Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1952 — Page 11
pe, economic crisis o“mine enough 1st year to bdy the U. 8. Yet it could get it
an economic ald ports of Ameri. ) a ton in Penn the time transed, lied Europe with Britain’s -coal roduction to pred ‘out her coal had to spend oal. ide to stop the ajor blow to the
ike
ight to say it."
“which isn't an ot too nrofitable, . know about the ayed without pay itals for crippled w he has turned benefit performups. t hig arrest will r break the heart ed guy and ruin
h literature, but xample of a vice Juke Stern. 'heobald, City.
the price of $17 Oatis: ackmail? I can't Your paper stated id paid for, also on same by the 1ave $17 millions Will not refund eir purchase. 1 should wonder e respect for us, e up to it regardexpect to spread even live by the t steal.” + steel mill case? made before the Let's get this k their money or
taxpayer and an “zechoslovakia in ¢ again if needed. believe that right
1y set him free at “heap to do it the y be doing things -G. A. M,, City.
rmer resident of eved at the passone of the most 1g officers ever in rtment. 11 and honorable iblican Board of hief of police to uspended him for termed an “error by the Board of riticism and conled ~itizen of Inaffiliation. n, Greencastle.
Jur
Himself ENTIALS
things and who gave Read verses 23-27. ilding in Washington, that any invistigator als—a badge and an
good friend? Does he Friendly Relations?” by his performance. of a teacher of relidegree of Doctor of entials. Does he teach Does he speak the uth? Is he God's man love? in the temple even $ a rabbi. No wonder | him, “By what qu
ither will 1 tell you ngs,” he was saying judge of their validny life.” her, when we put all je away, and help us t ig eternal. Let our aith, as in Jesus, our
Mint »
ns out, according ‘intendent of the money factory, ks are to blame, en they ship hack aten-up old coins on, they includa cent of perfectly ble money. This y slipshod to him. on ” ARD didn’t believa he'd investigate an wondered how such a whopping lver dollars. The imple. Until ld to be an actual! for every pape? alation.. It was aw to melt down cartwheels. Made mbles, too, Dr. H.
'em in canvas ler 25 years or so 1 one place, the 1ld disintegrate. move a few and all over the floor. out this, ..He used weep ’em up and
it- has béen legal currency with silDr. Howard and wn 60 million silbut he still has f them left.
‘MONDAY, MAR. 10, 1052 _____.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Hike In Food Supplies Expected To Cut
ay $e Ld
nimi: PAGE’ “11
Down Grocery Bill
U.S. Officials
Study Query, How Much? 8
WASHINGTON, Mar. 10 (UP) —Theg@®verage family's grocery bill should drop in the next few months but there is no way of knowing how much, government officials said yesterday. Agriculture _ Department experts said food supplies are increasing because of seasonal fac! tors. Cattle shipments already are above last vear's level and still are increasing while milk, butter and cheese should be more plentiful soon. With food supplies abundant, farm prices can he expected to skid below present levels. The! big question is how much of the decrease will filter down to re-' tail levels, Cites Bigger Profits . Officials noted that Secretary of Agriculture Charles F. Brannan recently told the Senate that 80 per cent of a $37 rise in the annual cost of the average American market basket. was due to higher marketing’ costs and bigger profit margins bv wholesalers and retailers. One expert said there is some feeling that current pork prices do not reflect-in full the recent
ae
DESERTED—Chicago's usually bustling LaSalle St. NYC rail workers halted trains yesterday,
Senator Asks | $7 Billion Budget Cut
WASHINGTON, Mar. 10 (UP) Sen. Walter F. George said yes-|
decline in live hog prices although he conceded there probably has heen some increase in
marketing charges. He said marketing costs are expected to rise more sharply this vear than they did in 1951, particularly if the Interstate Commerce Commission’ approves a
pending railroad request for a rate hike which would boost rates 15 per cent above last year. The department is on record as opposing the increase on grounds
that it would-send up the cost of x
marketing farm goods unnecessarily.
terday that Congress should aim’
for about a $7 billion reduction in President Truman's $85 billion spending budget for the new 1953 business year. He that
conceded | a cut of: this size can be]
SOOTHE
Poultry, Eggs Plentiful J Officials said poultry and eggs Made gly J hy will continue plentiful and that Se Mr. Tru chicken, egg and turkey prices WA's requests RALAOD should show a definite decline. ry o ind }
The low price of eggs is causing some concern among farmers confronted with generally high feed:
for military and
foreign aid appropriations but|
di -y " \ 1}
he said it must 3 4 be done. “I think as a
prices. Prices of lettuce, carrots, gelery| and cabbage also are expected to drop somewhat as the new crop comes to market. Citrus fruits are relatively cheap and should continue that way, But these are all commodities which involve high handling charges. Meat production so far this year is up about 3 billion pounds or 4 per cent over last. year. Beef supplies are increasing but pork production is falling off to assume its normal role as secondary to beefsteaks and rump roasts. Dairy prices normally fall as herds move into spring pastures and off costly winter feed. Butter prices already have begun to drop.
Sen. e eh Georg matter of pro-
tecting the solvency of- the gov-! ernment and the American tax-! payer, we must reduce the general budget.” the Georgia Democrat! said. “It cannot be done without cutting the military and foreign’ aid.” i “The budget should be cut somewhere in the neighborhood of 37 billion.”
Sen. George is chairman of the tax-writing Senate Finance Com- | mittee and ranking Democrat on| and Joe Bell. the Foreign Relations Commitee which starts hearings this week on Mr, Truman's request for $7 billion in new foreign aid pro(gram. Secretary of State Dean {Acheson heads the witness list.
Flynn New Director Sen. George said in an interOf M H . {view that he ig not yet prepared armon- errington to suggest how much the foreign’ With 2000 balletomanes (that William Flynn, president of the aid program should be cut al- means fans) disappointed by a Indiana National Bank, has been though he had felt it should be railroad rhubarb, another -2000 elected a director of the Marmon- trimmed $1 billion to $2 billion did manage to witness IndianHerrington Co., company officials below Mr. Truman's recommenda- apolis’ annual dose of hard-toe announced yesterday. ition. culture at the Murat Theater
Taft, lke Supporters mri fi ai: Predict N. H. Victory
"Ballet company didn't roll into By United Press
town until 4 p. m,, too late for its slated matinee, but by RK:30 p. m. curtain, the Londoners were sufficiently organized to make every cue, complete with cositumes and settings.
CONCORD, N. H., Mar. 10— The company had already Supporters of Gen. Dwight D. taken their seats on the New Eisenhower and Sen. Robert A.
York Central train in Cincinnati yesterday morning when the rail strike there was called.
Plan Ticket Refund
| While the production manager ‘hurriedly made arrangements to transfer the cast and baggage to {busses and trucks, Gladys Alwes
Taft (R. 0.) made conflicting forecasts of victory today as New Hampshire voters prepared to mark ballots tomorrow in curtain- = raising presidential primary. The stinging “grass roots” campaign, which left little room for compromise among opposing
Republican factions, is expected and the Martens Concert Series to attract more than one-third laid plans for refunding the 2000 of “the state's 300,000 eligible matinee tickets which had a voters.
|gross value of $10,000. | Taking off with something old, |Tchaikowsky's Casse Noisette— The Nutcracker Suite, the com-
While the Eisenhower-Taft contest holds the nation spotlight, President Truman's. popularity among rank and file Democrats § gets its first major test since the 1948 elections. Sen. Estes Kefauver (DD, Tenn.) the President's opponent, all but concedes victory, Mr, Kefauver said with another week of ‘crack-
{a macabre number originated at Sadler's Wells 18 years ago, and wound up with a modern version of a Gilbert & Sullivan story,
Warn Against Confusion
IKE.BACKER—Gov. Sherman |
er barrel” campaigning, he Adams of New Hampshire But hefore holding a post morcould heat Mr, Truman. But, (above) feiected as "baseless ‘em on last night's sparkling perwith time having run out. he will 4, J formance, let's he sure you don't
and grossly unfair the accusa-
be satisfied Eienk : 1senhower is
“with a good show- © 8 tion that Gen,
confuse this Sadler's Wells com-
ing. 4 pany with the other SW troupe! Expects to Win 4 under any obligation whatever hich previously had barnstormed Mr. Taft said he would win four to the National Democratic this part of the country deelgates, but his campaign man- Administration, The company hich [i ipented s ing six to eight of wr at oomington an .afayette. A talming six o eight of : What is more important for j,q¢ season, headed bv Margot Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. NeW Hampshire” he asked, “to Fonteyn and Moira Shearer was (R. Mass.) the national Efsen- have Eisenhower here, like the the regular road company and hower campaign manager, pre- Senator from Ohio, trying to line DOW is in Hollywood making a
dicted a clean sweep, The- fact that Gen. Eisenhower did not personally participate in
m up delegates for a partisan con- The troupe at the Murat last vention, or to he over there try- night is the home office squad,
the campaign or make known his ing to line up 100-million free direct from the Sadler's Wells position on political issues was Europeans to save New Hamp- Theater in London, where they : for shire and . America. from the have heen entertaining during the
Taft's main argument support. He said he believed Gen. Eisenhower would be a “weak” candidate, once he took a stand on eontroversial issues,
agonies of war and the horrors Festival of Communist victory?”
of Britain, As could be expected, the danc-
Cites Voting Record Gov. Sherman Adams, the Gensral’s New Hampshire campaign manager. closed the campaign by citing Mr, Taft's. voting record against Selective Service ins 1940. the Atlantic Pact and parts of the National Defense budget Gov, Adams defended Gen. Eisenhower for staying out of the campaign.
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Tuesday from 12 Noon
PICKETS AT UNION STATION HERE — Harry Gantz (left)
Rail Strike Delays An Impressive Ballet
but
any dipped and turned through pan) pp g ‘company. Elaine Fifield,
‘of their prominence, by
{ | |
|
|
|
ing was the acme of scintillating grace, with the performers musically bouyed off the footboards by the same excellent symphony orchestra which accompanied the other . Sadler's Wells troupe in its tours.
Victim of Strike
Last night, American conductor Robert Zeller led the orchestra in a light blue suit. His formal wear and other jaggage was a victim of the rail strike. When the first curtain opened on Pauline Harrop and Robert Lunnon as the now Queen and
King in The Kingdom of Ice from’
the Nutcracker. Suite, the most impressive thing was the simple magnificent had been carted all the way over here from England. For downright, light - footed calisthenics. it would be difficult to find anything to compare with The Kingdom of Sweets scene from The Nutcracker Suite. The performers hit the stage in =alvoes of fury and grace, reclimaxing each sequence for the heavyhanded audience. Star of this scene was Svetlana Berinsova, the No. 2 girl of the the No. 1 star, was to have appeared in the matinee production. The Haunted Baliroom, a grisly bit of busifess, concerned a clan of castle lords who were being danced to death, in order a- gang of ghouls who resembled their acquaintances. “Pineapple Poll.” lection of the evening, is a W. 8S. Gilbert story, complete with Sir Arthur Sullivan's music, and liberally lent to ballet, It seems that a slightly goofy dame hanging around a seaside taproom gets a crush on a young sea captain and’ sneaks aboard hig ship disguised as a sailor, 80 does every other lass in the town, Comes the fun, when the captain
the finale ge-
brings his bride aboard. Danced by Maryon Lane, “Poll” exuded bedevilment, yet .main-
tained her twinkle-toed grace--a neat trick. —-R. K. S.
NOTICE! ALL VONNEGUT STORES WILL CLOSE
DURING FUNERAL SERVICES
GEORGE VONNEGUT
An Official Associated With This Company for 75 Years
to 2 P. M.
Emergency Calls Only Phone MA. 2321
Hog Prices Dip 25 Cents Here
Barrows and gilts fell 25 cents grders for the ever-present hams.
{in trading at the Indianapolis And the hams will
pile 50-35.50
futility and commercial
setting which _
Works Board
Faces Water, Light Issues
New streetlights and water mains for the city have become a
{top money problem for tha Works
Board.” So tough is this. problem, the board has decided to duck the is-
{sue and ask City Council for its | jadvice. The problem is this, The Le |poard is allotted each vear a cer-
tain sum of money to pay light
land water bills,
At the present rate of spending. the money will be gone in Novem- , leaving the board with a deid financing problem, Meanwhile, requests and water service are
for light flooding
the board | Last
year's total light hill jumped $22.886 over. 1950 and the water bill showed an $8728 increase
Noarly a million dollars is in-
{valved in light and water service. | The.1952 budget for lighting pre-
vides $490,000 and $450.000 for (water, Expected bills for lighting
however, now are at $522,191 and! for water $495,618. This would
{leave a combined deficit of $47
809 To the average citizen this means he is not going to get the
| Street lights requested. at least
{not right away. © The mopey problem for the Works Board is part of an overall *problem faced hy city officials. Other hoards have complained the budget is too lean.
Stockyards today.
9:
Local Stocks and Bonds
Tod a yi " Busi ness J ge
‘American States pfd’ 4 *Arshire Collieries 8 odin. seta k 3 Ager 4'2% cee. 100 : Belt RR & Stk yas LOM Lig. » Belt KR & Stk Yds pid ..... #: LL : | Gobbs-Merrili com ..... 134 cre h Bohhs-Merrill ofd 4% ....... + 12% Central Soya 38% Ih Chnsmoer ol Commerce com .. 21% . Circle Theater com 40% Citizens Ina Tet aw pfd 50 * » . |Commonweaith Loan 4% ptd.. 83 as {Consolidated Fin § pfd 84 | Cont Car-Na-Var "h o IY 1% { gumapins & KhE com HH . 40 | Cummins ofd .... 100 Delta Elec OY . 15 1s Eastern Ind Tele 5 ptd 2 .
Equitable Equitable Securities pfd of Family Pinance com Family Finance 8% ptd Hays Corp pfd ww
By Harold Hartley Hamilton Mfg Co com .
I NEVER FIGURED the pickle for much. Picnics maybe. Or something to nibble with the celery. Her-Jones Class A ptd
1 rate the warty taste-teasers, sweet, sour or dill, along HE Bu go com fries
8ecuriiies com
[nd Asso Te hid . with potato chips, sand in the potato salad, and wet diapers iid daa Weer Som L000 307 30 La Ww BL vere HO ten miles from home. ~ ie aioe pr rmmmmneel J4 Nn tv) %a 33 "w But the pickle, along with the are fi Tn nr rompaty tndbls Cp, ot? Ss 4 iT'a live, has its biggest season dur- - an Oe anvone lease th 8 So, a Le ot com ” ", ing Lent. The reason is that some 8% : Plea: eM [ndianapolis Water com... 171i 18's y aa t oth? “Indianapolis Water 4'4 pf 99 101 people eat everything but mea . . : ‘Indianapolis Water 5% pf . 108 109 That's why this job is open. In ,.4 A That Ineitdes pkieh and olives y Jeflerson Nattonal Life com 1 12 addition to the $500 a month, it Kingan 4.Co com. .... wo ogi di THEY RIDE right along, may- pays $250 a case at hearings with Lincoln Nat Lite onesies 119 o be a little ahead of macaroni and 4 minimum of two cases per hear- Lynch Corpor ation ... See ih Ie a cheese, and that old Lenten stand- Ing, so that's probably another Marmon Herrington COM vers or 3 : bv. tuna fish, ereamed, made into $500 or so per, month, plus ex- Natl Homes com vie i My iy Sg shld : Nau Homes ptd 105 a crusty loaf, or saladized with penses. Ind Pub Serv com 28 sliced tomato. But if I am reading the record Hag wer a 4 ) 8 cr 20 an! In fact, during Lent people run right, two fired in nine months, N Ind Pub Serv 4 58% pid. 28 164 out on red meats, and eat any- it's a job with no future, \ Pub Ser i oa cise on 307% ARP Me | P 8 y EN thing that swims. Fin Shri, Sugar Bouncing ota pA 80) hu S egs, lobster 0 & E Caesars ' 14 serod., scallops, frog 8 3 SUGAR IS ACTING up again. So Ind OG & E 8% ptd "aah + 23'® anything which can stay under 90 Stokely-Van Camp com 1! 15's If you can grab 10 pounds for Stokely-Van C fd iE water without holding its breath. amp pfd ... 1794 us cents or under, take it. jester & Cu v.3% old . e alleal PR AND A FEW things which do That's less than the wholesale |4nD. [Machine Co Ban “ not swim will have their biggest price. And it will move higher in United Phone 5% ptd " season, ‘mostly macaroni -and a day or two. | us dividend LL |spaghetti, the bulk around which 1 get this Irom a TEN i Allen & Steen 80... ” “ve are built hundreds of Lenten knows sugar. He Is (;eorge e | Ame can Loan 4'%858 ...... "i res Ashes er, of W. H. Edgar & Sons, who American Secumny beth ...... 88... When macaroni moves, so does handles Southdown Sugars in In Biteiue Tele & ge res 91 ee . y Buhner Pertilizge terees ee Ee ey hana, Om Ba Cts or C 8, § y ‘ 3 u s ere \dash of catsup or chill sauce, THE REF FINERS had beaten Equitable Secoritior 8s 60 | Bere y£ 8 the price for raw sugar down 10 Tndblse paint & Color 5s “ a. BUT STORES are already to- $5.35 and as a result, got their indpia bi Rate es 98 . ward the end of Lent, placing stocks cleaned out. Today Suga; ind" EE vs i * : e Asso Tel 3s ee vase will be up to $8.40 a hundr n ind As at “ ww" Se pull down bulk. By AR Yesnananen " sere i r iB reasenees ‘ene shelves of pineapple rings. | Sugar delivers here in bulk at giPre ATs Bo Sevense ae
Early bulk choice 170-240 pound
hogs were selling from $17-17.50. Lenten menus, Sows were about steady selling pickles, please.
at §14-15.50.
Lightweight steers and heifers out of me.
were moderately active. Several
{loads of choice medium weights
held around $34-35.50. Good to low choice heifers were selling at $31-32.50. Utility and commercial bulls were gelling from $24-28. J top of $39 was reached on vealers. Fat lambs jumped 25-50 cents higher, Odd lots of good choice natives sold at $25-26.
Hogs 13.000: moderately active. harrows and gilts weak to mostly 25¢ lower. early’ {bulk choice light and medium welehls 170-240 pounds $17-17.50; few loads 240-280 {pounds 316-17 scattered ,$15.50-16 25; 120-160 pounds '$15 50; sows ahout steady at $14.1550 Cattle 2400, calves 300] {ghtweight steers and heifers moderately active, about steady. steers over 1075 potinds slow: part load choice yearling steers $34. several loads choice medium weights held around moderate choice 800-1000 pounds good cholee steers $31-33.50, util(ity: and commercial 324-2850, gond to | low choice heifers 3$31-32.50: $21-24 50: three! loads medium and good springer cows on shipping account $24: bulk canners and cutters $17.50-21.50; bulls weak to 50 cents | tlower: utility and commercial $24-28: good { $2 vealers moderately active, steady: top! | $38 sparingly; ‘hulk goad to prime $36138.50; utility and commercial §$26-35; { euilx $25 down | Sheep 500: fat lambs fairly active 2550 cents higher. odd lots good and choice native $25-26. load choice to prime near 100 pounds fed wooled western lambs $27 cull to good native lambs $20-25: slauwhter ewes about steady; utility and good $10; culls down to $8
Slansky Back in Prague
After Quiz in Moscow | VIENNA, Austria, Mar. 10 (UP) {—Czech refugee sources said to‘day that Rudolf Slansky, former secretary general of the Czechoslovak Communist party, has been returned to Prague after questioning in Moscow. Several other top Czechs, like Slansky charged with plotting against the Communist government, were reported still’ held in Moscow,
uU. S. Statement
WASHINGTON, “Mar: 10 MTP) —Giovernment expenses an# receipts for the cur rent fiscal vear through Mar. 6, compared with a vear ago This Year st Yea t % 894 nas 638
Expenses $ 42 855.526.8438
Receipts 24.931,407.828 27.837.759.374 Surplus 963,670,R86 Deficit 4.924.029 009 Cash Bal 4.241.574.221 4.929.157.7112 Public Debt 260.238.167.876 255.733.0981 247 Gold Res 23 290, 322.7197 21.950.692,818 INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING Jou SE Cleatrings £14,9%9,000 Debits a 994, Ad
opportunity!
1531 Stadium Drive
But
when you load up your 9.086. Add to that 40 cents a don't forget hundred for packages In
pounds, and 30 cents a hundred Local Truck Grain Prices
five
Otherwise, you'll make a fibber tor 10-pound packages.
My tip to you is to lay in 10 or|
[Trastion Terminal oe 87 wsnees 90 ne
Truck at, $2.04.
A tra box of powder, or a can of quite meek.
cows steady!
a beer at
Limited Quantity! While They Last!
1951 REFRIGERATORS ~ 25%0QFF
Few Nationally Advertised 1951 Refrigerators whose names we can’t mention , . know at a glance. Take advantage of this rare
MOST UNUSUAL OFFER!!!
DILL IMPLEMENT CO.
Plenty of Parking Space -
Soap’s ‘G-2' |20 pounds. You'll save a few| Row No.3 white corn. $1 " THERE'S a leak.’ Spies, maybe. jcents. New No.2 18 Haw corn, $1.84. The soap companies are raining| Pinned Back coupons, good for a dime, an ex-| TODAY I AM in bandages. And Produce
shortening. ‘ |" 1 wrote a little piece about how Coupon wars have surprise at- well young men are going in| oan ded " d tacks. They are kept very secret. pusiness. I got my ears pinned 1008, “A arse white, 38-417 cents: Boom goes the first gun. Then pam hy Jim Twyman, 2946 N,|brown mix, 36-30% cents. U. 8. medium
hite, 7 h Wh competitors unlimber their print raihot. Said he: i ony Ju. 3% ting presses, and they're off to!
“Your ‘Pick 'Em Young’ piece, 14 per cent, extra large white, 34-36 cents, the races. oa [can be dud aNd Believed Dy sn caver’ exchanged. J0-21 © conte: marked BUT THIS time something 'n positions that can a
Stesdy po unshanaed Frien with supplies e for fair demand. slipped. The word got around and, ltves of other men. Chickens, commercially grown fryers, If what you say is true, whyi,," h h 1) the big three, Colgate-Palmolive- {doesn’t it apply to your own ad- Tt 19-20 yrs Tig Fr] Peet, Lever Brothers and Proctor!
cents; . vertising department where men {one STi weak at 1-3 oants decline. and Gable, all let go almost at well beyond the years of youth Ricoipts light balance steady and un
od Eges. prices fob Cincinnati, cases ine
once, : Butter, creamery score 82 cents, Lever Brothers had a little the| are Setting SRVIanIe 10 Cras ork: premium butterfat, " cents, regular, 61
edge, but not much. And I'll bet a hoxtop, or a dishcloth enclosed, that somebody's been sweating on the carpet for letting the word get out,
and it requires experience, dur-
ability and perseverence to ac-local Truck Grain Prices |complish.”
I DO TAKE a * look at our own ‘advertising department, every day. And for them the “impossible” is a routine chore.
Truck a $2. nu. Oats, 9e
New No. 2 white ‘corn, $1.73. New No, 2 Iu corn, $1.63,
” » ” ‘BE Id printer is MAYBE the poor old p Soybeans, $3.7
under suspicion. Maybe he had the corner tavern on
» ount older men, ADVERTISEME the way home and let the word 1 never discou NT slip that he was turning out
specially when I look in the mircoupons by the thousand, and the ror and see he grav above my THE QUICK AND a oa orely tng sxperience carrying me EASY METHOD OF a pelt like that, close to, em: Re ROACH CONTROL HOME PLATING (O. GUARANTEED
BUT RIGHT ow you can Sp) any kind of soap you want, in
ILVER boxes, from Breeze to Tide to /Z aa 4-9-2 Liquid brushed around Dreft, Fab or Rinso, at a dime or BRASS {just where it is needed kills off, if you clip the newspaper ~Z GOLD jroschun, ants, waterbugs and coupon, ed BRONZE 80 why don't you? A dime’s | 3 CADMIUM jother crawling insects overnight, a dime, even now, a | COPPER-NICKEL |and is effective for many weeks, Job Open CHROME Invisible, odorless and stainless HERES a good ‘fob, It pays © Silverware Replated 4-9-2 kills roaches the sanitary,
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Quality Reupholsiering
Regardless ot a” 200 04Y YOO ean’'s buy
$500 a month, plus extra fees. International Harvester has fired two arbiters in about nine months. The first was Whitley P, McCoy, and the second, Ray Forrester, both legal Hinds.
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