you are going away for a day or a month, mn nige of this week‘s issue of Chronicle tells you how and where to go. Either ten miles or a hundred, it‘s on that page. An important feature of such an ouf, ing are the meals. Carroll‘s Limited in Waterloo is the place to get your summer foods. â€" â€" _ Then on ;3e 6 the Wentworth Radio and Auto Supply Co. Ltd. offer sensational bargains in used radios. They also have battery sets for cottage or farm use. J. D. Nalon, the new credit jeweller at 50 Ontario street, Kitchâ€" ener, suggests that you use your credit when buying jewellery. Parâ€" ticulars will be found on rxe 4. Goudies Limited, Kitchener, ask you on page three if you are ï¬ettinx your share of savings at their July Sale. They have some fine barâ€" gains in linens. The theatre notices are on the same page. _ On the classified plte. the Goodâ€" rich Silvertown Stores have reduced prices in auto accessories. Be sure and tell the men about it. Motor oil for the car can be bouflnt at the Service Hardware with a large savâ€" ing, the same page says. Bargain Fares JULY 31 â€" AUG 1 For immediate acceptance ONLY we will give free with your order for a Gilson Furnace a ROBOT Automatic Heat Control â€" Regular price $20.00. The ROBOT never forgets! It regulates drafts better than you can do it yourself. Saves fuel. Just set it to the heat you want! No elecâ€" tricity needed. No upkeep cost. The Robot works on any hand operâ€" ated furnace. 1 wrote home for another $1,000, but my folks are getting sore! Look how they signed this letter! Mommer and Pauper. From Detroit, up to 2.55 a.m. train Aug. 4 From Chicago, up to 11.30 p.m. train, Aug. 4. Consult Agents â€" Ask for Handbill. Perfect Moisture or Heat Control. 16 Meno St., Waterloo, Phone 447J 29â€"3 City Passenger Agent 120 King St. West â€" Phone 585 You will find our prices much lower than you had expected to » pay for high quality glasses. An added feature is that you _ may _ buy _ your glasses on Goingâ€"To Windsorâ€"Detroit: Trains 19 and 635 July 31, All Trains Aug. 1 To Chicagoâ€"All trains July 31, Aug. 1. From Branch line points use connecting trains. The W.G. Young Co. Vacation time is here! Whether LOWER PRICED GLASSES SHOPPING Use Your Credit JEWELLER 50 Ontario St. S., KITCHENER Jewellery Watches â€" Clocks Silverware J. D. NALON Watches, Clocks and Jewellery LOW PRICESâ€"EASY TERMS For further particulars see Canadian Pacific WINDSOR ........ $3.65 DETROIT ........ $3.70 CHICAGO ........ $7.00 Jewellers In Our Optical Department FREE! FREE! The Bengal Stations in Kitchener (Across from Ford Garage) 600 Queen S. s (At Master‘s Mill) Ahrens & Victoria Sts. 188 King St. N., Waterloo Onennnnmennnnnnnnnnn en d Gilson Furnace 491 King E. 8 KING E.. KITCHENER Robot Heat Control or Automatic Humidifier With Every BUY GAS AT A. STRASSBURGER Extended Payments On Our Easy Terms As Low As 50c Weekly. We Feature Returning > Repaired. To Buy Optometrists ‘ Enters Second Century of Service pnctnes I Mechanica Professorâ€"Describe the He: "Ona‘swallow does not make mechanism of a «{leam shovel. a summer." Young Engineerâ€"Don‘t kid me. She: "No, but it sure puts apring You can‘t carry steam on a shoval. into your atep." FIRST ENGINE CARRIED 84 GALLONS The manager gritted his teeth angrily centenary this year. It was just one hundred years ago on Tuesday, July 21, that a steam locomotive drew its first trainload of J;wenxen over Canada‘s pioneer railwayâ€"the Champlain and St. Lawrence Railroad, a distance of sixteen miles between LaPrairie and St. Johns. â€" â€" â€" "As soon as we fook the scaffold Ing away the whole building col Is paed," he explained. _ Rocket had made history on the Manchester and Liverpool Railroad and brought fame and a prize of £500 to its inventor and builder, George Stephenson, lendinï¬ merchâ€" ants of Montreal headed by Peter McGill, first president of the Board of Trade and thrice mayor of the city formed a company with a â€"apitalization of £50,000 in one thousand shares of fifty pounds sterling apiece to build and operate a railway. oo "What ever‘a happened?" he aaked his foreman. The Building Collapsed The manager of the building conâ€" cern stared in amazement at the scene of desolation. The foreman scratched his head in perplexity. s s Kitchener.â€"According _ to _ Park Superintendent Cress, a watchman has been on duty in Breithaupt‘s bush for the past few weeks, watchâ€" ing viligantly for fires, and this offiâ€" clal will be kept cn duty unt!l the fire hazard ia definitely past. Evidence given by Zehr, who has just been released from hospital, was to the effect that he and Hass got into an altercation when they met on the morning of June 4. of Trade and thrice mayor of the' The Dorchester was fourâ€"coupled city formed a company with a in type with a small pair of lo.ging â€"apitalization of £50,000 in one and trailing wheels. She weighed thousand shares of fifty pounds five and a half tons and carried one sterling apiece to build and operate puncheon (84 gallons) of water.and a railway. a cord of wood in a special trunk It was natural that these men behind the engine. The Champlain should make their first effort along and St. Lawrence has long since lost the highway that for more than two its identity having been lisorbed by centuries had been the main artery the Grand Trunk which later beâ€" of traffic between New England and came an integral part of the Canaâ€" New France. These men still dian National Railways and the sixâ€" thought of transportation in terms teen miles of trackage of this pionâ€" of water routes and this pioneer eer road have grown to more than overland link was designed to save 24,000 miles. The Dorchester.would time and money. It was fifteen form a striking contrast to the 6400 years before the line was extended of the Canadian National Railways to Rouse‘s Point. Among those who todayâ€"the largest streamlined enâ€" worked on the construction of this gine in the worldâ€"-lttainil;g about latter link was a young engineer, one quarter of the speed of the 6400 Mr. Jay Gould, who became famous type and carrying its 84 gallons of twenty years later as one of the water and its cord of wood as great railway financiers of the age. against 12,000 gallons of water and The Earl of Gosford, Governorâ€" 20 tons of coal. c s Several hours after the accident, the wreckage of a skiff was recovâ€" ered by searchers. A torn piece of a girl‘s slipper was found in it. Police said the owner of the smashed ‘boat had not been identified. (By Chronicle Correspondent) Miss Hamacher. was born in Plattsâ€" ville 26 years ago, and had resided in Toronto for the past six years, being employed at the Boulevard Club. She is survived by her father, Allan Hamacher of Plattsville, and Mrs. Fred R&nk of Plattsville, Maggie of Galt and one brother in the West and another brother in Galt. One brother was killed overâ€" seas and another was drowned at Buffalo. One sister was fatally burned by a coal oil stove. POLICE COURT NOTES Waterloo.â€"Peter Wilson of Drayâ€" ton was sentenced to seven days in jail in Waterloo police court on Friday when he pleaded guilty to being drunk in charge of a car. Eric Brower pleaded guilty to breaking, entering and stealing two cartons of beer from <the Kuntz Brewery, and was remanded in cusâ€" tody for one week. Herbert Heinâ€" rich, pleading not guilty to a similar charge, was remanded out of cusâ€" tody for one week. CcOmMITTED FOR TRIAL Kitchener.â€"Oscar _ Hass, Weber street, Kitchener, charged with asâ€" saulting Willam Zchr on June 4, and causing actual bodily harm, was comâ€" mitted for trial by Magistrate John R. Blake in Kitchener police court on Friday. The Earl of Gosford, Governorâ€" 20 tons of coal. f General of Canada, and Lady Gosâ€" As â€" originally â€" constructed the ford, Sir George Grey and the leadâ€" track of this pioneer road consisted ing citizens of Montreal, numbering of wooden rails on which were about three hundred in all and acâ€" spiked flat iron bars about two and companied by the band of the regiâ€" a half inches wide and threeâ€"eighths ment stationed in Montreal, took of an inch thick. There was a conâ€" part in the inauguration of the railâ€" stant tendency for the spikes to pull way. Owing to the uncertainty of up, thereby causing damage to the the antics of the Kitten, it was ‘engine and coaches. It was from deemed advisable only to draw two this cireumstance that this type of passenger coaches with the locomoâ€" rail obtained the name of "snakeâ€" tive and attach two horses to each rail". of the other freight cars which was A provision of the charter was called into service. After a short that at every place where the railâ€" preliminary run a start was made way crossed a road that gates were and the current account says that to be erected which were to be kept "‘the engine easily outstripped the locked and those using the road horses." Nevertheless, it took near-'would have to climb down and unâ€" ly two hours to complete the sixteen | lock both gates before crossing. The miles although the journey back was penalty for failure to do this was done in about half that time and on five shillings for each offence. Dr. and Mrs. C. T. Noecker, Miss| * JP /**°* WOX 9 °C °0 CC CX OC Eloise Noecker and Miss Mary Galâ€" ppmmmemonmmmmmmmcommmon braith, all of Waterloo, and Miss| (Kitchener.â€"According to District Phoebe Watson of Doon returned on : Manager W. Milner of the Bell Teleâ€" Monday from a three weeks‘ motor phone Company, reeonstruction work trip to Gaspe Peninsula. {at an estimated coct of $60,000 is beâ€" â€" Mr. and Mrs. Fred Snider motored ing done between Kitchener, Galt and to Muskoka this week and on their Preston and on the Blair road. A return were accompanied by their|number of ten pin cross arms, old daughter, Miss Betty Snider. pole lines are being removed and mm n on mc are ‘being replaced with cable. Girl Thought Asleep Miss Hamacher is believed by pOâ€" lice to have been asleep in the boat, following a swim, about a mile from shore, when death reached for her through the spray split asunder by the fast travelling launch. The crash occurred about 11 a.m. The dead girl‘s ‘Toronto address was 45 DeForest Road, Swansea. She was a daughter of Allan Hamacher, and is also survived by a sister, Mrs. Ranke, of Plattsyile. firmed PLATTSVILLE GIRL â€" Streamer (Continued from Page 1) into the air, but this was not conâ€" Canada is celebrating her railway on LOOKOUT FOR FIRES Plattsville Girl Personals Years Ago on Tuesday First Canadian Railway Engine Made Inaugural Run of Sizsteon Miles in OF WATER AND ONE TON OF COAL the following day only fortyâ€"five minutes were consumed on the trip. It was unfortunate that on the reâ€" turn uifl from LaPrairie to Monâ€" treal, which was undertaken after "One night I dreamt I had won $100,000 and in the morning my wife nearly killed me for not putting it in the hank before I woka up." On Grounds of Cruelty The little man had applied for a separation order: to be made out against hia wife on the ground of cruelty. Asked to prove his case he replied the Dorchester had safely landed her passengers nlonlfllde the river, that the vessel which was to convey the distinguished company to their homes stranded in the mud and the, entire personnel had either to flsd sleeping accommodation in the little village of LaPrairie or to spend the night in the great outdoors. The band was called into service and an impromptu concert and dance was held which presumably whiled away the weary hours of waiting. C â€"Thomas: "Well, 1 be better than I was, sir, but I hain‘t so well as I was before 1 wae as bad as T be now." A Slight Improvement The local doctor strolling along the village street, «aw one of the old inhabitanta seated on a chair in the doorway of his cottage. "Well, Thomas, quired the doctor The vicar had received a couple of tickets for the opera from one of his parishioners. Finding that he ‘was unable to go, he rang up some friends and said: "An unfortunate dinner cngagement keeps me from attendâ€" ing the opera tonight; could you use the tlckets?" "We should be glad to do so," was the reply, "but we are your unforâ€" tunate hosts." In Waterloo police court on Tuesâ€" |day, Roy Hoffman, William street, Waterloo, was found guilty of stealâ€" ing sausages from the Scholl Meat Market, King St., and was remanded to jail for a week. . Do l Testifying on his own behalf, Hoffman blamed the fact that he had had a few drinks as the reason for his taking the two sausages from the ice box in the store. All the time his class mates were busily writing the lazy boy of the class sat dreaming at the back of the room. Presently the teacher came over to see how he was getting on. At the top of the sheet of paper he bad written: As â€" originally â€" constructed the track of this pioneer road consisted of wooden rails on which were spiked flat iron bars about two and a half inches wide and threeâ€"eighths of an inch thick. There was a conâ€" stant tendency for the spikes to pull up, thereby causing damage to the engine and coaches. It was from this circumstance that this type of rai}â€obtained the name of "snakeâ€" rail". GUILTY OF STEALING SAUSAGES, REMANDED Unprintable! The school teacher had set the ciass to write an essay on "The Funâ€" niest Thing I Ever Saw." Bell Telephone To Spend $60,000 Here ‘The remand was made in order to enable Inspector A. P. Pullam of the Children‘s Aid Society, an opporâ€" tunity to submit information about the defendant before sentence is passed. Kitchener.â€"Elizabeth Mary Dickâ€" son, Wood street, Kitchener, was reâ€" manded to county jail for one week after she had pleaded guilty in Kitchâ€" ener police court on Tuesday to a charge of neglecting to obtain assistâ€" ance in childbirth with intent to conâ€" ceal the birth, causing death or inâ€" jury to the child. ‘‘The funniest thing I ever saw was too funny for words." A large number of poles and overâ€" bead wire are being removed, the new cable which will replace it proâ€" viding adequate facilities for a numâ€" ber fo years to come and offering a much greater resistance to storm hazard than the present heavy open wire lines, GIRL PLEADS GUILTY, IS REMANDED A WEEK Told Ton Much how are you?" enâ€" ‘ According to Food Inspector Dr. C. K. Mader, the new milk houses BDeirg erected by about 20 milk proâ€" ducere in the Kitchener milk supply area, will greatly contribute to higher efficlency in the milk supply because of the new equipment being installed Until comparatively recently the common match in Canada was of the evilemelling type. They were deâ€" pendable lighters but they had to burn for a little while before being .used to light a pipe of tobaceo, otherâ€" wise the tobacco was ruined by the obnoxious taste created by the match. They were sold in little paper packâ€" ages. They are rarely seen today but they were once the favorites amongst outdoor _ people. _ The _ aristocrat amongst matches in those days was the wax vesta. MATCHES In the year 1800, Philemon Wright came from New Englad and settled on the north shore of the Ottawa River, opposite what is now the City of Ottawa, founded the town of Hull, began the exploitation of the timber wealth of the Ottawa Valley and preâ€" pared the way for Hull to be for years the "Match Box of Canada". He was aml still is spoken of as the }“King of the Gatineau". againat the City of Kitchener, but when the chairman of the sewage disposal committee comes Out and says that the plant is 100 per cent perfect it is time we took action," Mr. Hipel declared. ‘"He is wrong. Thei plant cannot be operating 100 per‘ cent. perfect, because it is not completed. The very fact that Kitchâ€" ener has men down below the Blair bridge clearing out the river is eviâ€" dence enough that they are at fault." & When the delegation drove to their first river ingpection location, men were noted at work clearing out the river alone the banks below the Plair bridge. It was to theee men that Mr. Hipe! referred. * ‘Before the inspection tour broke up,. Dr. Berry wase told plainly by those from this district how they felt about the entire condition vince. "Yes, but the trouble isn‘t there," commented Dr. Hogg. Hon. Mr. Hipel informed The Chronâ€" porter that, in his opinion, the only ways of correcting the condition were ty completing the disposal plant; by chemical â€" rteatment, or by going ahead with the flood control or wa: ter conservation proposal. The man who uses the modern meâ€" chanical lighter and never buys a match is apt to conclude that wooden matches are going by the board like «o many other old industrial proâ€" ducts, but he is mistaken as the reâ€" was valued at $1,645,000. In 1931 it cords show. In 1930 the factory output climbed to over two millions, but dropped in 1982 to $1,212,000. In the last two years the production has been over $1,600,000 in each year, which is just about the average of late yeare. The imports and exports are small. Meeting at Blair the inspection party was composed of Dr. Berry, Hon. N. O. Hipel, who, incidentally, arranged for the visit by the health departments representative, Dr. Edâ€" munds, Toronto, who has been here for three weeks taking tests, Dr. Hogg, Dr. Henhoeffer and Reeve S&mon Kinsie. They visited several spots along the river bank between Blair and the disposal plant. Various forms of algae were quite noticeable along the shores, and in one spot Dr. Berry remarked: "There is more than â€" algae coming down â€" there. There are some solids. We will have to find out where that is coming from." Various members of the party suggested he go straight to the sewâ€" age plant for the source of the gondiâ€" ‘This information is contained in reports issued by the General Manuâ€" factures Branch of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. The sewage plant was visited and Dr. Berry remarked that the system had the best drying beds in the proâ€" New Equipment For Pumper Tested The effluent stream was clearly noticeable as a heavy flow in the centre of the river for a distance of over a quarter of a mile below the spot at which it entered the Grand. Dr. J. Scott Hogg drew Dr. Berry‘s attention to it by referring to it as "The Gulf Stream". Stones were thrown out into the river at variâ€" ous points, and in the splash the dark, deepâ€"colored, reddishâ€"brown efâ€" fluent was easily discernible. 3,500,000 Gals. Daily Dr. Berry informed The Chronicle that about 3,500,000 gallons of this effluent was pumped into the river daily at the Doon plant. tion was h@lteved to be the original cause of the trouble. It wa* maintained that this effluent was a perfect food for "algae", a growth which lined the river bank below the disposal plant. Stringent tests were given the new pumper equipment on the pumper truck of the Waterloo Fire Departâ€" ment, last Thursday and on Monday. On Thursday it was found that a new adjustment had to be made in order to maintain the new preseure of 600 gallons per minute or 120 pounds. The former pumpage was 400 gallons per minute. In addition to the new motor and pumper, an auxiliary booâ€" ster brake has been added and the chemical tank replaced with a 75â€" gallon water tank, (Continued from Page 1) he did not want to do anything against the City of Kitchener, he was, after all, a representative of South Waterloo and intended to back the township in their fight to clear up the alleged unneceseary condition. Dr. J. Scott Hogg, medical officer of health for Preston and Waterloo township, and Dr. A. S. Henhoeffer, sanitary inspector for the township, both of whom were in attendance, were strong in their remarks conâ€" cerning the Kitchener disposal plant. Both, together with other members oi the inspection party from this disâ€" trict, were firmly eonvinceed the source of the trouble was the Doon plant. It was alleged that the effluent from one of the large tanks at the plant was pumped into the middle of the Grand river without treatment. This ‘I do not want to do anything Hon. N. 0. Hipel NEW MILK HOUSES FACTS ABOUT CANADA From the Dominion Bureau of Statistics ‘There are not so many spinsters as bachelore so it might be agreed that there is no dearth of busbands and that cannot be tne cause of their epinsterhood. ‘There are about one million backhelore in Canada who have passed their twentieth birthday, so numerically there are plenty of husâ€" bands available for all the spinsters, and plenty to spare. 1. What alarm clock would you buy if you needed one? 2. What camera would you buy, for your own use, or to give to a son or daughter? 3. What motor car possesses your favor? 4.‘ What face cream or shaving soap or cream, or tooth paste did you use toâ€"day? 5. What laundry soap (or flakes) is in your kitchen right now? 6. Does ;ho breakfast bacon which you like best have a brand name 7. The watch on your wristâ€"what name does it bear? 8. Your shoesâ€"who made them? t 9. Your life insurance policyâ€"what company issued it? 10. The ginger ale which you serve to guestsâ€"what brand is it? 11. The tea which you buy regularlyâ€"what brand is it? 12. The soap and baked beans and the tomato catsup now on your pantry shelvesâ€"what brands are they ? 4 .> The things which we don‘t buy, and which have a sickish life, are those which are NOT advertised, and which try to ride into public favor on the backs of wellâ€"advertised products. You see, whether or not you consciously or habitually read advertiseâ€" ments, you buy, by preference what advertisements have recommended to your confidence and what experience has proven‘ to be satisfactory. Formerly the tit‘e "spinster‘, was given to unmarried women of the gentle classes, from a viscount‘s daughter down, and often retained by them on their marriage, especially when the husband was not of the gentry. Nowadays a spinster in the popular mind, is an umnarrlo!.'o- man, somewhat advanced in years. SPINST It was once an nm maxlm that a young woman should never be marâ€" ried until she had spun herself a set o. body, table and bed linen. Hence the name "opinster ‘. i 0d thia ue c 90A .A d i 4 8 400 40 lR A nc xHéï¬lever, we may be allowed to say that all unmarried women in Canada, twenty years old and over. are spinsters. There are over 660,000 of them,. There is one spinster for every three or four married women in the Dominion ,or women who have been married. Twentysix thousand of thiese married women are under twenty, and twenty of them are unâ€" der 15, most of these twenty are Inâ€" dians. This information is taken from Census reports issued by the Doâ€" minion Bureau of Statistics. sURFACED HIGHWAYS ‘There are 94,000 miles of surfaced roads in Canada, exclusive of streets in cities, towns and incorporated villages. ‘The mileage has doubled since 1925. The cost is enormous. in 1934 alone the construction and maintenance account was $67,000,000. _ Badgers are not so plentiful on the & C iPrairies as they were. Settlement ?.‘Illll“ll““l“ll|l|l||l|“||lllIIIlllIlllll||l|||||||||"||||||||||||||||||||Illlllllllllllllllllé To say "I never read advertisements" would be much like saying, "I never use soap," or "I never read newspapers," or "No one can teach me anything," or "I know everything." Many good â€"but not very wiseâ€"persons seem to think that all advertisements are just the vainglorious braggings of those who publish themâ€"designed to part fools and their money. The truth is that most advertisements are incitements to their readers to do or be or buy or use something for their immediate or prospective advantage. Advertisers, to be successful and to live long, have to offer something of value or of desire â€"something really wanted or needed by the public. Advertisers, to live long, must not cheat the expectations of confidence of those who buy what they offer or propose. Here are some questions to be answered by those who say "I never read advertisements‘"‘â€" j A spectacular part of the program ic, of course, the Transâ€"Canada Highâ€" way, not yet completed, and in this connection the name of Doolittle should be remembcred as is Macaâ€" dam in association with the type of road surface that bears his name. The badger lives for the most part underground and is seldom seen abroad in daytime. It can be a feroâ€" cious, dogged fighter when cornered and badgerâ€"baiting used to be a pOâ€" pular sport. It can hold its own against the fieriest dogs. Father badger has but one wife at a time, stays with her all summer and helps her to feed and look after their young. Usually there are three in a litter. n Are YOU among those who sayâ€" "I Never Read | Advertisements" Dr. Perry E. Doo!ittle, of Toronto, has been called the "Father of the Transâ€"Canada Highway". He died over two years ago at the age of 72. He was a remarkable man. When he was seven he became the proud possessor of a homeâ€"made bicycle. Later he made a wooden bicycle, the rear wheel being 18 inches in diaâ€" meter and the front one 48 inches. They had steel tires. ‘The backbone was a piece of gas pipe. He built another from a musket barrel and he imported the tires from England. On this wheel he made a successful debut in racing and between 1881 and 1890 he won many trophies, inâ€" cluding a Canadian championship. He built what is believed to have been Canada‘s first motorcycle. He raised the first Canadian Good Roads Fund. ‘The figures in the foregoing have been supplied by the Transportation Branch of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. The CANADIAN BADGER The Canadian badger is a low, thickset animal, its body broad and flat ears short, tai short, legs very ghort and powerful. Its coat is sil very grey. A white stripe runs back from the tip of the nose. It is more «arnivorous _ than â€" the European badger. It hibernates during the colder months of winter and is the only member of the weasel family to 1o so. It is of no credit to say, has reduced their numbers. Five or six years ago there were 15,000 pelts taken but least scason only about 3.000. The value of the pelt is close to $12, so that it is worth about as much as a grizzly bear or a white bear. It is more valuable than a ‘beaver or a red fox or a wolf and nearly four Above are three competitors in the Sailor‘s Hornpipe Dancing conâ€" test staged as part of the programme presented at the evening tattoo of the Waterloo Band Festival on Saturday. The dancers, from left to right, are Alvin Wilson, Windsor, Patricia Matthews, Weston, and Jenny Logan, Toronto "I Never Read Advertisments" Dance at Waterloo Band Festival 44 William St. W. A Science That Is A Real Health Retorer. Chiropractic Adjustment E. G. F R Y TO CARRY ON through a a day‘s arduous household work with a smile is to enjoy good health. BUT . . . if an hour or two of effort tires you . : . if your easily fatigued ... you Moderate Fees. â€" Consult Chiropractor WATERLOO "Smiling" Health ‘This information is taken from reâ€" ports issued by the Fur Statistics Branch of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. times more valuable than a wild cat A lot of people wait for the breaks" until they‘re broke. 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