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The Morning News from Wilmington, Delaware • Page 4

Publication:
The Morning Newsi
Location:
Wilmington, Delaware
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

to to to to to to to to to to to WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1945 WILMINGTON MORNING NEWS, WILMINGTON, DELAWARE, ARMY AIR LEADERS SHIFTED IN PACIFIC LeMay, Twining, Brooks Are Promoted to Blast Japs With Greatest Bomb Load WASHINGTON, July 24 -The today announced triple change in commands to help blast Japan with a greater bomb tonnage than ever rained on Germany. Ira C. Eaker, deputy commander of Army Air Forces, announced that: 1. Curtis E. LeMay, a veteran of the B-29 strikes against been promoted from commanders of the 20th Air Force to be chief of staff to Gen.

Carl (Tooey) Spaatz, commander of strategic Army air forces. LeMay's Successor 2. Lieut. -Gen. Nathan Twining, native of Monroe, will be head of the 20th Air Force succeeding LeMay.

Twining formerly commanded 15th Air Force in Africa Italy. 3. Maj. -Gen. John B.

Brooks, native of Greenwich, N. will be commanding general of 11th Army Air Force, attached to naval under Fleet Admiral Chester forces, Nimitz, the 11th has recently been active in attacks against Paramushiro and the Kuriles. The bomb tonnage creating havoc among the Japanese already is 60 per cent as heavy as the greatest flung against Germany. Eaker pledged that the figure will reach a record 270,000 tons a month by next March. This compares with the peak 185,000 tons a month dropped on the Germans.

B-17 Orders Cancelled Eaker disclosed the Army has cancelled all remaining orders for production of the B-17 Flying Fortress, having a sufficient fleet of this type of bomber for the Pacific war. Including a similar cutback six weeks ago on the B-24 Liberator, the Army now has cancelled orders for 44,300 planes which Eaker said would have cost $7,600,000,000. Eaker said that a group of the B-32 bombers, a new heavy bomber larger even than the B-29 Superfortresses, will go into operation against Japan by the end of the year, Raid Tops Record In outlining the increasing tempo of air strikes against Japan, Eaker revealed that 625 of the B-29s participated in today's raid on Nasaka and Nagoya-a record raid so far. The prior record was made in a raid July 6 with 476 Superforts. Eaker said wanted to scotch an impression the air forces would reduce personnel sharply with a onefront war, that actually the A.

A. F. will gO to 2,130,000 men from a peak 2,400,000. OBITUARIES Mrs. Viola M.

Wright Mrs. Viola M. Wright, 74, a native of Wilmington, died Monday at her home in Drexel Hill, where she had lived for the past 14 years. She was a resident of Wilmington up DEATHS CATHER- In Elkton Hospital, on July 23, 1945, Clara wife of the late Ted Cather and mother of Mary Theo, of Charlestown, aged 45 years. Funeral services at the Patterson Funeral Home, Perryville, on Thursday afternoon, July 26, at 2 o'clock.

Interment at Charlestown Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p. m. Wednesday. MEIOROVITZ- Philadelphia, 23, 1945, at 11:30 p.

Morris Meiorovitz. services formerly will be of held Wilmington. Wednesday Del. afternoon, Funeral 1:30 o'clock. at Asher's Funeral Parlors, 1309 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

RUMFORD-In this city, on July 23, 1945. Frank E. Rumford, aged 73 years. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the funeral services at the Yeatman Funeral Home, 819 Washington Street. on Thursday afternoon.

July 26. at 2 o'clock. Interment in Friends' Burial Ground. Hockessin, Del. Friends may call Wednesday evening after 7 o'clock.

RUSSELL -In Seaford. on July 1945. Elizabeth Wallace, wife of Charles G. vited to Russell. attend Relatives the funeral and friends services are at The in- Chandler Funeral Home, Delaware Avenue and Jefferson Street.

on Thursday afternoon, July 26. at 2 o'clock. Interment at Greenhill Cemetery, SCHWITZGOLD- In Philadelphia. on July 23, 1945. Annalee.

daughter of Ethel Rosevich Schwitzgold (schold) and the late Max Street. aged Schwitzgold. 6 months. of 828 Funeral West services Second The Chandler Funeral Home, Delaware Ave. and Jefferson Street, on afternoon.

July 25 at o'clock. Interment RE Lombardy Cemetery, Moses Montefore section. C. EVERETT KELLEY Modern FUNERAL HOME S. E.

Cor. 23rd West Sts. Phone 3-2452 J. J. DOHERTY FUNERAL HOME Seventh and Rodney Sts.

Telephone 6951 Established 1896 RIVERVIEW CEMETERY CO. BURIAL LOTS FOR SALE Our representatives are always ready to give detailed information. McCRERY Funeral 2700 WASHINGTON ST. Our Funeral Costs Meet Present Day Conditions WILLIAM E. HAINES FUNERAL HOME Market at 24th St.

CHANDLERS FUNERAL SERVICE Established 1892 PHONE 4-3141 Marines' Okinawa Memorial Fred C. Wallace the island command on Okinawa, tablet in the cemeter for U. S. Okinawa. Photo by Max Desfor, still picture pool.

until 1912. She is survived by daughters, Mrs. Ethel Bidwell Tampa, and Mrs. Myrtle Harrison of Drexel Hill; three sons, ward J. Newell of Boston, Robert Newell of Centreville, William M.

Newell of Wilmington; brothers, Lewis C. Moody of Wilmington, and George Moody Tampa, and a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Lafferty of Philadelphia. Funeral services will be held 2:30 o'clock this afternoon at Drexel with interment in Arlington Cemetery there. Mrs.

Elizabeth Russell Mrs. Elizabeth Russell, wife of Charles G. Russell, died at her home in Seaford yesterday. Mrs. Russell, daughter of the late James and McIntire, was born in Catherinion and lived here until about five years ago when she moved to Seaford.

She was an active member of McCabe Memorial Methodist Church. are her husband; a Surviving, a William S. Almond, of Seaford: a grandson, Private William S. Almond, U. S.

Army, in Florida, and a sister-in-law, Mrs. George McIntyre, 1607 North Rodney Street. Funeral services will be at the Chandler Funeral Home at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon with interment in Greenhill Cemetery. Morris Meiorowitz Morris Meiorowitz, 50, former mington clothier, died in Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia, Monday. He came to Wilmington from England as a young man and for many years operated clothing store here.

He left here about five ago and was employed as fur designer by a store in Philadelphia. He is survived by Mrs. Frances Zaret, and a grandson, Stephen Zaret of Wilmington. Fuservices will be held in Philadelphia cone Asher Funeral Parlor this afternoon. BABY DIES IN HOSPITAL Annalee Schwitzgold, 6-month-old daughter of Mrs.

Ethel and the late Corp. Max Schwitzgold of Wilmington, died in Children's Hospital, Philadelphia, on Monday. The child's father was reported killed in Belgium on Dec. 17 of last year. Before entering the service he was in business in this city.

His wife is the former Miss Ethel Rosevich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Rosevich, 828 West Second Street. Funeral services will be at the Chandier Funeral Home tomorrow afternoon with interment in Lombardy Cemetery. Frank E.

Rumford Frank E. Rumford. 73, of 1106 Washington Street, died Monday night in the Delaware Hospital as the result of injuries received in a fall several weeks ago. Mr. Rumford, retired foreman at the former Baker Machine Shop, was born in Hockessin and had lived in this vicinity all his life.

He suffered a fractured skull in a fall at Eleventh and West Streets in May. The only immediate survivors are two sons. Jason of Minquadale and Frank Rumford III Point. Funeral services will be held at the to Yeatman Funeral Home at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Interment will be at Hockessin.

BIRTHS St. Francis Hospital Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Cirigliano, 328 Seventh Avenue. July 24.

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PETERMAN'S ANT FOOD CHINESE REACH YANGSO SUBURBS They are Laying Siege To Former U.S. Air Force Base 44 Miles South of Kweilin CHUNGKING, July 24 (AP) -Chinese troops, sweeping toward isolated Kweilin from the south, former U.S. Air Force base the former S. Air Force base 14th of Yangso and are laying siege to the Japanese-held stronghold, the Chinese high command said tonight. Yangso lies 44 miles south of the prize city of Kweilin.

Soldiers of Free China fought into the suburbs of the south-central China base Monday, while to the north other veterans intensified their drive to take Kweilin, a communique said. east of Kweilin opened artillery Chinese artillery 13 miles, bombardment of Lingchan on the enemy, garrison's escape route to central China in an effort to prevent a Japanese withdrawal, headquarters reported. Elsewhere in China, a a a a a communique said the Japanese had launched a sweep south of the Yangtze River to protect Tokyo's vital transcontinental corridor from Korea to Hong Kong, and bitter fighting reportedly continued along China's invasionvulnerable coast west of Formosa. Japs Near Liuyang While Generalissimo Chiang Kiashek's army battled for Kweilinwith its three airstrips--the Japanese 270 miles to the northeast took steps to lessen the vulnerability of their Hankow-Canton corridor across southern China. The Chinese command said that a body of 600 Japanese troops struck out from a point 19 miles west of Changsha rail junction in China's "rice bowl" to the western outskirts of Liuyang, 35 miles east of Changsha.

The invaders, intercepted by the Chinese, swung southeast of Liuyang as Gen. Chiang's forces attacked their flanks and went on to a point 25 miles northeast of Liling, which is 45 miles southeast of Changsha. The enemy forces then struck across the border from Hunan Province into Kiangsi and were driving toward Wantsai, which is 85 miles east of Changsha and on a highway leading to the Kan River inland port of Nanchang. The Chinese claimed the Japanese had suffered high casualties. Another struggle raged 140 miles southwest Nanchang and 280 miles north Hong Kong, where an of isolated "floating pocket" of Japanese troops attempted to fight through Chinese territory from the enemy-abandoned U.

S. airbase at Kanhsien to Nanchang. The fighting Japanese withdrawal last Wednesday reached Wawan, site of a small auxiliary airfield on the Kan River 42 miles north of Kanhsien, today's communique belatedly reported. The Japanese continued battling northward and at latest Chungking reports had reached a point miles southwest of Taiho. Taiho is 24 miles northeast of Wawan.

The Chinese were said to be engaging the enemy. Chinese Advance Near Suichwan Chinese operating behind enemy lines were said to have reoccupied three Japanese-held points eight to 10 miles northeast of Suichwan, a former American airfield 16 miles west of Wawan. Suichwan, in Chinese hands, was the first of six air bases recovered recently by General Chiang's men. U. S.

14th Air Force fighterbombers, carrying out widespread operations against enemy water China yesterday, destroyed or damaged more than 120 river craft in the Siang, North and Si (west) Rivers and in Tungting Lake an American air communique said. Mitchell bombers over the Changsha area fired 13 Japanese convoys. Fighter -bombers over North China knocked out two bridges on the Peiping-Hankow railroad. Striking to the South China Sea, Mustang fighters blasted an airdrome at Samah on Hainan Island, while Lightnings bombed an ammunition dump near Hanoi, capital of French Indo-China. Japan- Continued From First Page were shot down by American pilots.

There was no indication that any Japanese aircraft got even near the fleet, however. A total of 64 enemy aircraft were destroyed or damaged by coordinated raids. in which some the, American planes were sent against Kure and Kyushu airfields from which the Japanese had staged their Kamikaze attacks against the United 1f It's Insurable, We Can Insure It You May Be Held Responsible and be obliged to pay heavy damages if your car should injure someone. Be on the safe side by having adequate Automobile Liability Insurance (Costs Very Little) J. A.

Montgomery, Inc. DuPont Bldg. 10th Orange Dial 6561 States' Ryukyus forces during the Okinawa campaign. U. S.

carrier pilots destroyed 11 and damaged 20 grounded planes. The British destroyed 12 and damaged 12 on the ground. Between the two days' concentrated aerial assaults, Adm. J. C.

Jones, took a small force of cruisers and destroyers to the southwestern tip of Honshu base to bombard seaplane and Shionomisaki airfield, a radio station and other military installations in the vicinity of Kushimoto. Steaming in to make their early morning, a attack, small ship, probably encountered a picket boat. Most of the Japanese warships damaged were caught in or near Kure naval yard, where five months ago 14 major ora units of the Japanese navy were heavily damaged. It was apparent that Halsey was making certain the Japanese are not given a chance to repair them and put them in commission again. The Japanese, abandoning their recent policy of negative resistance, put up extremely heavy anti-aircraft fire as well as some fighter plane opposition.

Nimitz made no mention of U. S. plane losses. Although official announcements were not exact, the number of Allied planes over Japan yesterday included more than 1,000 British and American carrier aircraft; at least 625 Superforts; 93 P-51 Mustangs, and 40 to 45 Corsairs. Vice Admiral Joyn S.

McCain's carrier force of Admiral Halsey's Third Fleet. prowling the coast of Japan into the third straight week, steamed in by night for the attack. The first planes, starting the great field day for American air might, were launched in clear dawn. The carriers, in order to strike at Kure, probably were no more than 100 miles off the mainland island of Shikoku. All throughout the morning and the afternoon the carriers continued to launch attacks.

Associated Press correspondent James Lindsley reported from a fleet ship. The attack Kure was the second by carrier planes--it was previously raided March 19-and the 20th Air Force announced simultaneously with the new strike that reconnaissance photographs showed 56 per cent of the Kure arsenal was destroyed by B-29s June 22. Fighters Join Bombers Mustang and Thunderbolt fighters and Liberator bombers from Okinawa Iwo Jima also took part in the day- assault on the homeland, Tokyo reported. Japanese broadcasts admitted ships and installations were hit at Kure, but claimed the damage to ships was "very light." The attack on Kure followed by five days a raid by American and British carrier aircraft of Halsey's fleet Oma the Rising Sun Empire's second largest naval base--at Yokosuka, on the shores of Tokyo Reappearance of the third fleet. which had vanished behind a security blackout after bombing and bombarding the Tokyo Bay area, marked a shift in Halsey's blows to southwestern Japan.

The fleet, after an opening carrier raid on the Tokyo area July 10, steamed north 600 miles to Hokkaido and then back Tokyo, bombarding the homeland repeatedly with bombs and shells. No Japanese ship or plane had attempted to strike back at the fleet until the 12 Japanese fighters challenged the carrier aircraft over Kure yesterday. Lindsley and AP correspondent Richard O'Malley. also with the carrier force, said one American and one Japanese plane were shot down in the air battle. Fleet Adm.

Chester W. Nimitz' Tuesday communique, Issued while the raid was still going on, announced other fleet blows from the far north Pacific to the China Sea. Light units of the fleet bombarded the fishing and cannery port of Suribachi on Paramushiro Island in the Kuriles Sunday. This blow doubtless was intended to further cut into Japan's already sharply reduced food sources. JAPS ADMIT B-29S HIT BIG PLANTS Tokyo Estimates Force At 700; Propeller, Aircraft Assembly Factories Targets GUAM, Wednesday, July 25 (P)- American reconnaissance planes flew over the Japanese homeland today checking damage inflicted in yesterday's bold daylight attack by a record force of more than 600 Superforts on the congested industrial areas of Nagoya and Osaka.

Unescorted by fighter craft, the giant skyships dumped almost 4,000 tons of demolition bombs on what the Tokyo radio admitted today were "important establishments," some of which, in the Osaka district, were set afire. The U. S. 20th Bomber Command announced that "more than 600" B-29s staged the attack and said they represented a record flight. Tokyo estimated the number at, a flat 700, saying 400 hit the Osaka area while 300 concentrated on the Nagoya section.

Catching hordes of Japanese workers in the noon period, the huge bombers split into task forces and, flying at both medium and high levels, pounded away with bombs that weighed from 500 to 4,000 pounds each. The skies over Osaka were clear and the American pilots dropped to medium altitude to strike the Sumitomo light metal plant, which turns out propellors. Then they smacked the Kawanishi aircraft plant, on outskirts of Osaka 12 miles to the northwest. Aircraft and bearing plants were blasted Nagoya strike but poor forced instrument weathere bombings. Targets in this area were the industrial sections Tsu, which is crammed with 68,000 Japanese, and Kuwana, with a population of 42,000.

Two of the targets, the AichiEutoku aircraft plant at Nagoya, an assembly plant for the Navy dive bomber known as the "Judy." and the Sumitomo plant had been hit previously by the B-29s. The 20th Bomber Command said no fighter interception was enand anti-aircraft fire was counterte. Tokyo Radio quoting 8 Japanese military communique, said the attack on Osaka lasted for two hours and was made by 400 Superforts raiding in forces of from 20 to 40 planes. Admitting that fires had out, Tokyo said an "investigation is now in progress as to other damage sustained." The communique reported another 300 Superforts struck the Tokai army district. No further information was contained on this phase, but Domei News Agency in another dispatch said Nagoya had been the principal target.

Domei also reported that the B- 29s struck the cities of Kobe. Okayama, Tokushima, Himeji, Wakayama and Kuwana. Kobe, Himeji and Wakayama are in the Osaka area, while Kuwana is in the Nagoya area. The Japanese communique claimed without confirmation that anti-aircraft batteries shot down seven "enemy planes" and crippled 29 others over the Osaka, Kobe and Kyoto areas. Presumably the claims refer- WINDOW SASH CORD REPAIRING Let us replace your worn out cords with new copper chain PHONE 5-4746 HARRY A.

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NEWARK, DEL. PHONE 546 red to B-29s. Kyoto, approximately Osaka, was not otherwise mentioned midway but west of Nagoya, and in the list of Japanese target cities as outlined by Tokyo. MINER LIVES 3 MONTHS WITH CORPSE, KILLS SELF LEADVILLE, July 24 (P)- This mountain mining town, puzzled today over who the strange made good a gold his apparently second attempt at suicide after living for three months in house containing the body of a 37- year -old woman pianist. In the dining room of the miner's two-story house Town Marshal Carl Youngstrom yesterday found the body of Mrs.

Annette Springhetti Peterson, wife of Carl Peterson, proprietor of a book store. In the front room was the body of 57- year-old Ivar Johnson, with a bullet wound in his head. Sheriff Clarence McMurrough pieced together this apparent chain of happenings: The miner related in a suicide note that Mrs. Peterson died of an illness April 25 and that Johnson first took poison, but "woke up in a couple of days." Then, the miner shot himself about July 15. Charter- Continued From First Page supply them, but he did not believe it would.

"If we stipulate that we will furnish troops only in certain areas," Connally shouted, "we'll violate the agreements of this charter." Wheeler made the point that in Senate hearings Connally agreed with Dulles that ratification of the agreement would be by two-thirds vote of the Senate. Connally declared today that he was expressing only his "individual view" and added: "When the agreements come back we can decide then whether ratification is by the Senate alone or by both Houses." He expressed confidence that the Senate "whether it be Republican or Democratic, will rise to its duty and respond to its obligations." Majority Leader Barkley expressed full agreement with Connally's conclusion, and added. Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich), who served along with Connally on the American delegation at San Francisco, declared he was satisfied that any basic agreement on the use of force "must be ratified whether by Congress as a whole or by the Senate." Wheeler said he would vote for the United Nations charter just to give the framers a chance to prove "their good intentions." "I gravely fear that this charter will take away from the people of America the right to be heard on mullin's. HarrisTweed the crucial issues of war and peace," he said. Wheeler's address held the close attention of the Senate which has heard the lanky Montanan oppose many pre-war policies he contended would draw the United States into European entanglements.

GOVERNOR OF NEVADA NAMED U. S. SENATOR RENO, July 24 (P)E. P. Carville resigned AS governor and was appointed U.

S. senator for Nevada today. He will fly to Washington, D. tomorrow, arriving Thursday in time to participate in the Senate vote on ratification of the United Nations charter. He succeeded the late James G.

Scrugham. Carville had planned to resign effective Aug. 1. He advanced date, he said, after receiving a telegram from Senator Alben W. Barkley (D-Ky), majority leader, urging him to be in Washington not later than Thursday in order to insure Nevada full representation when the United Nations charter ballot is taken.

Vail M. Pittman, who became governor upon Carville's resignation, appointed Carville senator this afternoon. Pittman will serve out Carville's unexpired term. Arthur N. Suverkrup, who was executive to Governor Carville, will have charge of his Washington office.

J. P. BENSON TO SPEAK An address on "The American Legion's Rehabilitation and Service Work" will be made by Benson, chairman of the veterans' employment, committee, today at Delaware 6:45 p. m. (left foreground), commanding general reads the inscription on the memorial Marines who died during the battle for AP staf photographer with the wartime Matthews, Colonial Heights, July 24, Wilmington General Hospital Son, Mr.

and Mrs. John Yeatman, 1506 Lancaster Avenue, July 24. Son, Mr. and Mrs. Constantinople Nacchia, 1806 West Seventh Street, July 24.

Gross Private Hospital Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter LaRue, 102 East Grant Avenue, Wilmington Manor, July 23. Shanghai- Continued From First Page sectors bombed Fusan airdrome in Korea, scored hits on a munitions dump at Amoy, causing large explosions, and destroyed a river boat near Saigon, French Indo-China. Returning to Japanese skies after a typhoon enforced absence of a few days, patrol bombers of the Far East air forces attacked Miho and Yonago air fields on southern Honshu at night.

They caused large fires and explosions which lighted the entire area. Other bombers and fighter planes attacked air facilities military installations on Tanega and Amami islands in the northern Ryukyus. A bomber Seventh Fleet reconnaissance downed a and destroyed another aground near Kota Baharu in Malaya. To the south, a Navy patrol bomdestroyed a freighter and a lugger off the west coast of Borneo. In the East Indies, heavy bombers and fighters of the Australian air force struck enemy shipyards and air bases in Java and the Celebes.

Coordinating their attack with light naval units of the Seventh Fleet. they harassed coastal areas, heavily damaged two schooners and sank two ammunition laden barges in the Halmaheras. In the lesser Sundas, search planes strafed watercraft and caused fires at a barge staging on Timor. Four Japanese paint, fighters intercepted the Yonago raiders without causing any damage and three others heckled patrol bombers over Kyushu. Nine Australia-based R.

A. A. F. Liberators, making a near-record 3,000 mile hop, hit populous Samarang, third largest commercial city Java, 150 miles west of Soerabaja, and bombed shipyards. It was the longest Alight yet made by the R.

A. A. F. Deaths Elsewhere NEW YORK, July 24 -William S. B.

Bana, 71, concert organist and choir master of the Church of the Good Shepherd. Fort Lee, N. died night at St. Luke's Hospital. WEST CHESTER.

July 24- Jacob Edge, Downingtown. first vicepresident and sales manager of the Downington Manufacturing and designer of many modern improvements in paper making machinery, died in Chester County Hospital today after a brief illness. He was 59. Let freedom ring on Uncle Sam's cash register! Buy U.S. War Bonds and Stamps! KIDNEYS MUST REMOVE EXCESS ACIDS Help 15 Miles of Kidney Tubes Flush Out Poisonous Waste If you havean excess of acids in your blood.

your 15 kidney tubes may be overworked. Thesetiny filters and tubes are working day and night to help Nature rid your system of excess acids and poisonous waste. When disorder of kidney function permits poisonous matter to remain in your blood, it maycausenagging backache, rheumaticpains, leg pains, loss of pep and energy, getting up nights, swelling, puffiness under the eyes, headaches and dizziness. Frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning sometimes shows there is something wrong with your kidneys or bladder. Kidneys may need help the same as bow.

els, so ask your druggist for Doan's Pills, stimulant diuretic, used successfully by mil. lions for over 40 years. Doan's give happy relief and will help the 15 miles of kidney tubes flush out poisonous waste from your blood. Get Doan's Pills. PAT OFF BOARD MARRIS REG 353.757 COPYRIGHT HARRIS TRADE TWEED CLOTH FACSIMILE OF THE PURE Imported Harris leather lined for year-round wear! $48 Here's a smart shopper's look-ahead investment, and the wisest solution to what you're going to wear next Fall, next Winter, next Spring, and so on around the seasons.

Strictly man-tailored Harris Tweed coat with 4 button-in leather lining. Heather, blue. 10-20. James T. Mullin Sons, Inc.

6th and Market Great Store in Great City.

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