Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 340, 15 October 1910 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PAIXADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1910.

Itz Richmond Palladium esi Son-Telecrasi Published and ewnid by the PALLADIUM PRINTINO CO. Issued T day aeh weak, evenings and ttundsy moraine;. Office Corner North tth and A streets. Ham Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.

4elk G. U4t Edltar Ltftu Jmi ! Maaaaer Carl Barahardt AHt K4Um W. It. reaassteae ewe Baiter BUBSCniPTION TEIlMS. Xa Richmond .0 per year (In advanea) or lOo par week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One rear. In advance '5 22 Is months. In advance One month. In ndvauca " RURAL ROUTES One year. In advance 2? 01 x months. In advance One month. In advance Addreva chanced aa often as doalred; both new and old addresses must be given. Hubacrlbera will please remit with order, whl'-h should be sMven for a specified term: name will not be enter ed until payment is received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mall matter. ifJTH Mil JIIMMH1 ' Tie AoHaHon f AmericaaO AaHartiiafi (Naw York Oty) has Willi ml "" ""'M l sf tali sasusartoa. Only tad Bum m witum u in report an ay the AssosUtloa. RICHMOND, JNDIANA ''PANIC PROOF CITY" Has sv population of 13.000 and la growing. It la the county seat of Wayne County, and the trading center of a rich agricultural community. It Is lacat M due east from Indianapolis miles and 4 miles from the state Una. Richmond la a city of hornet and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It is also the Jobbing renter of Eastern Indiana and enjoya the retail trade of the populoua community for , pillea around. Richmond I proud of It splendid streets, well kept yards. Ita cement sidewalks and beautiful shale treea. It haa S national banks. 3 trust companies and 4 building associations with combined resources of over 18,000.000. Number of factories 125; capital Invested 17,000,000, with an annual output of 127.009.000. and a pay roll of f,t.700.00C. The total pay roll for the city amounta to approximately $.S0i),90O annual ly. Thera ara flva ratVroad companies radiating In eight different directions from the city. Incoming freight hr.ndled dally, 1.TftO.ooo lbs.; outgoing freight bandied dally, 760.000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day. 1.700 cars. Number of passenger tralna dally, t. Number of freight tralna dally, T7. The annual post office receipts amount to 10,000. Total assessed valuation of th city, 111.000.000. Richmond has two Inlerurhan railways. Three newspaper with a combined circulation of 12.000. Richmond la the greatest hardware Jobbing center In the state and only recond n general Jobbing interests. It has a piano faetry producing a high rrade piano arery II minutes. It Is the leeder In the manufacture of traction ene-lnee. and producea mora threshing machines, lawn mowers roller skates, srraln drills and bu-lal caskets than any other city In tha world. The cltv's area la 2.440 acres; tea a court house coating IS0O.f00: 10 public schools and haa tha finest and most complete hlgt school In tha middle west under construction: 2 parochial schools; Karlham colleas and the Indiana fhi'itnes CoMece; five eplendl I fire comnanlea In fine hone bouses; Olen Miller perk, the largest and most beautiful park In Indiana, the home of Richmond's annual rhantannua: .ven hotels: municipal electric light plant, tinder successful operation, and a private electric llrht plant, tnatirtnr competition: the oldest public library In the state. -. cop one and the second lnrct 4A.A00 volumes: pure. refrehng wstee. unsurpassed; eg miles of Improved streets; 40 miles of . sewers: ja miles at cement curb and Kilter combined: 40 miles of cercept walks and msnv miles of blrV walka. Thlrtr churches. Including the Tfeid Memorial, built at a cost of CSO.OOO: Reld Memorial Hospital, one of the most modern In the state" T. M. C. A KMiMin, erected at a cost of ino 000 one of the finest In the te. Th emnsement center of fern Indiana and Western Ohio. Vo city of the also cf Richmond holds a fln an annual art et Mbl. The Richmond Fall Festival held each Oeoher Is unique, po other cv hold" a -imllar afflr It Is given In the Interest of the cltv and financed by the hn-lness men. gicces awaiting anvnne with enterprise In the Tanlo Proof City. REPUBLICAN TICKET WAYNC COUNTY For Congress WILLIAM O. BARNARD For Representative LEE J. REYNOLDS For Joint Representative (Wayne and Fayette Counties) ELMER OLDAKER For Joint Senator (Wayne and Union Counties) WALTER 8. COMMONS ' For Prosecutor CHARLES L. LADD For Auditor LEWIS S. BOWMAN For Clerk GEORGE MATTHEWS For Sheriff ALBERT B. STEEN For Treasurer ALBERT ALBERTSON For Commissioner (Middle District) BARNEY LINDERMAN (Western District) ' ROBERT BEESON For Coroner DR. ROLLO J. FIERCE ' For Assessor WILLIAM MATHEWS -

News Forecast For Coming Week

Washington, Oct. 15. Rhode Island republicans will assemble in state convention Wednesday and renominate Aram J. Pothier for governor, thus completing the list of gubernatorial candidates of the two leading parties to be voted for in the various states next month. From now on the state and congressional campaigns will be waged with increased intensity throughout the country. The progress of the contests in New York, Ohio and other states in which the results will be of national Interest will be followed with close attention. Colonel Roosevelt will leave his home in Oyster Bay the middle of the week Tor a brief trip Into New England, speaking in Boston in behalf of Senator Lodge's candidacy for re-election and in New Hampshire for Robert P. Bass, the republican candidate for governor. William J. Bryan will stump Indiana the first three days of the week in behalf of the democratic state ticket. Thursday and Friday he will spend in the Eighteenth congressional district of Illinois speaking against Speaker Cannon. The interest of all followers of baseball will be riveted on the aeries of games for the world's championship between the Chicago National league team and the Philadelphia team of the American league. The opening game is scheduled to be played in Philadelphia Monday. Two notable events in the field of aeronautics are on the calendar of the week. The first will be the international balloon race for the Gordon Bennett trophy, which is scheduled to start Tuesday from St. Louis. The second event will be the International aviation meet at Belmont park race track outside New York City, in which the contestants will Include many of the foremost aviators of America and Europe. Of Interest on both sides of the Atlantic will be the launching of the mammoth steamship Olympic of the White Star line, which is fixed to take place Thursday at the yards of her builders in Belfast. The Olympic Is designed to be the largest and most luxurious steamship afloat having a gross tonnage of 45,000 tons and a displacement, when loaded, of nearly 60,000 tons. VeteranB of the blue and gray will unite in exercises in the Vicksburg National Military park on Wednesday, when the memorial erected by the state of Wisconsin to her soldiers who fought and fell In the siege of Vicksburg will be dedicated with impressive ceremonies. The opening of the National Dairy show in Chicago advertised as one of the largest exhibitions of its kind ever held In America, and the assembling of the Lake Mohonk Conference of Friends of the Indians and Other Dependent People will also figure in the news of the week.

Kaiser Desires

Royal Castle Needs Funds

BY STEVEN BURNETT. Berlin. Oct. 15. There Is a chance Just now for an American millionaire, who wants to follow In footsteps of royalty, to acquire an Imperial castle In Germany. The castle of Wilhelmsthal near Cassel, one of the several scores of castles owned by the Kaiser, is for 6ale, and as It is to be sold, because the Kaiser needs money, the man who buys it at a high price Is sure of Imperial favor, in the shape of orders and decorations. The price so far offered is $625,000 but the Kais er Is holding out for more. The castle was built in the latter part of the eighteenth century by Wilhelm VIII., the famous Landgrave of Hesse. It took nearly twenty years to complete, and is a masterpiece of architecture. The Interior Is even more striking than the outside, and the place Is crammed with art treasures of every description, many of which are almost priceless. It has been well known for many years that the emperor is most prodi gal in his expenditure, and it was once estimated by one of his ministers that Wllhelm had spent more than fifty million dollars, since he ascended the throne, out of his privy purse. Of course, not even the richest monarch in the world could throw money about at this rate, without a halt being called sooner or later. That occasion has now arisen, and. from all accounts, Hl-3 Imperial Majesty is taking the situation very badly, and is prepared to sacrifice other of his residences and their contents rather than be without the means to carry out any and all of the schemes that present themselves to him. A pretty scene may frequently be witnessed while the Czar and Czarina are at Frledberg. It Is the visits paid to a Bad Hauhelm toyshop by the five-year-old czarevitch and his playfellows, the little Princes Ludwig and George of Hesse and two tiny princesses of the Royal Family' of Greece. Throe ladies of the Russian Court accompany them, but with the exception of one, whose duty It Is to empty Prince George's pockets as he lawlessly fills them from the shop counters, they in no way interfere with the children's mpvements. At first a couple of detectives stood at the door to prevent other customers entering while the royal children were In the shop, but the precaution has been dropped, and now many people go In simply to watch the spec tacle. All the children are dressed, as usu al, in white, except the czarevitch, who Is clad In a blue frock, patent leather top boots and a white cap with hanging, gold-embroidered tassels They run about the shop mounting rocking horses, handling dolls and setting mechanical toys in motion, but their purses, it seems, are not over full, for their purchases only range range from a nickel to a dime in value. The conduct of the czarevitch is said to be different from that of his lively companions. He is described as hiding shyly behind the counters and shrinking if a door opens or any one speaks suddenly behind him. The shyness, bordering on fear, Is credited to what he has heard about the dangers that Incessantly threaten every member of the imperial family, but another and more probable suggestion is, that his temperament Is to be ac"THIS DATE

OCTOBER 15. 1612 Cham plain arrived In Canada to take up his work as governor of the country. 17S3 Pllatre De Rosier made his first balloon ascent In Paris. 17SS President Washington started on a tour of the northern states. ISIS Consecration of Theodore Behon as Protestant Episcopal bishop of South Carolina. . 1840 William Tierce, one of the last survivors of the "Boston Tea Parr ty,1 died In Boston, aged 96. 1S74 Lincoln monument dedicated In Springfield, Ifl. 1SS0 Seventy lives lost by the sinking of the steamer "Alpena" in Lake ' Michigan. 1906 Japanese were excluded from the regular public schools of San Francisco. HO Dr. Cook given "the freedom of the city" la New York. a t

to Sell One

counted for by the constant and pain fully apprehension his mother, the czarina, suffered from at the time of his birth. Great excitement reigns in the vil lage of Schosdorf, In consequence of the demolition of 100 graves in the cemetery attached to an old Evangelical church, which now belongs to the Roman Catholics. The church became the property of the Catholics in 1861. During the present summer the church was renovated, and 100 graves in the cemetery demolished, the monuments being broken to pieces. Even the graves of Evangelical priests were not respected. The bodies were exposed so that the workmen could see the heads and folded hands. The czarina cure at Nauheim will be prolonged, as it Is evidently benefiting her. She Is looking and feeling much better than when she arrived at FTledberg; in fact, so well that it Is difficult to tell her health Is affected. The czarina now takes the baths on two consecutive days, only resting on the third. She began with the plan thermal water, and will soon, it is hoped be able to stand the Nauheim speciality, baths in which the water, direct from one spring, continues flowing and bubbling through the bath all the time the bather is in it. The attendants on the czarina are, besides her own waiting-woman, two experienced Nauheim bath-women, one of whom was also in attendance on the late Empress Elizabeth of Austria when she took the cure there ten years ago. Princess Tatjana. the czarina's thirteen-year-old daughter, bathes In an adjoining room at the same time as her mother, and keeps up a continual chatter all the time she is in the bubbling water, which affords her great pleasure. Each of the "royal baths" consists of four small rooms ante-room, dressing-room, attendant's room and bath proper and, when not occupied by royalties, may be hired by anyone willing to pay $5 for one bath. As the baths are state property, the treasury authorities, of the Grand Duchy of Hessen are taking into con sideration the question of handing in a bill to the Tsar for the use of them when he leaves Friedberg. This Is My 76th Birthday GEN. ELLIS SPEAR. Gen. Ellis Spear, former United States patent commissioner, was born In Knox county, Maine, October 15, 1834, and was educated at Bowdoin college, graduating in 185S. At the beginning of the civil war he went to the front as captain of the Twentieth Maine volunteers and later became colonel of the regiment and was brevetted brigadier general After the war Gen. Spear entered the United States patent office as an assistant examiner, becoming examiner-in-chief in 1872. From 1874 until 1S76 he was assistant commissioner and in January, 1877, he was appointed commissioner, in which office he continued to serve until 1879. For the past thfrty years Gen. Spear has been engag ed in practice in Washington as an attorney and solicitor of patents. -I this concerns yon. reed csrr fully: r ,8idwell's Syrup Pepsin is positively Kraaran eed to core indigestion, constipation, tick beed cho, offensive breath, malaria and all diseases rising- from stomach trouble. IN HISTORY"

Items Gathered In , From Far and Near

Evidently Had a Call From Hobson. Pittsburg Gazette-Times. Bob Evans believes we're bound to have trouble with Japan. Ditto Richard Achilles Ballinger. Houston Post. All of Pinchot's talk can't extinguish that fore3t fire in Minnesota. Joey is From Missouri. Atlanta Constitution. If Taft is to "save Oaio," why doesn't Foraker crawl back into his cave? What Ar They Doing? Hiding? Baltimore American. President Taft stands true to his wise policies, knowing that he has the people back of him. Gives Them an Equal Chance. Philadelphia North American. Now that Hearst has come out against both tickets there will be a feeling of relief among the candidates. His Foxy Little Trick. Atlanta Journal. Colonel Roosevelt indorsed the tar iff part of the republican platform, but stopped payment on the check, so to speak. Blazing a Good, Wide One. St. Paul Dispatch. The news reports say Bryan is to follow on Teddy's trail. Bryan will surely experience no difficulty in lo cating tiie trail. Bark's Pears to be Willin. Boston Advertiser. Anyway, there seems to be no way to test whether or not T. R. could "carry a single southern state" with out trying it. Has a Prize Collection of Them. Cleveland Bee. Mr. Bryan now says the plan for a tariff commission is a delusion. As a delusion expert he ought to be entitl ed to a hearing. One Place Taft Can't Follow Him. Pittsburg Sun. There is a haunting suspicion that Teddy's progressiveness going up in the St. Louis aeroplane will lack an enthusiastic following. Wonderful Will Broken at Last. New York Evening Post. "You know I did not Intend to do It." he said to the Times correspon dent, speaking about going up In the aeroplane, "but when I saw the thing there I couldn't resist it." Will he keep his eyes shut in 1912?" TWINKLES You Often See 'Em. (Puck) The Old One (as they clasp hands) Hello there, old man! The Young One Why, hello there! How's the boy? Heroic Treatment. (Pittsburg Post) "Why do you invariably take a taxicab when you're drinking?" "The bill always sobers me instantly." Discovered at Last. (Chicago News) "Why do you Bostonians eat baked beans?" we asked of the native. "Because," he explained, "we find they are more digestible than the raw product." SUNFLOWER PHILOSOPHY. (Atchison, Kan., Globe.) Making money isn't as hard as getting along with women. When we want a thing to happen we are too apt to think it will happen. There is almost as much fraud about patriotism as there is about politics. People who say, "I don't care what people say about me," are always very sensitive. We notice that when a man begins to save his money be also begins to talk a lot about it. A horse that woman can drive is worth about 15 cents as a driving horse for a man. The man who says he has been working so hard he hasn't time to eat dinner usually lies. Our idea of modesty is a man who will whip a man much larger than himself and then not tell anyone about It. Tell a woman just once that she is good looking and if you want to retain her friendship, you'll have to keep it up. It always makes us mad when an automobile driver toots his horn as a warning for us to get out of his way. As though we haven't sense enough to get out of the way of an automobile! DESTINY. It is a proverbial saying that every one makes his own destiny, and this is usually interpreted that every one by his wise or unwise conduct prepares good or evil for himself. But we may also understand it that whatever it be that he receives from the hand of Providence he may so accommodate himself to it that he will find his lot good for him. William von Humboldt. MASONIC CALENDAR. Saturday, Oct. 15. Loyal Chapter, I No. 49. Stated meeting and work.

Head the Independence Ticket

John J. Hopper (on the left) and William R. Hearst, who were nominated by the Independence League as candidates for governor and lieutenant governor of the Empire State at the recent stat convention. The naming of a state ticket by the league came as a surprise in political circles, as it was thought that a fusion of some Bort would be made with the republican ticket.

THE SCRAP BOOK

Willing to Help. "When I wai a young fellow, just beginning the practice of law," aaid Magistrate House, "two of the oddest characters about the courts were the Cohen brothers, David and Philip. They bad a habit of appearing on the opposite sides of the same case. One day when Chief Justice Shay called the calendar in the city court David Cohen answered 'Ready for the plaintiff in one case, and immediately Philip Cohen answered 'Ready for the defendant. On the second call David again answered 'Ready, but Philip answered 'Not ready. This caused Justice Shaw to say: 'Why, Philip Cohen, fifteen minutes ago you were ready. How is it that you are not ready now?' " 'May it please your honor,' replied Philip Cohen, 'I was ready when you first called the calendar, but since then I have learned that my brother David has fifteen witnesses in court, and I have only twelve. I should like an adjournment so that I may be able to go out and get three more witnesses.' "Whereupon up spoke Brother David, saying: 'May it please your honor, if that Is all that is worrying my brother Philip the case can go on. I will lend him three of my witnesses.'" New York World. Sorrow. Count each affliction, whether light or grave. God's messenger sent down to thee. Do thou With courtesy receive him. Rise and bow And ere his shadow pass thy threshold crave Permission first his heavenly feet to lave. Then lay before him ail thou hast. Allow No cloud of passion to usurp thy brow Or mar thy hospitality, no wave Of mortal tumult to obliterate The eoul'a marmoreal calmness. Grief should be. Like joy. majestic, equable, sedate. Confirming, cleansing, raising, making free; Strong to consume small troubles, to commend Great thoughts, grave thoughts, thoughts lasting to the end. Aubrey de Vere. A Familiar Warning. Mrs. Jones' favorite warning to her young progeny when they were in mischief was that she would tend to them in a minute. "Tending" was accomplished by applying ber open hand where it would do the most good. When Harry was four years old he was sent for the first time round the corner to the grocery. In a few minutes he came trotting soberly back with the nickel still in his band, but no bag of onions. "What's the matter?" asked his mother. "I'm 'frald of the man." be said solemnly. "Oh. he won't hurt you." reassured Mrs. Jones. "Run along and bring the onions. I'm in a hurry for them. A second time Harry disappeared round the corner and a second time returned without his purchase. "I'm fraid of the grocer man." be explained as before. "Well, what makes you afraid of him?" demanded his mother impatiently. "Why." answered the little fellow. bofe times when I goed in be looked at me an' said. Til tend to you in a minuter " A Confession. The late Father Ducey was once eagerly sought, while hearing confessions, by an enterprising reporter for a New York newspaper. There .was a long line cf pjem tents

to fbe c&urcn, a nil tDfe reporter saw that the only way to get a speedy bearing would be to get a place In the line. At last his turn came. "Father Ducey," he began, "I'm a reporter for the New York Daily Blank" "My son," interrupted the cleric, "even that might be forgiven."

Admitted His Foolishness. It was in Corse Fayton'g younger days as a manager, when his highly interesting eccentricities were beginning to distinguish him. He bad appeared in a small city with his company and was already indulging bis habit of making speeches before the curtain. The editor of the leading paper in the town attended the performance, after which, in the sapient manner of bis kind, he went forth and wrote a biting piece for his paper, which may be called the Herald. '. . "Corse Payton." wrote the editor, "is a fool. He looks like a fool and acts like a fool." This, thought the editor, wDl embar rass Corse Payton, who will be careful hereafter how he acts. Yet the next day the billboards bore bills in this wise: "Corse Payton is a fool. Herald. "Of course Corse Payton Is a fool for giving a dollar show for 10, 20 and 30 cents." ' Scotch Stories. It was late in the afternoon when the Scotch minister arrived at the farmhouse. The housewife suggested that perhaps he would like a cup of tea before engaging In "exercises." "Na. na." said be. "I aye tak my tea better when my work Is done. Ill just be gaun on. Ye can bins the pan on an' leave the door ajar, an I'll draw to a close in the prayer when I bear the baam fizzln'." Another woman of Scotland when asked if she had understood the sermon to which she bad just been listening replied. "Wad I faae the pre sumption?" A WOMAN AND A CHECK. Mrs. Black Was Not Absolutely Help less In Money Matters. Some few persons still cherish the Idea that all women are absolutely helpless in business matters and that they are so lacking In financial ability that they cannot safely be trusted to handle money. Mr. Black belonged to this class. He had been in the habit of paying all the household bills at the end of each month, and bis wife, though allowed unlimited credit, bad never had an allowance. One day the Blacks happened to be passing the comparatively new building in which the bank was situated. "Do you know. John," remarked Mrs. Black. "I have actually never been inside tbe bank since it was built more than two years ago?" "You haven'tr exclaimed John. "If that's the case I guess I'd better give you a check this month and let you pay tbe bills. Do yoa think you'd know how to cash it?" Mrs. Black received the check, which, by the way, happened to be an unusually large one that month. That evening Mr. Black asked, not without sarcasm, if she b&d succeeded in indorsing it properly. "Oh. yesr returned Mrs. Black cheerfully. "How many bCls did yoa pay?" "None. It seemed a pity to waste aD that tnoner jpayixur bills."

Then what In tne world did yoa da with itr "Oh, returned the little woman serenely, I Just deposited it la my name and opened an account ot my own with

itr Sotting Her Right.' On on of the corners of a bnsy thoroughfar sat an old man blind and minus one leg. a sympathetic lady who was passing stopped and gazed at him tn pity. Finally she approached him and began asklns him questions. She asked him If he were married, how many children he had. where be had worked last, how he hnd met with the accident that had incapacitated him for work and a thousand other questions. Finally the unfortunate one became peevish. "Madam." be exclaimed harshly, "you may think this is an Information bureau. It is not. It is a collecting agency." Cincinnati Commercial Tribune." Plain Clothes Man. In a small South American state which had recently undergone a change of administration the new potentate summoned an artist and ordered new designs for all the official uniforms. "1 wish showy costumes, very showy." be said, "for the people are Impressed by to em. I have here some sketches that 1 myself have made. Look them over and be guided by these Ideas as far as possible." The artist examined the sketches carefully. "This." he said, turning the pages, "is evidently for the navy and this for the army. but. If you please, what Is this a long red plume on a three cornered bat. yellow dress coat trimmed with purple, and" "That." replied the chief of state gravely, "is for the secret police." LIFE NOT WORTH LIVING is the way Miss Alta Abel of West Baden, Ind., summed up her existence after having sought In vain for health. She writes, "I was a complete wreckalways tired, worn out and nervous. I had to spend about one-third of my time in bed, and my life was not worth living. " Vinol, your delicious cod liver and Iron tonic, was recommended, and I can truly say it has done me more good than all the medicine I ever took In my life. That nervous and tired feeling is all gone. I have gained in health, flesh and strength, until I feel like another person.", (We guarantee this testimonial to be genuine). What Vinol did for Miss Abel, we know nt will do for every nervoub, run down, overworked, tired, thin and discouraged woman in this vicinity. Try a bottle of Vinol with the under standing that your money will be re turned if it does not help you. Leo H. Kibe, Druggist, Richmond, Ind. The Coffee Plant' Friend. ' In Colombia there la a tree highly esteemed as a shade for the . coffee plant. It is found also In tropical Braall and possesses qualities that make It peculiarly aulted for this particular use. It will live on a stony, poor soil, and a tree only eighteen months old will shade 144 square yards of ground, while when full grown It may be fifty feet high and have a spread of fifty feet on every side. A Barnum Story. A story is told of the meeting of Matthew Arnold with P. T. Barnum, the great showman. In America. Mr. Arnold when Introduced said bow proud be felt at making the acquaintance of a man with a worldwide reputation. "Ah. Mr. Arnold," said Barnum. "we are both public men, bat the difference between yoa and me Is that A - .1.11,.. , 1 . m t jwu ui a uwiauuiiy, vow a in ouiy a P08T CARD COUPON Clip this Coupon and bring it to one of the Quigley Drug Stores with 10 cents and receive one set of 25 colored view Post Cards of Richmond. By mail 3 cents extra for postage. - South Side MiUincry Store WILL HAVE SPECIAL PRICES ON HATS AND HAIR GOODS THIS WEEK. . Edith Bradbary . 208 SOUTH 8TH ST. . Beauty Parlor Shampooing, Hair Dressing, Facial Massage. Everything sanitary. ROOM 1, MURRAY THEATER BUILDING. PHONE 1728. 210 su rScUMOS

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