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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Apr 1927, p. 4

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Hill iiini THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER, THURSDAY, APRIL 14,192% v,n V W* **'* & <' n THE M'HENRY PLAIN DEALER v** -.; V. , V", 1 \l every Thursday at McHenry, HL, by Charles F. Renteh. Entered as second-class mattei1 Mk tt» postofflce it McHenry, DL, tt)» 4er the act of May 8, 1879. One Year .. Six Months . Subecriptieo Rates ' .....$2.00 ..4..$1.00 A. H. MOSHER, Editor and Manager RANCHER'S LIFE SAVED BY HORSE Ablmal Waits for Injured Man to Mount. !vV--; Stout Falls, S. D.--Harris' Rlnderneck, a rancher of northwestern South Dakota, is the owner of a horse which he would .not sell for its weight in gold. His affection for the animal is due to the fact that it saved his life. During a storm recently, while the tefiiperature was below *ero, Rinderneck was rounding np some of his cattle, riding the horse which afterward saved his life, when the animal slipped SPd fell, throwing Rinderneck to the gtound, breaking his leg and rendering him unconscious. Instead of the " horse scrambling to its feet and dashing away, as most animals would have done, it scrambled to its feet and stood patiently beside the form of its master on the ground. When the rancher regained consciousness he found the horse there waiting for him. Helpless, so far as attempting to walk was concerned, he grasped the saddle stirrup nearest to him, then spoke quietly to his horse and with his voice guided it to a snowbank which was of sufficient height to enable him to crawl to the back of the horse. He then rode to the nearest farm l(ouse, but on arriving at the gate he was unable to make any one hear his calls for help. In this extremity he produced his pliers and cut the fence, riding up to the house, where he was given assistance and then taken to the nearest town for surgical attention for his broken leg. The rancher declares that'had his horse not waited for him he would have frozen to death. Hp was several miles from home when the accident happened, and would have been Impossible tor him to have crawled that distance. & POOR HORSE COLLARS CAUSED ROME'S FALL Classified Column • ^ ^ ^ A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A ^ A. A A A A A A AAA. .» •> T FOR SALS WE HAVE PIANO with A $750.00 PLAYERa $15.00 Duett Bench . Gun Shot Both Round I and Square Bullets Los Anpeles, Calif.--The deadly tllarlin machine gun, capable of firing 16 bullets a minute, one of the prize .exhibits in the recent trial of accused Mexican revolutionists, 4s a far cry from its first ancestor. Invented in jEngland away hack taJJ17. The TnoitenT gun put It"all over Its forebear in speed and accuracy, but It thasn't inherited one classic feature ^ which seems to have" recSSi^^nlTo^ the Iwst one---that of being able to shoot ^square ^bullets against Turks and ^»und ones against Christians, v G. E. Chase, in charge of the patjtlff room in the Los Angelej public • library, Recently or1 me across thelspecltflcatlnn for this first gun, granted to , James Ruckle. It was ajortable gun, «r a machine called a "defense," and the description ran as follows: ! "The gun is a revolver and is i mounted on a tripod; It has a single fcdrrel and a rotating chamber. The shape of the chambers and of the bullets may be changed or varied, some* ft>r shooting square bullets against Turks and others for shooting round "b ualllleett;s against Christians." : P i Lose Fortune by Failing, to Pay Tax of 98 Cents I Wellirgton, Kan. -- Seven two-acre r tracts of land, whose owners_Iogt t^e • hack in the nineties by failure to pay Ifexes of 08 cents per tract, now are ; talued at $100,000. The owners in j!®93 considered the land worth about $12.50 an lacre. , The discovery of oil is responsible. Benjamin Reitz, a Kansas pioneer, 'had a "'feeling" the land would lie valuable some day, and religiously kept up his tax payments, while his neighbors let theirs lag and finally 'lost title. Then an oil company drilled a test well and found oil. This well now ft* ipomplng 1,200 barrels a day. Cut Off "Twistle" j Oswaldtwistle, England.--This little ||own is going to lose its "twistle" and tfrobably become plain Oswald. The ^quncilmen have decided "twtstle" Is itaittbarflome. French Savant Advances an Original Theory. Paris.--Did Rome fail because no public-spirited citizen knew enough to invent a harness that would adequately utilize horse power? This weak Joint in the armor of the fallen empires (ft antiquity was pointed out by Commandant I.efebvre des Noettes at a recent meeting of the French- Institute of Anthropology. Commandant des Noettes has made a complete survey of the history nf the use of animal motive power from the early dawn of civilization. The harness'of the ancients, he explained, had fur its principal organ of traction a collar consisting of a leather band that went around the neck like a <l«:r collar, without touching the shoulders, and which was attached to a wooden yoke Jest above the withers. This collar was so plac,ed that it most effectively cut off the animal's wind by pressing on his windpipe and the large artery of the throat. Almost Strangled Horses. As soon as a team felt the weight of a chariot and its passengers exerting pressure on the collar they were forced to rear up their heads and dash off to save themselves from strangling. Hence the rampant attitude of all the horses depicted in ancient papyri and sculptures, declared Commandant des Noettes. As a result of this drawback the great civilizations of the past were never able to get more than a fraction of the potential motive power from their horses. Oxteams operan Ing with a wooden yoke attached to the horns, not greatly different from that in use today, did not suffer from the oppressive collar and In consequence did most of what heavy hauling was done. Both oxen and horses were unshod and In consequence were not much good in rough ground. Couldn't Haul Half^a Ton. Data obtained from translations of the Greek historian Xenophon and from the Theodosian code about n thousand years later, said Commandant des Noettes, indicate that no team Of oxen In ancient times was ever considered capable of transporting a load of oyer ^aT7 a ton. _ Various ineffectual attempts were made to modify to better advantage the accepted type of harness, but not until after the era of Charlemagne, about, the time of the beginning of the Capet dynasty In France, did some inventive pen ins Revise a horse collar that practical. For six hundred years the water mill for grinding corn hnd failed to brin^' great benefit to the Romans, simply because it took numberless animals to draw enough grain to supply Its needs. Where grain could not be transported in ships the arduous labor of hand grinding continued to be the order of the day. The lack of adequate transportation of raw products and the consequent dependence on slave labor, according to Commandant des Noettes, constituted the great weakness of the civilizations of the past. The Invention of the modern harness gave to the world, he declared, a motive force more powerful and economical than slavery. GOLD SEALED USED CAR BUICKS »nd 60 rolls of music in Woodstock. One 1926 5-passenger Sedan. Customer who purchased this player One 1923 5-passenger Sedan. fro™ us is unable to finish the pay These cars carry the same guaran- wents due of $10.00 a month. Rather tee as a_n_y_ new r^ar than return to factory will sell this {qt ^ balance due Ad(Iresg One 1924 4-passenger Buick Coupe. Cable Piano Company, Elgin, Illinois. One 1924 5-passenger Jordan Touring Telephone Elgin 2305. 46-2 One 1926 2-pass. Chandler Coupe. pQn RENT--Modern 4-room flat, on OVERTON & CO WEN Riverside Drive. Jos. J. Miller. 46-tf Phone 6 West McHenry -- _ . FOR SALE--3-room sectional cottage ENJOY EASTER SUNDAY IN ONE pan be gecn at Pouliot's Boat Works, OF OUR GOOD USED CARS east Gf river. See P. W .Frett, West 1925 Dodge Coupe, in A-l shape; Mrfjenry. 44-tf. has set of new balloon tires; priced - to sell. FOR SALE--Early Northern Grown 1825 Ford Roadster Truck; new seed corn, $5.60 per bushel. A. J. side curtains and mechanically per- Smith, Round Lake, 111. Phone 45-R. feet. . 42-6 1922 Studebaker Big FOR SALE--Guaranteed new Kohler iSTFordor Ford; run only-a few Power and Lighting Plant This plant thousand miles; new tires and gen- wl" ta^e care °' a" lighting and era? appearance of new car. «« Regular pr.ee Dodge Touring; loa extras; a real buy for $200. W™Tlln,; loaded wfth MM; -«>Jell for »400. W. L. Howell o ~,oi w for *200. & Co., McHenry. _3S-tf We have Ford Coupes, Willys- FOR SALE--Day old chicks from Knight Sedans, Studebaker Sedans high producing flocks. Prices very and two Dodge panel trucks. reasonable. Order now for April and JAMES MORROW & SON, M!ay delivery. Call or write H. E. Phone 186 , West McHenry, 111. Gordon, 257-R, Libertyville, 111. 42-4 -- SEED CORN USED MACHINERY pQR SALE-^-We have about 75 bu. One Fordson Tractor, complete G0jden Glow and Wisconsin No. 7 with fenders, governor and clutch P»l- gee(j Corn, grown near Rockford, 111., " 1 germinating 95 per cent, that we are offering for sale at $6.00 per bushel. Phone your order. McHenry County ley, One Case 12-20 Tractor. One Titan lfr-20' Tractor. . „ ruuuc One Case 26-46 Thresher, fully parmer8 Co-op. Ass'n. Phone 29 equipped. 44.2 One 10-ft. McCormick Power Binder One 8-ft. Double Disc. One 3-bottom Plow. COOPER'S SAPONIFIED CRESOL-- For disinfecting barm fter TB test- Also a complete line of new plows fag. Sold by Dr. J. E. Vv i.-. ler, West and discs. McHenry. 38-tf DRUCE & SHELDON Phone 100 iGrayslake, 111. FOR RENT 45 • . ' i- FOR RENT--Modern cottage,* with FOR SALE--Assorted colored dahlias garage. E. E. Bassett, Main Street, at Vycital's, Green St., McHenry. 45-3 West McHenry. 39-tf FOR SALE--20-f. launch with canopy FOR RENT--Store location in Centertop, side curtains, 4-hp Cushman ville business district. Electric light, motor, etc. Cost $250 last year. In gas, water, etc. order to sell immediately will let it McHenry. If you are looking for Inquire of Roy Kent, Phone 8. 38-tf go for $125. a motor boat this is a real buy. Inquire at the Plaindealer office. tf. FLAT FOR RENT--Inquire Popp, West McHenry. of B. S7-tf BARGAIN FOR YOUNG COUPLE Cost $3,000 four moilths ago. Will take $550 for' all or will separate. Beautiful furniture of 4-room apartment. 3 pc. silk mohair parlor suite, hand carved frame; 8 pc. walnut dining room set; 2 9x12 Wilton rugs; 4 pc. walnut bedroom set, complete with spring and majtress; [library table; 5 pc. breakfast set; floor lamps; chest of silverware. Must be WANTED WANTED--Farms of all sizes and 'descriptions for cash or exchange for income property. We specialize in quick deals. Kent & Company, Mc- Henry. 38-tf MISCELLANEOUS Wedding invitations and announce- , ments beautifully and correctly printseen to be appreciated. Will arrange ed at ^ piaindealer office. for delivery. 832 Leland Ave,, near -- Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 111., phone RESULTS! Sunnyside 6190. 45-6* £ent £ Company FOR SALE--Firewood, $1.00 per load. sell that house! Hunter Boat Co. Phone 7. 45-tf Can ™nt that flat! Can find a buyer for that land! 18-tf FOR SALE--A membership in the McHenry Country club. Address, Charles B. Barnes, Woodstoc,k 111. 44-tf Going to be married? Se« us about printing invitations or announcements. The Plaindealer. i * '. Seelu Safer j London.--Because the streets are I too dangerous, Harold Solomon has •old his taxicab and began studying aviation. Be purposes to ran sn air taxi. • i I- ?r Hunt in Sheba't Land for Stolen Jewish Ark New York.--A legend that the Ark of the Covenant, stolen by Menelik I, son of Solomon and the queen of Sheba, from Jerusalem, is in a temple In the remote fastnesses of Abyssinia is to be investigated by an expedition which left here recently. Search will be made for trace of the secluded Jewish tribe, the Falashes, who refused to risk the Red m passage with Moses. The expedition, sponsored by Adventure Magazine, will hunt specimens of the black-maned lion and two rare specimens of monkey, the Gellada and the Hamadgros, for the national zoological park in Washington. Gordon MacCreagh and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Rossman are members of the expedition. Reports of the trip -will b« made l>v radio. Discover Branch Fossil " 100,000,000 Years Old Pittsburgh, Pa.--A tree branch fossil estimated to be 100,000,000 years old Is a prized possession of the Carnegie Institute of Technology here. The fossil, found in a coal mine at Harmarsburg, Pa., Is described by geologists as a "lepldodendron lanceolatuta," a plant which contributed greatly to the forming of coal deposits In the carboniferous era. The woody part of the tree became carbonized with other branches that became coal and the fossil Is almost as thin as paper. It is a tree top four feet high with branches spreading three feet Bark, limbs, twigs and leavM are very clearly marked. iiraers in the Harmar mine of the Consumer Mining company found the fossil In the slate roof of an entry, and tb« company gave It to tate. WEEKLY PERSONALS COMERS AND GOERS 07 A WEEK IN OUR CITY As Seen By Plaindealer Reforters and Handed In By Our Friends Foreign Names Barred on Russian Bills of Fare Moscow.--Roast beef, cafe au lait, consomme and other adaptations of foreign names for foods henceforth will appear no more on Russian bills of fare. The government has ordered that foodB in Russia must be called by their proper Russian names to stimulate national feeling in Russia and thereby unintentionally maklnp life a little less happy for foreign vis ltors. Icicles in Alaska Tunnels Delay Railroad Traffic Anchorage, Alaska.--'Huge icicles tunnels along the route of the Alaska government railroad are interfering with through on time traffic. Last week three pillars of ice several feet thick formed of frozen COripplngs from ceilings of tunnels between Mile 44 and Mile 52. The ice was so brittle, however, from intense cold that a blow of an ax shattered the obstructions. a Myth, Kxnioor, England. -- Lorua &oOpe never livj?d and Richard D. Blajjk.- more's celebrated romance of that name was founded on a myth, say* :4* O. Bfa<Hey, noted English historian.'] A£rs. C. Unti was a Chicago visitor Monday. William Bickler spent Friday in Chicago. Mat B. Laures was a Chicago visitor Monday. Miss Lillian Buss visited friends at Aurora Sunday. Frank Page was a Woodstock visitor Sunday. William Green was a Woodstock visitor Sunday. Fred C. Schoewer was a Chieago visitpr Monday. „ * Miss Mae Noonan was a Chicago visitor Monday. Dana McKnight spent Sunday with home folks at Aurora. Mrs. Mollie Givens and family were Chicago visitors Sunday. Miss Eleanor Conway was an Elgin visitor Saturday evening. Miss Ruth Kent was a Waukegan visitor Saturday evening. Mrs. Peter Freund was a Woodstock caller one day last week. Arthur Krause and Paul Plitske visited at Elmhurst Sunday. Mrs. Henry Block was the guest of Miarengo relatives Sunday. Misses Dorothy and Genevieve Knox were Elgin visitors Saturday. Patrick Mioran was a shopper at Woodstock one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Feltz spent Sunday at Marengo with relatiev.s Mrs. Laura Kent called on rela tives-at Woodstock Sunday evening. Mrs. Ben Wagner and daughter, Helen, were Chicago visitors Monday. Ted Splinter of Ridgefield visited In the Albert T*urvey home last Thurs day. Jean Powers spent several days last week with relatives at Round Lake. Mrs. Phil Peterson and daughters of Marengo spent Sunday as guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Eddy. Mir. and Mrs. A. Purvey and son Jack, visited relatives at Woodstock Sunday. Mrs. A. Krause and daughter, Marian, visited relatives at Elmhurst Sunday. N. C. Klein spent several days last week with friends and relatives in Chicago. Charles Owen of Chicago was Sunday guest in the R. A/Thompson home.' Mr. and Mrs. William Meyers and family of Chicago were'Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Math Dflil imUfOf m lm* - , -- - - - Miss Misner spent Saturday in Chicago. E. E. Bassett was a Harvard caller Saturday. Miss Lillian Buss was a Chicago visitor Monday. Mis3 Mai re Kinsala was an Elgin visitor, Saturday. ' * Miss Alice Knox was a Chicago visitor Saturday. Miss Greeta Chamberlin spent last Thursday in Chicago. Lyle Bassett spent Sunday with friends at DesPlaines. Miss Villa Rothermel was a Chicago visitor Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Newman called at Spring Grove Sunday. Miss Floribel Bassett visited with friends in the city Sunday. Misses Vera and Nellie Doherty visited in Chicago Saturday. William Althoff was a business visitor in Chicago Monday . Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kamholz were Marengo visitors Sunday. Misses Mary and Dorothy Walsh were Chicago visitors Saturday. George Hermansen of Chicago spent Sunday in the F. E. Cobb home. Mrs. J. Werde spent several days the first of the week in Chicago. M5ss Arleen Harrison spent the week-end with friends in Chicago. Mrs. George Bohr is quite ill at. her home, with rheumatism. Mrs. John E. Freund was a business visitor in Chicago Wednesday. Mr. and Mjrs. Frank Rosing were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Wagner at Grayslake one day last week. Misses Viola and Rosalie Stilling were Chicago vistors last Saturday. Mrs. Charles Pich of Chicago spent the week-end with McHenry friends. Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Jones of Chicago visited in the C. W. Goodell home Saturday. Richard B. Walsh of Chicago visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T .J. Walsh, Sunday and attended the meeting of the McHenry Country club. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schmitt and children of Belvidere. were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kamholz. Mrs. A. J. Butler of Chicago spent a few days last week in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henrj? Heimer. Mrs. Hoyt Morris, who is a guest in the J. H. Miller home, spent several days last week with friends at Woodstock. Mirs. Kinney and daughter, Luella, of Chicago were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Bonslett. ' Mir. and Mrs. Albert Gorman of Chicago visited in the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Wrede Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Wormley and daughter, Dorothy, and Mrs. Theo. Winkle were Wiaukegan Vistors on Saturday. Mirs. S. S. Chapell and daughter, Marian, of Evanston were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson. Mrs. E. F. Kelter spent several days last week in the home of Mrs. Vincent Martin, near Wauconda, caring for Mrs. Martin, who has been quite ill. "afey OrSmenn Moot tl# fniwy if Mni Wi Wiw, UIIHIbUlinedl p.wwfui, Prntntta*. Sootttif Others may claim to Wu good, but there ia no aubatitute for -- CRIMSON HEAT Mrs. Joe W. Rothermel arid children spent Sunday with relatives at Elmhurst. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Frett of Wheaton spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Frett. * Mr. and Mrs. Armand Bethke and children of Dundee visited relatives here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Linus Newman spent Sunday afternoon with Dr. and Mrs. Beebe at Antioch. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Newman spent Monday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. F Newman Francis Bonslett of Chicago spent Sunday with hi9 parents, M.r and Mrs. William Bonslett. Miss Kathleen Givens commenced work at the local telephone exchange Mionday morning. Mrs. Raymond Whiting of Lake Geneva spent Monday in the home of Mlrs. D. A. Whiting. Mr. and Mirs. Theodore Bethke and son, Theodore, of Dundee visited relatives here Sunday. Mrs. Fred Feltz spent several days the first of the week in the Frank Block home at Marengo . Mrs. D. A. Whiting visited her daughter, Mrs. P. N. Musser, at the hospital at Elgin, Sunday. Mrs. Edward Dunn of lAke Geneva was a guest of her mother, Mrs. A. Whiting, Monday. Mrs. Jack Walsh and daugliter, Kathrine, spent several days the first of the week in Chicago. _ Mrs. Leo Lawson of Elgin spent: several days last week as the guest of relatives in this city. Miss Pamela Rietesel of Chicago spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rietesel. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wightman of Lake Geneva were Sunday evening callers at L. F. Newman's. Mr. and Mrs. Alberg of Chicago spent the week-end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. M]ath Steffes. Mirs. McAuliffe of Chicago was a week-end guest in the Walter Brooks home on Waukegan street. Mrs. Roy Hankermeyer of Waukegan attended the Eastern Star meeting here Mbnday evening. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Coriley of Chicago were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Frett. Miss Maud Granger of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of her sister, Mrs. Robert Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. John Egan of Chicago were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brooks. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Weiss of Chicago visited the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Vasey, Sunday. Mrs. Delia Matthews and daughters, Dorothy and Jean, were Chicago visitors one day last week. Ed. Houlihan of Park Ridge was a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Conway the first of the week. Mrs. Charlotte Seskin and children of Chicago were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brooks over the week- A Rub for Palna, Aches and tonimi The First Aid For Colds ia Chest, Neuritis, Neuralgia, Rhuwatlc Pains, Lnmbac*, 8till Neck, Head--ha, Backache, Croup, Sprains, Aching Feet, •are Joints and Mosaics. Uie it wherever pain, inflammation, oongwtion or itching exists. A household necoiity--keep it on hand always. Inaiat upon getting the genuine CRIMSON HEAT. Xiook for trademark on package. In handy tubes, 60c. Your druggist will get it for you. Or if you prefer we will send it poetpaid upon receipt of price. THE ALPEN CO.* 1127 Pine St., St, Louia, Mow THOMAS P. BOLGER "The McHenry Druggirt" Mrs. T. W. Winkle and son, Leo, visited relatives at Grayslake Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rosing and family were Sunday guests in the home of Mir. and Mrs. Jbhn Lenzeo at Round Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wrede of Chicago spent the week-end in the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Wrede. Mrs. Eugene Fontenelle left Saturday# for Sioux City, Ia., after visiting several weeks in the home of her daugh- -V ter, Mrs. A. H. Mosher. ff. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sayler returned to their home on Waukegan street $ Tuesday, after spending a very pleas- jfant winter at Belleview, Florida. Mrs.; Sayler has been greatly improved by the trip. Classified ads are winners Stephenson Underwear For Men and Boys Buy now and have them handy when yon lay away your winter weight; '^75':.'. Our Prices are - • . si bo fi.25 si.ss si.se.. A suit for regular styles or athletic FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN WE ^ DALEY'S -I Smith Bros. Phone 179 McHenry, 111. i; Easter Sunday Will see many new costumes^ It is the dress-up day of the year. It is also a good time to try some of tli« delicious dishef served ftt our fountain. ••rv J KARLS' Easter Sunday. ^ Ice Cream Special Brick Ioe Cream, fruit and nuts. 50^ Three-layer Brick, Strawberry, Chocolate and V a n i l l a ! ^ . . . " V ; ICE CREAM IN BUL* ^ New York, Vanilla, Strawberry, Chocolate UNTI BROS. SPECIMEN City of McHenry, in the County of McHenry and State of Illinois, Election, 19,1927. . R. F. Conway, City Clark m&t* Shall the City of McHenry borrow the sum of $20,000 and issue bonds for the same for the purpose of paying indebtedness owing by said City of McHenry t FOR -«MnM AGAINST SPECIMEN BALLOT City of McHenry, in the County of McHenry and State of Election, Tuesday, April 19,1927. * R. F. Conway, City Cleric Shall a tax not exceeding two mills be levied each year on all taxable property in the City of McHenry for the purpose of providing a fund for the maintenance or employment of a Municipal Band for musical purpose#? AGAINST -tit#** 4 ' ' ' ' v:„- ^ ' • ?

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