Newspapers / Polk County News and … / April 16, 1908, edition 1 / Page 3
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"A r Japanese Coon M Expansion. Consul Geneial Henry B. Miller, of Yokohama, forwards the following Japanese newspaper extract cartling attention to two more large extensions to be made to cotton mills in that country: The Osaka Spinning Company pro poses to issue debentures to the amount of 1500,000 for the construc tion of a. new factory, containing 1, 200 looms and 17,000 spindles, at Shik wanjima, Osaka. The new factory, which is expected to commence opera tions by about March next, will en gage in the production of shirtings for export. "The Japan Spinning Company, of Osaka, is to issue seven per cent de bentures to t'he amount of $500,000, for extending the Ichinomlya Spin ning' Factory, near Nagoya, which it has recently absorbed. The number of mule spindlea is to be increased by 22,300, and finishing machinery and -a steam engine will be bought. The is sue price of the debentures i3 fixed at $49 for $50 face value, and they will be redeemed by three annual draw ings after the lapse of three years frcm the date cf ;ssue. MADE OF THIRTY THOUSAND STAMPS. At a" ball in Bermuda a wonderful dress was worn, in the making of which over thirty thousand stamps were used. Years were spent in col lating the stamps, and three weeks :n the making of the dress, which was of the finest muslin. The stamps were not pat on hap hazard, but in an elaborate design. On the front of the bodice was an eagle made entirely of brown Colum bian stamps. Suspended from the Lira's talons was a globe made of very old bine revenue stamps. Or each side of the globe was an Amer ican flag, having stripes of red and blue siamp3. On the back of the bodice was a collection of foreign stamps in the form of a shield, in the centra of which was u portrait cut from old revenue stamps, says Hor.ie Chat. A picture hat coveaed wit5" red and blue rtamps was worn with this re ir.arkable dress. PROPER NAME FOR IT. The lawyer's pretty daughter and a ycucg man were occupying chairs on the veranda. "It's rather cool out here," said the fair maid. "I move that we conclude the session in the court room The young man having seconded te motion, they at- once repaired to iho front oarlor. Are a Necessity J in the Country : Home. The farther you are removed from town to railroad station, the more the telephone will save in time and horse flesh. No man has a right to compel one of the family to lie in agony for hours While he drives to town for the doctor. Tcl- ienrior. 4 the siifFerincr "Our Free Book tells how to or- Ecronize. build and operate tele- .- ' phone lines and systems. Instruments sold on thirty days' trial to responsible parties. THE CADIZ ELECTRIC CO., 201 CCC Building, Cadiz, Ohio. 1 CENT: .IS 1 BELOW any other at or on any kind of terms, until you have received our complete Free Cata logues illustrating and describing every kind of high-grade and low-grade . . . , . . J . A r- Un -.. r nmirlroKI. 1 11 W PRICES aud wonderful direct to rider with no middlemen's pronts. fE SHIP OU APPROVAL without a cent deposit, Pay the Freight and allow 10 Days Free Trial and make other liberal terms which no other house in the world will do. You will learn everything and get much valu able information by simply writing us a postal. We need a FSJdct Agent in every town and can offer an opportunity to make money to suitable young men who apply at once. 8.50 OT.0TyftiPROOF TIRES P.N kl Wo Will sott&wm Yoss a Sampio wom t let Pair for Only out the air g (CASH WITH ORDH-$4.S5) Nfji MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES. nciiit nf i? vears extjerience m tne mov; snfier from THORNS, TUS. PSNS, NAILS, TACKS or GLASS. Serious punctures, like intentional knife cuts, can be vulcanized like any other tire. Two Hundred Thousand pairs now in actual use. Cver Avnn.rivA Thousand oairs sold last yea. BFXaatPTgSSSs Mo.de in all sizes. It is lively and easy riding very durable and lined side ffcrSajSCfJr of r-rtv- which never becomes oorous and which closes up small punctures with a special ouulity ci raDD..,w.ncn jcvci ' f i0k ..chiak statino without aHowins the air to that their tires have only be an ordinary tire, the puncture . .. , mmi-ac9 prepared tatmc on me nuuv i"' 'prgJ-J Weave" tread which prevents all air from bring or soft roads is overcome b$ we patent ,lsketweave w . f reruiftr tirice of these rww?TH. OITOBB 1iriW dated brasa hand Dtnnp and tw at OIK expense if for any reasou they are not Prices char-red bv dealers and repair men. -w wunucnui oners mc ."s- MEAL SYCLE COMPANY, of intentional icnu cuis cravy We are pertectly rename anu ..iwkj Vr.rJ 7Ct n- nhotit . If vou order a pair of SSIurag nowM'wufbS.aS tewbfeS Svj lZ us a nfll trial order at once, hence this readme .wheel3, saddles, pedals, parts AAi CmZ3 A Bfg'Q i -, K,., SW.U. line are sold bv us RECIPES. Cheese Balls Beat up the whites of two eggs -to a stiff froth, add to them a pinch of sail and a few grains of cayenne pepper, then add two table spoonfuls cf grated, cheese, mixing all thoroughly. It should be. a quite dry paste. Roll this mixture into small balls; brush over with beaten egg and roll in fine bread crumbs and fry to a golden color in smoking hot fat, drain on white papT. Serve hot on a fold ed napkin. Cheese Custards Dissolve a tea apoonful corn starch in a cup of cold milk; have two eggs beaten light and smooth, heat the milk with- the corn starch in it and add to the eggs, and add a pinch of soda; have six table spoonfuls grated cheese mixed with two of butter, and add to the eggs and I milk while warm; season wdth salt and pepper and half fill buttered cus tard cups; steam half an hour or until the centers are firm and the custards high; set in the oven a moment to brown lightly; these should always .be served with -thin slices of bread and butter just before dessert, as a separ ate course. Corn Meal Muffins Sift enough corn meal to fill a cup, add a pinch of salt and enough boiling water to wet through, but not thin in the least; stir three-quarters of a cup of flour into this, beat in two eggs and a table spoonful of batter; lastly add enough milk to make the batter -just thick enough to pour heavily from the speen and stir ilk. quickly two tea spconfuls baking powder. Bake in greased gem pans. Crab Salad Boil the crabs for one half hours in salted watsr, to which has been added a little vinegar; when dene take out the crabs and drain them. Let them cool, rqjmove the shells and pick cut all the meat; cut the meat into pieces and cover with French dressing. Cut up an equal quantity of crisp, tender celery, mix with the meat and let stand for an hour before serving. Mix with egg dressing and serve on lettuce leaves garnished with the crab claws, pais ley and hard-boiled eggs. Celery and Nut Salnd One bunch crisp celery cut into small pieces and mixed with cne pound English wal nuts, shelled and broken in pieces, then moistened with the cream dress ing, and piled lightly en erisp lettuce, will be ample for ten. . 4 SILK HANDKERCHIEFS. In washing silk handkerchiefs care should be taken to prevent their turn ing yellow. One should never be boil ed, n:r have any soap rubbed onk it. Make a lather of finely shredded white soap and water, wash and "squeeze the handkerchiefs in it, press' cut all the moisture possible, and dry quickly in the sun. Iron, them while they are still damp, but not wet. White silk handkerchiefs used ag neckties are sometimes cleaned very well with dried and-powdered starch in which a little powdered blue has been mixed. The handkerchief is spread over a clean linen cloth; with a pad of clean white linen powder is rubbed over the silk, then "cfusted out- , Iron with a moderately hot fron. Two folds of slightly damped linen are laid over the silk on the right side, this brightens it considerably. New York Press. The advocates of pooling, by the rail ways, argues the Pittsburg Dispatch, have tried to make it appear that the only way to escape rebate-3 and fa voritism was to stifle competition by means of pools, notwithstanding the fact that the most successful pools were those which united in enforcing I discriminations. But the supporters of honest and impartial rates easily j showed why the rebate is not "neces 1 sary to secure traffic which shippers would move otherwise. ILL IT WILL COST TOD to write for our big FREE BICYCLE catalogue showing the most complete line of high-grads BICYCLES. TIKES and SUNDRIES at PHICE8 manufacturer or dealer in the world. a DO NOT BUY A BICYCLE 1: t,,, -JS new offers made possible by .selling .from factory CAC Notice the thick rubber tread "A" and puncture strips MB" and "D," also rim strip "H" to prevent rim cutting:. This tire will outlast any other make SOFT, ELASTIC and EASY RIDING. A .ffiSi5KS felt when ridine on asphaft rvoi n r v iuii nv v r 1 h 1 idvcia vji Lit 111. n uv.iaii this wttement. ftfeil.S'i.'Sa ctoiy and repairs, and i at halt the usual . vw nFiiiii nv BUYING s . -. m Jm mm I Dept. " L" 0 MIOABCf ILL i escape, we nave nuauicuo . 0 za pumped up once or twice in p whole season. They weigh no morethan w Aini Nitirtirp r owe on tit i 1 umu uiixri 3 1 .hcjv. uiv. Batisfactoi-y ci examination. u n safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster. CORA AND TOMATOES TILL FROST THERE IS HO EXCUSE FOR ANT FARMER HOT HAYING THEMGET READY H0WT0 HAYE THE BEST GARBSN OFY0UR LIFE THE IH1908 1T f ILL MEAN MORE HEALTH, MORE HAPPIXESS-fWHAT TO PLAHT Tiic home' garden is too much neg- ter ana make variety with the Black lected everywhere by farmers, and Eye peas and hominy. the Southern farmer is no exception Except in the trucking sections of the coastal country one finds vegeta bles few on the tables of the farm ers. We have no objection to the Black Eye peas and sweet potatoes, j and even collar but in a climate ; where one can have a plentiful sup- j ply of all sorts of vegetables there is no excuse for having only these and a few roasting ears from the corn 1 Keife- rP V on in miner V vnn vl tna nmitiira o wv.".xj m late summer we find tfce gardens that were planted In the spring grown ' up in weeds and tne dead corn stalfes , standing even in the village gardens. There is no excuse for this, for we can by a little forethought keep up a constant supply , of the best vegeta- oles Asparagus For Example. How few farmers have an asparagus bed! j AUU y mere is ciup uroie easiiy . grown. Make a piece of land very nun wuu iu-Aueia wunteu m Qsepjy n n r qav -Mi o o r o i'ti wrwrr Pi- -i n 4- ' t-fc uu ww ww iwv c,-it lii 1 KJ y iu m ilTCL apart and thin out to two feet apart, and the very next spring you can cut euniB ctt, auu il sua Keep me uea : wen manured every isu u win in- ; crease in product year after year. Do , not bother aoout transplanting roots, for you can get asparagus quicker ' from the seed And Why Not Have Snaps, lintier ' Beans and Roasting Ears Till Frost? ' Sow now the first Valentin 3 beans and as fast as a rov is fairly up so,v j another, and so on till late August, ' and you will have snaps all summer till frost. Plant some Adams Early corn, and as scon as it shows plant 1 ouiuc ro o inmww Qujar turn ur aww ell's Evergreen, and then save your own seed. Homegrown seed will al- ways be best. Plant a succesrn of corn, tco, tin eariy August and have com till frost. Plant Wood's Busli Lima bsani, and tem the g. ::a pds well picked, for if they a;-e allowed to ripC.n they will stop blooming, but Usey will keep tearing if well picked. The tail Dreer's Lima bean is the best of the large Limas for the South, and is best grown by planting in rows and thinning to twb feet apart and then using some chicken -netting for them to run on and not "bothering with poles. Onions and Beets. Sow soed of Tau's Quean onion very thickly to make sets- for planting in the fail to give you green oniour, from February on. Sow the seed in narrow rows very thickly. A piece of bed six by ten feet will hold a pound of seed, for the little drills may be almost filled with tha seed, the object being to get sets no larger than a small marble. Sow Early Eclipse bsets and scatter a few radish seed along the rows to mark them and to come out before the beets need thinning. The Blood turnip bsets are sown at ?amo time for later use. The half long beots can be sown in July after some early crop is off. These will be fine all winter if the soil is thrown to the rows late in fall. m ... . Try Some Egg Plant, Parsnips and Salsify. Plant White Spine cucum bers in well manured hills for table use now, and later in July plant more for pickles. Egg plants are tco little grown in the South. It is too late to sow the seed, but you can get plants cheaply from the seedsmen and set them in May when tho ground is warm, and then keep the potato bugs picked off them and you will have a dish that any one will appreciate. Sow parsnips and salsify in July. These make their best growth after the weather gets cool and will grow all winter. They are sown hi the spring-in the Nortb, but in the South they are apt to get woody and run to seed in late summer if sown early. Salsify is commonly called oyster plant, and the boiled roots mashed up and made into fritters are very much like oysters. Then the salsify and parsnips give vegetables in win- Lions For Hie Tope. Emperor Menelik's present to the Pope of two fine African lion cubs, maleand female, has arrived safely at Rome. The Hons started from Addis Ababa in Abyssinia cn Ne? Year's Day. Shortly after they reached the des ert region on their wayto Alexandria a lioness took up the trail behind the caravan. - She followed it for 'mora than a week, making repeated efforts at night to ge: through the Hue3 cf th3 soldiers to the cap a re auimais, whose pressnce sue vas eviaentiy , tue coasvyui4Ju . iun.uoi biiu aware of. She only dropped the pur- j houses especially built for working suit when '.he caravan get out o? the j men and .their families, and the mu- Ueseit illlCl liuu m xuiuiiaiauivi.- thickly inhabited regions on the out skirts of Egypt. New York Sa. Here and There. A man should try to do his bset only when he is doing the right thing. Before subscribing to the statement that it is better to have the good will of a dog than the ill will, find out about the dog. The man insisted upon a receipt. The merchant said: "I've had so much trouble collecting this bill. I I would never undertake it again." Watermelons and Cantaloupes, of Course.- Every farmer should have ; some cantaloupes and watermelons, i but these are better in a natch in themselves. Any old sandy hill will make watermelons if the hills are well manured, and the drier the land the more juicy the melons, strange to say. Cantaloupes need stronger ground and well manured hills or rows. The .Tones and the Mclver are t i l . . . me uest watermelons lor nome use and the Kdlb Gem tor shipping. For cantaloupes, ! plant Rocky Fords and Hackensaek. Okra, Parsley jihc! Pepper. Then for gumbo soup, plant a few okra seed. The White Velvet is the best. The green soft pods can be cut and dried and kept for making soup in winter Every housekeeper likes to have some parsley for dressing dishes. Sow a row or two of the Green Double Curled sort. Mint romes in hanriv own in ,.rtnllJfli places, for making mint sauce for lamb in spring. A few roots set in a damp, out of the way place will keep you a supply. Then the good woman 0f the house wants mango pickles in the fall, gew a few seed of Ruby King pepperf in bed and transplant to r0ws three eet apart, later. If you like bat pepper Sf&tic?. sow some seed cf Tacascs pepper. These will grow six iect high and give a great crop of Utile pods, and they will make vin &2zr hot enough for a toper. Of course you sowed some garden psas in Febi-uary, but if not, you can still sow sq!me Premium Gem peas, and can agiin sow some in late Au gust for fall use. - j ' iWi.jr Be Sure io Have Tomatoes and Squash AU Summer. Tomatoes every one wants. For very early ones you had better buy the nlants unless vou have somes glass and a hotbed or frame. Buj in the South its is neces sary to sow a late crop as the early ones are apt to play out in the heat the last cf j June. Sow the seed in May and transplant after some early crop. Th'erf in the late fall when the vlnea- are full of green fruit and frost threatens, feather the tomatoes and wrap each in paper and pack in boxes and put in; a cool place just where they will not freeze, and bring out a few at a iime into a warn! r oon i where they will soon color UP- A i have --had omatoes to slice in this way till January, Summer squashes you will have, of course. The White Patty Pan is best. lladisli and Sage. In September sow some Qhinsse Rose-Colored Win ter Radish iseed, and as the weather gets cold mulch the rows with coarse manure and you can pull nice rad ishes all winter, for I have done it winter aftei- winter in Raleigh. Then you wilj wint some sage at hog-killing time for sausages. Sow some seed in a beef slnd transplant after some early crop a foot apart and you can cut it gren to the ground in the fall, and have enough for the neigh borhood when dried in the shade. Tiien if an one wants the plants, sell them and sow seed again next spring, for the young plants re bet ter than the. eld hushes. ;- 'lake Yhir Gartten Work All Year Hound. Irr short, have a garden and keep it atfwork all the year round. Then if yOu will get a few hotbed sashes incf make a frame for them you can have 'fresh headed lettuce to eat all winter, parsley and radishes and French carrots A garden kept at work al the time and abundantly J supplied nvjith' manure and fertilizers, and by having a good large garden you can supply the home market with nice vegetables and at least pay all the cost of what your family eats. The garden kept at work and kept clean will; not breed cut-worms, for they breedl in the weeds and trash left in the common gardens in the country. fw. F. Massey, in The Pro gressive Farmer. Ih Desperate Mood. "Why didn't you remember that it was Satan who tempted yov. into that scheme of! graft?" "Because it wasn't," answered the man who was being investigated. "Sometimes I wish it had been an ex pert like iSatan instead of the bun gling amateur who got me into all this publicity." Washington Star. WbrLiugineii's Homes. The citijy government of Milan has voted to appropriate 1,150,000 for ukwi. v- parcment) will give ?100,00y out oi its nrofitg; toward the same nurnose Fallen By the Wayside. He who? considers only the letter of an instrument goes but skin deep in to the meaning. The success of the man who suc ceeds is usually due to the failure of others. There is nothing that makes the or dinary man feel better and be meaner than to give an order and have it ob- ! sepaiously obeyed NO ONE CAN ALWAYS AVOID Z Many people persist m riding on the X clothing. iney start out per naps m the neat, wraps:- file ranid movhts of the car cools the t perhaps they are slightly perspiring! When iciiuwv. iuu ur esraviatijr iiuc wiieu a lonuu im suiting. . , Beginning a street car ride in the middle of the day and ending it in the even- ' ing almost invariably requires extra wraps, but people do not observe these pre- ! cautions, hence they catch cold Colds are very frequent in the Spring on this account, and as the Summer ad- I vances, they do no, t decrease. During the Spring months, no one should think of T noing on tne car wunout Detng provided wun a wrap. I A cold caught in the' Spring is liable to 1 ast through the entire Summer. Great Z' t caution should be observed at this season against exposure to cold. During the t nrst lew picasani uays 01 opnng, tne uauiutv 01 caicning cotd ts great. , . No wonder so many people acquire muscular rheumatism and catarrhal diseases during this season. However, in spite of the greatest precautions, colds will be caught. At the aDDearance of the first Bvmbtoro. Peruna should be taken aceordintr to '! ;i directions on the bottle, and continued until every symptom disappears. " Do not put it off. DO not waste time by taking other remedies. Begin at once to take Peruna and continue it until you are positive that the cold has entirely X uisappearea. mis may save you a long ana Bad Effects From Cold. Mr. M. J. Deutsch, Secretary Building Material Trades Council, 151 Washington St., Chicago, 111., mites JlWStJ: fSe w .H i cuivaviuo .u . vireciB i rum cotu, nun liiuxe eaucuianv in driving away all jyptoins of catarrh, , th which lam freq ilie WIVBJ IBTOIW ytvuo m uiiiiiiiKui 1 troubles alone is well worth the price per bottle. I have used the remedy for several years now." Spells of Coughing. Mrs. C. E. Long, writes from Atwood, Colorado, as follows: "When I wrote you for advice my little ree-Vear-old girl had a cough that had sen troubling her for four months. She three-5 been troubling her for tour months, fehe took cola easily, and woum wneeze usea. Peruna is sold by your local druggist. Buy a bottle today. No matter how respectable you are J . . ,"rhe, .Fra?1C." J , . He sent to hetr his photograph; yoursen ,you cannot maKe a dusi ness that is not respectable, respect able. So. 16-'OS. MACHINE-GROUND PAINT. Occasionally one hears the "hand mixed" paint of the painter slight ingly spoken of as "unscientllic" and "not thoroughly mixed." The facta are all on the side of the painter and his hand prepares paint. It is the most "scientific" nair.t there is, because it is made on the SDOt to suit the nartimilar nnrnosn for which it is to be used. It is as scientific as a good doctor's prescrip tion. If the painter did not mix it thus it would be as unscientific as a patent medicine. Moreover the paint which a good painter turns out is made of genuine white lead and pure linseed oil. If he does not mix it him self he is not sure what is in it and consequently his client cannot be sure. As for not being thoroughly mixed by machinery, that fs simply a mis statement. White Lead as' made by National Lead Company is thoroughly incorporated With 7 or S per cent, of pure Linseed oil in the factory, mak ing a paste. This paste need only be thinned with additional linseed oil to make it ready for the brush. . The thorough incorporation of pig ment and oil has already been accom plished before the painter gets- it. To know hov. to tell pure white lead is a gret advantage to both painter and house-owner. National Lead Company will send a tester free to anyone interested. Address the company at Woodbridge Building, New York, N. Y. His Misf ortimc. "I was a celebrated pianist and j a great success with the public' con- j fided the sad-eyed man to his com- i panion, "but I had a misfortune .which threw me out of favor with my j audienees and cut off my revenue as j a performer!" "What tos your! misfortune t ' ' asked his friend. 1 ' My hair fell out ! ' 'From the April Bo- Tinmia-n ' 0. F. King's Experience in Newspa per Making. Charleston News and Courier. Mr. C. F. King, of Boston, who made considerable stir in the spec ulative world a few months ago, is in trouble just at present. His creditors are after him, although it is not by any means certain that they will catch him. About a year ago he establish ed a newspaper in Boston called The Daily Tribune. According to The Hartford Times, this experiment cost him something like $300,000 in the space of ten months, and finally died, we are told "for the same reason that Murat Halstead stopped singing in the choir, j by general request." "The logic of King's excursion into journalism," says our Connecticut contemporary, "shows the supreme folly of starting and trying to main tain a superfluous paper. Than an unprofitable paper no better agency for the consumption ot capital was f AnloaA ft 1 CC1 ,v" There is Oniy One Bromo Quinine " Thst 13 L&x&tlwG Bromo Quinine WORLD OVER TO USED THE Always remember the full name. lor this signature on every box. street care, insufficiently protected - by T ot tne day and do not tea the need ot X body undulv. When thpv honrd the car Z the body is in this condition it is easily t pernaps serious niness later on. - and have spells of coughing that would sometimes last for a half hour. "Now we can never thank you enough for the change you have made in our little one's health. Before she began taking 'our Peruna she suffered everything in thi way of cough, colds and croup, but now - u 1 4. ..:.- - 1 1.1; 't t d well and strong as she has evei " Pe-ru-na for Colds. Mr. James Morrison, 68 East 16th St., Paterson, N. J., writes: I have given Peruna a fair trial, and I find it to be iust what vou claim it to be. I T . ".. I'll II 1 cannot praise it too nigniy. i nave usea two bottles in my family for colds, and everything imaginable. I can safely say that your medicine is the best I have ever that yc Twas in a frame of gold, With butterflies and ivy leaves m And starry lilies scrolled. He went without cigars a week And lunched on apple pie And to and from his office walked, The costly thing to buy. She thanked him in a charming note That filled his soul with bliss, And then she took his picture out- Oh, sly, deceitful miss! She put her own, in regal pose, With opera cloak and fan, j In that expensive frame and sent It to another man. . Mfnna Irving, in the New Yarlr Press?. One of the ambitions of the aver age man is to do those he has been done bv. This wrmiaa says she was sayed ; fmm oDeration by Lydia E. pinkm's Vegetable Compound. - ., n na Y.Heai of Ji ornstown, Ga, 8 te am ; . " I sfftered untold misery, from male ITOUUKa. my uwwr mlu .1 tion was the only chance I b&d, and 1 dreaded it almost as much as aeain. " One day I read how other women had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkbam'a Vegetable Compound, and I decided to try it. before I had taken the first bottle I was better, and now I am -entirely cured. 11 Every woman suffering with any female trouble should take Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty yea.rs Lydia E. Pink. . ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands oJ women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear. ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. OURS A COLO IH ORE OAT Look 25o.
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 16, 1908, edition 1
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