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J - The MQEliMe f ' 1 rr. ' Bos Vol. VIII. RALEIGH, N. C., FRIDAY, AUGUST 9. 1901, No. 10 D om me rce Paralyzed by Sail Francisco Strike NONE TO MOVE GOODS Many Vessels Lying Idly in the Harbor Ts Steam ship Firemen Join in the Strike SmFrnncisco, August 8. The labor 'vrike here promises to be one of the jj,. st protracted the ci'ty has ever wit r, s-fil. Both side are doing their ut tint to gain a victory. Meantime, the ;!;i:ping industry is almost wholly sus--. .-rtilod. Over a hundred vessels are an h :til in the bay either waiting to Be -,. ruled or unloaded. The sand teams'ters have decided to order a strike of the men employed in c it aJiins the streets. S;in Francisco, Aug. 8. The strike filiation became most serious today as ;i result of the strike of the firemen on a.-t:n vessels. These men, some two hundred in number, had a definite con tract with the Pacific Coast Steamship Company, which fully recognized the union. They were bound not to strike f -r a year, but in spite of this they all Unit work and left helpless seven coast al;: steamers. Others will be tied up ji soon as they reach here. There are iioiv in the bay besides thev coasting fhips three big tramp steamers and eighteen deep-water ships. These are jill waiting for grain cargoes. Although the warehouses-and . wharves are-piled high with wheat no men can be found t'l load the ships. The congestion of pr.iin in the warehouses has blocked the shipments from ranches and the Jfarni ers will suffer enormously unless the situation is relieved soon. Edwin Good a, of the Facifie Coast Steamship Com pany, said: "This action on the part of the rnarine firemen shows conclusively that a con tract with union labor is of no value. The strike was a complete surprise to u. as We had received no notification that such action-was even contemplated. We will sue the union, which is incor porated." IN THREE COFFINS Empress Frederick Sealed Up from Mortal Sight Cronberg, Aug. 8. The Empress Fred erick was placed in a . coffin erly this morning. Later the emperor bade a final farewell and-then the cofHn was sealed in the presence of his majesty and a few members - of the imperial family. Divine services were held in the death chamber in the evening, the P.i-hop of Ripon and Canon Shore read in? selections from the English burial service. The emperor, empress, crown prince and all of Empress Frederick's children xeept Frince Henry, who is at sea, and other near relatives- attended the service, which lasted only-twenty, min utes, after which the family Teturned to Homburg. JThe coffin consisted of three cases. The first is of oak, lined with metal and cushioned with white satin; the second is an oak coffin, and the third is a s'tate coffin, also of oak, bnt covered with purple velvet, ornamented with rosettes designed by Empress Frederick. Upon the lid is a velvet cushion supporting a gulden imperial crown. The coffin has ten heavy gilt handles. LIBERTY IN SIGHT Friends Rise up to Assist the Joint 'Smasher Topeka, Kan., Aug. 8.-Mrs. Carrie countv jail for destroying property in freedom within her grasp. Dr. fc.va tr i- j. - y,a roMff Tiind. naming, ireasuirr m has $78, and today Mrs. Nation received T V. TTurlrt-nir of KOCn- ester, N. Y., that he had forwarded her Mrs. Nation's fine was $100 and the costs $48. She has served eight .7 v :,.v, a rlnllnr Jl flaV. lavs in jan, wuaiii " " u leaves her $12 to raise to secure her release. Mrs. Nation claims that on nr-eonnt of her imprisonment she ns lost $400 worth of lecture dates. Mr. Furlonsr, who advances her the $oU, nas a contract with her for lectures m the following' towns between August Id ana L'2: Thousand Isles, Syracuse, Rochester, Silver 'Lake, Erie. Buffalo, Binghamton, -Scranton and Bergen Beach. W ii m- . - - J a!orrrflm from -urs. nation . recevru a , , John Wanamaker's paper, the rhia North American, offering nex and expenses for four lectures at At lantic City in the interest of th.e,poor children's outing. She has accepted the oner Jenkins" Downs Maher , three in a wrestling maicn 7 ' " p"V Maher, the Irish pugilist. M this afternoon. About 2,000 people at tended, among them many -pie who are spending the fme? a this resort and who wer e as enthus lasUc as the sports. Considerable betting went .... ....-v1 -r.i.:, favorite at o to 1. Both men appeared lb15filV was excellent condition. The jnajcta 1 was for $1,500 a side. u -- Amateur champion of tne acted as referee. The first event as Atlantic City, N. An wS J-nklns of Cleveland won two best . ot at catch-as-catch-can. Jenkins won the first fall in sixteen minutes and thirty seconds with a crotch-and-hammer hold. The next event was in Graeco-Roman style. Jenkins won again, with an elbow hold, in seventeen minutes and twenty- nve seconds. Strike Situation Unchanged Fittsburg, Aug. 8. There is no appa rent change in the strike situation, but there is a general feeling that the strikers are losipg ground. i De.Viiliers Surrenders London, August 8. General Kitchener reports to the War Office that Com mandant DeVilliers and two field cor nets have surrendered at Warm Baths. DeA'illiers was second in command un der General Beyers. $ Faster Time to Buffalo Scranton, August 8. In order to in crease the speed of trains and to de crease the running time between New York and Buffalo, the Lackawanna Rail road has a large force of men engaged in getting rid of. the sharp curves on Focomo Mountains. It is understood this policy will be pursued along the entire length of-the line. . Struck by a Loose Belt Wilmington, N. C, August Special. Larry Ballon, colored, an emploe of the Xavassa Guano Company, was se riously injured at the works this morn ing by being knocked down,by a flying belt. The negro was struck with great force and was unconscious 'for several hours. His right deg was broken and his head, arms and body bruised and scratched. He may have suffered inter nal injuries, but the doctor is not yet able to decide.. The negro was brought to the city on the tug Navassa, and sent to a hospital. -' . - A Boomlet for Ridgeley Chicago. August 8.--The Tribune. Senator Cullom's organ, booms William Barrett Ridgeley of Chicago, for comp troller of the currency to succeed Chas. G. Dawes, when the latter leaves the office next Ootober in order to make a canvass for the United States senator ship. Mr. Ridgeley is a son-in-law of Senator Culloni, was formerly vice president of the Ridgeley Bank of Springfield, and is now secretary 'of the Republic Iron and Steel Company. A Boer Spy Escapes Pretoria, August 8. A Boer spy, be lieved to be a resident of FretoYia, who took1 the oath ef neutrality and after ward rejoined his commando, entered the town this morning. Three . police men started out to arrest him. The sPy who was back of the door of a house, drew a pistol and shot the police men, severaly wounding them. lie then made his escape'. The British operations in the Heil- bron district have met with considera ble success. Forty prisoners were cap tured. -S- Old Dominion Works ScM Richmond, Va., August S. The for mal transfer of the Old Dominion Iron and Nail Works to John L. Williams Ac Sous was made today, the considera tion being several hundred thousand dollars. President Arthnr Clarke of th- company said that the entire 4lant ! now owned by the Williams syndicate which, is how largely interested in street car lines and railroads throughout the State. This plant made a great del of the armor plate used by the govern ment dnring the Spanish-American war. The' works will be enlarged, and the capital stock increased to over $1,0C0, 000. Railroad Damaged by Floods Richmond, Va., Aug. 8. Later reports from Southwest Virginia show great damage to the Norfolk & Western Rail road by Tuesday's storm. At Walton, just east of f East Radford, the entire fill of the road-bed is washed out for Mfifteen to twenty feet, and also 1,200 or l.oOO feet of ballast from the side track. Trestles on the North Carolina division are more or less ' out of line, and some of them undermined. Traffic . T .1 rri -v - - 11 lias oeen suspeuueu. iue rsorioiK ?c Western Railway officials say that the damage from floods to the roads within the last few months in southwest ir ginia and West Virginia has exceeded one million aonars. AFRAID OF LYNCHING , ; ; , - A Mississippi Negro Ends His Misery with a bullet New Orleans, August 8. Percy Levy, a respectable colored man living a mile from Terry. "Miss.,' committed suicide last night through fear of lynching. A young white woman was criminally as saulted at Terry last Saturday by a ne cto and the white men of Ithe neigh borhood hae been, searching everywhere for the assailant, but without success. Whether Levy was the assailant or not it is impossible to know now, but he he came terrified fearing that the lynchers were in pursuit for him. lie could not be induced to leave his home, but sac there with pistol 4n his hand or lying by his side when he slept. He became crazy with fear and finally could not sleep Last night a pistol shot was heard by his wife who fled to her fath er's house. A party, returning found levy dead in bed with a bullet through bis heart and v the pistol clutched in bis hand. The bedding was on fir from the pistol shot ot a suspicion pointed to Levy M the man for whom IL mnh was searching, as he bore an I excellent reputation - " - r . 1 (18 The Filipino Junta Provokes Opposition at Hpme ENOUGH OF FIGHTING General Sumner Brings a Good Report from Batan gas Distressful Financial Situation in Luzon Manila, Aug. 8. Te decision of tne insurgent Filipino junta at Hong Kong to continue the war against the Ameri cans has aroused the loyal elemer ainonc the -natives of the 'archinelasr hnd it is believed by the officials he; that the efforts of the latter will d much towards extinguishing the last lii gering sparks of rebellion. In view o the receui declarations of the Hong Kon. junta, several of the most prominen r llipino leaders, have left this city fo the purpose of visiting the camp o: General Malvar. After a consultatioi there' the leaders will form a stronj. local junta and adopt a policy to com bat that ' framed by the revolutionarj elements Hong Kong represents. tieneral bumner has returned from Ba- tangas and has a good report to offer. He says that the American reinforce ments recently sent there are most active but that a favorable opportunity had not yet been presented for engaging the Filipino forces. The insurgents have temporarily retired from the field, but the Americans are hopeful of stamping out the belligerents or bringing them to terms within a comparatively short time. The financial situation in Luzon is causing some uneasiness, and. Governor Taft has taken measures to solve tne problem. He held a conference today with the governors of Panay -and Cama rines, as'well as officials from other places, and the financial question was thoroughly discussed. For thevpurpose. of relieving the present trouble it was arranged that the central treasury shall advance funds sufficient to cover the expenses of immediate and necessary provincial improvements, and also to restock the numerous districts which have been impoverished through the prevalence of the rinder pest amongthe cattle and the plague of locusts. , . GdDtam Stafford, a New lork man. has been appointed physician for the civil officials, their families ' and-itheir employes. , . , RURAL FREE DELIVERY "Blackburn Wants Routes Es tablished in His District Washington, Aug. 8. Special. Repre sentative Blackburn called on Superin tendent Machen. of the Rural Free De livery Service, at the Post Office Depart-(press ment roaay, ana asKea to u;ie eti;u rural free delivery routes established in his district. Mr. Machen informed him that he would send an inspector into' his district to look over the field and make surveys of proper locations for the establishment of the service. Pensions granted: Thomas Ogle, Bry son City, $12. Postmasters appointed: C. C. Gentry, at Austin. Wilkes county, vice G. S. Smoot. dead; S. G Wheeler, at Cascade, Guilford county, vice O. C. Wheeler, dead: W. II. Buff aloe, at Jackson, North ampton county, vice E. S. Roberts, re moved; S. S. Weir, at King's Mountain. Cleveland county, vice J. W. Brown, removed; A. B. Feeler, at Paso, ( Cleve land county, vice W. Sane, dead; L. L. Wrenn, at Siler City, Chatham county, vice N. E. Cox, removed; E. D. Hardy, at Essex, Halifax county, vice N. S. Keane, removed. A new post office has been established at Pink. Stokes county, with Benjamin F. Pulliam as postmaster: at Shewbird, Clay county, with David E. Coleman as postmaster. Confederates General Ransom Eloquent in Describing the Heroic Deeds of the Men Who Wore the Gray and the Women Who Endured the Hardships of War Warsaw, N. C, August 8. Special. There was a tremendous gathering of Confederate veterans at Kenansville to day to hear a speech by General Ran som and to organize a camp of Confeder ate veterans. Two thousand people were oq the grounds, and perhaps ' as many as four hundred weienien who wore the grey. Good music was furnish ed by the Goldsboro brass band and the women of the county served - dinner, which comported fully with old Duplin's well known reputation for plenty and hospitality. Dr. Jobn M; Faison called on Hon. P.. F. Grady to introduce ihe speaker. Ex-Congressman Grady iu eloquent words described General" V Ransom's splendid career, great alike ?n peace and in war. t General Ransom spoke with much of his old-time vigor. He spoke about the war and the reasons for the South's defeat. He pointed out the tremendous superiority of the North in numbers and resources; but never did the.tidi of bat tle, he said, go permanently against the South until Grant forbade further ex change of prisoners. Gettysburg had been called the decisive battle, but that the South lost there was not Lee's fault nor Longstreet's nor Pickett's. It was . jraw T nier . v'-e had had mm And Dumont's Air Ship Re ' V fused toail CAME DOWnIn A HEAP The .Motor was Stopped to Avoid an Explosion and the Aeronaut Had to Climb out of a Difficult Position Paris, Aug. 8. M. Santos Dumont, the aei-onaut, met with an accident this morning. He started at 6:12 o'clock in is attempt to make the trip from St. loud around the Eiffel Tower and re 'rn, in order to secure the Deitsch rize. He reached the tower in - nine linutes. When half-way back, , about fifteen linutes after, he started, he noticed that he front of the balloon was bulging in rard, which would Indicate that the ,'as was escaping. Thereupon he attempt ed to drive air into the .balloonet, which Va small balloon withyi the large one, )irf the motor failed to act. Then, the :as went out of the rear balloon, which '.inng in a flabby way and threatened to atch the screw. Dumont became fear ful of an explosion and fall, and, in order to avoid this, he stopped tne mo tor, thus leaving the balloon at the mercy of the winds. It drifted about a while and then came down in an awk ward position between two blocks of the Exposition Trocadero Hotel, where is bung suspended. Dumont climbed up to the roof as quickly as a cat by means of. a rope which was lowered, and escaped without injury. A huge crowd gathered on the Quai Pasay, and there was great excitement. -Dumont and Prince Bonaparte were the least excited of any of those present. Mffeh sympathy was expressed with Du mont over today's mishap. He has a chaTmJng manner, and makes friends cotstaptly.J WALDERSEE LANDS ' Honors Without Display for the Returning Field Marshal' Hamburg, Ang. 8. Count Von Wal derseej field marshal of the allied" forces in China, landed hereat noon today, lie was met by General Ton Wittich, commanding the Eleventh ' army corps, and various other officers, among them two brothers and five cou'sins . of the field marshal. Count Von" Waldersee was 1 welcomed "to the city by 5,000 troops of various regiments and battalions, ad a large crowd of civilians. The ceremony, while impressive in all respects, was yet over cast by a shadow of solemnity due to the recent death of he Dowager Em- Frederick. The roval family were not represented ats the reception today, but they will receive the returning field marshal at Cronberg Saturday. In striking contrast with the brilliant military reception to Von Waldersee in tended by the Kaiser was the quiet welcome accorded him today. The streets were almost devoid of decora tion, only a few flags flying at half mast. The procession was without mu sic, and the banquet to the returning hero, intended as a feature of the re ception, has been abandoned. Emperor William has granted Field Marshal Von Waldersee the order of Pour le Merite, with oak leaves. He also ordered that a regiment of Schlesswig artillery shall bear Count Von Waldersee's name. Window Gliss Monopoly Pittsburg, Aug. 8. The trip of James A. Chambers and'M. R. McMillan to Belgium is said to be for the purpose of buying up all the available Belgian win- at Kenans ville 5,000 more men his troops would have walked over Meade's army and held Washington and New York under their feet. f. The venerable speaker appealed to his comrades to stand by the union into the making of which much Southern blood and brains had been wrouRht. The blood of Worth Bagley and William- E. Shipp, he said, should be a covenant of everlasting peace between North and South. As no address to old soldiers would be complete without a tribute to Lee, Gen eral Ransom delivered an eloquent eu logy on the great Confederate chieftain, making him second only to Washington. The last and perhaps more affecting part of this truly great speech was a tribute to the womanhood of the South. Great" as was the virtue of the Confed erate, troops it was surpassed by that of the women w-ho during and after the war set nn ovnrnnle of unselfish devo tion and unfaltering self-sacrifice that was absolutely unexampled. When General Ransom finished O, J. Carroll r-f TfnLiw.li m.j-inrt0r tlirAO rhoortt &r General Ransom and they were giv en with hearty good will. After dinner William Houston Camp of Confederate Veterans was organized wirh abo"- 150 members. - dow glass. The American Window Glass Combine will control the market here if the purchase is made. The trust has been unable to raise the price of glass beyond a certain point on account of Belgian importation. PERPLEXING PROBLEM MacArthur on the Attitude of Hostile Filipinos . Washington. Ausr. 8. The. annual re port of Major General 'MacArthur, dated July 4. 1901. the day that he relin quished command of the division of the Philippines, has been received at the War DeDartmenL The period covered by the report is from October' 1, 1900, when the first report from General Mac Arthur was dated. He reviews the policy of the Filipinos who were hostile to the Americans, Baying that their actions since the prac tical collapse of the insurrection has been a perplexing problem. With the disbandment of the insurgent field armies the Filipinos organized desperate resist ance by banding the people together in support of the guerillas. This was car ried out by means of secret committees which collected contributions, inflicted punishments and carried on a consider able opposition to the Americans. Gen eral MacArthur reviews the manner in which the operations were carried on against these guerillas, and says he hopes the- policy adopted will in time conciliate the natives and make them friendly to the United States. NOTHING AT ISSUE President Spencer Will Not Meet Discharged Machinists ; Washington, August 8. Since the con ference between Vice-President and General Manager F. S. Gannon of the Southern Railway, and a committee of machinists employed in the shops of the company, held in this city May 27, and which resulted in a strike of the shop employes of the road, several efforts have been made by the men- to secure audience with. President Samuel Spencer of that road. The correspondence on this subject between Mr. Spencer and representa tives of the strikers' shows that Mr. Gannon's procedure in at once dis charging the strikers has been upheld by the company. It also shows that Ihe company has filled the place of the strikers to the extent of 70 per cent and has a sufficient force to do all, shop work. Mr. Spencer says in reply to the last reuqest for a conference, made July 30, by B. .F. Henry, district president of the machinists at Kno grille, Tenn.: "If you were employes I should be pleased to take up with you any reasonable question affecting your interests. As you are not, and as your letter mentions no subject for consideration except such as pertain to the relations of employer and employe, I see nothing to be ac complished by such meeting as you pro pose, and I cannot, therefore, name a time and place ior one as requested." , ROBT. L. ERIDGERS DEAD He Was Once Prominent in Railroad Circles Wilmington, N. C, August 8. Spe cial. Robt. R.' Bridgers, eldest son of the late Col. R. R. Bridgers, president of the Atlantic Coast Line, died yes terday in a sanitarium at North Adams, Mass., where he had gone to recuper ate health. He was born in Tarboro about, 47 years ago. He leaves a mother and two brothers and two sisters, Pres ton L. Bridgers, Geo. Bridgers, iMisses Mary and Emily Bridgers, all of Wil mington except Geo. Bridgers. He is also survived by his wife, who was Miss Cain, of Durham, and four chil dren. Mr. Bridgers, for n number of years was a prominent railroad man and superintendent of the Western North Carolina branch of the Southern. The last few years he has been en gaged extensively in the saw milling business in Georgia. The remains will be interred at North Adams for the present, but -will be removed to Wil mington later. -- NEITHER SPOKE A Principal Attractions Missing from the Meeting at Union Columbia, S. C, Aug. 8. Neither Till man nor McLaurin spoke today. Till man passed through Columbia tonight going to Union, where he will speak J;o-J T . .1 lit !M Sf.T - - : 1 1"' morrow. 11 is aouuimi 11 mctiaunu win be at Union. Today Congressman Lati mer made a violent attack on McLaurin. Tillman's friends declare he must take some action regarding McLaurin's charges; that they are too severe to be passed off. 1 Gone Into the Steel Trust New York, August 8. It was an nounced here today that the United States Steel Corporation had obtained control of the great Shelby Tube Works. This corporation owns fifteen mi&. The location of these mills is as follows; Shelby, O.; Greenville, Pa.; Elwood City, Pa.; Toledo, O.; Newcastle, Pa.; Hartford, Conn.; Albany, Ind.; Auburn, Pa.; Beaver Falls, la".; Garwood, N. J.; Mansfield, O., and Tioga Falls, O. The plants are operated by non-union men. British Foreign Trade London, Aug. 8. The British trade re turns for July show that there was an increase in imports compared with last month of 2,764,655, chiefly in articles of food and drink. There was a decrease in the exports compared with the vorre pponding month of 1900 of 164786. mm Boatswain O'Connell to -Testify in Schley Case WAS SIGNAL OFFICER Navy Department Officials Satisfied- that A d m Ira I Howison Has not "Formed and Expressed a Belief 1 Washington, August 8. Orders were issued today at the Navy Department directing the return to the United States of Boatswain Dennis J. O'Connell, now at the Cavite atation in the Philippines Boatswain O'Connell is one11 of the most important witnesses to be calle ' before the Schley court of Inquiry. He was chief quartermaster on the Brook lyn, Rear Admiral Schley's flagship, the time of the figblt with the Spanish vessels, and had command ot the- signal mn on the Brooklyn. He will be called to testify as to what signals were, give? by the Brooklyn during, the ' fight and will prove a valuable witness in this respect. According to Captain Cook's report on the battle the first signal given by the Brooklyn was "Enemy coming out Action." Other witnesses will be summoned from distant , points from day to day until all who will be re quired will ibe under orders to return to the United States. - " The. officials of the Navy Department are not much concerned over the stata ment that Hear Admiral Howison., who , has been selected as a member, of the court of inquiry, had expressed his views in regard to . Hear Admiral Schley's conduct at Santiago. .Acting Secretary of ' the Navy t Hacketft was very particular to inquire of Rear Ad miral Howison if he, had expressed him self and received assurances, from the admiral that he had not; furthermore that he had taken such little interest :in the controversy that..W had not even readthe department's publication- of the correspondence: In additionrto this the department declares that it gave de tain fParkeri Rear . Admiral Schley's counsel, every opportunity, to 4, mako known his client's? wishes in the matter, and that the name of Rear "Admiral Howison was among those suggested to Mr. Hackett by Captain Parker.'as en tirely acceptable to Rear Admif a! Schley. ' . j v BIT OFF BY A SHARK Sailor McKie Lost a Leg While Swimming ' "Washington, Augusit 8. The Navy Department has received from Rear Ad-, miral Kempff at Cavite an interesting report in regard to a shark biting off the leg of Samuel McKie, quartermaster of the third class on the Kentucky. Tho . case "nvoived" a settlement of the ques tion as to whether he Jost his leg in the line , of duty, and both Rear- Admiral Kempff and -Rear Admiral Rodgers agree that he did. McKJie, with several other men, was bathing near the firing range. One of them h"etard a Very- of shark and looking in the direction of the dingy saw McKie swimming vigo fously for it with a trail of blood behiniT him. Two of the men, whothad already scrambled into the boat, pulled the un fortunate man in and were horrified to see that his leg had been taken off at the knee. He was afterward removed to the ship where ft was found neces sary to perform an amputnttion. In his endorsement upon the report "Rear Ad miral Kempff says: - - ( "I beg to state that In vie-vr of tha fact that the departmen't encourages swimming requiring men to be instruct ed in it and in view of the. fact-.that McKie had obtained permission ' from the officer in charge of -fife-firing party.,,. I consider that his injury can be-regard- - ed strictly as in the line of duty Surprised by Boers London, August 8. General Lord Kitchener has telegraphed "the war "of fice that the Boers hav surprised anA captured a post of 25 men of SSteineclc er's horse on the Sabt river, in the Ly denburg district of Ihe .eastern Trans-' vaal. The burghers came on ihe . Brit ish troops so suddenly that "hey had practically no opportunity. , td . offer - re- sistance. - i : ",' -.,'- ' '-':' According to reports recently "received , from the Transvaal, the Boers are ex hibiting renewed activity , and. are caus ing a great deal of trouble. It is. under stood that a force wille septput iim mediately to try to release the-captnree troops. . ' ' :.. ' , 0 : V Manager Duffy Suspended -. Chicago, August 8. 'Hugh Duffy, man ager and captain of the Milwaukee f is ball "club, was toda'y suspended indefi nitely by Ban Johnson. Duffy " struck J Umpire Mannassau on the jay. durfng": the game at Milwaukee yesterday;.' He. will also be heavily fined, but FresMont Johnson has not; yet settled the amount ' Iof the fine. Oonroy and Frielr wji took pant in the row, . will also L . . ..A i
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Aug. 9, 1901, edition 1
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