Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / June 30, 1945, edition 1 / Page 3
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LOCKER SERVICE READY BY FALL frozen food lockers for New Han ,.er patrons may become a reali (v in September, as officials of the project disclosed yesterday that it is hoped that the lockers v;jl be in operation by that time. L W. Preston, head of the Wil mington Cold Storage Co., reveal ed yesterday that lockers have been ordered and are expected to arrjve in time for the projected plant to open in September. \V. E. Cherry, who together wrtn w D Bass, heads the newly or canized Frozen Foods Lockers Co reported that he expects approval within a week or ten jays on the firm’s request for pri orities to build a 500-locker storage mid food processing plant here. If priorities are approved by that time Mr. Cherry was of the opin ion that the new plant could be built and ready for operation in aboui 90 days. Interest in additional cold star a«e facilities in Wilmington was aroused some time ago when New Hanover county farmers, desirous 0f storage space, petitioned County Farm Agent R. W. Galphin to use his influence to obtain frozen food lockers. Three hundred farmers, anxious t„ shotv their faith in any program that might be started, paid s -.ear's locker rent in advance to' yir, Galphin. The $4,000 collected m this manner now is being held lockers are available. Lock er rents are $12.50 and $15 per Year, according to size of facili ties. Mr. Galphin revealed yesterday that the priority ordered for the building of the new storage plant here had been approved by the AAA committee of New Hanover county and sent to Raleigh severa, V.eeivs • - The plant contemplated by Bass and Cherry will include, in addi tion to the 500 loclcers .and frozen food drawers, a complete food pro cessing plant equipped to process vegetbles, meats, fish, poultry and other foods that may be frozen. In addition to the rental of lockers and the processing of food for locker holders, the firm also plans to process locally grown food prod ucts for commercial sale and to sell a nationally advertised brand of frozen foods. A method similar to that used by banks renting safe deposit vaults will be followed. The lock er holder will register upon en tering the plant and an attendant will accompany him to his locker. The Frozen Food Lockers plant plans to use lockers of twp sizes, one measuring six and a quarter ' cub e feet and the drawer type, which is seven and one-half cubic feet. The food lockers which the Wil mington Cold Storage plant expects to receive measure five cubic feet and maintain food at a tempera iure of from 0 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit. The same safety de posit type of service will be offer ed by this firm and locker holders may insure foods at an additional cost. -v Wilmington Dealer Pays Federal Fine Among 13 eastern North Carolina concerns which have paid a total of SI.586.21 to the Treasurer of the United States because of re cent OPA charges that the firms overcharged on women’s clothing, was one Wilmington store, accord ing to an announcement made yes terday by OPA District Director Theodore S. Johnson, of Raleigh. The local dealer was Winthrop’s Five Cents to Dollar store at 719 North Fourth street, which paid S25. A rhenlr fr»v* <7 Vs\7 Jones Department store, of Siler City, was the largest penalty, Johnson stated. This represented tnree times the amount of alleged overcharges. Other penalties were: Proctor's Department .store Roanoke Rapids, $295.51; Wii Jams-Breediove Co.. Oxford, $100, •T- G. Barbour and Sons, Inc., Clayton, $75; W. C. Allsbrook. Roanoke Rapids, $75: Brody’s De partment store, Kinston, $50; Col ons Clothing store, Goldsboro, $50, Mood’s Shoppe, Siler City, $50; ''-alia's. Inc., Raleigh, $33.75; Gay’s Clothing store, Mount Olive, *31-95; Hamilton and Hamilton Angier, $25; and P. R. Taylor <jo. Ayden, $25. Johnson pointed out that the gov wnment's wartime clothing pro gram—which begins with ceiling Prices by the manufacturer and 'hen on down the line—is designed *o keep down the cost of clothing. . :rcement action is being taken 111 ail cases where stores fail tu evectiy price and sell clothing ,'1 the oublic. BEAT HeaT nores quick cooling relief for bum smart ot heat rash, prickly heat. "Pst sprinkle Mcxsana on your irri 'jitcd skin and ease the tormenting s 'nS- This soothing, medicated pow 'Ifr has a special base that helps-ab w,-v woisture, oiten the cause of these miseries, and guards tender skin from I hair. Soothes itch of healing sunburn, mosquito bites, and minor skin trou ll1"' Mcxsana relieves diaper rash; !N'T alter every change helps.J)revent . II A family favorite. Send some over Mas-. < ’ostg little. Beat the heat;.with mexsana Nothing medicated powdIR ? ... ; V - Three Firms Ordered To Suspend Shoe Sales ■ I Charged with violation of Office ■,of Price Administration shoe - | rationing regulations, three Wil : mington merchants have beer ; | ordered to suspend the sale 01 rationed shoes, according to word I received here yesterday from • I Theodore S. Johnson, Raleigh OPA : district direc or. Daniel L. Bell, of Atlanta, chiel OPA hearing commissioner, order ed the suspensions, Johnson said, and most of the violations were in short inventory accounts of shoe coupons and shoes. The orders accompanied 26 other suspensions, against some of the largest mercantile firms in eastern North Carolina, which ranged from 10 days to "the duration.” I The local merchants whose | rationed shoe sales were ordered suspended are H. L. Green Co., Inc, 90 days, 21 days active; Lowen stein’s, 60 days, 10 days active; Charles Finklestein and Son, 90 days, 10 days active. Part of the suspension in each of the 29 cases except one, which runs for the duration, is made inactive, thus placing the dealer on probat ion for the duration of rationing. Most of the suspensions are scheduled currently, but in a few instances the dealer has al ready complied with the required active ban on sales, it was explain ed. During the active suspension period the dealer cannot lawfully sell or receive rationed shoes. W. C. Mitchell, of Moncure, was stopped from dealing in shoes for the duration. The suspended firms and penalties follow-: John F. McNair, Inc., Laurin burg, thirty days, ten days active; Belk-Hensdale Ct'., Whiteville, sixty days, ten days active; Israel’s | Store, Williamston, ninety days, i tenty-one days active; New York | Clothing Co., Kinston, ninety days, | twenty-one days active; Lyman | Hoskow, Whiteville, ninety days, fifteen days active; H. L Green Co., Inc., Durham and Wilmington stores, ninety days, twenty-one days active. HothrStewai't Co., Henderson, ninety days, fifteen days active; Taylor’s Department Store, Rocky Mount, ninety days, fifteen days active; Collins Department Store, Lumberton, ninety days, fifteen I days active; The Evans Co., Mur i freesboro, sixty days, fifteen days I active, Stein Bros., Fayetteville, 1 s i x t y days, ten days active; Leggett’s Department Store. Roan oke Rapids, sixty days, ten days active. Badham Bros. Co.. Edenton, nine ty days, twenty-one days active; N. ' Thomas, Farmville, sixty days, ten days active; Frances Shoppe Roanoke Rapids, sixty days, ten days active; Capitol Department Store, Fayetteville, ninety days, ten days active; Fox’s Department Store, Oxford, sixty days ten days active; William Faber, Roanoke Rapids, sixty days, ten days active. Sawyer and Harris, Elizabeth. City, six months, thirty days ac tive; Margolis Bros., Williamston, sixty days, ten days active"; The Hub Fayetteville, ninety days, fif teen days active; Parker’s Depart ment Store, Elizabethtown, sixty day?, ten days active; Baker’s Shoe and C’othing Store, Hender son. sixly^days, ten days active; I. Blum, Rowland, sixty days, fif teen days active; W. R. Lawrence, Colerain, sixty days, ten days ac tive. DAVIS SAYS MEN MUST WORK, FIGHT (Continued from Page One) dispute over who is to do reconver sion work. Sixteen thousand returned to the Ford Motor Company plants and 7,500 to Budd Wheel Company. At the Packard Motor Car Company, 1,000 maintenance men voted to go back Monday, enabling resumption of output by 22,000 production work ers idled by the maintenance men’s walkout. The agreement between the AFL Building trades and the CIO United Automobile Workers main : tenance council set up procedure for adjusting diflerences. The AFL withdrew an ultimatum that its members will refuse to construct any building unless they do all the work_ and the CIO rescinded one prohibiting hiring of AFL trades men until all CIO maintenance men were at work. At the Motor Products Corporat ion, where 1,100 have been out for several days, the CIO UAW called a meeting to discuss a return to work. A strike of 700 AFL members at lumber yards continu ed. NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY The president of the Independent Western Electric Employes as sociation, George Duval, announced plans for selecting the date for a strike approved by 16,941 eligible voters in a National Labor Relat ions Board Election. Duval said 30,000 union members in 13 New Jersey and three New York plants of Western Electric would meet July 6 to choose the date. Only company action in the dispute can avert a walkout, he The employes voted in favor of a strike to obtain wage increases for 4,000 employes. Electronic and communications equipment for w'. r use are produced at the plants. ; Another big eastern dispute in volved 8,500 workers and shut down plants producing automobile part?. A dispute between the Mackj Manufacturing Company and the CIO UAW over seniority closed the concern's New BrunswicK, N. J.. plant Monday.' CONNELLSVUXE, PA. The WLB in Washington direct ed an immediate termination of a strike of 150 AFL machinists in a jurisdictional-dispute with the AFL Glass Bottle Blowers Union which has kept. 1,000 persons idle at the Anchor Hocking Glass Company Connellsvllle, Pa. Workers walked out May 19 be cause four members of the Machin ists’ Union, who also were member of the Blowers Union, were dis missed. The Blowers have a closed .shop agreement at the plant and obtained dismissal of the four men for belonging to "dual unions. ’ MEMPHIS The Dixie Greyhound Bus Service reported all buses operating on schedule despite a walkout -of about 150 mechanics, members of the AFL Amalgamated Association of .Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employes. Federick Smith, President of the company, attributed the walkout to refusal of the management to discharge five men for activities unbecoming to a union.” A spokes man for the union said the five men were attempting to organize a new, -union., CHICAGO Eleven hundred AFL printing tradesmen at R. R. Donnelley and Sons Company remained out.ih a dispute with the company over its • insistence to maintain a 40-yeai open shop policy^ Poland signed a five-year treaty of non-aggression with Soviet Rus sia in 1952 that was extended to 1945. City Briefs CAMP DAVIS DANCE The regular Friday dance at Camp Davis for convalescent soldiers was held last night. Hostess dance groups met at the Woodrow Wilson Hut and i were transported to the base by the Army. . ON CHEST PROGRAM Miss Cordelia Foster of the Girl Scout council was the guest speaker last night on the "Crisis In War Town” program broad casted every Friday night over WMFD at 6:45 o’clock under the sponsorship of the Com munity War Chest OIL PLANTS BURN AFTER BOMB RAID (Continued from Page One) railway to the Japanese base of Jesselton. and that the Australians controlled 135 miles of the wild North coast from Beaufort South west to the Miri oil field area In taking Beaufort the Austral ians met no opposition but found many newly-built pillboxes and trenches—all abandoned. The Australian force which took the Lutong refineries and Miri oij fields down the coast pushed North and joined forces on the Baram Peninsula with another Aussie column that moved down from Seria. In the Philippines, MgcArthur announced continuing extensive pa trols in Luzon’s Cagayan Valley, scene of the Japanese collapse on that island, and said enemy rem nants were being further compress, ed in the mountains to the West. On the Southeastern Philippine Island of Mindanao mopping-up operations were conducted in re cently-freed territory. The Luzon guerrillas ambushed one Japanese tank and killed its crew in the - mountains east of Iguig. and the U. S. Sixth Infan try division advanced three-quar ters of a mile towards the Jap anese base of Kinganm and' other guerrilla units took Kayan, a vil lage on the slopes of the high Cordilleras. Stitt other guerrillas were mov ing over' a mountain trail in Ilo cos province towards Bontoc, last important Japanese center in the area. U. S. 13th Air Force planes gave support to American ground forces in the Philippines, while Fifth Air Force Liberators ranged out to China Tuesday night and hit the, former Texaco oil center at Shang hai and docks at Canton. —_—V Negro Girl Scouts To Enter Day Camp The Negro Day Camp commit tee has set the Day .Camp per>-,d for Negro Girl Scouts of Wilming ton for Julv- 2, 3. 5 and 6. Trie time will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p. m. The camp will be condcted on the Stewart estate at Masonbort Sound. J Day camping is exactly what the name implies, camping by the day. The campers are divided into units and spend six hours in out door activities in a real campitg atmosphere. The day's program is planned by carefully elected and trained leaders. The camp will be set up in units of twelve girls; with a leader and two assistants in charge. Registered Girl Scouts, and other girls interested may .attend the day camp. A registration fee of $1 is charged for .the four, day period covering. tiie cost of milk, an afternoon snack-out and craft 'materials... -V---— . ■ BUY WAR BOl^JS AND STAMPS - ’ t * yy Aiuiuii.'i vt j. v/iyi mv/xv. SURVIVORS SAVED BY DARING STUNT (Continued from Page One) The brave WAC said Col. Ray T. Elsemore, of Menlo Park Calif., cargo chief of the Far Eastern Air Force, had offered to fly her over the valley tomorrow in his own plane, “and I’m going if Captain Riley will let me.” Captain Riley is a medic. The valley, inhabited by natives who live in walled communities and war on each o her, is isolated from North New Guinea by 150 miles of mountains, most of them unexplored. It is shut off from outh New Guinea by mountains and some 200 miles of crocodile-infested swamplands. During the days the trio were in the valley, they were kept inform ed of developments and of the 1 news of the world by means of a Walkie-Talkie which had been parachuted to them. The natives were not inclined to be friendly but did trade some of their pigs for sea shells. Miss Hastings proved the one With whom the natives were most will ing to do business. Tension has been great in view of accident after accident which had occurred during practice pickups of gliders, on Wakde Is land. Once Col. Elsmore was on the point of giving up and order ing bulldozers dropped to build a large strip for a C-47. The tow plane taking the glider in left Hollandia this morning af ter the weather, which had de layed the rescue attempt, was re As Major Samuels followed with the pickup plane, he radioed the weather was closing in and “I don't think I can pick up today.” Col. E'lsmore, flying over for ob servation in a B-29, assured him: ‘‘This is the best weather I’ve seen in the valley in many a day. You can do it. Go right down there and pick up the glider. You’ll never get much better weather here.” Samuels then' sent word ahead to the ground crew to have every thing set as he carried none too much gas and there would be no “dry runs.” Newsmen and pilots in an ob servation plane held their breath as Samuels swooped low. The long cable slackened. Then it pulled tight. As the glider lifted grace fully from the valley floor, Col. Elsmore in his B-29 could be heard saying over and over: “Boy oh boy. Oh boy.” • The glider’s fuselage was darp aged slightly in the pickup. As it went aloft, it picked up a para chute which bellied out in tbs wind and made it more difficult for the glider pilot to keep his motorless craft on »n even keel. The two engines of Samuels’ plane strained and heated in gain ing altitude of 10,000 feet. As he reached the hump, he sent out word: “I’ve pushed her as far as she can go. We're losing altitude slowly”' But a contact plane messaged back: “Don’t worry about your altitude. You can afford to lose altitude now. It's all down hill on the way to Hollandia. Why you can see (Mount) Cyclops down there 120 miles away-” The two paratroopers who were brought out were Tech. Sgt, Fer nando Dongallo, of Oakland, Calif., and S-Sgt. Benjamin Bulato, San Francisco. Shortly after the landing, the clouds closed in and a pelting rain prevented the tow plane from re turning to bring out Captain Wal ters, eight other paratroopers and a movie cameraman. Col. Elemore said two more glider rescue trips would be attempted tomorrow. At headquarters here the three survivors told of the crash May 13. lit. McCollom said he. crawled from the burning fuselage. Sgt, Decker and Cpl. Hastings said they were' thrown out, unconscious. McCollorp then crawled back to the plane and gave morphine in jections to two other passengers who were still alive but mortally injured.. They lived about 24 hours. All the, others were killed in the crash. . -• . ; ine mice survivors agreed mai some hard candies and a life raft saved them. They ate candy until they were “sick of it,” McCollom said, while the yellow raft, punc tured, served as a tent, and at tracted the attention of a plane that spotted them four days later. ■It took the trio a day and a hall to get four miles down the moun tainside to the spot where they were discovered. “We weren’t afraid of the na tives after our first encounter with them,” said McCollom. “They carry spears and bows and ar rows, But from the way they look ed at us from behind trees • '. 7c knew they were more afraid of us then we were of them.” Cpl: Hastings said she found the natives, “quite interesting, particu larly the women, who took me to their hearts and were very kind.” . —_-v-—' New Hanover Students Attend Brevard College BRJUVARD. June 29—Three stu dents from New Hanover county are enrolled in the summer ses sion at Brevard junior college, it was. annpunced today. All three of the student® ■ are in the pre-col lege g.-oup. They are Miss Margaret Britt,, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. M. F. Britt of 222-D. Williamson Dr.. Wil mington; Frederic Retchim. son of Mr. and Mrs, Raymond Retchim of 1103 Chestnut St., Wilmington;! and Mrs-. Virginia Mclver McNutt | of 1501 Ann St. Brevard has a capacity enroll ment in all of the classes this sum mer. .: . > t ) I .- A-' .'••• . r ’ » Obituaries ULE A. WHITE Funeral services for Ule A. White, former housing manager of the Lake Forest project here, who died Thursday, will be held Sat urday at Bloomington, 111. While in Wilmington, Mr. White was also connected with the New Hanover Board of Education, and was manager of the National Youth Association center. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Julia White; and a son, Arthur White, both of Bloomington. MRS. LENA TEACHEY Funeral services for Mrs. Lena Teachey, 77, of Rosehill, widow of the late J. D. Teachey, who died Thursday morning at the home of her daughter, Mrs. O. H. Barrie % were held at 4 p.m. Friday from the home with the Rev. C. T. Rog ers and the Rev.-F. M. Bain, of ficiating. Burial was in Rosehill cemetery. Besides Mrs. Barnes, Mrs. Teach ey is survived by another daugh ter, Mrs. C. L. Faircloth, Sr., of Rosehill; a sister, Miss Nellie Teachey, of Faison; and tour grandchildren and two great grand children. J. W. MILLER TABOR CITY, June 29.—J. W. Miller, prom'nent farmer of the Aynor section of Horry county died Friday morning at a Conway hos pital after an illness of five days. The body will rema n at the Jes sup Inman funeral home until Saturday when it will be taken to the home. Funeral services will be held at 5 p. m. Sunday from the Pisgah Methodist church with the Rev. O. B. Harwich, officiating. Burial will be in the church meme tery. Surviving are the widow, the for mer Miss Betty Blackman; two daughters, Mrs. George S. Johnson, of Loris, S. C., and Mrs. M. Howie, of Jacksonville, Fla, two sons. W. R. Miller, at home, and Ernest Miller, of Aynor. xr JOHNSON FILES DISSENT OPINION (Continued from Page One) as other residents of the Com pany’s territory, the company would have had a surplus of about $160,000 which could have been used to reduce rates for other res idential users. “I am unwilling,” he said, “to allow residential customers, wheth er they live in a government ; apartment, a rented house or one of their own, to buy or, use elec tric energy’bought at a rate cheap er than is paid by all of the resi dential customers served by the company. A citizen living in a government-owned house should have no advantage over the citi zen living in his own house. “If it were possible—and I think it is—that the Tide Water Com pany could stand a rate reduc tion, then I think every customer should be treated alike and receive the same reductions.” . _-V—% Wilmington Area Has 1360 PW’s Now At Work Approximately 9,400 German prisoners of war are held in base and side camps in North Carolina and are assigned to .work in order to relieve the manpower shortage in agriculture, timber and indus try under private contract or at Army installations for maintenance and repair, it has been announced by Major General Edward H. Brooks, Commanding General, Fourth Service Command. Five hundred and forty nine are sta tioned in Wilmington and are en gaged in agriculture, pulpwood and the fertilizer industry. Camp Davis has 811 for post maintenance while the largest number stationed at any one unit is 3,136 at the Camp But. ner base camp. Using prisoners on private con tract only when civilian labor is unobtainable and on Army installa tions to release American soldiers for other duties, or for jobs for which civilian workers cannot be found, the working prisoners are paid 80 cents a day in canteen .coupons—with a sharply curtailed list of items obtainable. General Brooks explained. The prisoners are shifted under private contract as need for labor demands and in North Carolina they, are working on farms at present and will .later work in harvesting various crops. They are also working in > ilpwood and timber. N. U. VANDENBURG ASKS RATIFICATION (Continued from Page One) I In one of the most eloquently, moving speeches the Senate has heard in years, the elder states- j man said the United Nations stand : on the threshhold of a great aJ-' venture — an adventure into coi lective security for peace. He cautioned his colleagues against “precipitious haste” in i considering the Charter. But he promptly added that he would “‘deeply regret any. needless or un due delay.” Then, in a climactic appeal for j early ratification of the historic document, he said: “America has everything to gain and nothing to lose by giving its support; everything to lose and nothing to gain by declining this continued fraternity with the Unit fed Nations in behalf of the deares* dream of humankind peace. I rommend it to Congress and the' country.” 1 When he finished, the Senate and packed galleries gave him a stan ding ovation. Senators and mem bers of the House of Representa lives, who had come over to heai his speech, crowded ground to shake his hand in congratulations. Sen. Robert A. Taft, R., O., in formally proposed a reservation to the Charter defining the functions and powers of the U. S. Delegate +o the United Nations Council.. But Vandenberg said no such re servation is necessary. Even before Taft raised the is sue, Vandenberg had foreseen the possibility that such a request for reservations would be made.' (Asserting that he knew “No bet ter hope” for peace than the Se curity Charter, he warned thai such hope “certainly will be brok en if you insist upon denying it a chance, or if you cripple it at birth.” —-— V-- » Californian Seeks Spot Here For Hunting Lodge The Wilmington Chamber of Commerce yesterday received a letter in which a request was made in behalf of a "California client” for information about the possibili. ties of securing a tract of land in this area on which ‘‘the highest type of hunting lodge could be de veloped.” The original request was for a tract of land 20 to 25 square miles in size, the leter states, but offer ings of from five to 10 square miles are receiving some' consider ation. it added. Interested persons may secure more information by calling. ^Ex ecutive Secretary Waltier Cartier at the Chamber of Commerce. DON'T JUST ASK FOR ASPIRIN —always ask for it bjr name. Be sure, say St. Joseph Aspirin. It’s genuine and pure. You can’t buy aspirin that can do more for you. There’s none faster, none better, none more depend able. Get St. Joseph Aspirin, world’s largest seller at 10c. Save even more on large size- 100 tablets cost Only 35c—you get nearly 3 tablets for lc. AT ALL (OOP SHOE REPAIRERS For Nationally Advertised WATCHES .• and j SILVERWARE DAVIDS, JEWELERS 7 NORTH FRONT ———i VISIT OUR GIFT SHOP —for Truly Outstanding GIFTS of All Kinds -r LATEST CREATION - A BRAND NEW STORE - A BRAND NEW STOCK y , 5 DAVID'S JEWELERS WILMINGTON'S NEWEST & FINEST 7 North Front \ CLEARANCE SALE Only because we are very much in need of the added room that this will make are we closing out such a great assortment of clothes that you can v. use now and later at only a fraction of their original cost. These are all regular goods that are merely slower moving numbers that you may find to be just what you love. This sale is limited only to the advertised items while they last. ONE RACK COOL PASTEL DRESSES $5.00 Regularly Sold for $14.98 COTTONS ALL SIZES ONE RACK SHEER and CREPE DRESSES $9.00 Regular $19.98 Value* LOVELY BLACK COOL WHITE REDUCED! REDUCED! SMART and LOVELY BEACHWEAR Bathing- Suits Play Suits $4.29 $5.98 Slack Suits Shorts $7.98 $2.98 SPECIAL VALUES! SHEER COCK, Blouses Halter Sets $2-00 ‘ $4.29 Regularly Sold for $4.98 Prints in Solid* EXCELLENT VALUES! 100% ALL WOOL LIGHTWEIGHT Spring Suits $15-00 Sold for $34.98 to $44.98 . PASTEL COLORS NAVY and BLACK ALL SIZES FOR A RAINY DAY TWILL Raincoats $5.00 Regular $9.96 Value* COLORS ALL sizes BUY ONE NOW FOR NEXT SPRING 100% ALL WOOL ; LIGHTWEIGHT COATS $1 Q.oo Formerly Sold for $24.98 to $34.98 ' ~ .. PASTEL and DARK COLORS ALL SIZES
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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June 30, 1945, edition 1
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