Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Feb. 14, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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"V - - .... - . t --r- r . VOI.." XIX. NO. 37. WILMINGTON. N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY ; 14; 1906. FIVE CENTS ON STAND ALL DAY HOSPITALS FOR THE INSANE Governor Glenn Makes Public Report Concerning Conditions at the Asylums. FORTIFICATION BILL III HOUSE Rigid Cross-examination Major Gillette of BJ COUNSEL FOB DEFEHSE 4 Considerable Progress Made in Greene-Gaynor Trial Cross Examination Related to Con- tracts for River and Harbor Work and Cost to Contractors in Carrying Them Out Today Will Probably be Consumed In the Further Question ins of Blajor Gillette The Largest Audience That Has Yet Assembled Appeared at the Trial Yesterday. (Special to The Messenger.) Raleigh, Feb. 13. Gov. Glenn's report concerning the state hospitals for the white Insane has been given out. It relates facts concerning his personal observation, as well as re garding acts and management by of ficial boards. There is recounted good management, dereliction on the part of the state to properly provide for its indigent insane, and the compari son of the cost as. between the state institutions and those privately con ducted. The board of directors is commended, and those who would detract from their worth, and the as sailants of their official actions, deplored in strong terms. There is considered the number of applicants, and the truth that a great many would be forced into the jails of the state without such discretionary, as well as discreet action, had been ob served by that body. In the end Gov Subject for Debate on Lax Methods' of Expenditures $15,000,000 FOR GRAVES RESIGNS FROM NEWS PHILIPPINES! For the Establishment of a Naval Sta tion Mr. Smith Sees a Tendency Toward "Bureaucracy" in the Govi eminent Department Expenditures. Statement Read Showing the Treas ury Deficit Nearly Wiped Out. for- Washington, February 13, The tification bill held the attention of the con- over house today and was the text for slderable heated argument, first the lax methods of expenditures of public moneys and second, over! the location of the 'proposed $15,000,000 Glenn calls on all who have strictures naval station for the Philippines. to state to make such to him, and j Mr. Gillespie (Tex.), made an un- where reflection is indulged in by citizens and. newspapers he requests that all such shall be placed before him, with names of those who are friendless or are strong with the power of a pull. TWO MURDERS AND A SUICIDE Savannah, Ga., February 13. Major Cassisus E. Gillette occupied the wit ness stand throughout" today's session of the federal court, appearing for the government, against Greene and Gay nor and undergoing a rigid cross ex amination from Mr. Osborne of coun sel for the defense. Attracted by the prospect of an en counter of wits between Major Gillette and the examining attorney, the larg- Three Violent Deaths Reported From New York Yesterday. successful attempt to get into the re cord a statement of grievances o the coal operators and shippers of Penn sylvania and the Democratic leader, Mr. Williams inaugurated a fillibuster over the question of adjournment as a retaliation. j Mr. Smith (Iowa), in charge of the fortifications bill, advanced the; idea of vitalizing ten of the committees of Outcome of Controversy Concern ing Sale of Atlanta Paper PURCHASE OF STOCK LEGAL LAST TRIBUTE TO DEAD KING Body of King Christian Lies in I State in the Slotskirke VIOLATION OF II Order of the Court in the Proceedings Between Colonel Graves and General Manager Dane! Mr. Graves j An nounces That Within a Short Time He Will Publish and Edit a New Dally; Backed by Large Capital. GREAT CROWDS VIEW REMAINS All Classes of People Took a Last Look at the Dead Sovereign Removal of the Body From the Amalienborg Palace an Impressive Incident, butl Lacking Almost All Ceremony. Combination of Coal Carrying Roads Denounced THEY HEBULfiTE OUTPUT . Vow Vnrlr Pehniflrv 13 Two TYIIir- ders and a suicide, the latter growing h,e bouse charged with the supervision m , , , of expenditures in the various gov- directly out of one of the murders. ernment departments. He advocated were reported in :ew iotk toaay. aQ amendment to the rules rhicti will Mrs. Etienne, a young x rencn worn- compel reports from these commit an. was found in her home on Grove I tees annually, these reports to be the street, suffering from three bullet I result of investigation regarding gov wounds. She died soon afterwards. I ernment expenditures. He urged this In an adloinine room, lav the dead! as a preventive of "bureaucracy,' to- bodv of Louis A. Faresin. a young I wards which he saw a presents ten that has v.t assembled I Ttallan whn had shot himself throueh. I dency. i va v.:nti Than-nm9n v,o wn shnt mr. omun saiatne sum speni ior with the revolver that lay beside Fare- fortifications since 1808 was $119,000, sin. and the police say that the Italian (000. The plan of the Taft board- con- murdered the woman and took his I templated spending $106,000,000 more, own life. A skeleton artillery organization to George J-Uiiey, ioreman ot a gang man these fortifications would cost w h o- T Xi; claim: Mr. Jones (Va.) and others opposed ed to have been seeking employment, the expenditure of $15,000,000 for the Michael J. Farley, a lather, was ar- station at Subig Bay. Mr. Jones rested on information furnished by I spoke of the local problem in the workmen who witnessed the shooting. I Philippines in case of war. He re He said he shot Tulley in self defense, f peQdillg bin appropriating nfj-i.. T'.tl Vi Q A offl nLTdCi hltn With art I - iuntjr v. "-"-" .. , -AW. n. Ki.tt ?nft Qr-aa nf nn1 irnn hat" I wv,vw w uuj vt w v-w W. Mfc. for trial appeared. Among those pres ent were many ladies and closest at tention was given by the audience to the exchange of questions and ans wers. The cross examination related to contracts entered into for harbor and river improvements and the cost in volved to the contractors In carrying them out. Apparently considerable progress in the cross examination was y made, but when court adjourned for . the day It appealer that there was every prospect for tomorrow fcemar con sumed in the further questioning of Major Gillette. Major Gillette was asked about the scour to the channel of Savannah as a result of the im provements made by Greene and Gay- nor but did not think the greater depth won through the jetty work was material. It was his opinion that the increase had been brought about rath er by dredging than by the scour. The adding of one foot to the Sa vannah harbor channel was a minor matter, wasn't It?" asked Mr. Osborne. "No." "It would cost half a million dollars to add such a depth, wouldn't it?" "It would cost about J4. 000. 000 in the way improvements were paid for In Savannah harbor." The matter of a contract in 1899 for improvements In the Savannah river at Augusta, was brought up by Mr. Osborne who showed by the witness TO DEVELOP DRAMATIC ART Well Known New Yorkers in Move ment to Establish a National Thea tre. on the island of Batan and said it was a good business and strategic, proposi tion. The government owned the re mainder of the island, which is all coal land. The land to be acquired was adjacent to a splendid deep j water harbor. f New York, February 13. A move- "Dollars, dollars, dollars," ejaculat- ment by a group of well known New ed Mr. Gaines (Tenn.). "I have been York men to establish in this city a here all day and have heard nothing theatre designed to foster and develop but dollars and expenditures. We are $LJ55:. lL? out of the Philippines, when only last Vuai itra x. nti ucj , vix; vrx tit? A-ruuca xic saiu. .. stopped forty elevators in the custom "It is not our intention to call thelf'f - . ra new play house "the national" thea tre, as this would seem to imply a nat ional endowment, but we hope to make it a national theatre, in the sense .that it will be the founder's earnest endeavor by the standard of the per ilous es of this country because we did not appropriate enough money to run them. Why do you do it? You are spending the people's tax money in the Philippines and making government officers climb up stairs. "In order that the elevator man in Atlanta, February 13. The contro versy among the stockholders and of ficers of the Atlanta News Publishing Company was ended today by the re signation of Colonel John Temple Graves as editor of the News, and the dismissal of the court proceedings be tween Colonl Graves and General Manager Charles Daniel. S Colonel Graves gave the following statement to the press: "The order of the court today in the contempt cases seemed to make legal the purchase of stock of the Atlanta News by the railroads and their friends, and feeling it impossible to preserve my integrity of conviction and liberty of action under the pres ent ownership of the paper, I volun tarily', resign the editorship of the journal which I have guided from its foundation. "I am able to definitely announce that within a very short time I shall publish, and edit a new daily paper in Atlanta backed by large capital and ampler equipment than ever sustained a newspaper in the south. This paper will stand for the same principles which have given force and popularity to the paper I have left. Only in this instance it will stand for these prin ciples permanently, because the ; new daily will have no stockholders,; and my only partner will be a gentleman in whose character, motives and co operative fidelity, I have implicit and well founded confidence. (Signed) "John Temple Graves." League Read in the House. MINERS AGREE ON DEMANDS Copenhagen, Feb. 13. In contrast with the extreme! simplicity of the tTTST Letter from Bituminous Coal Trade V, Jk VAALiOLiaU UCiS 11 state tonfght in the Slotskirke sur rounded ; by the impressive majesty befitting a king. In contrast with the family group which had hitherto gathered in the Garthenschall, was a never-ceasing stream of black-garbed crowds, waiting in line for more than a mile outside the church, represent ing all i classes of Denmark, passing the coffin to pay j the last tdibute to the dead sovereign. .The-coffin lies on a white -catafalque at the head of which, turned toward the crape-hung alter, reposes the crown of Denmark. At the foot of the coffin are the sword of state and the sceptre, crossed, and sur rounded tier on tier by some half hundred silver wreaths of white satin tabourets. Facing the coffin head stand several high naval and military officers in full uniform j with black wands and six others with halberds hung with crape, guard the dead mon arch on either side. The removal of the body from the Amalienborg palace at six! o'clock this morning was guarded with the ut most secrecy, the late Efforts to Have the Letter Made a Part of the House Record Objected to by the Republican Floor Leader In. dependent Operators Ask That the Inter-State Commission be Made the Final Court With Power to Stop Dis crimination by the Railroads and Trust Combines. Washington, February 13. Repre sentative Gillespie (Texas) made two unsuccessful attempts in the House to day to obtain consent to have included in the House record a letter from the Bituminous Coal Trades League of Pennsylvania, denouncing the alleged combination of coal carrying rail roads to control and regulate the out put of ",oal in the United States. Both! times Representative Payne (N. Y.) the Republican floor leader, objected, king's i wish land Mr. Gillespie finally abandoned the navmg oeen to avoid an ceremony, as i effort. the clock rang out the hour from the The letter which is referred to as crown prince's palace, the old! wooden4 a petition for relief, was prepared by gates of Amalienborg swung on their Frank C. Drane, secretary to the hinges and the guards stood at pre- league. Mr. Drane claims there has sent, while the hearse, drawn by two eI!tedor a lonS time a combination horses (with plain black trappings, ftfitXen-832vtVfa r?Jlroad wl,to nassed throueh and crossed the anthraciteand bituminous coal mln- passea tnrougn ; ana Qfossea tne lng and shipping companies to stifle square, followed by Princess and all comoetition in violation nf th a an- Scale Committee Getting Grievances In Prince ; Wildemar and Crown Prince I trust laws. He recites the grievances Shape for Presentation to the Oper- MJnnsuan ana tneir suites, an on i io wnicn tne independent operators l rrn i a i j z ioou ine progress tnrougn. me uiui ly lighted street j of the sleeping city New York, February 13. The spe- I was one of the most touching incidents frttriA committee of the anthracite attending King Christian's death. are subjected through alleged discrim ination, particularly the soft coal op erators in Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland and says that the indepen dents are helpless. The letter asserts that the Pennsyl vania railroad has established rules that only certain markets can be sup plied by one region, and that the mine workers tonight held its flThe-pnceBaton dae the less fre- meeting since coming to New ; York, lQW streets Dut was sweiied by work at which it took .up the demands to mpn who wpto on their wav to their be presented to the operators at the Jdaiiv toil, but -turned aside with their I Private cars of the soft coal trust have - ' i i.nivii-A v conference on rnursaay. ine SU'D-COm- hfl s nf nnla and bareheaded, follow- I "" mitxitei io snip mittee, which has had charge of get- nti1 f hA rjhristianborsr church was ting the grievances in snape ior ior- reached. mal presentation to the employers, the demands . th rkirlt of the ad- that Hunter and Fry of Memphis got ministration, to place it in the same the Nashville public building and my the award, and that A. J. Twiggs, of I relation towards the dramatic art ana A-enuesse menu ma, iw. Ausrusta. was a bidder. Then Hun'r I ittaraturA of thi otmtrv as is held explained Mr. Grosvenor, (Ohio), I and Fry whom Major Gillette, did not hv tilp nrinclDal national theatres of want to have a statement read show- know in the actual carrying out of the contract notified him that Twiggs represented them, in doinsr the work and that a certain Atlanta Bank, would ect as their fiscal agent in re ceiving checks in payment. "So one contractor apparently turn ed over his contract to another who had been a competitive bidder?" "The successful bidder had the other do the work." "Was there nothing in that to ex cite your suspicion?" "Nothing," said Major Gillette. "The Europe. "The names of the founders with several gentlemen yet to be heard from are as follows. "John Jacob Astor, Charles T. Bar ney, Edmund L. Baylies, August Bel mont, Paul D. Cravath, William B. Osgood Field, George J. Gould, Eliot Gregory, James H. Hyde, Otto H. Ka han, James Henry Smith, James Stiil- man, Robert P. Van Cortlandt, Wil liam K. Vanderbilt, Cornelius Vander bilt. Hrry Payne Whitney, Henry ing the treasury deficit nearly "wiped ut" A newspaper clipping giving the condition of the treasury was read. The house adjourned until tomor row. SHORT SESSION OF SENATE Many Amendments to the Shipping Bill Offered Vote on Pure Food Billion February 21st. prices were low and the work was properly done. I had a suspicion that j Rogers Winthrop Twiggs had a corner on all the Drusn in the neighborhood the work was to I change in S. C- Dispensary Sitmv- be done and tnat Hunter ana .t ry . t iAeirahla r mjtr an .irrane-p- I lion. ment with him." Columbia, S. C, February 13. At Tt m-ao annarentiv the Mfa of the I a late hour tonight the Senate by a Washington, Feb. 13. Aside from the time required for the transaction of routine business the entire sess ion of the Senate today was devoted to amendments to the shipping bill. The principal speakers were I Messrs. Spooner and Allison, who criticised various features of the measure, and Mr. Gallinger, who was constantly on guard in support of the bill. Mr. counsel for the defense to show that vote of 21 to 14 decided to strike out something like the practice of com- e enactment words of the Morgan petitive bidders being equally in col- bm Tflis bin which provides among no nrv,,f .o0 i.n. the state dispensary recently passed known under Major Gillette's admin- the house of representatives by a sub- lstrauon. tanuai majori. voted on tomorrow ll.lnuea in.T v""ie, ft" I senate leaves yne aispeuiry miu Mf Bacon offered an amendment .,;v. .1" vTV, . , , ' practically as it was oeiore. iu strikins out sections 1. 2. 3. and 4 " r:r r v". v V isiature aajourns omuruay slon. Mr. Osborne tried to draw from I -- Allison offered a number of ments which, with others, amend wilh be the witness that this was through a "private understanding" Major Gillette had with Twiggs. Major Gillette objected to the term . "private understanding," saying that It was a matter taken up with the chief of engineers and the secretary of war who approved. Major Gillette thought he had secured better results through this arrangement with the Twiggs than would have been the case had bids been advertised for and the contract awarded. Touching upon the 1902 contract "the big contract"' of the Savannah harbor. Major Gillette testified that mattresses of type number one, cost 75 -pr cent more than number three. Mr. Osborne asked If he had ever con structed the mattresses. He had not but still knew approximately the cost. Major Gillette said it was his opinion that In 1884 loblolly pine could be se cured for practically nothing so the cost of logs used in the mattresses was scarrpiv tn b considered then. A VUI J -m.f of the bill, eliminating practically all the features of the measure except expedit- United ror f-m- " 1 the provisions for aid in the Washington. February 13. Repre- . .. ge-yj of tne sentative Maynarc?. (Va.) Introduced; Ze mai1 SerV1Ce r tne umn tniair onnpfinriatlnc 140 nnn -for a oLULtra. postof fice building at Han.pton, Va.. An agreement was reached; to vote and $5,000 for a launch to be used in , on the pure food bill on February 21. the Norfolk customs collections dis- The Senate adjourned until to trict. morrow. I T that had been raised by Colonel Mel- "um, mjW drim's associate. Runaway Accident, j Asked if he saw Greene, Gaynor or Richmond, Va., February 13. Miss Carter at Cumberland Sound, when he Mary Lee, daughter of the late Colonel made his first trip to inspect the work Richard Lee. and a near relative of in progress there under the contract General Robert E. Lee, was probably let by Carter, Major Gillette said he fatally injured in a runaway; accident had not and that he did not know that near Winchester today. She was driv- Greene, Gaynor or Carter had seen the mattress which the witness had de scribed as full of holes, a mass of brush and unworthy the name of mattress at all. - His statement of three days ago that his walking through it was "like going through a was read tor mm and he was ing a thoroughbred horse, which took fright and ran, and she was thrown out of the buggy, landing on her head and shoulders. Reports from her home near Boyce, Clark county, to night, say there is little chance of her recovery. j held an all-day session, but was una ble to complete its work. President Mitchell and the I other members of the committee remain st ent as to the exact nature of the de mands to be made. It is understood, however, that the miners will put up stroner fisht for a change in the methods of the board of conciliation The mine workers are dissatisfied with the present method of settling-liffi- cultles. and say there will always be friction until a better method of set mn? dismiss ia found. There is a coal in according to therefor. Mr. Drane says the soft coal always fixes the prices, which gives the trusts and railroads hauling coal to market an excess profit over and above the Two Employes Killed and Five Injur-1 price the Independent operator . can FATAL COLLISION ON L. AND L. cd None of the Passengers Injured. Louisville, Ky., February 13. In a collision on the Louisville and Nash ville railroad near Maurice Station, Ky., a few miles south I of Cincinnati, at 4 o'clock this afternon, between the train I which left Nashville at 8 o'clock this, morning, and the local passen- get; that the hard coal railroads are ail common carriers and miners and shippers of their own anthracite pro duct; and that the railroads pool and1 regulate the price of hard coal by sell ing It direct to the dealer to be sold! to the consumer at the prices fixed by. the railroads. "The cost to the consumer usually is at least one-third more than before the strike of 1902" he says. Contin uing, the communication declares that I.I 1 W X M.A- C. M 11 1 1 111 1 1 LI. L. J . 1J U oTowinc- belief that if the operators m., .two employes were j killed and five n?arly a11 of the soft coal properties will be liberal in granting cessions injured. JSSmJSSSS EaSoSXS S to the miners tne aemana lui iu l? uu, r & - --- - he belief that the. Pennsylvania andl ognition of the union may not u i uy tuc lwuibviup uu twuiwo tne New xork central now indirectly none was seriously hurt. The dead: -Engineer Peter Murphy. Fireman Joseph Stout. Injured: : j Engineer James Maharney. Conductor P. J. Fitzgerald. Flagman W. N. Miles. Baggagemaster R. W. Lockwood. Negro cook . in dining car. j When the ! southbound train from A WW HC1511L Ufliuc xu Un oofftrmo,! thit thafnet train day on the Knoxvine aivision oi ma northbound, was- fifteen minutes late. Southern Railway, seven miles west I Te engineer of the southbound train of Asheville. One man was killed and j believed he could make the siding at three injured pressed. FREIGHT WRECK ON SOUTHERN Two Trains Hit Head-on Seven Miles West of Ashevilte One Man Killed and Three Injured. . TtalPieh. N. C February 13. A special to the Evening Times from Asheville, N. C, says: own the Pocahontas fields in Virginia, nearly all the stock of the Norfolk: and Western and the New River Coal fields, and nearly all the stock of the Chesapeake and Ohio, the roads men tioned as being the only transportation means from the two fields to market; that the Pennsylvania and New York Central control the Baltimore' and! Ohio and the Philadelphia and Read ing; that the Pennsylvania through intermediaries controls the Pittsburg Coal Company and the Consolidat ed and the Fairmont and Somerset Coal Mining Companies, the last two named companies controlling all the soft coal fields on the lines of the Bal timore and Ohio, and that the Wabash Mauricte station, and proceeded to that 1 controls the West Virginia Central Th nirfor, w ha to the mislead- place. He was just switching into tne oc"'i2r f-'i113 eMinW irhAii ,hA Tmrhhonnd train. I ana ex.-oeiia.ior iavis, oi west vir- ing of orders, it is said, and the prev- " "TT ioC tim alence of a heavy fog which prevented ct 4nto tne southbound train. the engineers from seeing the head- j Both locomotives were badly demol- lights until too late to stop, j lished but none of the cars was dam aged, v. A negro brakeman named Ruther ford from Knoxville, was killed. Engi neer Blair was the worst injured of the trainmen. His left arm is badly niang gled. He was caught by this arm and suspended from the ground for more than two hours before the iron bars holding th arm were cut away. The wrecking train crew I built" a platform under him on which his teet could rest and relieve his suffering while the iron hars were cut in two. ginia, are joint owners of an enormous acreage of West Virginia soft coal and operate about all the mines along that road." I The letter alleges that the hard coal trust and the soft coal trust own or control all the fields in Pennsylvania and Maryland except perhaps a few small tracts operated by individuals on Plead Guilty to Indictment Charging tth conspiracy exs iwo xears in tnei vapla stand first, the Fairmont, Gas BEAVERS IS SENTENCED thlrkpt " laugh was elicited by a statement rrom I asked if he adhered to it. He ans the witness that "Colonel Meidrim I were(i that the language was perhaps Millikan's Nomination Confirmed. Washington, Feb. 13. The Senate leading counselifor the defense) told, "picturesque" but answering Mr. Os- Aav nfim foiion-ft. nom!. nrno'. wnrH Tint "eiftCVPTatpd " Whnt y.j wv me a few days ago that he himself had J borne's word, not "exaggerated." What sold pine lands in Georgia at ten cents I he meant, he said,-' was that he had an acre." this benlg radically opposeai sunk to his waist. to the point t value of pine timber I court adjourned until tomorrow. nations: James ISf. Millikan. marshall . for the western district of North Carolina; Schooner Damaged by Storm. Fernandina, Fla'., February 13. The four masted schooner George May, Captain Davis, which sailed from this port on Saturday, was today towed back seriously crippled, her forecastle badly damaged, sails riddled ana jip- boom broken. She had anchored, on the northeast coast above Brunswick and was in the teeth of the storm which blew all Saturday and Sunday. Serious Famine in Northern: Japan. Washington, February 13. Presi dent Roosevelt today took official cog nizance of the famine which has grown to such serious proportions in northern Japan. In an appeal to the American people, the President re quests that contributions for the suf ferers from' the famine be forwarded to the American. National Red Cross. , Moundsville Penitentiary. Coal Mining Company, shipping mostly over the Baltimore and Ohio, and that allied with and shipping only over the Pennsylvania are five big companies alleged to compose the soft coal trust of Pennsylvania. "The Pennsylvania railroad," the letter alleges, "owns, controls or favors Washington, February 13. George W. Beavers, the former chief of the salaries and allowances division of the postoffice department j today, pleaded guilty to an indictment charging him K&;itotoeot with conspiracy to defraud the govern- aimost every other individual or com ment in connection with the sale of pany operating bituminous coal in time recording clocks to the postoflice Pennsylvania." department. He was immediately sen- All that the Independent bituminous tenced to two years in the penitentia- coal operators - want, it Is stated in ry at Moundsville, W. !Va, where Au- conclusion, is a provision in the new it W. Machen, Dr. George E. -Lorenz KZfLl1 , , rc i ... i -. I will mcuvc cue iiiici-oiaic vuiimicivo and thetwo Groff brothers already are commIssIon the flnal court wlth power confined, the. ; former i for four years to stop discrimination by the railroads ana in remaiuaer ior two 7i9 and trust comnlned. each. The indictment to ( wMch Beavers I Postoffice at Clinton Robbed. pleaded guilty was the one charging J Jackson, Miss., Feb. IS. :The post conspiracy with former State Senator George E. Green, of Binghampton, N. Y. i The six remaining; indictments,four alleging conspiracy and two bribery, will be dropped. Under the agreement whereby Beavers pleaded guilty he is not to appear as a witness in any post- office cases unless called by the de fense. . . ! hOfiioe at Clinton, twelve miles west of .Tackson,Twas robbed' early today. .The safe was blown open, pieces of the safe going through the walla and badly damaging an adjoining drag store. The robbers secured $1, 000 int money, $300 in stamps ana $1, 700 In jewelry. No clue to the rob bers has been found. i
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Feb. 14, 1906, edition 1
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