Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 110, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1931 — Page 2
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RIOTING AND KIDNAPING MARK PITTSBURGH ELECTIONS
BALLOT BOX IS STOLEN;SCORES HELD BY COPS Governor Pinchqt Calls Out State Police to Quell Disturbance. NAB DEPUTY SHERIFFS Street Brawls Also Take Toll; Alderman Is Brick Target. By United Press PITTSBURGH, Sept. 16.—Two men held up an election board and stole a ballot box containing 600 counted ballots today as an anticlimax to one of the most violent elections here in years. * Rioting, intimidation, slugging, shooting and “kidnaping,’’ were reported in various parts of Allegheny county. State police, sent here by Governor Gifford Pinchot,- arrested scores as they quelled the disturbances. The entire election was held in the face of the greatest confusion, caused by the record number of voters and failure of vote machines to work properly in many districts where they were placed in operation for the first time. The most serious disorder occurred in Pittsburgh where one fatality and scores of near-riots occurred during the pre-election campaign. Center of Rioting Letschee school, scene of half a dozen previous disturbances, was a center of rioting in the hill district. State and city police arrested twenty-five in that vicinity alone after a series of riots. Bricks were hurled at Alderman John J. Verona, hill district leader, as he drove past Moorhead school in his automobile. A Negro allegedly attempted to slash Verno before the alderman escaped in his machine. The bricks shattered two windows in his car. A crowd of fifty threatened a south side election board. Many were slugged and trampled .before police came to the rescue. An election watcher, Jacob Rosenberg, 26, was wounded in the leg. An undetermined number of persons, estimated at several score, were arrested as result of street brawls in which several persons were injured. Calls for state police came from Homestead, Duquesne and East Monongahela. Twenty-two deputy sheriffs were arrested in Homestead and Fire Chief Hyman Samuels, reported kidnaped, was found in jail. Samuels was released. Held for Shooting Daniel Staisley, Duquesne, constable candidate, was arrested after he fired several shots allegedly to frighten hoodlums who attacked him. Several reports of rioting in East Monongahela drew county detectives and state police to that district, but no arrests were reported. In McKeesport, Clairton, Duquesne and parts of Pittsburgh, voting machines, used for the first time, failed to work. After mechanics labored in vain to place the machines in operation, ballots were used in some districts. Charge of sabotage of the machines in Pittsburgh was made after it was revealed handles of nineteen machines had been filed or sawed off during the voting.
State Kiwanians Study Plans for Aiding Children By United Press WEST BADEN, Ind., Sept. 16Child welfare activities of the state’s seventy-three Kiwanis clubs jMdC. the attention of delegates to the organization's fourteenth annual convention here. Chief among several welfare proposals discussed was that of William H. Trimble, Indianapolis. Under Trimble’s plan, Kiwanis clubs conduct systematic surveys to And needy families, provide treatment for the children in Riley memorial hospital, Indianapolis, and check up on their welfare, both health and educational, long after they are out of the hospital. Trimble’s plan is being followed In forty-two clubs in the state, the convention was told. Last year, the report said, 500 children were treated. A net gain in membership in Indiana for the first six months of 1931 was reported by James Fischer, Indiana district governor. Large delegations were registered from Evansville, Gary, Richmond, Columbus and Indianapolis, all seeking the S3OO scholarship award which will be given the club having the largest representation traveling the greatest number of miles. The golfing team from the Sixth district won the state championship. It was composed of Doyle Kessell, Newcastle; Denver Harlan, Richmond; Glen Plymate, Shelbyville, and Emmet Bartel.
Goat’s Goat Got By United Press KENDALLVILLE, Ind., Sept. 16.—The fable of the dog which battled its image in a mirror had its counterpart here in a goat and his reflection in a tiled spring. The good Billy, owned by Georg# Gehring. a farmer, took on a war-like air when he saw the other goat in the clear water. His adversary assumed an equally combative attitude. As Billy lunged at his opponent, it rushed to meet him. With his head lowered, the goat advanced until he fell into the pool. The smooth sides prevented his escape. Joe Evers, a fertilizer dealer, got Gehring s goat.
Senator La Follette to Launch Kirshbauins Open Forum Series
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Six prominent speakers will participate in the monthly sessions of the open forum of the Kirshbaum Center, Twenty-third and Meridian streets, starting at 8:15 p. m., Oct. 18. The first speaker will be Sena-
ALL IN THE GAME
Nothing Worries Aimee’s Gang
By United Press LOS ANGELES, Sept. 16.—1 t takes more than a process server bringing official notice of a $200,000 breach of promise suit to push apart the two pillars of Angelus temple, Aimee Semple McPherson and her husbr.nd of three days, David Hutton. The bride’s smiling “don’t worry about it, dear; what’s another suit in the McPherson family?” rang in Hutton’s ears today as Myrtle Henrietta Joan St. Pierre announced, through an attorney, that she might agree to a settlement of her $200,000 suit. Miss St. Pierre, or Mrs. St. Pierre, as Hutton insists, is a nurse, who Hutton admitted saw him through several sinking spells and a bad cold. She charges he broke her heart, betrayed her, and jilted her. Attorney Jones Gardner Sanderson, speaking of Miss St. Pierre's attitude on a money settlement, said “it would depr and upon the amount of money involved.” To that, Hutton exploded: “Blackmail.”
Fraternities at Wabash College Publish Pledges By Times Special CEAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., Sept. 16.—Pledge lists of seven of the nine fraternities on the Wabash college campus have been announced. Pledging by the other two, Phi Delta Theta and Lambda Chi Alpha will not be completed until late in the week. The rush period will continue through the week. However, some of the fraternities have already completed pledging. Lists announced are as follows: Phi Gamma Delta —Irvin Powers. St. Charles. 111.: Donald Northcutt. Crawfordsville: Hollis Gleason. Wilmette. 111.; Oaklev Tenks. Daniel Wacks and Thomas Heflner. Wlnnetka. 111.: John Kennedy. Evansville; Louis L. Lanie. Evanston. 111.; Earl Peterson. Peoria, 111.: Andrew Y. Thornell. Sidney. la.: Doualas M. Klevorn. LaDorte: Frederick Frankenfieid. Frankfort: George V. Underwood Jr.. John Gandali and Herman Berns. Indianapolis. Beta Theta Pi—George Snyder. William Milllken and Morris Morris. Indianapolis: Rov Umble and John Hoke. Goshen: Harry Price. Blufftoti, Jack Neal. Springfield. 111.: Benito Sebillo. Albuoueraue. N. M.: Robert Fulton. Viroaua. Wis.; Luke White. Covington: Yale Bates. Mendota. 111.: Richard Atkinson. Crawfordsville: Perry Merchant. Frankfort. Kappa Sigma—Carroll Warren. Marshall: Victor Schwartz. Danville; William Stephens. Springfield. 111.: James Darnell, Lebanon: Chauncey Pomery ancf Edward Jenkins. Chicago; Chandler Lewis. Fremont. Neb.; Robert Voladovich. Chicago; Judd Davis. Springfield. 111.: Marcelluus Jones. Crawfordsville: Wavne Gillis. Cayuga; Harry Varner. Hammond. Sigma Chi—Charles More. Crawfordsville: Joe Danforth. Danville. 111.: William Curt*. Frankfort: Eugene Mayer. Mishawaka: Edward Null. Cleveland. O.: Richard Buck. Glencoe. 111.: Ralph Crisler. Carl Mason and William Rowland. Anderson. Delta Tau Delta—Robert Movers. William Reinert and John Tower. Chicago: Gene Rovenstein. Atwood: George Frasor and Robert Smith. Blue Island. 111.: Robert Vogel. Lebanon: Harold Romberg. Scribner Neb. Tau Kappa Epsilon—Hal Price. Gainesville. Fla.: Clifford Chase. Lafayette: William Harting. Jamestown; Richard Peton. Fremont. O.: Mario Deluka. Chicago Heights; Bert Gernodle. Jamestown: Fred James. Chicago: Herbert Cox. DanvHle. Ul.; Avwood Bmlth Jr.. Calumet City. Beta Kappa—Robert Kelling. Wlnnetka. 111.: Chauncey Oren. Saratoga; Jack Wright. Gladstone. Mich.: Jacob Hughart. Houston. Tex.: Norkert Osborne. Indianapolis; Clra Harbison. Russellville.
tor Robert M. La Follette of Wisconsin, upper left, talking on “What Do the Progressives Want?” The other speakers, showrn above, and their speaking dates: Upper right, Max Eastman,
MISS ST. PIERRE says that while a nurse at the Hotel Vita Del Arrayo in Pasadena, she met Hutton last January. “On Jan. 20,” she said, “he assured me of his undying love and asked me to marry him. I consented. He took me to see his parents and friends, introducing me as his future wife.” In April, he departed on a concert tour, and she believed they would be married upon his return, she said, but she heard no more from him until she learned of the marriage of Hutton and Aimee over the radio. Reports that Miss St. Pierre had been married and divorced could not be confirmed. Hutton said she had admitted a previous wedding. “There’s nothing to it all,” he explained. “She nursed me in the presence of my mother and father. I found her to be a charming person and I find it hard to believe she would stoop to anything like this to achieve money or notoriety.” Aimee was still more confident. In a telephone conversation with Hutton’s mother, she said: “Don’t let this worry you, because if I had married any one else, something like this would have happened. I’m the real target.”
Mr. Fixit Writ* your trouble* to Mr. Fixit. Re 1* The Times representative at the city hall and will he clad to present your case to the nrouer city officials. Write him In care of The Times, sirninr vour full name and address. Name will not be published.
Mr. Flxit —Please be kind enough to try to get something done to Kentucky avenue from the Belt railroad to Harding street. It is so rough as to be almost impassable. H. L. S. City Engineer A. H. Moore has ordered inspection of this section of street. Mr. Fixit—We have no street lights from Michigan to Sixteenth street on Holmes avenue. It is not safe for a person to be out on the street after dark. MRS. W. Request for street lights has been referred to the works board for investigation. LIQUOR GIVEN BLAME Aged Arson Defendant Addicted to Denatured Alcohol. NEW ALBANY. Ind., Sept. 16. Joseph Fetz, facing trial in Floyd circuit court here no a first degree arson charge, declares drinking changed him from a well-to-do business man to a potential criminal. Fetz, who has admitted setting fire to an abandoned school building near Greenville and the home of John Rouff said he had been drinking denatured alcohol so long that he became mentally deranged. Boy’s Arms Broken CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., Sept. 16.—Emory Williams, 11, suffered fractures of his arms when he jumped from a soring board at a school near here#-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
speaker and poet, Feb. 7; right center, Maurice Samuel, author, Dec. 13; lower left, Ellery Walter, traveler and author, Nov. 22; lower center, Dr. Smiley Blanton, psychiatrist, March 6, and lower right, Haridas T. Mazumoar of India, intimate of Gandhi, Jan. 10.
Leaders of Progressives to Be First Speaker of Season. An extensive program of addresses by interesting and prominent persons is included in Kirshbaum Center’s sixth annual Open Forum season, which will open Oct. 18. at 8:15, with Senator Robert M. La Follette Jr. of Wisconsin as the speaker. The center, located at Twentythird and Meridian streets, will have a speaker each month until and including March. The addresses are given under auspices of the Jewish Community Center Asssociation. La Follette, America’s youngest senator, will speak on “What Do the Progressives Want?” Known as the “supreme adventurer,” Ellery Walter, international traveler, will speak Sunday, Nov. 22, on “European Leaders I Have Met.” In his journeys Walter has interviewed Mussolini, Pope Pius XI, King Alfonso, Lloyd George and Josef Stalin. In his talk at the Kirshbaum, Walter will relate his interviews with these international figures. Maurice Samuel to Talk Appearing Sunday, Dec. 13, Maurice Samuel will speak on the “Future of Palestine.” Samuel, a student of Palestine, has received wide recognition of his books. He recently returned from Palestine. “Gandhi, the Man and His Message,” will be the topic on which Dr. Haridas T. Mazumdar, who is touring America at the commission of the Indian government, will speak at the forum session Sunday, Jan. 10. While in India last year he accompanied Gandhi on his famous “March to the Sea,” which later resulted in Gandhi's imprisonment. Max Eastman, poet, author and philosopher, will speak on “Why We Laugh Like Human Beings, ’ at the forum Sunday, Feb. 7.
Dr. Blanton Is Last Final lecture of the forum season will be by Dr. Smiley Blanton, discussing “The Emotional Life of the Child.” Dr, Blanton is one of the leading psychiatrists of the country and is professor of child study at Vassar college. The forum this year will follow the same lines as in previous years with an open discussion on the subjects between speakers and members of the audience at the conclusion of the speaker’s remarks. Members of the forum managing committee are Dr. Louis Segar, chairman; Mortimer C. Furscott, Leonard A. Strauss, Isador Kornblum, J. L. Mueller, Joseph M. Block, Fred E. Newman, Mrs. J. A. Goodman, Mrs. I. G. Kahn. Jack Harding, Abe H. Goldstein, Daniel Frisch and Allan Bloom, general secretary of the association. Wills $25,000 for Hotel By United Press CHICAGO, Sept. 16.—The will of Agostino Boggiano, who made $250,000 in the macaroni business, sets aside $25,000 to build a hotel for American tourists at Piano Campbel, Italy. “So they can get good wine and good cooking, untrammeled by prohibition,” sons of Boggiano explained their father’s bequest.
SHERIFF FILES REPLY TO SUIT BY IRAHOLMES Asks Specific Facts in Litigation Involving Fight in Jail. Through his attorney, Charles (Buck) Sumner today made his first official answer to an assault and battery suit in circuit court, by which Attorney Ira Holmes is demanding $25,000 damages. The answer, in form of a motion to make the complaint more definite, requests that Holmes state fully and definitely the facts necessary to sustain the alleged conclusion “that Sumner assaulted and beat the plaintiff.” Holmes filed the suit several weeks ago following a fight at the county jail in which the prominent criminal attorney departed with two black eyes and the sheriff with a broken finger. The argument resulted when Holmes attempted to interview his clients, Charles Vernon Witt and Louis Hamilton, who face trial at Lebanon, Oct. 19, as accused murderers of Lafayette Jackson, chain store owner. The new motion, filed by Attorney Harvey Grabill, brands Holmes’ suits as “the most general allegation of assault and battery which can be imagined under our law.” It demands that it state definitely what damages the plaintiff is alleging he has suffered—“whether he was damaged in his head, his foot, his feelings or elsewhere, and of what the alleged damages consist.”
I. U. PRESIDENT WILL BE BANQUET SPEAKER Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Doctors Will Attend Affair Tonight. By Times Special FRENCH LICK, Ind., Sept. 16. Today’s program of the annual convention of the American Academy of Opthalmology and Otolaryngology included instructional courses and a scientific session of the otolaryngology section. The annual banquet will be held tonight, with Dr. William Lowe Bryan, president of Indiana university, as the speaker. The convention is being attended by 800 eyes, ear, nose and throat specialists. Addressing Tuesday’s session, David Ingalls, assistant secretary of the navy in charge of aviation, declared full annual health examinations of pilots by qualified physicians are as vital to the efficiency of the aviation service as keeping planes in proper condition. Phases of medicine in relation to aviation were discussed by Dr. Conrad H. Berns, New York, and Dr. Henry T. Smith, Elverson, Pa. Fall Causes Death By Times Special GARY, Ind., Sept. 16. —George Feldman, Chicago, died in a hospital here of injuries suffered when he fell from a swing at Cedar Lake. His neck was broken.
BUTLER COLLEGIAN EDITORS APPOINTED
Loftin
Max Schneider Named by Journalism Head to Manager Post. Max Schneider has been named managing editor of the Butler Collegian and Adelaide Gould, his assistant by Professor J. Douglas Perry, head of the journalism department. Norman Hanna and Arthur Loftin were appointed night editor and city editor, respectively. The first issue of the fall Collegian will be distributed Friday at the university. It will be tabloid form in four or more pages. Others of the more than twenty appointed on the Collegian staff include: Mildred Beard, and Dorothy Wright, assistant citfr editors; Myron Hadley, Jane Hadley, and Evelyn •McDermitt, news editors; Harrison Miller, sports; Mary Virginia Clark, society; Dvera Cohea, dramatic critic; Agnes Postma, exchange editor, Theresa Bagnoli. literary editor, Margaret Marker, feature editor; Jean Underwood, rewrite editor; Evelyn Bently, Dick Mitchell, Paul Duncan, editorial writers. FORMER JUDGE IS DEAD Orion B. Harris Served on Bench of Fourteenth District. By United Press SULLIVAN, Ind., Sept. 16.—Orion B. Harris, former judge of the Fourteenth district, comprising Sullivan and Greene counties, is dead at his home here after a long illness. He was prominent in the state as an attorney and a leader of the Democratic party. He was judge of the Sullivan and Greene circuit court from 1900 to 1906 and formerly editor of a newspaper here. He came to Sullivan from Bladensburg, 0., in 1886, and engaged in law practice.
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Screen Pair Is Married
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3 INJURED IN SKIDOING GARS Rain-Drenched Streets Are Cause of Crashes. Three persons were injured Tuesday night in automobile mishaps 'in rain drenched streets. When the car in which she w r as riding smashed into a railway abutment at Missouri street-and Kentucky avenue, Mrs. Nega Lang, 30, of 305 North East street, sustained head and neck cuts. Her daughter, Ethel, 5, riding with her, was not hurt. I Police today sought the driver of the car who, Mrs. Lang said, had been drinking and fled after the crash. C. C. Berry, 60, R. R. 10, suffered head lacerations ■when struck by an auto driven by Fletcher Maholm, 4016 North Temple avenue, at Pennsylvania and Market streets Side injuries were sustained by Carl Lanfer, 32, of 522 East Tenth street, when he was struck by an auto in the 500 block North Capitol avenue. GIRL, 13, IN WEDDING Father at Anderson Asks Police of Kansas City to Find Her. By Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., Sept. 16. Police of Kansas City, Mo., have been asked to search for Garnet Ethel Kirkpatrick, who was recently married to a man twelve years her serior. Her father, William Kirkpatrick, Anderson, said his wife left him two weeks ago, and accompanied by Omar Cassell and the daughter went to Omaha, Neb. A letter received here from Mrs. Kirkpatrick said her daughter married a man who stole an automobile at - Topeka and drove it to Omaha, accompanied by the 13-year-old girl. They were married in Kansas City.
Hanna
Schneider
Tasty Tuition By United Press BELOIT, Wis., Sept. 16. Home-cureck hams, potatoes, eggs, chickens, fruit and vegetables now are accepted as tuition by Beloit college. Action of the trustees in voting to accept farm produce in lieu of money for tuition was expected to augment the already large freshman class. Farmers of the countryside had protested that they had no money to send their sons and daughters to school this year. The college trustees conferred and decided they could use the produce in the college dining room. The practice is reminiscent of the 80’s when wagon loads of grain and livestock were brought in and traded for college educations.
CHAPEL CORNER STONE WILL BE LAID SUNDAY Evangelical Lutheran Building at I. U. to Cost §50,000. By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Sept. 16. —The corner stone of the Indiana university Evangelical Lutheran chapel will be laid Sunday afternoon. The cost of the chapel will be about $50,000, of which more than $45,000 already has been contributed. According to the Rev. Edward F. Stegen a large number of out-of-town visitors are expected for the program Sunday. The regular morning service will be held in the temporary quarters of the church ahd a festival service will be held at 3 p. m. in the Student building of the university. Consecration of the new chapel will follow the afternoon service.
Lew Ayres
Miss Gould
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Lola Lane
By United Press LAS VEGAS, Nev., Sept. 16. Lew 7 Ayres, who rose from a minor position in a jazz band in Ti Juana, Mexico, and Hollywood to motion picture stardom almost over night, was honeymooning today with Lola Lane, also of the films. The young couple w r as married here late Tuesday. Later, Ayres and his bride left by automobile for a three-week honeymoon in Canada. Ayres, after playing minor parts in two pictures, was given the feature role in “All Quiet on the Western Front.” Miss Lane gave her name as Dorothy Mulligan.
Mis-bee-haved Park Tree Is Cut Down and City Florist Goes Away From There.
INDIGNANT bees have left their marks—fifty of them—on Orval Robison, chief florist at the city greenhouse in Garfield park, because he wouldn't run. Robison was directing several men in chopping down a dead sycamore tree in the park Tuesday afternoon. For six years bees have lived in the tree. When the last stroke of the ax toppled the tree, the bees left their home and the workmen left the tree. Robison, believing in the thepry that the bees would not trouble him if he remained still, did noi flee. In less than a minute he was in flight, though, with fifty bees concentrated on his face and neck. A Negro workman, who said he was a “bee man,” attempted to remove the hive from the tree later and was rewarded with several stings.
FORMER MEMBER OF CONGRESS IN CRASH Slight Injuries Suffered by Ralph Updyke in Plane Accident. By United Press LAPORTE, Ind., Sept. 16.—Ralph Updyke, former representative in congress from the Seventh district, and six other persons were passengers on a Lockheed-Orion monoplane which was forced down in a field near the municipal airport here Tuesday night. Updyke was cut slightly, but none of the others were injured. The plane was en route from Washington to Chicago. It was piloted by L. G. Stewart. Other passengers were William J. Froelich, Chicago, special assistant to William D. Mitchell, United States attorney-general, and Dwight Green, a government investigator in the Alphonse Capone case. Stewart told airport authorities that he was returning to the port because of fog and rain. The motor failed as he neared the field, Stewart said. The undercarriage was ripped off and the fuselage damaged. The same plane was forced down near here Monday night.
JL feel like dancing" ■a **T WAS always sickly, tired and 1 gloomy. I looked bad too. My sister-in-law took Lydia E; Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. So 1 tried this wonderful medicine too. "Now everywhere I go people tell me how much better I look. I feel like dancing for joy all the time. *’l am happy to tell other women about this medicine.” Mrs. V. E. Schnepper, 1409 E. Sycamore St; Evansville, Indiana.
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
JSEPT. 16,1931
GAS TAX PLAN PROPOSED FOR NEWJIR FIRM Works Board Contract to Be Submitted to Century Line. A tentative contract providing a sliding gas tax scale proportionate to the number of airplanes on daily schedule was ready today for submission to Century Airlines, planning Indianapolis municipal airport as the hub of an extensive midwestern passenger airway. y The works board drew up the contract for approval of Century Airlines, of which E. L. Cord, automobile manufacturer, is president, after two representatives outlined the type of contract they would require to use the municipal part as an operations base. If approved by the Cord interests the contract then must also be sanctioned by city council. Century Airlines plans development of hourly air travel to most large cities in Indiana, Illinois and Western Ohio, together with Detroit, Mich., using Indanapolis as the base because of its cenfral location and because of facilities offered by the new municipal flying field. Operation would start at once, representatives of the firm said, following approval of similar contracts in Louisville and Evansville. By United Press CLEVELAND, 0., Sept. 16.—The Century Air Lines announced today | what were described as the first regular excursion flights adopted by i commercial aviation. Excursion rates approximating i three-fourths of regular round-trip fare will be offered each w 7 eek-end, commencing Saturday between Cleveland, Toledo, Chicago, South Bend and Detroit. The flights will continue indefinitely. it was said. BUS PROBE IS SOUGHT I North State Operators Charge Line Is Unauthorized. H. E. Bussard and L. A. Young, operators of the North Manchester : Truck Company, petitioned the public service commission today to I investigate the South Whitley Truck Company, operated by Esta and Glen Arnold. Bussard and Young, operating from Laketon to Ft. Wayne, contended that the other company, operating from South Whitley to Ft. Wayne, was not authorized by the commission. 'OPEN’ CHEROKEE STRIP, Oklahoma Celebrates Anniversary of Famous Land Rush. By United Press PONCA CITY, Okla., Sept. 16. Covered wagons, ox-carts and cow ponies raced over the prairies of Oklahoma today, to commemorate the opening of the Cherokee strip thirty-eight years ago. Hundreds of citizens at Ponca City, Garber and Tonkawa, where celebrations were held, took part in the original race. Some who found oil on the sites they picked are millionaires today. Others are “down and out.”
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