ce Br a eet estima | Small Crowd Sees Robert Cooke, H. S. Taylor and Henry PAVEMENT CAVED In.—Last week the | . Howard w published relative to ! la ponies. phic ol Kline, while sheriff W. Klepper, WATCHMAN an item to ! —-— |fora many girl friends. a. Bert Delige Executed ,¢ clinton county. was also a spectator. G. McC. Fry, of Ferguson township, los- | —Roger T. Bayard, local editor of the Tyrone | —William Y. Cadwallader, of Pittsburgh, Was ing a | hicl out of sight in | /70ld: spent Sunday with friends in Bellefonte. | in Bellefonte Wednesday night, a guest of Mrs. a A grok by] iia. SarabEttery, ot Lest, was a visitor | D, G. Bush, large fissure imestone rock in Bellefonte Tuesday. purchasing some of her | Meg W. E. Hurley and children went over to the crust of earth breaking while Mr. spring styles. | Philipsburg on Monday to spend several days Fry was plowing. On Monday after- Miss Louise Brachbill is at Philipsburg. the | with friends. noon a big patch of the tar pavement in ' guest of her cousins, the Misses Elizabeth and | Prothonotary Arthur B. Kimport is taking in front of Temple Court caved in, though Mi Ferme 2 | the sights in Philadelphia. this week and is 2 not entirely out of sight. For some time | ™ Johnson Smith, of Altoona, spent ; guest at the Windsor hotel. em i opot '¢ HIME | re week-end in Bellefonte, the guest of her fath- | —Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Shuey and Mrs. Ardell, pressed gradually until it was two inches | © ohm, ; spent Tuesday and Wednesday at Altoona, at- | —Miss Short, of Milford, Delaware, has been in | tending the funeral of Alexander Rilling. lower than the general level. On Mon- | Belcfonte for the past two weeks, the guest of —Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Mitchell and Mrs day Harry Baum tramped upon the spot | Miss Sara Potter. Mitchell's niece went over to Burnham yesterday to test it and the pavement cracked and | —Misses Ruth and Goidie Eberhart, of Lock to visit Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Mitchell. : sounded hollow underneath. About four | Haven. spent Sunday in Bellefonte as the guests of —Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Mingle were among those o'clock in the afternoon Fred Lane decid. | Mi Helen Marin. | Jou Bldtouts wis out Yo Vide Gis Milk ed to test the spot and on stepping upon | CCl Lik vis mother. brother and | Keichline. o Gevege it with one foot it gave way and dropped ' gisers in this place. «yJoln Coldren, Miss Freda Bailey and Joht H. out of sight, leaving a hole about fifteen | _john H. Wilson, manager of the Western | Bailey, of Centre Hall, were Bellefonte : ' All told about one hundred people com- The Sentence is Carried Out on Tuesday ' ced the crowd present. — me cee | Morning a A an The crime for which Delige on Tues- 0. CommesPONDENTS.—No communications Condemned id the penal the scaffold took published unless accompanied by the real name | gpoke Three Minutes from Scaffold. a a Sunday, October he writer. of t : | Full Details. ' 16th, just as the church bells were tolling — . | i 3 . THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. | A: just seventeen minutes and one sec- off She ou = oe pening Sarvice | » } ——Clean-up week will begin May | pu St eh Ooch i= Te ie John Baudis, a frail little woman, and 15th. wich sprung the tap and Beit Delige + 2ier criminally ascadlting her killed her ‘i y i 3 , by cutting her throat with a razor in —wState and Dickinson will play ball | gropped from life into eternity as the by ng : on Beaver field, State College, this after- | penalty the law exacted of him for the as- order to keep her from exposing him to noon at 3:30. | sault and murder of Mrs. John Baudis, of the Yorth of i tighteoss public. hod ——The ‘mighty Haag show, a new one | Scotia. He went to his death with the | Whi Baudis a ae ou a in this section, will exhibit in Bellefonte, | same calm and fortitude that has so char- | ms Rk Svening : on Thursday, May 25th. acterized his whole conduct since his ar- , HOUSh De : . Vigistee ——Miss Mary Cook, who has been ill | rest and conviction, the only apparent ageing: Delige Ving Comm elisfonte, Pa., April 28, 1911. at the Brockerhoff house for the past week, is slowly improving. ——After being critically ill for several days during the past week, Miss Mary Ceader is very rapidly growing stronger. | ——Sidney Krumrine, the druggist, was confined to his home several days the past week with illness, but is now able to be around again. ——Rt. Rev. Cortland Whitehead, of Pittéburg, will occupy the pulpit in St, John's Episcopal church on Sunday even- ing at 7:30 o'clock. ——Miss Sara Potter entertained Tues- | weakness displayed being when Jo Time ho was Surly Saicoust be straps were being adjusted about his | © lowi os . by arat Ww G limbs. and that was for but the fraction | o ng S y San ira a a of a minute. : | as thorough an investigation of the case Delige's eating a Song ime bee | as was possible in that limited time and something rkable. He always cob |. ocult was the finding of what was versed quite unreservedly with visitors to | ent 8 t the the jail and even joked and laughed with | deemed 3 3 uiielen SL eves to vars po them, at all times maintaining that Jo Tmo pro Lp a » on had truly repented of his crime and sib- | poo conte and lodged in jail cerely felt that he had been forgiven. 3s The missing dink in the chain of late as 10:30 o'clock on Monday night the | id SE i SF the ine sheriff and deputy sheriff accompanied By | Ji ont with which the murder had | George Hurley, of Philipsburg, went into | been committed. From indi tion. the jail and left Delige out into the corri- | . Very inches square. An investigation disclosed | Union Telegraph company in Altoona, spent Sun- the fact that there was a big hole under- | day with friends in this place. neath and the overhanging pavement Bea. John Ouenitlre and Mrs. W. Frank 1 , of Centre were in Bellefonte on a and surface were broken away, leaving a | opel dit tay, hole about five feet in diameter and six . —John D. Meyer was down from Altoona over feet deep. No satisfactory solution of | sunday and one of his pleasant diversions while the cave-in can be given by any one. | here was to interview the dentist. Some maintain there is an old well there, | —Mrs. Edward P. Irvin left Bellefonte Tuesday but others declare there is not. Some | to join her husband at Cherry Tree. where they ascribe it to an old abandoned sewer, but will make their home in the future. thera is nothing to show that such is the | —Frank W. Grebe, of Philipsburg, Democratic case. The most likely cause is that at candidate for County Treasurer, was a Bellefonte some time there was a leak in the water visitor in the early part of the week. main in that neighborhood and the water —Mrs. J. R. Lee, of Gregg township, was in Bellefonte on a shopping expedition on Tuesday washed the soft clay into openings in the and a very pleasant caller at this office. —Rev. W. D. Benton, of Fredonia, N. Y., who was pastor of St. John's Episcopal church here about twelve years ago, was in Bellefonte over last Sunday and preached in the Episcopal church that evening. —~Miss Mary Hunter Linn and Miss Elizabeth Blanchard with Miss Laws and Miss Natt, of Philadelphia, will sail from Montreal June seven- teenth for Glasgow, expecting to spend four weeks in Scotland. —Miss Linnie Benner is spending several weeks at Atlantic City, where she was joined by her niece Miss Emaline Cooper,who went from Peeks- kill, where she is at school, to visit during the Easter vacation with Miss Benner. —~Col. H. S. Taylor was over in Clearfield on Sunday where he delivered the memorial address before the Lodge of Moose. Today he is in the same town attending the annual reunion of the Spanish—American War Veterans’ association, —George Tanner and bride arrived in Bellefonte on Monday evening and have been guests at the home of his mother on Bishop street this week" They were married in Akron, Ohio, the latter part of last week and expect to leave for that a sharp instrument had been used, evi- | rock and that gradually ‘he underground dently a razor, but all efforts to find the hole increased in size and the crust of same proved futile until Bert himself told earth underneath the pavement decreased his brother where his razor could be until it was not strong enough to support | found and the latter in turn told the au- the same and Monday's cave in was the thorities. After securing the razor De- ' result. lige made a full and free confession of pu. pci Sreper BRIDGE AGAIN.— all the horrible details of the double pb hably because the bridge is located —~Miss Sara Bogle, of Pittsburgh, has been spending the past week with her mother, Mrs. E. Norris Bogle, at her home at the Forge House —Mrs. Edward Cooke and daughter Jeannette are home after spending four weeks in Pittsburg with Mr. Cooke, who is at present located in that city. —J. W. Norris, street commissioner of Juniata, was in Bellefonte in the early part of the week on his way home from visiting friends up Buffalo day night at her home on Linn street, in honor of her house guest, Miss Short, of Milford, Delaware. ——A meeting of the Bellefonte Motor club was held last evening but too late to get a report of the proceedings in this week's WATCHMAN. dor for a few minutes recreation. He walked up and down the corridor and chatted freely and laughed heartily at a | few harmless jokes. Shortly after that he retired and slept quite soundly all night. He awoke about six o'clock on Tuesday morning and ate a hearty breakfast of ——Contractor R. B. Taylor has had men at work the past ten days putting down the concrete walks between the crime, and while said confession was used | oatmeal, ham and eggs, bread, butter and against him in his trial at the December | coffee, after which he was given his new Run. —Dr. J. H. Pickle, of Millersville, was the gues right at the corner of the WATCHMAN of- fice the editor of this paper is asked doz- place today. —Capt. W. H. Fry, the well known veterinarian of Pine Grove Mills, passed through Bellefonte court house and the jail outfit of clothing in which he arrayed term of cout. it was net vitally NECEsSArY | ans of times a week when work will be for several days the early part of the week of | on Tuesday to attend a meeting of the survivors -—A forest fire is now raging in the Barrens south of Waddle. which is being fought by the employees of the McNitt— Huyett Lumber company -—Thursday, June 15th, has been selec- ted as the date for the holding of the an- nual Schaeffer—Hazel reunion this year and the place Hecla Park. ——Qnly one marriage license was granted the past week by register E.C. Tuten, and that te William C. Yeager, of Alphena, W. Va., and Mabel L. Bathurst, of Curtin. ——Get everything in readiness so that when clean-up week comes around, May 15th, you:can assist in putting the town in a better sanitary condition by cleaning up around your premises. ———Andrew J. Reeser has disposed of his business in Snow Shoe and with Mrs. Reeser and their two childrén is now in Bellefonte rooming at the Stickler home until they locate permanently. ——At the annual meeting and elec- tion of officers of the Altoona Chamber of Commerce on Monday evening John D. Meyer was appointed a member of the Industrial committee for the year 1911 ——There will be a new moon today and the old fogies predict nicer weather from now on; something that is to be de- voutly hoped for, as thisis the most back- ward season in this locality known in years. —W. Francis Speer has resigned his position as local editor on the Bellcfonte Republican and will devote his time to conducting his campaign for the nomina- tion for Recorder on the Democratic ticket. ——A reception was given Miss Helen E. Overton as Vice Regent of the Penn- sylvania Daughters of the American Rev- olution Monday afternoon at four o'clock at her home at the fraternity house, by the members of the Bellefonte chap- ter of the D. A. R. ———Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Curtin, of Pitts- burgh, have rented the half of the Harris home on Allegheny street, occupied by Mrs. Harris. Mos. Curtin, with her two children, expects to come to Bellefonte early in June, to take possession of the house for the summer. ——Announcement was made at Phil ipsburg Wednesday afternoon of the en- gagement of Miss Elizabeth Fryberger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fry- berger, and Wilbur D. Twitmire, of Lan- caster. The wedding will take place sometime during the year. —A Great meeting for men will be held Sunday afternoon at the Y. M. C. A, Dr. W. A. Cook, of Wheeling, W. Va., will speak. Sacred concert at 3.30 by the Y. M. C. A. orchestra. Vocal and instru- mental solos, social and good time for every man who attends. Reference li- brary and reading room open for working men at 2.30. Every man welcome. —Last Thursday Lewis Daggett bought the cigar store heretofore con- ducted by Harry Irvin in the Bush house block, next door to the Bush house en- trance, and in the future will have entire charge of same, having taken possession on Friday. This is one of the best stands in this partof town and there is no doubt but that the new proprietor will meet «with success. ——The Moshannon Coal company, of which C. H. Rowland, of Philipsburg, is president, has awarded the contractiopen- ing up a new drift at their No. 10 mine which is to be one hundred and}fifty feet completed employment will be given to more than one hundred additional men and the output will be increased from six himself. About 8:30 o'clock he was vis- ited by his pastor, Rev. P. E. Paul, of the A. M. E. church, accompanied by Rev. H. N. Hepler, of the Free Methodist church, with members of the Salvation Army, who held a one hour's prayer and praise serv- ice and remained to accompany him to the scaffold. On account of the lateness of the arriv- al of several of the men selected to com- pose the jury and the necessity of pick- ing new men the intended time of execu- tion was delayed a few minutes so that it was just ten minutes and fifteen seconds past ten o'clock when the condemned man, supported on either side by the sheriff and his deputy, appeared at the door leading from the jail office to the jail yard, the trio being preceded by Revs. Paul and Heoler. The prisoner walked with a firm step and mounted the scaffold without an apparent quiver. When the five men stood upon the plat- form Rev. Hepler offered up a brief pray- | er while Rev. Paul prayed at greater | length. At 10:13 o'clock the prisoner | was given an opportunity to speak if he had anything to say. He stepped to the railing of the scaffold and spoke for three minutes. The most vital points of his re. marks are as follows: Gentlemen and friends, it's a very pleasant day. I thank God my life has been spared this long. Ihave been bad and committed a crime and I am willing to suffer for it. I feel thankful for the belief that God has forgiven me and in a minute I hope to be with Jesus, just as soon as the drop falls. God bless you one and all. I wish to thank the sheriff and deputy sheriff, as well as those who had me in charge, for treating me so good. I also wish to say a word about the grub I was given ever since | was in jail. It was good and so nicely cooked and served by the sheriff's good wife. I pray all my brothers to turn from a sinful life and live right with God. Let them take warning from me. I hope none of my family may ever be where I am now. Again God bless you all and keep you right. Goodbye to everybody. At the conclusion of his remarks De- lige stepped back upon the trap and while the sheriff and deputy adjusted the straps exhibited the only signs of fear, but it was only momentarily. It took one min- ute to adjust the straps, noose and black cap and it was just ten o'clock 17 minutes and one second when the drop fell. After the body fell, aside from a slight swaying from side to side the only thing notice- able was a brief twitching of the fingers and a convulsive drawing up of one leg. Eleven minutes after the drop fell the physicians in attendance, namely: Drs. M. J. Locke and W. W. Feidt, of Belle- fonte; coroner S. M. Huff, of Milesburg; Walter J. Kurtz, of Howard, and P. §& Fisher, of Zion, announced that the heart had ceased to beat, but he was not offi- cially declared dead until 10 o'clock 31 minutes and 40 seconds, 14 minutes and 39 seconds after the trap was sprung. At 10:48 the straps were removed and at 10:54 the body was cut down and turned over to undertaker S. S. Osman, of Port Matilda, who placed it in the coffin al- hundred 4o-one thousand tons a day. to his conviction, as a very strong chain of circumstantial evidence had been woven around him by the Common- | wealth. After being on trial three days the jury at nine o'clock on Saturday evening, De- cember 10th, brought in a verdict of! guilty of murder in the first degree. He! was sentenced to be hanged by Judge Orvis on Saturday, December 17th, and remanded to jail until such time as the Governor should see fit to set a day for the carrying of the sentence into execu- tion. On February 22nd Governor Tener named Tuesday April 25th, as the day on which the final mandate of the law should be carried out and now that such has been done the word finis can be written on one of the most revolting and dastardly cases that ever besmirched the court records or the fair fame of Centre county. Andit is to be earnestly hoped that never again will a similar case oc- cur in this county. ———Hamill Holmes, of State College, is now driving a new Ford touring car which he secured through the local agency at that place. ewe —It is only a week now until the ap- pearance of the Bellefonte Academy min- strels in the opera house. For some | weeks past we have tried to tell you how | good they are going to be, but at that we have conveyed only a faint idea. They will have to be seen to be appre- ciated and it is up to you to give them your portion of appreciation. ——The seventh annual convention of the Episcopal church, Harrisburg diocese, will be held in St. John’s church, this place, on Tuesday and Wednesday, May oth and 10th. The convention will be made up of over one hundred clergymen and lay members and will be a religious gathering of considerable interest. Bish- of J. W. Darlington, of Harrisburg, will preside. ——At a recent meeting of the board of directors of the Y. M. C. A. Wallace H. Gephart, C. T. Gerberich and Joseph L. Montgomery were selected as the building committee for the new swim- ming pool that is to be built through the generosity of Mrs. W. P. Wilson. The plans are about completed but the con- tract for building same has not yet been awarded. ——The Bellefonte Academy baseball team will go to Lock Haven today to play the Lock Haven Normal team. Their first biggame at home will take place on Hughes field on Friday afternoon of next week when the Bloomsburg Normal nine will be their opponents. On Satur- day afternoon of next week they will play the Williamsport High school team on Hughes field. Mrs. S. C. Hile has sublet her fur- nished rooms over Lyon & Co's store to Mr. and Mrs. Frank O'Brian, who the past winter occupied the Charles Smith house on Bishop street, and has gone to Pleasant Gap to take care of her invalid mother. As she will be away for an in- inasmuch as the change was made quite suddenly. ——1It will be worth the price of ad- mission to see John Blanchard, Hard | they know less. The only thing certain Mrs. Pickle's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Twitmire. —Joshua T. Potter, of Centre Hall, was a Bellefonte visitor on Monday, having come over on his way to attend the funeral of the late Mrs: Philip Saul. —Mrs. Robert Sechler, of Spring street, went to Lewisburg Tuesday morning, for an indefinite stay with her niece. hoping that the change might improve her health. ~Charles Larimer whose home is at Indiana, Pa., joined Mrs. Larimer and their daughter Elizabeth at Bellefonte this week, for a short visit with both his parents and Mrs. Larimer's parents. —~Miss Mary Grimm went to Alliance, Ohio, Tuesday, where she will spend some time with her uncle and aunt, expecting when returning east, to visit with other relatives in western Pennsylvania. ~William Showers, of Mingoville, was in Belle- fonte on business Wednesday and a caller at the WATCHMAN office. He forsook Bellefonte two years ago for the farm and is making a good success of the undertaking. —Mrs. Thomas Moore, of Philadelphia, is visit- ing her many friends in Bellefonte. Her husband expects to come up later to try his skill at entic- ing some of the big trout in the Centre county streams to bite at his alluring bait. —Miss Maggie Whiteman is spending the week in Bellefonte and with relatives at Snow Shoe, having come from her home at Williamsport to see her aunt, Miss Margaret Whiteman, who is critically ill at the Bellefonte hospital. ~Fred Blanchard came to Bellefonte quite un- expectedly on Friday evening and remained until the beginning of the week, He was on his way back to Chicago from a business trip east and naturally stopped off to greet his numerous friends here. —Mrs. Etta Wynn, of Sunbury, with her son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wynn, were in Bellefoate Monday attending the funeral of Mrs. Wynn's sister, Mrs. Montgomery, with the party was Charles Wycoff, a nephew of Mrs. Montgomery. ~Mcrchant Ira G. Burket, of Stormstown, and farmer Frank H. Clemson, of Buffalo Run, were visitors in Bellefonte over Monday night and both averred that their mission here was purely one of business and had nothing to do with Tues- day's unpleasant happening. ~Mr. and Mrs. John Cherry and their daughter Miss May Cherry, arrived in Bellefonte Monday morning, having come from their home at Big resumed on High street bridge and how it is to be done. In this connection we desire to state that we know absolutely nothing about it. The members of the borough council know very little more and the county commissioners declare is that the petition for a new or rebuilt bridge must go before one grand jury at least and be approved by the court be- fore anything can be done. Engineers are preparing plans on which the bridge can be rebuilt, and if the petition is en- dorsed by the grand jury and approved by the court then it will be up to the authorities to advertise for bids for the work. The grand jury will not be in session before the third week in May and if that body endorses the petition, it will take at least three weeks more before the contract can be awarded. That will run toward the latter part of June, then it will be up to the reader to figure out how long it will take the successful bid- der to construct the material and get to work on the bridge. As it looks now it means that the High street bridge will be in a torn up condition practically all sum- mer, and that is as near as the WATCH- MAN editor can figure it out. —— BP or ress THE ACADEMY MINSTRELS.—The next big event in Bellefonte will be the Belle- fonte Academy minstrels on Friday and Saturday evenings of next week, May 5th and 6th. It will be a big event from the Academy viewpoint and the people of Bellefonte want to make it big from every standpoint because of the fact that itis to be an athletic benefit, and the big- ger the crowd the bigger the percentage to the Bellefonte baseball association. This is one reason why the minstrels should be liberally supported. Another reason is that they are bigger and bet- ter this year than in former years, with new songs, new jokes, new dialogue, etc. While the minstrels will give you more than your money's worth their performance will be followed with a one act comedy, “Mrs. Flyn’s Lodgers,” given by local talent under the direction of Mrs. John M. Shugert and others which in itself will be worth the price of admission. Therefore keep May 5th and 6th open for the Academy minstrels. Montgomery, who died last week at the Bellefonte hospital before the arrival of her son and daugh- ter. ~John Larimer spent Sunday with his mother on Curtin street. He is now on the road selling cement 2nd he avers that the backward weather has hurt business considerable, inasmuch as con- tractors have been unable to begin operations on contracts on hand so that the demand for all kinds of building material is very light. ! ~The people from a distance who were in Bellefonte Wednesday to attend the funeral of George W. Meese were his daughters, Mrs. Harry Bowes and Miss Margaret, of Philadelphia: Mrs. association Judge Ellis L. Orvis appoint- ed Gen. James A. Beaver, John Blanch- ard, Hon. William C. Heinle and J. 5 Perry county, was a Bellefonte visitor on Monday and Tuesday. He isa cousin of Col. J. L. and Howare\ ~Harry Freeman, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Freeman, of Tyrone, was in Bellefonte Wednesday and yesterday visiting his sister, Mrs. Hugh N. Crider and husband. He has just returned from Philadelphia where he spent several weeks in a husband's parents to Mont Alto and on Wednesday brought home her sister, Miss Bertha Mewshaw, who has been in the sanitorium there the past ten months for treatment. While at first she showed some im. provement of late her condition has grown worse and it was deemed best to bring her home. She Spring, Texas, to see Mr. Cherry's mother, Mrs: | Butt was taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Osman, on Thomss street. of the Forty-fifth regiment held in Williamsport. Mr. Fry was a good soldier during the Civil war and is now just as enthusiastica G. A. R. man. ~Mrs. James Kellerman and daughter, Mrs. Harry Auman, went over to Lewistown on Sun day in response to a telephone message announc- ing the very serious illness of I. R. McClintic with pleuro-pneumonia, The next day Mr. Kellerman received word that his son Hickman was ill at Cresson with an attack of appendicitis though not a very serious one. —Miss Mary Hicklen and Miss Alice Lowry both students at the Woman's Collegeat Luther- ville, arrived in Bellefonte Tuesday night. Owing to an epidmic of typhoid fever the college has been closed for the year, and the students, among whom was Miss Lowry, who would have graduat- ed in June, having already passed their final ex- aminations, were given their deplomas. ~Mr. and Mrs, John Johnson Allen, of Brooklyn Heights, spent the latter part of last week in Bellefonte. Mrs. Johnson who lived here between 1865 and 1869, came from Pittsburgh with her father judge Shaler, and lived in the Curtin hous on the corner of Allegheny and Howard streets during their stay in Bellefonte. This was Mrs Johnson's first visit tothe town since leavifi§ it forty-two years ago. AE ee m— Homes WANTED FOR Boys.—The Cen tre county children’s Aid Society has four boys for whom they would like to find good, christian homes ia the coun try. It is desired that persons applying should do so with a view of adopting the children. There is one boy ten years of age, two are four and one two years. Ad dress inquiries to Mrs. J. THOMAS MITCHELL, Sec., Bellefonte, Pa ——Wm. G. Runkle is ill with the grip, at the Beezer home on Spring street Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce. BS ht et bt 3 0 the rate REE. Papers will not be sent hot of Centre v Epis we wi LEGAL AND TRANSIENT. goa legal am transient advertising running 1 FEET BUSINESS OR DISPLAY ADVERTISEMENTS. Per inch, each insertion...........25 cts. The following unts will be allowed on : on snd des sx perct. mos. six — Tes IRGer 12 moe 25 vet 1, or? at io notice =
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