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/ ClitherpeAdvertiM S A L E
BARGAINS AT
HERE AND NOW
8, York Street, Clitheroe. Tel. 4203.
20 per cent. REDVCTION on all other stock
CRABTREES OPEN
NO NEED FOR ANYONE TO BE BORED, ALFRED SAYS
OF special interest to Mr. , Alfred H. Maytum, of Wad- > dington, was the recent i account of how Mr. Wil- i liam Houghton, of Clare- | mont Avenue, Clitheroe, had constructed a .five-inch
80, declares that no better rewarding hobby can be pur sued than model making, with
gauge model locomotive., Mr. Maytum now a spriteiy
round & about
MARKET PLACE. CLITHEROE WE ARE
DURING BOTH H . .D\Y WEEKS for your usual morning goods Fresh Bread, Pies etc. Tel. Clitheroe — 3348
WADDINGTON ROAD CAFE — SERVICE — QV4LITV —
HOLIDAY OPENINGS
2ND WEEK Dinners: Tuesday—^Wednesday— Thursday—^Friday.
Suppers: Tuesday—Thui'sday-— Sahurday.
Friday—• Cafe open until 11-15 p.m.
through a long career: a pound of practice was worth pounds of theory.
INVENTOR
CLITHEROE ADVERTS. SELL
JOIN
THE SIX
for promotional advertising in
NoiiJi East Lancs.
* CLITHEROE ADVERTISER ★ BURNLEY EXPRESS * NELSON LEADER ★ COLNE TIMES
* BARNOLDSWICK AND EARBY TIMES
★ BLACKBURN TIMES
The BIG SIX Newspapers COMPRISING THE
East Lancs. Press Group AND THE
BEST BUY TO PROMOTE IN N.E. LANCASHIRE
Telephone Glitheroe 2323
AND ASK OUR REPRESENTATIVE TO VISIT YOU
/s ACROSS
10 New arrangement for the master, the leader of the orchesEa! (7).
11 Old-Emers (12). 13 Stop the bed getting full up!
20 Board upset about Virginia boasting (7).
21 What a search in atlases will reveal (5).
23 Communications producing muddle before very long (8).
DOWN
3 An action performed with some reservation in mind (7,1,4) .
6 AddiEonal part of a com plex translation. (5).
7 They prevent low joints being exposed (8).
12 Nothing in real bad con fusion can atEact ' great affection (8).
8 Onslaughts that go right to the- core! (5, 7).
16 Depression in which one
15 and 18 Dn. One of a pair of spectacles? (7-5):
■ can become habitually fixed (6).
1 Bag some wine (4). 2 Organise a place for shoot ing, by the sound of it (7).
4 Here’s some spirit—drink
up: the result is a disturb ance (6).
14 He rings up a visitor (6). 17 Recording arEst is different in the district (12).
.
22 Vowels, we hear, remove difficulties (4).
9 Freight transport to depart (5).
1 Sword-bearer (8). 5 Natural apEtude to be crooked (4).
18 See 15 Down. 19 Go beyond a mountain road (4).
9, Scene-shifters. 10, Inapt 11, Curator. 12, Lines. 13, Manor. 18, Run down. 20. Cameo. 21, College of Arms. 22, Saying. 23, Reason. Down: 1, Assail. 2, Opera
LAST WEEK’S SOLUTION Across: 1, Arouse. 4. Torque.
above crossword fill in your name and address in the space provided and send it to this address marked “Crossword” in the top left-hand corner of the envelope.
AdverUser and Times, King Street, Ciitlicroc.
post_ next Tuesday morning. No entries will be checked before then and the sender of the first correct solution opened will be awarded a 75p postal order.
EnEies must reach us by first
Name Address
last week’s crossword opened on Tuesday morning was sent in by A. E. Cousins, 28 St Mary’s Street Clitheroe. When you have completed the
tionally. 3. Sheathe. 5. Offer. 6, Question-marks. 7, Ensure. 8, Shock. 14, Arch-foe. 15, Precis. 16, Under. 17, Loosen. 19, Ocean. The first correct solution to
Mr. Houghton for his achieve ments—“no doubt his first knowledge came from seeing locomotives passing through Clitheroc and this created the urgency to make one”. Pictured is a Maxim Norden-
feldt Gun which Mr. Maytum made when ho was 14. His other models include a marine engine, a five-cylinder steam engine to his own design and a marine engine copied from the Isle of Man ferry.
will help to interest more in the absorbing, satisfying and frm'tful hobby of model making. After all, be says, “It was the model-maker hobbyist experimenter who provided the nucleus of wireless and tele vision as it is today”.
Mr. Maytum hopes Iiis story
could pud something of interest even if it were only making paper flowers. I often recall the saying of a friend—that he could give the knowledge but not the intelligence to use that knowledge”. Mr. Maylum says he admires
young, or retired people, say they arc bored. There is no excuse for boredom; they
active, Mr. Ma y t um has turned his thoughts to invent ing, a sphere in which his knowledge of model-making has been invaluable. Time never drags, he says. “I get tired of hearing tlie
Now retired, but still very
tum owed to his hobby much of his success in obtaining jobs suitable to his engineering calling. One employer told him he had been given a post because he had practical evid ence to show. This attribute followed him
making when he was 14—^with little knowledge and much less money. But by joining the then Manchester Model Society ho “rubbed” against many clever enthusiastic modelmakers who were “good to know and to learn from and against whom to pit one’s skill for prizes cups, medals and diplomas”. As a young man, Mr. May
its many branches to choose from—ships, aeroplanes, steam engines and so forth. It is. he says, “More satisfying to mind and body than many other pastimes, along with the many friendships it creates.” Mr. Maytum began model
Mr. Mayfum’s model of a Maxim Gun.
Music Society announces programme
OF interest to music lovers are two orchestral concerts to be given in King George’s HaU, Blackburn, next montli under the auspices of Blackburn Music Society. On Friday. August 6th, the March 25, the soloists being
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted b y Charles Groves, will have Denis Matthews as the soloist in Beethovens’ Piano Concerto No. 5 (Emperor). The pro gramme will include Symphony
programme of three concerts shows an interesting variety of works with the Manchester Mozart Orchestra and the usual high standard of soloists. Horace Tatlersall will be the conductor.
be on a Saturday, beginning on November 6, when the pro gramme will be: Blest Pair of Sirens (Parry). The Music Makers (Elgar), and Four Sacred Pieces (Verdi) with Marjorie Thomas as soloist.
All the choral concerts rvill
many peopMc the highlight of the Music Society’s year, will bo sung ou December 11, the soloists being Iris Bourne, Barbara Robolham, John Elwes and Michael Rippon.
n ic Messiah (Handel), for
Society, Israel in Egypt (Handel) will be performed on
A work new to the Music
Big event of year
THE fourth annual show by Clilheroe Area Women’s Insti tute will be held in St. James’ School, CHtheroe, ou Saturday, August 21.
of the Clitheroe Agricultural Show and when this was dis- conEnued the Women’s Insti tutes decided to stage their own effort.
part in this display of horti culture (including fascinating flower arrangements), produce
Twenty-two institutes lake
tionery. There is also an open children’s section, the trophy for which was presented by the Advertiser and Times.
chairmanship of Mrs. Ronald Williamson, were a litEe ner vous about staging a separate show, but it has been more than justified, for in the ideal setting of the large and light SL James’ School, the show has gone from strength to strength, until last year there were 999 entries, mostly of a very high standard.
The committee, under the
days, when nearly everyUiing, including'even flower arrange ments, can be bought ready made, the members of the Women’s InsElute arc keeping the old skills alive.
This indicates Eiat in Uiese
decision of the governors of St. James’ School to accept only one-day bookings in future, the committee will be seeking another venue for the show next year, as an event of this magnitude cannot be moun ted and judged in less than three days.
Unfortunately, owing to the
tions, the committee feels that ‘the show must go on”.
Keeping ia touch
WISHING to be remembered to former friends in Pimlico Road is Mrs. H. Cowler, 28, Larnack Street, Christchurch, New Zealand.
of the Advertiser and Times from a friend and vou can imagine how pleased I was; I read them from front to back and I would like you lo for ward the paper to mo' regu larly”.
Mrs. Cowlcr. A cop.v of the paper will be sent to you each Week; we welcome you to the many Clitheronians overseas who keep in touch with their home town and disEict through the Advertiser and Times.
the- paper to anv part of the world. The cost is three months 72p, six months £1.43. 12
We are always happy to send mpnths £2.S6,‘ . No sooner asked than done,
In a letter to us Mrs. Cowler writes: “I received four copies
, But Eue to the best Eadi-
and preserves, exquisite handi crafts and luscious confec-
The Show was originally part
their new conductor, James Laughran, will visit Blackburn on Thursday, August 26. The Music Society’s choral
Froissart. The Haile Orchestra under
No. 4 by Tschaikovsky and will open with Elgar’s overture. Langham Road. Blackburn.
to an orchestral appointment, the Blackburn Concerts Orches tra was described as being the main orchestral group spon sored by _ Blackburn Music Society. Tliis was incorrect and the Music Society ask us to make it clear tliat there is no connection between the Music Society and the Blackburn Concerts Society.
In a note last week referring
pelled the society to raise its prices and patrons are now offered one ticket for each of the three choral concerts for £1.80. Applications should be made to Mrs. Edith Tattersall,
His Downham, Anne Warde, George Allen, Rodney Smith and Kenneth Woollam. Increasing costs have com
Top award for acting
THE gold medal for acting— top award of the London Aca demy of Music and Dramatic Art—has been gained by two members of the Clitheroo Players.
Christine Cook, and Mis s Rachael Hodgkins. Both are 22. The examiner was Pauline
They arc Clitlicroc girls, Mrs
Mrs. Greta Wilkinson since they were seven but for the last two or three years have been nicmbers of the training class in_ spcccli and drama at the Clithcroe Adult Centre, where Mrs. Wilkinson is the tutor.
Wattis. of London, and she complimented then, on their excellent work and recommen ded them for the teaching diploma in the future. They have been pupils of
demy bronze and silver awards for acting and the correspond ing awards of the Poetry Society. Christine, who lives in
F.ara
day Avenue, is the mother of twins and is a trained nursery nurse; Rachel lives in Victoria Street, and lakes her final examination in nursery nursing in November.
Both of them. took part in Clitheroc Flavors’ recent pro
duction of “The Corn is Green”
SHOWING HIS SKILL
demonsEate his hobby at the forthcoming Hodder Valley Show.
has taken part in the show; this lime in the forestry section. Mr. Thwaites intends to
intake keeper for the Preston District Water Board, was inter viewed at the show for a pro gramme on Radio Leeds. It is the second year that he
sop Bridge, look part in the Great Yorkshire Show, giving demonsEaEons of his hobby, making crook, fell and other horn-handled walking sEcks. Mr. Thwaites, who is a senior
Mr. Alan Thwaites, of Dun- They hold the London Aca
WHM SPINNING WHEEL SANG HOMELY SONG
THOSE who travel north f»r their holidays will app reciate the . truth of an author’s words some years ago, that in all the over- populated southern parts of Britain there will He, in the next 20 or 30 years, many people who feel themselves imprisoned by the inodin- ate pressure of too many neighbours, or unduly regi mented by the demands of an increasin^y impersonal industry; and some of them, seeking a return to more reasonable habits of life, will look to the unpeopled
means rare. They are in fact inevitable as the tides and it does not need a professor of economics or medical practi tioner to realise that most of us, after being brainwashed' since leaving school, will sooner or later reaUse that we have, like the donkey, been following the carrot But strange to say the carrot
places of the north. Such conclusions arc by no
MRS. JANE GROAT . . recollections of years long past.
may now turn out to, be made of plastic. After all do we not find that by working, saving and doing most of the things the government sees desirable for the country’s prosperity, we arrive at the stage when most of the things we have sought have lost their value—including savings.
DELUSION
and reading are of the uEnost importance to the Orcadian. More Elan most they have Eme to stand and stare and converse. This must not be interpreted to mean they do not work. On the conEary Eiose who toil in the fields or with livestock have no time for idleness. TheE task, if they arc to survive, is constant. Above all, these people are
im m e d i a t e suggesEon was, “Would \/e come indoors to have a cup of tea”. Now, as most Clitheronians know this sort of hospitality is not un common if you are known to the people. But where, particu larly below a line drawn be tween say YorkshEe and the
Birsay Ei Eie north of the main land and one day as we. were passing a farm a sEangc sight caught my eye. On our left, a couple fifty yards from the road, and hanguig on a clothes-line not far from the house himg a dozen haddock, obviously dry- mg in the wind. I went down the path to be met by the lady who had no objecEon to my photo graphing the unusual sight After taking my picture her
so courteous and hospitable to the sEangei. We had many examples of this and one in parUcular comes to mind. We were staying in the PaiJsh of
so often the politicians and others believing that the abso lute answer to all life’s prob lems can be solved by theE philosophy. What delusion, and what a carrot to hold before any donkey. A trip to Orkney to converse with crofters, farmers and others turns one’s thoughts to such matters. ConversaEoo
I menEon this because we find
Fyldc, is such a . spontaneous welcome the general trend? We had to decline the invitation for we had just eaten a hearty breakfast. However we promised to return, and wo did.
INVITED
land of Orkney. The island, Copinsay, was
the spinning wheel, long hard days of toil, wpeding turnips was the rule of the day.
RESIDENTS
fourteen children and the light house keeper were the ody residents on Copinsay. Then she reminded me of the school teacher that made up the popu- laEon of the island. Just ima gine having what really amounts
Herself, her husband, and
privilege of meeUng a woman who speaks of lonely island life over half a cenhEy ago when
the home of Mrs Mary Jane Groat, 86 this month. Her recol lections, and charm, will remain with me for a long time. Who indeed can forget her memories of what seems lo be a far- distant age fast passing out of living memory? Seldom does one have the
such behaviour and similarly news Eavcis fast as these people visit one another for a chat in the evenings. Our host told us of a friend who until recently lived on a very small island off the northern coast of the main
than in these remote places, would it be possible for a com plete shutdown of activity simply because of a visit by two strangers? Island life is renowned for
There was no sign of fiagging at any Eme and when I sugges ted we were hindering farm work our host would have none of it. Where, I thought, other
walked towards the farm on the day before saying goodbye to Orkney and Mr and Mrs Taylor and their son came out to meet us and then accompanied us to the kitchen where we were in vited to taste home-brewed beer and cakes. A rather unusual menu at such an early hour. The conversaEon was intense.
It was about 10-30 a.m. as we
to a private teacher for your family.
was healthy and as I listened to her tales and was shown many pictures 1 constantly compared those days to our way of life in 1971. At the age of 14 she rose at 4-30, made a cup of tea and after walking a couple of miles started work weeding turnips at 6 o’clock. There was no canteen and when I asked about food she told of taking a ‘piece’ in her pocket This I found was something plain like an oat cake. And work conEnued until 6 p.m. and the wage Is. 6d. a day.
In spile of long hours, life
■boys going over the cliffs to col lect bEds’ eggs. They plaited binder sEing to make a rope and when someone asked what would happen if the rope broke, the boys replied; “Oh we can get some more”. Later when she had the
I was surprised, and Ei a way horrified, when I heard of the
family she had to milk, bake, help with the peats and make stockings. By today’s standards those days were very, very bard. Few indeed are capable of undergoing such toil with all our vlEminised food and modern methods of labour saving. All I can say is there must be a les son in this somewhere.
OPINION
dress and mini skirts in parEcu- lar and was forced to smile at her reply. She liked her knees tucked away. When she first saw a mini skirt in Kirkwall, she said, “Give that girl a smack on the backside. It won’t be hard to get at.”
I asked her opinion of modern
‘It takes a wise man to be a fool.”
n a tu ra l ist .
her sharp wit and memory, her dialect, and sense of humour. She knew “Wandering WillE” of Orkney and recalled how they put him aboard a batUe- ship in the first World War. But Uiey were, glad to get him off because they thought he was daft. But as the wanderer said:
laics and philosophy of this grand old lady and her wonder ful scrap-book. 1 marvelled at
We certainly enjoyed the OVER the next t\i
Or so the Milk m| Board’s C a t t l e „ Ctentre at Whalley, j playing an importani
- 1 J '■ < »* ** - 'H ' ' *» I
an experiment to pud of French’ quality our into , beef prddu|
our dairy cows. Britain’s dauy cows
I
about threequarters of | from our farms as wei]
toe milk we need, but i toem with pedigree bea improve the quanEty a d
yTeId°.^ r
toe miporters hojie it wil on to .the , British breSI which It will be crossed.
I NEW SOCIETY
. Altogether 25 of the h i Drown Liinousin bulls wel p o rt^ plus 159 heifers, ■
stations in most areas o1 country.
. They came out of quar* m the sprEig and are nml jnto small, groups on faniF on private and official bna
■
at Mr. E. Towers’ Manor | Bonvick, Carnforth, andl rently Eiree of the bulll standing at the Artificial l | inauon CenEe, at WballcJ
In.Lancashire there is :
the neivly-formcd Bridsehl ousin Cattle Society whil co-operating in a carl planned testing programml toe new cattle.
Alilk MarkeEng Board, I been formed to draw upl testing progr;imme and v | Its implementation.
. A steering committee, ini mg members of ttic soJ other breeders, the Minist Agriculture, the Meat | Livestock. Commission and|
The testing will be a :|
HON-FK POPUL
WHALLE
WHALLEY people read users of the six libraries in| And according to the
BRASS PLATES IN ABUNDANCE
IT MAY not happen to you but it usually happens to me—-whenever I go on holiday, no matter where it is, almost invariably I meet someone I know. This year, for the first
t im e in
memory, it didn’t' happen, but I did meet Dr. A. B. Granville, M.D., F.R.S.— not in person, for Dr. Gran ville died over 100 years ago—but I did meet his book and now I feel I
know the author very well indeed.
Dr. Granville look a gi'cat
interest in spas and the mineral content of their waters and travelled all over the country where, in the interests of science, he drank gallon after gallon of noxious and evil smelling fluids. When he had concluded his tours the doctor sat down and wrote books about them; not dry-as-dust scientific . treatises but lively and entertaining trav elogues. He was interested in so many things besides water— he liked people, their idiosyn crasies, their peculiariEes and their local customs. He had an insatiable curiosity a:nd, gifted with an eloquent and proIEic pen, he produced se v e r a l volumes quite overflowing with curious facts, anecdotes and human observations.
FASCINATING
eroe among the watering places that claimed his attenEon and his comments on the ancient borough are fascinating.
England,” first published in 1841, Dr. Granville listed Clith
In his book. The Spas of
celebrated for ‘Lime, Law and LaEn’,” and he continues, “It is doubtful wheUier anoEier town of the same size, containing
about 7,000 inhabitants, exists, where the door of every other house in two or three of the principal streets, as in CliUiero, exhibits the awful word ‘attor ney’ on its broad brassplate. What people in such a place, fattening upon fat cattle (of which, by the by, I witnessed the finest display imaginable in Eie market place) and most of them graziers, can have to quarrel about, it would puzzle the very attorneys themselves to decide.”
Claremont area and consisted of Evo wells and of these the doctor wrote, “They are close to a factory-mill of considerable size, lately erected, and they seem to arise from limestone shale.
The spa itself was Ei the
evidently sulphuretted, but Eiat which I drew from the round well was only slightly so; whereas the one in the square well exhibited stronger marks of the gas when tasted. To the latter weU the public have made good theE claim after some squabble and they avail them- selvM largely of the privilege of qMflSng the water for nothing. The temperature of flie water IS 48 degrees. It is perfectly transparent and drank like com
mon spring water so little saline matter does it contain.”
EXCELLENT
“Ciilbero” (that is how he ^pclt It) noted the. Doctor, “is
, After giving details -of the baths adjacent, the doctor con tinues, The water has been found to be an excellent depur- ativc for all eruptive diseases,
The water in both wells is
Whalley window
the better classes of people Ei Clithero.”
and IS a great favourite with
An analysis of the water re vealed that it contained an
abundance of sulphuretted hydrogen gas, small quanEties of muriate of soda, sulphate of magnesia and carbonate of lime, and “of iron only an atom.”
life at the lime in Stonyhurst College. These, will form the subject of
readers interested in the England of 130 years ago for, apart from our own district, it gives pictures of Southport, Black pool, Skipton and other parts of
details of spas and “the principal sea-bathing places” from one end of the country to the other and has just been republished by Adams & Dart, of Bath. I can recommend it to all
\Vhally! His book is full of fascinating
the Craven country we know so well
STRINGENT The doctor provides, too a
ctiEcism, it would force the Mayor and Corporation o f that town to. bow their heads in
^ n g e n t castigaEon of Proud Preston which, so blEng is his
Shame and possibly compel Eio more sensitive among them to cast their bodies into the lower reaches of the Ribble, so cen- sonous of the. morals of their totrasfolk and the educational facilities available to them is this nineteenth century author. In Preston, it seems, the per-
by a centuty and a quarter! J.F.
was anticipMed
a ^ tu re article and, meanwhile, I have only one quarrel with the doctor who provided me with such interesting holiday rea^ng —he mentioned Whalley only once, and even then his spelling He caUed it
writes of the town’s claim to fame because of its lime and latin and, elsewhere in the book, ^ves some surprising details of
The inquisitive author then
French boys look around
A PARTY of young French boys, from Rheims, concluded a four-week stay at Stonyhurst
Tni
and they enjoyed what might be Wi'ihn.t'?
“'i ^
learned from- Mr. Turner, was built around 800 years ago and mter partially destroyed by Cromwell. One boy thought it was “not very funee”. All the boys were sEuck by the con
. ters and so on. The Clitheroe visit was the
was at the Mayor’s Parlour, where the Town Sergeant, Mr. Stanley Flack took them in hand^ and told them of the towm s Eeasured- possessions, in cluding the ancient seals, char-
trast between Clitheroe and its French equivalent After the castle, Eie next call
nappy thought of Mr. Melvin Morrow, under whose supervi sion they stayed at Stonyhurst
the castle which, the boi's
without tears. The visit began with a tour of
to Clitheroc ^«son
March of last year, the Wha| library has provided the d| sion with a large display a| which can be used by memlf of the public to show tl| skills in painting, photograf and other crafts.
formation is at last being s J fied. Since it was opened ,
I
that th e majority of displ work in the division — whf includes libraries at Claytif OswaldEvistic, Great Hanvoi Church and Rishton—is dc| by the more artistically dined members of staff.
REFERENCE ROOM
A book fund, which is keeping pace with the ris|
Less room for fair
day morning a party of wildlv geshculating French boys were disgorged in town, accompanied by a surprisingly cool Mr. Tur ner, a history master at the
OilTreh SEeet The boys were parEcularly
gress the Mayor, Conn. Sidney with a friendly
“ oy voicing his pride to Chtheroe, and was thanked by Mr. Turner.
Maijr s Parish Church to see the f°tobs_ of SE Thomas Radcliffe aaa *ns wfe,_ and other memori- ai® of historical interesL A pleasant expedition ended
The last place of call was St
each side of the entrance to Eic parlour. While this visit was in pro
Council Chamber where he ex plained its purpose and historic associations. He concluded his
Hello and led them into the fascinated by the halberds on
with a view to learning some English. , Accordingly, early last Thurs
Planning and Estates Comn Ico, Mr. J. Newton Bell, t| Borough Surveyor, said til the last time the fair was I CliUieroe, the health dcpa| merit had difficulty getting and out of the rccreati| ground. Conn. J. Blackburn, chsl
CLITHEROE’S October f I wiE' only be able to use pi of the recreation ground t l year because the GPO al Corporation Health Depa| ment also use the site. At a recent mccUng of
man, of the committee, suggi led that another site be foul for the fair but after sot discussion, none was accept! He said that if the rccrcatil ground was used then wh|
lines or some other meEi| would have to be us ed ensure that there was accl for , the health ■ departml Vehicles and to the footpal It Was decided that the s | veyor: should- arrange wh|
wth the . boys scurrying off W buy ‘Some delcecious Eenglish bon-bons” and remarking hoff friendly the English were.
confirmed :-by ' the council Tuesday.
parti-of the ground should used, by the fair. I J is course of action .
which have included both 1 and water painlings, pho| graphs, textile designs any display of handicrafts by dcrstoncs Hospital. Mr. Illingworth jxiinLs J
worth, there has been no sh<| age of material and an cxh| tion has been organised bjl different person each monil A great deal of interest f been shown in these displl
To date, states Mr. Illi|
sional librarian, Mr. G.J Illingworth in his annual port, this indicates that needs of the community L Whalley for knowledge and|
I
The caElc have been brl to Britain by the 22 membi
rause of Its reputation fol tog out large quanfid tosty, lean beef; a characj
_.A^aew b r ^ from | railed the Limousin, ha| Drought m as an experiml
i
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