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Hickory Daily 4 vk Pf COMB VOL. II. NO. 99 IHICKORY, N. C, WEDNESDAY EVENING JANUARY 10, 1917 PRICE TWO CENTS GOVERNOR TO RECEIVE AN HXtttASE IN SALARY House Amends Senate Bill and Reduces Propos ed Income and Then Kills Salary Raises for State OfficersMay Not Return Money to Penitentiary. Record's Special Legislature Service Raleigh, Jan- 10. By amending the senate bill raising the incoming governor's salary from $5,000 to $7, ,.00 ami reducing it to $6,500, the house- today passed the salary act ap plying to the governor only, by (51 to 48. The senate immediately sidopted the amendment and it is now law. Constitutional questions arising out of the article declaring the gov ernor's term to begin January 1 caus ed four votes against the raise. Ray of Macon opposed the raise on the ground that taxes already are too heavy ami the raise would lose votes in close coun'ties. Page of Moore wanted a $10,000 governor. Four Republicans voted with the majority party. The house when it considered the salary bill had not adjourned from Tuesday night and ratified legisla tion today by its continued session. When the senate bill raising consti tutional officers to $4,000 reached the house, only one member voted for it. Jones of Buncombe introduced a resolution appropriating $4,070 by WATER POWERS UTILIZED BY ARM ES (By Associated Press) Paris, Jan. 10. The water power of the Alps, the Pyronee. and the central mountainous region is playing a big role in "the military effort of France and will have an even greater share in the after-war economic struggle. iMany new hydraulic power plants, born of the war needs, are turning out shells, chemicals and other neces sities for the army. Many others, born of the coal famine and its les sons will replace steam after the war. France utilized thirteen per cent of its total estimated natural wrter pow er in 1914. She was utilizing more than twenty per cent in July of this ytar and the proportion is every day increasing. Competent engineers LEAK' HEARINGS DRYS TRANSFER PLACE CAB! OF DISPLAYS SUSPENDED TODAY (By Associated Press.) jWashington, Jan. 10. After an- HEIR FIGHT TO HONS E (By Associated Press) Washington, Jan. 10 The fight other brief session today the house for a dry national capital was trans rules committee suspended public ferred to the house today from the hearings on Representative Wood s ! senate, where the prohibition bill for resolution to investigate whether there was a stock market leak on President Wilson's note. Many con gressmen said they believed the com mittee would vote against a public hearing. iNo formal action was taken by the committee at its executive session. TVT .- -.- lf rA V-T. . ufli" !- -frVio Wood resolution probably would be10" for Personal tise adversely reported to the house the District of Columbia was passed late yesterday. Advocates of the measure apparently are confident of favorable action in the house. As it goes to the house the bill would , abolish saloons in the district and prevent the manufacture of liq urors, but would not prohibit importa- The measure would go into effect November 1, NET HICKORY SPINNING CO. ! NEW CORPORATION HERE AT DEPOT Whether to recommend specific in-' 1917 vestigation of Lawson charges of stock exchange dealings was not de cided upon. The course of the committee was -not announced, 'but there have been inti mations that the majority felt that the examination of Thomas W.. Law son had revealed nothing to warrant an investigation. Some members contend that if there is to be a general investigation of the New York stock exchange and alleged operations of government of ficials thereon, it should begin on a new one, as the Wood resolution was not broad enough. JLawson told the committee that he would, turnish the name ana amounts if a special investigation is held. . GERMAN HAIDER IS T DE ROYED fiv sit J.f-On Onn hnrsf nowr.r the pn way of refund to the state prison crjXy France could secure from its upon the $10 alloted to the families water-falls at low water, while 9. of the prisoners. It appears that the -00,000 horse power is the estimate lp rri i a. 1 . measure will be opposed. Governor Craig has agreed per sonally to return this money if the legislature refuses to pass the bill. .Representative Pritchard, Repub lican, or .Madison last night urged the senate to kill his bill abolishing for average seasons. The Ulal steam energy used in France before the war was only about 3,500,000 hoise powsr divided among about 64,000 establish ments. The water power of the Alp3 has gicen the name of the ''Vale of Alum- i 'num to the Valley of the Arc, where the Madison county road commission; forminfr alumine into aluminum bars, when he learned that his county i ia Romanche is the wild valley from would lose $10,000 of government ; Bourg d'Oisons to Pont de Claiz is money. The repeal had been passed; the "valley of carburet and metallic in the house during the day. with alloys," absorbing 62,000 horse power, the help of IT.nry Page. yho insisted; Kiectric steel plants are concen that Mr. Pritchard had the right tot trating in the basin of the Arly where monkey in county affairs as much as one concern has installed a complete Democrats. ' : till with electric furnaces run .by Both houses passed a great number ( turbines of 22 000 horse power. Sev. Of local bills during the day, and, ,.n1 imnnrtnnt. tipw rilnnts nv. hir,0- yesterday worked intermittently while the clerks, an extra bunch of them, worked hard to catch up with the grind. Governor-elect Pickett will be in augurated Thursday. Mr. Bickett will come from his home at Louis burg on a special train. Santford Martin, editor of the Winston-Salem Journal, already is here to act as his secretary. BUFFALO BILL' PASSES AT DENVER (By Associated Press.) Denver, Col., Jan. 10. Col. Wm. Frederick Cody (Buffalo Bill' soldier hunter and scout, died at 12,05 here today at the home of his sister. I) KICKS RUINING FARMS IN PART OF SCOTLAND (By Associa'-'d Press.) Glasgow, Jan. 10. Scotland is suf fering from the deer pest. Hun dreds of herds of deer are descending on farms and devouring the crops. Farmers and land agents reported fieso conditions at a recent meeting "f tho Scottish Chamber of Agricul t ire und demanded amendments to the game laws so that more deers could be shot and tho food supplies increased. It seems that 9,000,000 of Scot land's 1.., 000,000 acres are officially described as "mountain and heath n razing land." Of this more than two ii illion acres are deer forest proper, and on much of the rest deer com l"te with sheep and cattle for the Pisture. A good landlord encloses l. ; . . it m preserves wun a ueer ience anai keeps it in repair. tBut it was said at tho chamber meeting that there fire many bad landlords. One of tho biggest sheep farmers in Scotland declared that a .nation less insured by tradition to the dom inance of the great landowning fam ilies would long ago have demanded that deer should be confined to the poor lands, and that the better lands should bo used for crops, pasture or afforestation. built in the region of Grenoble In the valley of the Durance new plants aggregatin 74,000 horse power for the electro-chemical indus try are under way, while above Mon ande one of the biggest chemical works in France has acquired rights to about 120.000 horse power of water fall that will be utilized speedily. ,Nydrauu'c electrical plants in Central France have saved the fam ily ribbon industry of Saint Etmne. The little home shops had begun to disappear unable to compete with the mills. Electric motors of a quar ter of a horse power have set this domestic occupation going again, keeping at home men and women who would otherwise be driven to the looms of the big mills. Little mo tors are used all through th region for cabinet making. Had they not existed before the war, it would be necessary to invent them or some thing equivalent for the use of maim ed soldiers. The electric motor is counted up on also to solve the problem of farm help in regions accessible to current. Cooperative socities are being formed to buy current for distribution among the members: the installation of a power station is being considered by one of them. A law to encourage and help such projects is now being considered in the chamber 'Electric energy for Paris brought from the Alps is the most ambitious project for the future. A dam 75 yards high in the Rhone at Genissiat backing the water up 14 miles to the Swiss frontier, will furnish a fall sufficient to operate a power station of 35,000 horse power and 240,000 kilowattsi The energy is to be trans ported to Paris in the form of an al terrating current under a tension of 120,000 volts. The line of transmiss ion will be 312 miles lOne hundred and twenty million francs is the estimated outlay the cost of about a day and a half of war to France. This enterprise would alone econ omize 1,800,000 tons of the 20 mil lion tons of coal France imported an nually before the war, Engineers fig ure that current brought from the Swiss frontier may be sold with suf ficient profit in Pans at 3 centimes a kilowatt hour, an economy of about 50 per cent on the cost of current produced by steam before the war (REFORMED CHURCH TO HELP j IN EDUCATIONAL MOVJiMiilST A residence section of Hickorv' Salisbury, Jan. 10 The Reformed will be opened up when contemplated church classis of North Carolina at 1 . !. 1 . ' 1T - 1 improvements are maae in wnai is a special meeting neia m ansoury known as the M. L. Lline estate, Mr. vesterdav decided to enter into the Guy Cline appearing before city coun- umvard educational movement cil Tuesday night and offering the great uPward educational movement city a fifty-foot street through the , ot their church and, to this end the property. fThis would be JS1 meteenth ; month between August 15 and bep- street and it would intersect with tpw 15 has been set anaA as the ourteenth avenue. Already proper-; t;m( fnr tT.e making nf the canvass ty-owners in this section are asking jn this state. for water and Mayor Whitener and j The speciai meeting of classis was the board promises this as soon as ! addressed by Dr. J. H. Apple of Hood possible. If possible, a main will be'Colleee Fredrick. Md.. who explained aid at Once. ItVip mnvsmpnt wherehv the Reformer. Mr. D. T, Applegate, appearing ipV,, ;s pndeavorinP- to arouse e-reat with Mr. Cline, said that he had ; interest in education and at the same awarded the contract for a residence ; time raise a fund of $i 000000 to be ALABAMA GOVERNOR MAY VII T BORDER Montgomery. Ala.. Jan. 10. Arous ed by tho report from the Alabama camp at Nogales, and the official re port that 22 of the soldiers have died there during the last 24 days, Gov ernor Henderson announced today that ho was-seriously considering go ing to tho camp for a personal inspection, PHYS ICAL VALUATION SOUTHBOUND RAILROAD RESIDENCE 1 BE OPENED (By Associated Press) New York, Jan. 10. Persistent ru mors that a German raider was met in the Atlantic and sunk by a British cruiser yesterday afternoon were cur rent in well informed steamship cir- jeles. Details are lacking of the iden tity of the vessel and the location of 'the place. j The Lamport and Holt line, owners of the steamship Voltaire, announces ; that rumors had reached them that their vessel was m a Bermuda port. Line officials say that they have heard that the Voltaire, which was said to have been captured by the raider, had been recaptured and carried to Bermuda. The Voltaire left Liverpool No vember 28 for New York. (By Associated Press.) London, Jan.. 10 entente powers to President Wilson's on note asking the belligerents to state sicians had rendered first aid. their aims has now received the an-' The negroes who drew three -.-.-1 . V-. 4-l- C- TirAn "lT- . X"t1 , r-. tJn il 1 I . proval of all the entente governments 1Ttj i c Z ' I secured at once, the plant will be and its delivery is about to be made those who drew gix months were 'Hez. p.t Paris. Publication, however, will ekiah Lewis, Roosevelt Dula and Gor- be deferred until 48 hours after it don buddeth. has been received by the American ; ijgar Everettes of Dfrookford was ; tinerl .. arm pnsrc fnr cc nlVinr- q government. i school bov. the man heino- Hisn.PaspH The delay in sending the reply was with a lot of children playing baseball due to changes by one of the entente at the school grounds, powers, but these were largely chang- j 7777 ; 777T l v;i- i x uiiuiin o l j o v j es in phraseology and do not alter the original reply. The reply contains approximately ,500 words. Its terms concerning FROM GERMAN CAPTORS CBy Associated Press) Maastricht, Netherland, Jan. 10. i An ingenious ruse, smackiner of Di- he terms of the entente powers are rate yarns, has just enabled 40 Bel- more specific than were contained in ; gians to get safely out of Belgium the answer to Germany. and could not start work until water was secured. His new house will be in the rear of Mrs. J. C. Moser's res idence. Council approved bond of the De Rhodes Plumbing Company for in stalling the plumbing and heating ap paratus at the new graded school and, distributed among the 12 leading col leges and seminaries of the church. Catawba College at Newton will be the North Carolina institution to share in the fund. Phillip Palmer clerk at the Empire Hotel is at John Hopkins Hospital to undergo an operation made necessary LITTLE POSSIBILITY MEXICO GOING 1 i 1 1 ! .1 as tne material aireaoy nas arnvea , as a result of a feU he had some yearg miu as cue wuiiv ui uic uuuuci naa approached the second floor, Mr. De- Rhodes and his men can begin work at once. ago. Envoy S. A. Dillman, who has been in charge of the Salvation Army work in Salisbury for some time, has re ceived notice that he is to be moved. Neither his new place nor his success or here have been named. E. C. Crego has bid in the old P. P. Meroney home for $18,500. This was the girlhood home of Mrs. Crego. iJames Lyons, pressman at the Even ing Post office for four years, has gone with the Richmond Locomotive works to help make shells for the allies. MARKETS COTTON FUTURES T)HE CENTRAL HIGHWAY Greensboro News. !lt appears now that a large propor tion of the local bills introduced du ring the first week of the session of the general assembly might have been put off until later, as they do not come within the inhibition of the con- stitvltional amendment. Perhaps the mistaken notion that thty all had to be in within the first 10 days may redound to the benefit of the state, however, as pretty nearly ever body has got his particular bill through by this time, and having local matters off its chest the legislature can turn to affairs of state-wide importance with the leisure and concentration that they demand. (Heavens knows there are enough of these to keep them busy. A proii- tahle wp. V . nnln hp stwnt nn "rlit highwav problem. iMonths ago thelcotton market today and after start nailv Mews sno-o-esferl thf one nfimg at a slight decline, active months the most profitable investments that:f?1(J 4 to 46 Points belo,w the the legislature could make for North j hl8h level uf yesterday. Spot houses Carolina would be the paving of he werr uou uuy. nowever, aim uie Central highway from the Atlantic market steadied after the call, with ocean to the Tennessee line. It is'c"v' ",U'R"S eiB L "f"" our hope that now that the special The market closed steady, legislation is for the most part out ' Open of the way the solons may be indue- ,Janua'"3r ed to consider this proposition with March 18.55 the care that it deserves. By the May 18.80 best calculations available, laying a 'July 18.81 pavement similar to the one on the stretch of the highway between (By Associated Press) INew York, Jan. 1U. ihere was a renewal of active realizing in the Greensboro and High Point would cost $6,000,000. If the state supplied every copper of that amount it would receive large returns upon its invest ment; but it would hardly be fair to take it all out of the state's treasury. The counties through which the high way runs ought to pay some, and the people whose property abuts on the road ought to pay some more. If each of the three parties named were (By Associated Press.) I assessed one-third of the cost the Washington, Jan. 10. Physical val- state s share would amount to only October 17.40 Close 18.07 18.22 18.49 18 60 17.08 HICKORY MARKETS Cotton 18c Wheat $2.00 CHICAGO WHEAT (By Associated Press) i(hicago, Jan. 10. W,heat prices rallied today from transient weak ness, due from inferences that the German chancellor would soon make O V ' W ATTA "- - - T t 4- , - .., i oo aaa J u i a I1CVV i"ve tu uinifd auuui peace, uat.on or the winstonaiem ,.- - Opening prices which ranged from the same as yesterday's close to 3-4 high er with May at 1.86 7-8 to 1.87 and July at 1.49 to 1.50, were followed hnnnd Pailwav Co.. 112 miles long , worth many times that sum. and owned jointly by the Norfolk I We are looking for some sort of on1 Wioat.prn and Atlantic Coast Line legislation concerning the Central Railway-made public today by the highway and whether it takes the a Substantial set' blcT and thS form outlined above or not, we hope and believe that it will be a step for ward toward the goal a first class, boulevard from one end of the state to the other. ! interstate commerce commission, and cost of reproduction are placed at $5,121,188. and its present value al lowing for depreciation $4,753,006. iThe original cost, the report shows was $5,153,996 The road is capil talized at $125,00 and has outstand ing obligations aggregating $6,210,- 000. Among its assets are placed; 17 000 acres of land valued at $603,-.days" is being conducted in the Bap- 898. The road was operated at a . tist church, in Boone by pastor M. A. loss of $409,639 from December 17,' Adams and Rev. A. C. Sherwood, of and Thursday, much colder Thurs 1910, to June 30, 1915. Bennettsville, South Carolina. day; strong west winds MEETING AT BOONE j iBbone, Jan 10. "A meeting of a rise in some cases that showed moderate net gain. THE WEATHER For North Carolina: Fair tonight i ROAD SENTENCES F0RC0L0RED (Mir. C. G. Hanson of Asheville, in dustrial agent of the Southern Rail way Company, was in the city Tuesday afternoon conferring with Secretary Joy relative to a display cabinet that is to be placed at the union station for the benefit of persons who may stop here for a few minutes or hours be tween trains. Photographs of dairy farms, of man ufacturing plants and other industries, together with a panoramic view of Hickory, will be placed in the cabinet in plain view. A box will be placed in the cabinet and persons interested may drop their cards into the box and be sure that their inquiries will be an swered. IThe display cabinet will be the most pretentious in this part of the state, and it will be ot interest not only to iGarfield Parker, colored, drew 18 the travelling public, but to Hickory months on the countv roads and the people as well, many of whom will be other young warriors led by him in urprised at the number and import- the campaign acrainst Rob Wilson and ance of the interests in this section. ! Tom Whittenbers. two Newton com- ! manders who wert hauling around i Beta Hoke and Goldie Gaither, drew ; three and six months respectively for their part in the attack on the auto mobile new year s eve between Hick- ; ory and Brookford. The genadiers j under 14 years of age were allowed I to be hired out for three months, this ! concession being made to them in de j forence to their youth, j Wilson was returning from the : country when the Hickory darkies ; who had built a fire by the side of . the road, fired at his machine, and ; sent a load of birdshot through the ! front and peppered Wilson and one I of the girls. A shower of rocks al j so struck the car. The joy riders I did not stop until their gasoline gave The reply to the ou':' ana they late.r bougnt a gallon V7 i xvciuacnc tiiivi JUU1 1 1 1 t. u tu J.NCW- but not until after several phy- Corporation to Manufacture Hosiery Yarns Char tered for Hickory May Not Secure Suitable Location Here Is $300,000 Enterprise Ready by Early June NTENTE REPLY READY ' By Associated Press Raleigh, Jan. 10. The Hick ry Spinning Company of Hickory, capitalized at $:00, 000 of which $75,000, has been paid in, was chartered todaj' by the secretary of state. The company will manufacture yarns, cloth and other fabrics. The Hickory Spinning Company, with authorized capital of $300,000. was chartered by the secretary of state at Raleigh today, and the new company, which will manufacture hosiery yarns, is expected to be in operation by the early part of June. No location has been secured for the plant, but the company hopes to lo cate in Hickory if a suitable site can be obtained at a reasonable price; otherwise it will seek a site elsewhere. (The corporation is composed of some of the leading business men in this section of North Carolina and the business will be unlike any in operation in Hickory or this part of the state. Although the authorized capital is $300,000, the new company will begin business with $125,000, all of which is subscribed by Mr. A. M. Kistler of Morganton and Messrs. Geo. N. Hutton, J. D. Elliott, II. J. Holbrook and K. C. Menzies of Hick ory, AH the amchinery has been pur chased and the company is waiting only on a suitable site and the erec tion of a -building. If the location DRY A tugboat lay on the river Meuse a Haccourt early one morning, guard ed by three German soldiers. One or two Belgians casually approached and entered into conversation with I the sentries, the sequel to a friend j ly chat being an invitation to have a t drink at the nearest hosterly. Here ; a sleeping portion was adroitly in i t.rrvdnppd in thp linsnsnprtincr flpr. man's glasses, and a few minutes la- ; ter the sentries were carried aboard (By Associated Press.) jthe boat in a helpless condition. Oueretaro, Mexico. There seems lit- Three Belgians quickly donned tie possibility that a clause providing ieir umiorms, tne rest oi the lugi for prohibition in Mexico will be in- tlve Party had already taken up their eluded in the new constitution, accord- Quarters below, and the towboat was ing to delegates to the consituttional otm seaming noiiana-waras, tne congress. The advisability of pro- perman war flag flying bravely at hibiting the sale of intoxicants and "' nu tne ui, prohibiting gambling was considered ivre imperiously snoutea ana in connection with Article 4 which once safe y on the other side the little declares that no person shall be hin-'; boat .Ped downstream at full speed dered in following any profession in-. snappmg the wire that stretched dustry or labor which does not offend arss the boundary and being soon against the laws of society. The ar-. afterwards run ashore on Dutch ter- 4- T-iT7o 1-ioT iro a rprnr pi tit tin' x 1 uux J committee without specific mention ' . "WSth borrowed plumes restored to of prohibition and passed as report-; t?sm abdicated Germans were A V.,T nnnrrvavc ftlVCII UUC Ul I LIUIl S tUIlCUrillllS lilt. CU u y Ulic t.iititoo. T l . n 1 The delegates to the congress are,""- "" u" "k11""' confident for the most part that the body will complete its labors well within the time specified in the decree of General Carranza which provides that the new constitution mast be completed by February 1. The dele-i gates declare that although there .-re over one hundred and thirty articles ; in the draft of the new constitution, j there are many to which there is no . opposition and that action on these ' will be sneedv. . Althoug-h the call has not formally """"h"" been issued it is known that the elec- r tion for president probably will be u,: called for the first Sunday in March ates.. and that the successful candidate will reion. assume office April 1 m operation before the first of July. It will manufacture yarns for knit ting mills and will find a ready mar ket for its product. Hickory people will hope that the plant will be located here or in this immediate vicinity, as the promoters are prepared to more than double the output. GASOLIN NTENS E COLD WAVE TO STRIKE COUNTRY E FIRE TRUC 1 K ARRIVES The big gasoline pump to be attach ed to the fire truck arrived Tuesday night and has been placed in the fire station, together with the new body for the machine. The pump was purchased on the original contract with the fire truck mnufacturers and was ordered six months ago. With this pump, the firemen will be able to fight fires anvwhere they can secure water, regardless of pres sure. Winston-Salem, Atlanta and other larger cities have their trucks equipped with gasoline pumps, and Hickory will be in line. An expert from the LaFrance Com pany will come here to install the pump. FIRST NATIONAL BANK LENOIR ELECTS OFFICERS Wins? i 3y Associated Press.; :i gton, Jarv 10. A ;T.-?noir. Jan. 10. The stockholders of the First National Bank of Lenoir met. yesterday afternoon elected offi cers and directors and declared a div ident of 4 per cp.t. Dr. A. A. Kent is president and E. L. Shuford is vice- old wave of several days' ! president. The dirj-ctors are J. B. is predicted to overspread ; Atkinson, R. L. Steele, F. II. Coffey, :le Atlantic and New England i D. D. Doughteriy, E L. Shuford, ,. ihe Oil. valley, and thelakejE. Ransom, T H. Broyhill and Dr. I A. A. Kent. pro- MAY MAKE PAPER AT ROANOKE RAPIDS (By Associated Press.) Raleia-h.' Jan. 10. The General Pa- npr Comoanv of Roanoke Rapids, Halifax county, was chartered today. Field . j, .-r.4- rrv .-V Mackensen Forces Passage of Putna in Campaign Against Russian Forces i 1 y Associated Press.) Marshal von Mackensen is by the secretary of state. The con-: -dl developing his attack north cern, capitalized at $5,000, of which 1 s $2,j000 has been p?id h proposes " of Fokshani and already has sue- to manufacture, buy ana sen paper; d d 5n forcing a passage 0f the and paper products. The incorpor- 1 & itors are Fred and R. M. Peck and 'Putna, across which the Russians m C. M. Graham. NDOWMENT m OVER HALF MILLION southern Moldavia retreated after los ing the Folkshani bridgehead pro tecting the Sereth line in this impor tant central sector. Von Mackensen's thrust here ap parently has the railroad town of Pantzin as its objective. At last account the Teutonic forces 1 iTi An 1it fivo milps frnm Pantzin. Charlotte, Jan. 10 -As the : result of j Qf wWch would interfere tne campaign m u b uilcxcs. v,x ,, . , isterial relief, which came to a close ; seriously wan uic iuu'ci,.u. -. w today, the Southern Presbyterian ! Russian supplies. church has added $137,500 to this j .wfoile the German statement to cause and now has a total of $538,500 ! rf the gaining cf a to the endowment fund. J footing on the bank of the Putna, the Russians have been cleared en tirely from the stream and have been forced to retreat back of the Sereth river itself, the last defense of the Russians. Nearer, Berlin indicates, stubborn attacks have been made by the Rus sians, but declares that these have been repulsed with heavy losses. Considerable importance is at tached by entente military observers of the offensive the Russians have opened in the Riga region at the northern end of the Russian line. Ber lin declares that, altho'gh vigorously waged, the attacks have been repelled. Official statements declare there were no important developments last night on the other fronts during the night.
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
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Jan. 10, 1917, edition 1
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