souvenirs of the occasion were burnt wood panels with CUB. burnt In the center. Of the Ashevllle gins wno are members are Misses Mary Walden Williamson. Itena Oudger, Ethel Bol linger, Alice Whltson and Oertruae Parker. The Adelphlan literary society held thejr Initiations Saturday night. After the Initiations, the guests, memoers. and faculty repaired to a banquet given In the dining room of Spencer building. The tables, arranged in tne shape of two diamonds, were prettily decorated In autumn leaves ana jaca o' lanterns. Drockman'a orchestra of Greensboro furnished muslo for the occsslon. The souvenirs were silver picture frames. - An excellent menu was served. Misses Mary Tennant and Naomi Schell were the Ashevllle girls Initiated as Adelphlana. Thirty-Seven Leagaee. Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 9. The Na tlonal association of Minor league Is comprised of 17 leagues, with eluba in 2iT cities, reports Hecretnry Far rell lit th linnuiil foci ttng to-' : y. Are Pausing on Classes. New Tori. Nor. 9. The National horse show judges today began pass ing on clsssen Bt'lKtana. Clv -- ' and Pereherons. In' i, A n end Canadinn srmv ' t : 1 their " ' 1
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 9, 1909, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75