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The Daily News Leader from Staunton, Virginia • 2

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Staunton, Virginia
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'I THE STAUNTON NEWS-LEADER, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 17, 1939 Blackstone Finn's Bid Low on fin tr i Hi? BOYS AND GIRLS HOLDING JOBS NEED SOCIAL SECURITY CARDS Crawford Objects to Placing Shrines Sidewalk Project at Churchville on Sideshow Basis ezenori of tu staunton news-leader Every student who Is going to account number Is shown "on his -Tha-Vlrglnia, state highway da- -Bids Called Washington, June 6. WV Annoy work this summer In a store, fac The highway department called ed by Secretary of the Interior M2S. DRIVES ETTER, Representative Ickes recent order placing admis tory, shop, mill, filling! station. Ice cream parlor, baseball park, or Phont 249 til Csestnut Avenue. lor mas seven, highway construction projects, including two on sion fees on such shrines as the OFPHEIIIX MOID (Continued from Page I) The commander of the French naval fnrrm In tYi Var Vactmm other commercial or Industrial es Km Hitter, Airertidac, aai 8abauisH thowU rantbM te Mn Kttafc tablishment must have a social social security card.

He keeps this same number all of his working years. The employer must know the account number, so that the employee's wage earnings may be correctly reported to the government Reports from all parts of the country indicate that employers are giving preference to th u. Route i. The proposals will be opened June 29. The Route 1 lobs are 3.4 mile Lincoln museum here and the Lee mansion across the river, Representative Crawford Mich.

proposed today to stop all such charges In the District of Columbia unless of concrete paving and two bridges in SDOtsvlvania countv near Thornburg, and slx-tenh mlleof specifically authorized bycongress. Bulletin Being Issued by Bible job applleanfr-who has- a social OllCCb (LSpiltUb at csouui tun in Mecklenburg county. Other projects are: School Students He offered a resolution to atop the practice, and said the charge "places a commercial sideshow complexion on these sacred points of historic interest' Under Ickes' order, a ten cent Route 60, Chesterfield county, security account card, says the Staunton social Security office, which continues: A teacher who takes a Job in commerce or industry for the summer; a worker who was formerly employed on a farm or in domestic service; in fact anyone who is changing from excepted employment to a job that is Included under old-age insurance provisions must have a social security account number. Part-Time Workers Too Most employees of factories, shops, mines, mills, offices, stores, business firms are covered by old-age insurance provisions of the one-quaner mue of soil surface treatment beginning ZA miles west of Richmond. Route 11, Washington county, 3.7 admission fee is charged to the two partment announces that Garrett, Moon, Pool, of Blackstone, has submitted the low bid for route 250 sidewalk construction In Church-vllle.

The bid was $3,049.84. Bid on a number of projects were opened in Richmond Thursday. The highway department received bids totaling $236,447.02, and among-other-low--bidders-were W. W. Tuck Son and Sam E.

Flnley, of Virgllina, submitted low bid of $88,693.94 for construction of 3.2 miles of waterbound macadam roadway from the Intersection of Route 8 near Narrows to the new Celanese plant in Giles county. Route 360, King and Queen and King William counties, .33 mile of roadway and bridge and approaches at the Mattaponl river; Bowers Construction company, Whlteville, N. $48,592.55. Route 301, Prince George county, 4.3 miles of concrete paving and a bridge south of Petersburg, Hechler Bros, Highland Springs, Underpass at the Atlantic Coast Line railroad on Jones street in Petersburg, E. R.

Boney, Norfolk, $8,37960. shrines named by Crawford. security account card. How Employers Help The amount of old-age insurance which any eligible worker will receive will depend upon the amount of wages credited to his social security account; therefore a record must be kept of his wage earnings. Wage repoits are submitted every tliree months by employers to the bureau of internal revenue.

After these reports are checked. tunes oi waierDouna macadam and a bridge in the vicinity of Ablng- aon. Route 250, Albemarle county. overpass ana approaches at the O. u.

rauway at Shad well. Route 316. Accomac countv. 4 0 BILL LIMITS OPERATIONS OF THE WPA Social Security act. They may be miles of 'concrete paving beginning working full-time, or part-time.

they are used by the social security board to enter the wages (as reported thereon) in the worker's social security account. They may work for more than one as ine intersection of Route 13 at Taslev and ending 1JS miles south of Parksley. Rockbridre Proiei When Payments Due Employers may aid In the area, when he received no report of the submarine's arrival at the expected hour, Immediately sent out an alarm to all war ships and planes. Naval authorities conjectured there was some accident aboard, but there was no official word on the cause. After several hours of search the command reached the conclusion the submarine must have developed trouble in submerging and gone to the bottom.

Officers pointed out It was unlikely, an accident would have occurred If the delicate task of submerging had been completed successfully. --v, Naval officials In Paris could not say immediately whether the Phe-nlx carried equpiment similar to the Davis escape lung, by which four men aboard the Thetis saved their" lives. Prance had Just opened negotiations with the United States for four diving bells similar to the one used to rescue- thirty-three from the Squalus. She does not now have any such 1 The, navy ministry was informed of the apparent tragedy this morning, but It kept the news a closely guarded secret until it could Inform the families of the men who went down. Most of those aboard came from the Toulon area, where news of the nrevimi twn trairH( in i nat Report of State Gon vention-Heard -at Club Meeting Waynesboro, June 16 The June meeting of the Waynesboro Business and Professional Women's club was held at Hotel General Wayne last evening at six-thirty with the club's new president, Mrs.

W. Lee Gardner, presiding. The program after the dinner was devoted to hearing the report of the annual state convention, which was held in Roanoke on May 19-20. The reports were given by Mrs. Gardner and Miss Louise McOomb and were very interesting to the club members.

The membership chairman, Mrs. Francis Boward introduced one new member, Miss Katherine Jordan, who moved here recently from Fort Defiance to make her home. Miss Jordan is private secretary to Lawyer H. Branaman. The club now has an active membership of forty-two members, with the state federation membership at 1,066.

There will be no regular meeting of the club during July and August, as is the custom during the summer months. SON ARRIVES Waynesboro, June 16 Mr. and Mrs. David L. Padgett are announcing the birth of a son, on Thursday, June 15, at their home on Thirteenth street.

Route 608, Rockbridge county, a 225-foot bridee over Buffalo rrpftr employer at a time. They may be employed by a manufacturer and work at home. They may be paid by the piece or by the hour, day, week or month. Even though a worker should move from place to place, finding employment In first (Continued from Page 1) vision was acceDted under which eignt mues from Natural Bridge Waynesboro, June 16. The students of the First Presbyterian church vacation Bible school today published The Trail Guide- a bulletin or the activities of the chool, which will be published again next week.

The staff of'The Trail Guide" Is as follows; George Barksdale, editor-in-chief, Munsell Randall and Manual Hamilton, art editors, with Mary Grey Craig, Ruby Wagner, Dorothy Davis, Buddy Davis, Vin-Cla Coyner, Virginia Tyree, and Edward Haney as assistants. The average attendance has been about 113 students and 28 teachers. Total attendance in the four departments for the first week, which ended today, was: Beginners 93, Primary 163, Junior 118, and Intermediate 75. The school is doing a splendid wort. The church library is open each day with Mrs.

Fenton Swezey as acting librarian and with books for all children. Many outstanding things are being done by the students of each department. The beginners made a scrapbook for the nursery class for their mothers and ash trays for their fathers and are starting a rhythm band. The members of the primary department also have a rhythm band and sand table, where they work out the Bible stories told In class work. The junior department prompt payment of old-age insurance benefits to their employees by advising the social -security board when an employee reaches the age of sixty-five or when one dies.

all WPA workers except heads of one town and then another, he lanuues lorty-flve- years or old Kai-Shek policies, including, protec er muse De discharged after eighteen months' service to make mnm tion oi anu-Japanese and commun 1st elements." 2. Discontinuance of support of for the thousands on the waiting list. Those discharged would be cninese PRESSURE BY CHINESE REQUESTED eugioic lor re-employment after PARMER ASSERTS HIS MARE CRIES BERNE, Indi. June 16. 3.

An end of "cornering of commodities" In the concessions and "connivance at the use of wireless sixty days. This provisIon.which its authors has a chance to build up a wage record that will entitle him to old-age insurance payments after he reaches the age of sixty-five. The amount of benefits will depend upon his own wage earnings. Lost Cards Employees in this section, who have lost their social security account number cards may obtain duplicates from thi Staunton field office of the social security board. An employee's social security by lawless elements." privately- said was aimed at the 4.

End of a ban on the use of Florenz Stucky. a farmer, report workers alliance, and publicly asserted was intended to eliminate ana-Japanese school text books. WPA "careerists," was bitterly ed his mare has shed real, honest-to-goodness tears since its colt broke out of a field and was killed by a train a few days ago. fought by members of a small bloc. They denounced it as "vic ious and cruel" and said it would DRIVER SUBDUES UNRULY MAN Neighbors, verifvin sturkv's story said the mare bawls ax if J.

A. BRANUM brokenhearted. month had already worried those who had loves one on submarine duty. The wife of the commander of the have a particularly bad effect upon relief workers over forty-five years of age." Time and again, the members of a small bloc, led bv Renresent. is studying "What is In the Bible" and are making a wall frieze of (Continued from Page 1) studying suggestions for retaliatory action.

Today's communique described the manner of the Japanese spokesmen In Tientsin as "threatening," and said it was clear from their statements that the refusal of British authorities to hand over the alleged terrorists was "no longer regarded as the reason for the imposition of measures against the British concession." What the Japanese really want, BALTIMORE, June 16. you try to start anything, this rnenix, ueui. commander O. M. atlve Voorhis (D-Callf) and Mar- Bible cahracters.

The boys are making book shelves under the Bouchacourt, was one of those in cab goes over in the ditch and cantonlo (Aly-NY), attempted to FIREMAN DASHES AFOOT TO BLAZE BRUNSWICK, June 16. (IP) When Fireman Fred Shaffer tullance of Mr. LaBlre. J. A.

Branum, of Weyers Cave, died at ten o'clock yesterday morning from the results of a stroke paralysis which he suffered Thursday afternoon. The deceased was seventy years of age and had lived in Weyers Cave for the past thirty-five years. A blacksmith by occupation, he was OBITUARIES we both get killed." So said Taxi Driver Paul Zar- loosen the restrictions, only to be beaten back and defeated bv cone to the passenger who pro The intermediates are: studlng about "My Chruch," two of the students Jean Mattox and Virginia Barksdale are making scrap books votes of lop-sided proportions. formed. She lives at Toulon with many other wives and children of ordinary seamen.

Like them she kept in constant touch -with the naval base. Lieut. Commander Bouchacourt Is forty-three and has a 15-year-old duced a pistol. Without Incident, zarcone reported to police, they answered the engine house tele me Democratic-Republican al-hance, Including all the house economy advocates, won its wav. drove to the center nf town.

well known in that community. the foreign office said, is to force the British "to cooperate with the THE REV. F. F. JONES There the Daseneer trot out nnii He Is survived by his widow and three children.

Mrs. Branum son In Toulon xchonl Th nt.har bade Zarcone a pleasant (rood officers aboard were Lieutenant Ba- phone and learned the Fred Shaffer home was on fire he didn't wait on anything, not even the fire truck. He dashed out on foot. Fellow firemen followed him with the pumper and put out the blaze. was Miss Sadie Morris and night.

Japanese in constructing a 'new order' In the Par East." The Japanese demands were listed as: 1. Abandonment of "pro-Chiang herze, thirty-two. Ensign Veron, Gordons ville. The children are He didn't pay for the ride. Zar twenty-five, and another ensignc- cone dldnt ask him to.

however, largely by making concessions to the new deal on the amounts to be appropriated. Thus the house tentatively approved a $1,477,000,000 outlay for work relief, the sum requested by President Roosevelt, and later yielded to the extent of a compromise on the appropriation for the national Mrs. J. R. Forry.

of Newark, Grafton D. and Irwin T. Branum, of Weyers Cave. The burial will be at eleven o'clock The Rev. F.

F. Jones died at his home near Middlebrook Friday evening, June 16. Mr. Jones was born in Dlnwiddie county, March 29, 1875. He was the son of the late Dr.

Thomas Thweatt Jones, pastor of the Brunswick Presbyterian church in Brunswick county and Mrs. Jones. Mr. and Mrs. Jones graduated from Hampden-eydney college with the Sunday morning at the Reformed a fliwn ti hf mission churches The girls are drawing under the direction of Mrs.

F. O. Cockerille and are making posters of the church and grounds. Each day the department has a special supervised recreational period. HAVE NEW SON Waynesboro, June 18 Mr.

and Mrs. Herbert G. Perl of Port Republic road, are announcing the birth of a ton, on Thursday, June 13, at Waynesboro Community hospital. The baby has been named Eric Herbert. 1 "0 PERSONALS Royal Liner Is Anchored in Bay on East Coast church in Weyers Cave.

Friends will Navg Prepares For Future Emergencies, Training Gobs in Escape bg Diving Bell meet at the home at ten oclock youth administration. The President had asked for $123,000,000, and the appropriations committee had recommended S81.OOO.00O. Funeral services will be conducted by the Rev. H. A.

Welter, the de- A. B. degree, and received his B. D. degree from Union Theological St.

John's, June 16. (Can cased's pastor. MRS. LAURA B. HENDERSON The difference was compromised on the floor with the tentative adian Press) The liner Empress of Britain, bearing Kirwr George and seminary in 1901.

He was ordained to the Presbyterian ministry by the Presbytery of Ashvllle. North Caroline in 1901. He began his approval of a $100,000,000 dis 4 bursement. Queen Elizabeth to Newfoundland, In all. prior to final action on I mlnlsty as an evangelist In Clay anchored in Conception bay on the east coast of this oldest of Britain colonies tonight.

county, N. C. on the death of his Mrs. Laura B. Henderson of Swoope, passed away suddenly Thursday night at about nine o'clock at the home of her daughter, Mrs.

Harry Trimble. She had suffered a heart attack. father, he was called to his home church in Brunswick county, which The royal party will go ashore In the morning for the last stop of the 4 1 I the big relief bill, the house gave lta tentative approval to appropriations totalling $1,735,000,000 for various relief activities, including, in addition to WPA and NVA, the farm security administration, relief for needy Indians, and related activities. ill North American tour. he served from 1903 to 1911.

He was pastor of the Olivet and Pine- Surivlng are the daughters men tioned. Two sisters, Mrs. Bettlc The vessel passed the narrows at the entrance to St, John's harbor tops churches in North Carolina from 1911 to 1913, and pastor of the Miller, Staunton route one; Mrs. Mattie McClung, Swoope. She was born and raised in Au Timber Ridge Presbytrian church in Lexington presbytery from 1913 oiicnu vi uu jici way iaj Conception bay, twenty-six miles from here.

She dropped anchor at six-thirty p. m. (EJ3.T.) in glass- to 1919 when he was compelled to give up the active ministry on Waynesboro, June 16, Mr. and Mrs. B.

S. Saufley and family are moving today Into the Bragg home on Chestnut avenue, which they recently L. O. Barksdale Is a business visitor In Roanoke today. Mrs.

Harry Gardner and Miss Elsie Dyer of Roanoke, will arrive In the city tomorrow to be the guests of Mrs. Gardner's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Q. C.

Hall. Mrs. George Brown will return to her home today on Ohio street from the University hospital, where she has been for treatment. Jack Keller Is spending some time In Charlottesville visiting his father. Capt.

H. C. Simpson, member of the city police force, began his two week's vacation yestersday. gusta county, and was the widow of W. H.

Henderson, O. agent at Swoope for some years. She had been in bad health for quite a calm water after a day of cool sailing from Halifax. account of 111 health. Surviving are his wife and the During the day the King and At following children; The Rev.

Frank F. Jones Jr. of Tucson, Miss Queen rested, making only infrequent appearances on deck. The TO PRESENT PLAY The Women's Work of the Mount Vernon Church of the Brethren will present the five-act play, "The Two Builders," at the Waynesboro Church of the Brethren on this Sunday evening. June 18, at eight o'clock.

The play was first given very successfully in the Mt. Vernon church on Mothers' day, May 14, to an appreciative audience. All are invited. Mary Boyd Jones, at home: Dale King played deck tennis for a short Jones of Houma, La; Miss Anne time. Boiling Jones, James Alexander This ancient colony was spanned Jones, and Miss Meade Randolph with bunting in preparation for a gala welcome for the royal visitors.

Jones, at home. Two children died ft J. tri -fee hS in infancy, Betty Jones and Nancy Barnett Jones. 1 I He Is also survived by the follow while. The funeral will be held from the Trimble residence at ten-thirty today, and in the absence of her pastor, the Rev.

W. C. Jamison, it will be conducted by the Rev. W. W.

Sprouse, assisted by the Rev. T. A. Gulton. Burial will be in Thornrose cemetery.

Pallbearers will be: active, Marion Brown, Wallace Trimble, Andrew Wilson, Earl Coffman, Waldo Reynolds, Francis H. Bear; honorary Samuel Henderson; Lynwood Henderson, Clinton Miller, Russell Layman. J. W. Riley, Robert Brown, Robert Bear, Ferdinand Harvey, William Dunlap.

BETTIE MARIE SMITH state Trooper A. R. Bryant has returned to his work In the Waynesboro area after being absent from the city since Monday doing special work at Lexington during V. M. ing brothers and sisters.

Dr. Boiling Jones of Petersburg, Randolph Jones, Texas. W. Elliott Jones, Houma, Five sisters, Mrs. W.

B. Mcllwalne, Heath finals. Miss Virginia McCaleb of Fairfax HaU junior college, is spending Springs, S. Mrs. J.

P. Atkinson and Mrs. J. L. Tucker, Champe, Mrs.

J. O. Damerson, Weems, sometime with her parents, Mr. and Mnt F. J.

McCaleb, at their home in FayettesvDle. and Mrs. L. R. Bowling, Center 11 v.v.-.v 1 Mrs.

I. H. Paul and Miss Ruth ville, Miss. An infant brother and biotliei, Thomas Thweatt Jones Duvles of Chestnut avenue, re leaving during the weekend for of Texas, are deceased i I 1 their summer home at Massenetta Funeral arrangements will be announced later. MRS.

JAMES CRISP Mrs. Elizabeth Salome Barnes Officers and men at the United States Navy Yard in San Diego, are drilled in submarine rescue technique in preparation for possible nnderseas disasters. Above, they lit the McCann diving bell over submarine hatch, guiding it into position just as divers would do under water. Top right, an officer opens the hatch, giving an idea of size of the manhole Crisp died yesterday afternoon at her home at 19 North New street following an illness of two weeks. Springs.

Dr. and Mrs. Ferd. schulze left today for Norfolk, where they will attend the Garrett-Nunnally wedding. 0 BISHOP TO BE CREATED VATICAN CITY, June L'Osservatore Romana, Vatican newspaper, announced that Pope Plus XII would create a group of missionary bishops in the autumn.

The number Is expected to be twelve in commemoration of the twelve missionaries sent out by Christ. Mrs. Crisp was born in London, England April 20. 1880. through which undersea sailors enter and leave their craft Lower right, a "rescued" sailor climbs through hatch into diving bell, which has been scaled to submarine with waterproof gasket She came to America March 7,1907, and for the past twenty-seven years had made her home in Staunton.

She Is survived by her husband, Proud of its successful rescue of James Crisp, and one son, E. despite the lesser depth at which the British divers had to work. These pictures of training maneu Crisp, of Staunton; three brothers, The funeral of Bettle Marie Smith, colored, who passed away Wednesday night at ten-thirty in Mt. Sidney after several months' illness, was held Friday afternoon at three o'clock from the Mt. Sidney Methodist church.

The Rev. D. M. Pleasant, pastor of the Augusta Street M. E.

church officiated, assisted by the Rev. C. H. Gant. Hymns used were: "Jesus Is Mine," "Rock of Ages," and "God Will Take Care of You." Resolution from the Sophomore class of the Booker T.

Washington High school was read. The obituary from the family was read by the Rev. D. M. Pleasant.

Flower girls were: Elizabeth Smith, Audry Smith. Ophelia Williams, Rosa Lee Cooke, Mary Virginia Smith. Edith Taylor, Helen Howard, Lillian Cooke, and Pearl Vaughn. Active pallbearers were Charles Barts, Clarence Brown, Lacle Vaughn, Bobby Jones, Douglas Vaughn, and Chaplin Nelson. The large attendance and the many beautiful floral designs attested the high esteem In which the deceased was held.

Burial was in the adjoining cemeterv. Harry, Joseph, and Arthur Barnes; two sisters; Mrs. Louise Booker and vers at San Diego, Calif, show clearly how the American rescue system works. Seamen and chief, petty'officers fit the bell over a sub Mrs. Berfitt all of London.

She was a member of the Epls copal church of England since early childhood. marine deck hatch, just as cavers the bell's tanks to balance tha weight of the rescued men. Finally, the rubber gasket is released and the bell rises to the surface of its own buoyancy. Meanwhile the men inside pay out a cable fastened to the submarine, by which they had pulled the bell into position, and. thus regulate the rate of rise.

Air is pumped continually into the rescue chamber from above during the entire operation and until it again reaches the surface with the rescued men. In event the bell's downpull cable becomes stuck, as it did during the KEEP UP WITH THE NEWS AT HOME You don't want to feel like a stranger, when vacation is over! Well be happy to enter yonr subscription under your vacation-time address, wherever it is! Then youll get the home news, daily! Send us your VACATION ADDRESS THE EVENING LEADER and THE NEWS-LEADER PHONE 411 would were the operations under Mrs. Crisp was a faithful and kind mother and will be missed by FOR BEST GRADE OF 33 men from toe unprecedented depth of 240 feet when the submarine Squalus sank off the New England coast the United States Navy is putting its undersets men at every navy yard through intensive training in use of the McCann diving bell, in preparation for possible future emergencies. Conclusive proof of the superiority of American rescue methods was given when, only a short time after the Squalu disaster, the British submarine Tketit was disabled 130 feet below, the surface, off Wales. Working without benefit of the McCann apparatus, the Admiralty waa unable to save 99 men, her many friends in the com munity.

The funeral will be held at ten thirty Monday morning from Ham-rick funeral home. The water. After the bell is in position, it is sealed tight with a rubber gasket to the exterior surface of the submarine, by underseas water pressure. Finally the hatch is opened and the men in the subma-j rine climb np into the bell. Inside, they climb above an air lock, which is closed to keep out the water, and ballast is pumped out of services will be conducted by the Rev.

Dr. J. Lewis GIbbs, of the Em last trip in the Squalus rescue, it can be cut and the bell pulled up by cranes mounted on surface vessels. manuel Episcopal church. Interment will be In Thornrose cemetery.

Active pallbearers will be Percy H. Arnold, J. Earl Jones, R. C. Que en Leator Fauver, Charles H.

TILLIE THE TOILER Bv RUSS WESTOVER Distance Lends Enchantment Shelley William Shumate, J. A. Johnson, and Dr. C. W.

Putney. Honorary bearers will be members BEER JW VIE VISIT of the V. F. W. post.

The Vetterans of Foreign Wars aulllary, of which Mrs. Crisp was a member, will have charge of the services at the grave. i SAMUEL R. REDIFER Samuel R. Redifer, seventy -eight, died at the home of his son, Roy Redifer, near Strlbllng Springs, Friday at six p.

m. He had been critically ill for a Mr. Redifer, who was a farmer, 7 fl DON'T THINK IT WOULD I YOU'RE1 NOT BY ANY I I I'M GLAD YOU FEEL I I I HE'LL LIKE ME 3E BEST TO LIVE NEXT kl CHANCE XEALOUS, THAT WAY, MAC AND SClU BETTER IF IJ DOOR, TO DICK HE'D yaMEM I ARE YOU. MAC I DON'T THINK I'D jUw fS DON'T SEE KNOW EVERYTHING 1 fZCFi CARE TO LIVE NEXT jfifW HIM TOO OFTEN) THAT WAS GOING ON T- I DOORi ANYWAY fh HWTjf 1 'I'-" JrJ' (WHY TILLIE. 2 I HA i MV YOU RE RIGHT Ji YOU KNOW zf) (l WAS SURE fM ffiilbjf WkxM JsOfti rr r.

-) BYRDS GRILL Is also survived by a daughter, Mrs. F. E. Eutsler. of Fort Defiance.

Funeral services will be held wsam Sunday at three p. from Lebanon Church of the Brethren, eon-ducted by the Rev. W. H. Zlgler, pastor of the Elk Run church.

Bur ial will be In the Lebanon ceme tery. i1-.

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