Newspapers / The Valdese News (Valdese, … / April 20, 1949, edition 1 / Page 1
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Boost Yaldcse! Watch It Grow! Your Local Merchants Deserve Your Support nl. » VALDESE, N. C., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1949 No. 16 EAVV FINES ieted out in ;OUNTY COURT ariety of Charges Come Up In County Court Before Judge Riddle. jit-ion ssessing ed ,.mes Warren Myrick.and For n Dale drew the stiffest fines ;ted out to any defendants in t week's session of Burke County Iminal Court when they were "d guilty of violating the pro law, transporting and ^•whisky. Myrick was $500 and costs and Dale was Bed $250 and costs. _ Robert Busick. arraigned on the me charge, had to pay $200 and on a driving dnink charge :.ard N. Baker and Ishmael Ivfh Parton were each fined $100 d costs Kirby Leonard Sam was ireed with the costs on charges being drunk and disoi dei ly and assault on a female. Charles kens. Lester Aikens, W. T. Laws, d Ray Smith were found not ilty of public intoxication. Several fornication and adulteiy 5es were heard. Ray Betts and lia Davis were found not guilty, t Lunette Biggerstaff and Joel Ison were given six months su ;nded sentences on condition ,y stay out of Burke county. >d Braswell and Mellissie Mc immins were charged with the its on a similar charge. Bras il paid the costs for assault on nale. Many Assault t ases Assault cases came in for a big u-e of the docket. D. C. Lowman s found not guilty on an assault irge. James Henry Connelly was lered to pay William Watkins i in an assault case, in addition court costs. On charges of as ilt with deadly weapon and ink and disorderly, William yton Watkins was found not lty, but he had to pay the costs a charge of disturbing the ce. Charles Powell was fined costs for assault on female and y Powell was fined the costs on respassing charge. Henry Webb s given 12 months suspended tence on conditions that he ' the costs and not molest or ault his wife. Lee Weatherman s fined $25 and costs on an as It charge. eroy Beavers and George Ro t Willkie were fined $25 and ts for operating a vehicle with a license. Mansford Lowder k paid the costs on a reck > driving charge. n two non-support cases, El r A'oee was ordered to provide a month for the support of his Wren and Leonard Pearson was ered to provide adequate sup t for his wife. iven Tried In oyor's Court So ir This Month 'rom April 1 through April “n cases had been tried in 'or’s court in Valdese. die Key of Valdese was f ^ for driving an automc 1 imPtoper equipment, verette 0. Willis of Mai ude Lee of Maiden, Pose Ow nny Jackson and J. B. Se aiC*ese. having been arve u?nges 01 drunkem J510 05 each in fines and c “e arrests made du month of March were as ; Put)hc drunkenness, sportation, 1; traffic viola' o assault on female, 1. *■ HILDEBRAN P.-T.A. 1° meet on THURSDAY lPa S °f the George Hilde I be hpiri 'TeaChei s Associatior l'sckvSat!he sch001 building |ck !, night’ April 21 at 7:3( l'2“mhRefonsib,my 01 ling Dp. n bc lhe lopic of thf Imtafn ,U°n Wil! be Stan I will be musical select fees anC Lte-wui be c°n I ProJtei dvS being Miss L°l 1 McKendriPEuSSt ChaPman ain, ah' : We ancl Rhods [urged to h ntei‘ested parent: 10 be present. r « pAS( AL l[()\ |>Un‘stlGe,h0me “f 1 l18uL‘>hM «.G mam sti'ee T'>Cv^0n'lay a!te™ I Source oneh‘ f‘re di r°b'Micuvfr" Ne wa« , cllVe flue, tied. ' not Sei'ipus, ii Here Next Week Rev. A. A. Wilson, above, pastor : of the First Assembly of God church in Kansas City, Mo., and one of the Presbyters of the Gen eral Council, will speak twice daily at the district council and min isters’ institute which is being held next week, April 25 through 28, at the Valdese Assembly of God church. WATER BONDS SOLD AT LOW INTEREST RATE Durham Corporation’s Bid On $100,000 Issue Is OK’d By Commission. Bonds of the town of Valdese for the purpose of enlarging the water filter plant were sold Thursday, April 12, in Raleigh to the First Securities Corporation of Durham. W. E. Easterling, secretary of the local government commission, handled the sale, opening the seal ed bids at 11 o’clock Tuesday morning. Fourteen bids were received on the $100,000 worth of bonds, and the sale made to the bidder who offered the town the lowest rate of interest. The First Securities Corporation of Durham’s bid will cost the town 2.4777% interest. Highest interest cost on a bid was i that of Alex Brown and Sons, who offered to take the bonds at : 2.8461% interest. t I Bidders w7ere allowed to name ! interest rates in multiples of one I fourth of one per cent, and each i bid could name one rate for part ! of the bonds (having the earliest : maturities) and another rate or ' rates for the balance, but no bid ; could name more than four rates. The First Securities Corporation bid was in four parts: on the first I $25,000 maturities, 2% per annum; on the next $1,8,000 maturities, ! 2%% per aannum; on the next i $242,000 maturities, 2y2% per an num; and on the remaining $15, j 000 maturities, 2%% per annum. ! The bonds matuVe annually on May 1. Each year 1951 to 1955 in clusive, the town will retire $2,000 of the bonds; From 1956 to 1958, it will retire $5,000 a year; From 1959 to 1961, $4,000 in 1968; and from 1969 to 1976, $5,000 annually. Other bids were R. S. Dickson and Co., Oscar Burnett & Co., Kirchofer and Arnold, Branch Barkeny and Trust Co., Alex Brown and Sons, John Nuveen and Co., Inc., Griffin and Vader, Inc., Equitable Securities Corporation, Vance Securities Corporation, and ! J. Lee Peeler and Co., Inc. j The next meeting of the Valdese town board will be May 2, the regular meeting date, according to Mayor Oscar M. Harrison, unless i some emergency should necessitate ; a called meeting of the board. This date is the night before the I biennial election, on Tuesday, May i3-_ REVIVAL CONTINUES AT MT. CALVARY BAPTIST ! - | Revival services continue ! through this week at the Mt. Cal j vary Baptist church. Rev. Ewell j Payne, a home missionary to the ; Cherokee Indians in Cherokee, N. j C., is the guest evangelist. His ser ! mons are made especially inter esting by his accounts of his work with the Indians. Services are at 7:30 p. m. Monday’s Asheville Citizen had a picture of Rev. and Mrs. Payne, and two of their church members, j Mr. and Mrs. Mike Walkingstick, : receiving the title to a bus from 'Rev. Perry Crouch, pastor of the First Baptist church of Asheville. The bus will be used to bring the people into church from the coves and valleys of the Cherokee Indian Reservation. Valdese-Made Hosiery To Get Wide Advertising Waldensian Hosiery Mills Supplies New York Firm With Nationally-Advertised Socks Added To Widely Advertised Line of Men’s Wear. During 1949 national advertising of men’s socks made by the Wal densian Hosiery Mills, Inc., of Val dese will appear some 150,000,000 | times in Life, Saturday Evening i Post, Colliers Weekly and Esquire. But the name will not be Wal densian Hosiery; it will be ‘Otis’ instead. ‘Otis’ is the trade name of a1 nationally advertised line of men’s | sportswear and men’s underwear, i made and distributed by the A. S. Haight and Co., Inc., of New York. It is one of the oldest and most reputable companies in the busi- j ness. During the war the idea germi- ! nated among members of the Haight Company that hosiery should be added to the already popular Otis lines of men’s wear, j Through a fortunate combina tion of circumstances, officials of A. S. Haight and Co., were brought in touch with the Waldensian Ho siery Mills of Valdese, and ar rangements were made for Wal densian to be the sole supplier of I Otis socks. ! So the Otis trademark will be affixed to the socks made here in Valdese, and throughout the country, where the other Otis lines are known, Otis hosiery will soon be known. i j The A. S. Haight Co., is also the : manufacturer of a nationally ad- j ; vertised line of children’s under- ! wear, the E-Z line. E-Z children's garments are advertised regularly in Parents’ Magazine and in other publications that are widely read | by women. •Officials of the Waldensian Ho- | ation with the Haight is a fortu siery Mills believe that the associ nate one, and that Waldensian hosiery which already enjoys a high reputation, will prove as popular as the other Otis lines. Recently 14 representatives of j A. S. Haight and Co., accompanied ! by John Grant and Robert Jar- 1 beau of Waldensian’s New York J Office, came to Valdese for a one- i day course in the processes of. making Waldensian (and Otis^ I hosiery. The men came in a char- ! tered pullman car, arriving in J Morganton at 6 a. m., and left Val- j desc at 6 p. m. During those 12 hours they were shown how Wai- J dersian hosiery is made, from the ! production plant at the Pauline, through the dyeing, boarding, in specting, boxing, and other pro- j cesses at the Waldensian. The men, among whom were the ' two Haight brothers, had lunch at the Pilot Cafeteria, and were shown a little of Valdese, includ- . ing the community Center. A few j of them found time to visit the I Pilot Mill an da few the Valdese Manufacturing Company, but most of their time was concen trated at the Waldensian. County-Wide Music Event j In Valdese On May 18 j ) Wednesday, May 18, has beer* se j lected as the date for the second j annual county-wide music festival | to be held at Valdese elementary i school. Friday, May 20, is the ! alternate date in case the weather i on Wednesday is unfavorable, Mrs. Harold LaFevers of Valdese, chairman of the committee in charge of arrangements, said that the entire program will take more than one hour and ten minutes and it will possibly be shorter. Each part of the program is being tim ed, and spaced to allow time for the changing of pupils on the; auditorium steps which will serve as a stage. The schools that will take part in the festival are Salem, Pilot Mountain, Oak Hill, Chesterfield, Drexel, Rutherford College, Icard, Hildebran, George Hildebrand, and Valdese, and the three Negro coun ty schools: Willow Tree, Corpen ing and Drexel. Only one of the county schools, Mull; was unable to participate this year. The program will begin at 7 p. m. Mystery-rarce in i nree Acts is Senior Play Friday Night! “Aunt Susie Shoots the Works” is the title of the play which the senior class of the Valdese high school will present at the school auditorium Friday evening at 8 o’clock. The play, a mystery farce in three acts, is under the direction of Miss Anita Ghigo, senior class adviser. In the leading role of Aunt Susie Stowe, an eccentric old maid, will be Nancy Harrison. Other mem bers of the cast are Gilda Cline, Elizabeth Coulter, Florine Mott, Betty Brevard, Juanita Sharpe, Rosalie Grana, Edwin Houk, Rob ert Herman, M. Z. Honeycutt and i Jackie Envood. Other members of the class are working on the administrative and production end of the play. Bobby Craft and Bill Ollis are working together in the dual jobs of stage' •manager and properties manager, j Robert Dye will manipulate the j lighting. Phyllis Berry is in charge of | ticket sales, and Gerald Arrowood, j Jackie Erwood and Marie Zimmer- | man are making posters to publi- j cize the play. Price of admission is 50c for j adults and 25c for children. Recreation Program For Children To Begin At Valdese Mission Today I a cnnaren s recreation program j at the East Valdese Baptist Mis ; sion will be started this afternoon, Wednesday, at 3:45 o’clock. All the children in the neighborhood are invited to come to the old tea room, which is being used by the Grape Damage High Here From Easter Freeze Fred Peyronel, one of Valdese’s outstanding producers of grapes, says that the Easter morning freeze killed virtually all grapes in this area. “It put me out of the grape business for 1949,” Mr. Peyronel said this morning. Pointing out that Easter had been unkind to fruits for the past two years, he said that the low of 23 degrees came the day after Easter last year and this year the low point of 28 degrees was reached on Easter Sunday morning. “Last year it took all peaches, pears, plums, and some early blooming apples and this year it killed grapes and maybe some other fruits which escaped the earlier freezes March 1 and be j fore,” he continued. mission, for stories, games ana songs. Adjoining the tea room is a large lot which is being cleaned off and will be used for a playground when ready. In the meantime, most of the activities will be held indoors. Mrs. Bertis Fair, who has studi ied recreational work in college and in the Southwestern Seminary, will assist with the program. Different groups are being ar ranged for children of different ages. The program will vary with the different age groups, and handwork will be added later. Purpose of the program is to provide one afternoon a week of directed entertainment for the children. Last Thursday af tern on, chil dren of the community were invit ed to an egg hunt. After musical games at the mission building, they went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Micol for the egg hunt and for refreshments. Nineteen children attended. Peggy Walsh assisted with directing the outing. PILOT CLUB MEETING The Valdese Pilot Club will have a business meeting Thursday eve ning at 7:30 o’clock. Reports of the district meeting in Raleigh will be given. DELEGATES TO FHA MEETING ARE CHOSEN Four Valdese Students To Take Part In State Convention. Alyce Epley, Rheta Micol,, Peggy Benfield and Joyce Ramsey, to gether with Miss Jennie McNaull, will leave Friday evening after the senior class play for Raleigh where they will attend the state conven tion of the Future Homemakers of America clubs. Alyce, a junior at Valdese high school, is state vice president. The other three girls have been elected as delegates from the Valdese high school FHA. Joyce Ramsey, first place win ner in a style show in the high school here, will take part in the fashipn show at the convention. Last weekend Miss McNaull and five. FHC club members went to Catawba College in Salisbury for the open house of the home econo mics department. Work of the de partment was exhibited, demon strations were given, and a tea was held. The girls making the trip were Nancy Walker, Barbara Fra zier, Jenelle Searcy, Mary Ann Mc Carley, Maxine Briggs and Ann Berry. LOCAL SINGERS ARE ATTENDING MUSIC EVENT Taking Part In Festival In Greensboro Chorals For Boys and Girls. Eighteen students of the Val dese High School glee club are in Greensboro this week for the state high school music festival. They are participating in three choral groups—a girls’ glee club, a boys’ glee club and a mixed chorus, all under the direction of Dr. Harry Wilson of Columbia University. The festival is supplanting the state contests of recent years, and is intended to give the students wider choral experience under master directors. The students chosen to make! the trip are Doris Ramsey, Ann Long, Alma Whisnant, Rheta Micol, Alyce Epley, Peggy Joan Perrou, Vivian Grisette, Joan Rutherford, Norma Kay Fite, Ro salie Grana, Gerald Arrowood, Willis Lachot, Harold Abernathy, Eugen Sain, Jack Robinson, Max Baker, Harold Hartman, Robert Herman. Max Wilson, who received a rat inf of “one” on his baritone horn solo in the district music contest in Asheville, is also taking part in the state instrumental contest this week in Greensboro. Robert Gourley, director of the band and glee clubs, accompanied the students to Raleigh. MARSH SPEAKS TO ROTARIANS Social Security System Is Explained* To Club At Last Meeting. The workings of the Social Se curity were explatined to the Val dese Rotary club by Don Marsh, of the Hickory Social Security office. Mr. Marsh was introduced by T. R. Berry, who had charge of the pro gram. Dick Ribet, club president, ap pointed a committee to work with committees from the Lions Club and the Pilot Club on a project to secure housing accomodations for the teachers in the Valdese schools. The committee consists of Louis Deaton, Ervin Williams and Rev. M. M. Summey. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Ribet, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Ramsay, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Brown and Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Pons attended the charter night banquet of the New ton-Conover Rotary Club Friday in Newton. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Long attend ed the Morganton Rotary Club’s Ladies night Monday as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Berry. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Ribet were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Fitz. HERE SEVERAL DAYS Miss Kitty Long and Miss Fran ces Hern, senior at Mary Washing ton College, Fredericksburg, Vir ginia, spent Thursday through Tuesday at home with their par ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Long and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hern. Valdese General Hospital Is Ten Years Old Today 0 Here Are Your Candidates Seeking Office May 3 The Valdese race for mayor be came a four-sided affair last week when Harrison Nichols filed as a candidate to the office. Nichols entrance into the race came as a surprise, since he is a relative new comer to town. Interest in the election is run ning high with a total of 13 can didates for all offices as of Mon day. Candidates still have until Tuesday, April 26, to file for of fice. No rumors were abroad as to any other candidates who plan VALDESE HERO OF TOKYO RAID JOINS BUDDIES Ray Williams, Valdese Police man, One of Thirty-One Survivors of Raid Ray Williams of Valdese, one of the thirty-one surviving members of Jimmy Dolittle’s Shangri-La raid on Tokyo April 1*8, 1942 left Friday for Houston, Texas, for a reunion with his buddies. Williams, now a Valdese police man, was picked up at the Hickory Municipal airport Friday morning in a U. S. Army C-47 and flown to Washington, D. C., from which point he and others who took part in the historical flight will leave for Houston. The reunion opened Saturday morning at the new Shamrock hotel and will last through Tues day, Williams, who was an en gineer in World War Two, said prior to boarding the C-47 here, j The plane he boarded was flown to the Nation’s Capital city by Major R. R. Patterson, Lieutenant. T. N. Peebles and Sergeant Gal lagher, who landed in Hickory about 8:30 o’clock. The Valdese veteran arrived at the airport a short time later, ac companied by four fellow citizens —Mayor Oscar M. Harrison, City1 Manager Lee Ribet, Henry F. Gar- i rou, and Francis Garrou. It will be recalled that seventy two men participated in the Tokyo raid, taking off from the deck of the USS Hornet while the carrier was 680 miles off the Japanese coast. Bailing out over China after his mission had been completed, Wil liams fell into the hands of friend ly guerrillas until he was able to rejoin American forces. NEW BUILDING GOING UP ON W. CONNELLY STREET Thurman M. Brinkley is con structing a two-story brick busi ness building at 81 W. Connelly street adjoining the Valdese Furniture Company building. The building is valued at $15,000 on the building permit. Mr. Brink ley is supervising the construction of the building himself. Contract for the wiring has been let to Davis Electrical company, and the Valdese Plumbing and heating Company will install the plumbing and systems. A. and D. Farm Supplies will oc cupy the first floor of the new building, and the second floor will also be rented out. Bernard Buick Company will expand into t^he space now used by the A and D. JUNIOR ORDER DISTRICT MEETING HERE FRIDAY The fourth district Junior Order of United American Mechanics will hold its semi-annual session in Valdese Friday, April 22, at 8 p. m. W. C. Purcell of Durham and Forrest G. Shear in of Scotland Neck, state JOUAM officials, will be present. Bill McCombs of Mor ganton, district councilor, will pre side. SONNY GARROU HERE Henry J. (Sonny) Garrou, Jr., freshman at N. C. State College in Raleigh, spent Easter weekend with his parents on Mountain View Read. . ned to file, but with eight more days to go, plenty could happen. Correction Last week’s paper said that Aldo Martinat had filed as a candidate for mayor from Ward 3. The name should have been Yaldo Martinat. As of Monday, Earl Searcy in Ward One was unopposed and so was Donald Martinat in Ward Two and Guy Cline in Ward Four. All three are candidates for re-elec tion. The entrance of Walter Linga felt into the aldermanic race in Ward Three (Pineburr) brought the number of candidates there to three. The others are J. Francis Verreault, who is one of the own ers of the Dolly Hosiery Mill, and Valdo Martinat, an employee of the Pineburr Hosiery Mill. Linga felt is employed at the Pilot Full Fashion Mill. A similar situation exists in Ward 5 where the incumbent al derman, Stewart (Tude) Chester is opposed by John Sams, driver of a taxi for the City Cab Com pany, and Lenoir Lowdermilk, who is employed in the office of the (Continued on page two) BURKE SCHOOLS LOSE OUT IN DEBATE EVENT Glen Alpine, Valdese, Drexel Contestants In District Finals Thursday. Glen Alpine and Valdese High school debaters lost out in Boone Thursday in district finals in the State’s triangle and dual debates. Glen Alpine’s negative team was defeated in the final match by the Appalachian High school, Boone, which was made up of Joanne Al dreidge and Jo Ann Hardin. The negative winners were Clara Jean Parrish and Bruce McGuire, representing Brevard High school who defeated debaters from the Lee Edwards High school in Ashe ville. Schools represented at the meet included, in addition to the above, Jefferson, Hudson, Bowman at Ba kersville, Lansing, Sand Hill, Tip ton Hill, Drexel and Marion. The contests got underway at nine o’ clock Thursday morning and ran until Thursday night. The negative team of Glen Al pine, composed of Ethel Hipps and Christine Henline, won over a Drexel pair—Catherine McNeely and Stewart Cozart, recently. VALDESE FIREMEN AT DISTRICT PUMP SCHOOL Four Valdese firemen attended a pump school <in Enka last week for District Five of the Western North Carolina Firemen’s Associa tion under the sponsorship of Fire Chief Sally of Enka. They are Assistant Chief Paul Wyatt, Frank Tise, Jr., Francis Garrou, Jr., and Fred Ribet. Instructions were given by a representative of the American La France company (from whom Val dese’s new fire truck was purchas ed), and Fire Chief Munday of Charlotte. REGISTRATION BOOKS OPEN AT CITY HALL Registration books opened at the city hall last Saturday and will remain open every day this week until Saturday night, April 23, at 9 p. m. Books are open each day from 9 a. m. until 5 p. m., except Sat urday when they will remain open until 9 p. m. Saturday will also be challenge day. TO ATTEND PTA MEET Mrs. Floyd Powell, new president of the Valdese Parent-Teachers Association, will attend a state P. T. A. meeting Tuesday and Wed nesday, April 26 and 27, in Ral eigh. Reece Scull, president of the Rutherford College P.-T. A., is also planning to attend part of the meeting. LOOKS BACK ON AID FOR MANY LOCAL PEOPLE However, Unpaid Accounts Are Blight On Otherwise Outstanding Record The Valdese General Hospital, voluntary community hospital, is ten years old today. It can look back on 10 years of service, during which 16,525 adult in-patients (the kind who are put to bed in the hospital) and at least 10 times that many out-patients have been treated. It can also look forward to a future that is none too bright financially, the reason is simple: there are so many people in this world who do not pay their hos pital bills. Each year the hospital operates at a loss because of un paid hospital bills. With all it* present buildings paid for, the hos pital faces the prospect of having to mortgage the entire plant in order to meet the payments of construction on the new nurses’ home and the remodeling of the old nurses’ home into a clinic— an expansion program necessitat ed by the increased number of patients the hospital is being call ed upon to care for. The fact is even sadder when it is considered that some of those bills are even paid for by insurance companies, and the hospital never sees the money. It works this way: Private insurance companies write a hospitalization policy. The pa tient sends his hospital bill to the company. The company sends him a check. The patient spends the money and the hospital is left holding the bag ... an empty bag at that. Such practices as this, and the fact that there are many people who consistently refuse to con sider a hospital bill as an obliga tion, are forcing the hospital to operate in the red, a state of af fairs that cannot continue in definitely. Some hospitals manage to keep out of the red because of large en dowments. The Valdese General Hospital has no endowment. The solution to the problem is not in sight, say the trustees of the hospital, but one must be found. The hospital must keep operating, they say, for with 2,303 patients .admitted in the past 11 and a half months, it is difficult to imagine (Continued on page two) In Valdese Thursday, April 21 3:30 p. m.—Girl Scout Troop No. 13 will meet at the home of Miss Sue Searcy. 6:45 p. m.—The Lions Club will meet at the Pilot Cafeteria. 7:30 p. m. — The Sans Souci Bridge Club will meet with Miss Pat Melvin. 7:30 p. m.—The Parent-Teach ers Association will meet in the school auditorium. 7:30 p. m.—The Pilot Club will meet at the Community Center. —o— Friday, April 22 8 m.—Senior class play in the school auditorium. 8 p. m.—District meeting in Val dese of the Jr. O. U. A. M. 8 p. m.—The Dutch Club will meet in the Waldensian Clubhouse. —o— Saturday, April 23 8 p. m.—Square dance at the Legion Hut. —o— Sunday, April 24 11 a. m.—Worship services at all churches. —o— Monday, April 25 2 p. m.—The Connelly Springs Home Demonstration Club will meet. 7 p. m.—Boy Scout Troop No. 2 will meet at the First Baptist church. —o— Tuesday, April 26 12:30 a. m.—The Rotary Club will meet at the Pilot Cafeteria. 7 p. m.—Boy Scout Troop No. 1 will meet in the St. Germain street Scout hut. 7:30 p. m.—The Postal Auxiliary will meet.
The Valdese News (Valdese, N.C.)
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April 20, 1949, edition 1
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