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GARDINER CHARGE FALLS T0 GROUND Coamberlain Finds No Depend- able Evidence Against Hart The charges which Henry E. Gardiner made against Chlet W. C. Hart of the police department in a letter to Chairman R. W. Chamber- Isin of the board of police commis- sioners will not be investigated fur- ther, it was said by the chairmen following a conference Saturday forenoon at the office of Chief Hart in the police station. Chairman Chamberlain and Commissioner M. | W. Bannan said they believed Gard- iner's accusations that the chiet was inefficient were without foundation | and no proof was offered in substan- | tiatlon of the charges. Gardiner's complaint included references to the | alleged sale of liquor in local clubs| and the alleged operation of lotter- ies without police intervention. Chief Hart sent Detective Sergeant McCue out to bring Gardiner to the police station for the conference and the sergeant found him at the home of Tra E. Leonard. former su- pernumerary policeman, at 749 Stanley street, Lconard and Gard-| iner came in and met the commis sioners and the chief, remalning in session until noon. During the con- ference, which was behind closed doors, it is understood fhat Chief Hart told Gardiner he was malicious and it is also reported that men- | tion was made of Gardiner's alleged misstatements while under oath in police court during the trial of the Maietta liquor case a few months ago. At that time, Judge W. I Mangan, who was presiding, inter rupted proceedings to warn Gardin- | er that he must be positive about matters which he stated as certain- ties before answering, and Gardiner accepted the rebuke. After the conference, Chief Hart was asked Ly reporters it ho wishe ed to make a statement, and while Gardiner stood a few feet away with the door of the chiet's office partly | open, the chief said: “Yes, Gardiner | is crazy and I told him so. He made a number of statements on which he is all wrong.” From information gleaned after the conference it appeared that| some effort was made by the com-| missioners to ascertain from Gardi- | ner his means of livelihood. Gard-| iner ts sid to have made the | statement that he has been a stu- dent ot constitutional law for sev- cral years. It is said that he has been ! from Co. No. 7 of the firo department was called at 3:47 yesterday after- noon to & grass fire on Allen street, and Co. No. 4 was called at 3:59 to a grass fire on Curtis street. City ltems Mrs. Alice Rehm of Stanley Wom- en's Rellef corps will give a waffle party at her home in Kensington to- morrow afternoon and evening. Members of the corps and friends wishing 'o attend in the afternoon will take the bus leaving the Center | church at 1:50 o'clock. Gentlemen friends arc invited 1o attend the party. ! At 1:10 this afternoon, Co. No. 4| of the fire department was called to a grass fire ou James Andrews’ pro- perty on Burritt strect, near Black Rock bridge. There was no damage. The police were notificd today of the refurn of the operator's license of Louis Maxen of 91 Seymour street. Richard McEnroe reported to Offi- cor Clarence Lanpher the theft of a gas stove from his restaurant on Church street. An investigation is bring made in- to a report by Joseph Disalvator of 51 Hariford avenue to Officer Peter Skierkowski that four gallons of wine were stolen from his cell which was broken into. Clharles Anderson of North Cambridge, Mass, a former head | tho Strand theater in this | v, is here for a fow days renew- ing acquaintances. FIND PLANE BUT PILOT 1S MISSING (Continued from First Page.) Detroit to t point at 9 miles, a record for planes of this type. He said he had averaged 78 miles an heur in the flight and had consumed about 42 gallons of gas- oline on the trip. Seen Over Melbourne Brooks was seen as he passed over | Melbourne Saturday night. His | plane had gone only a short dis- tance out to sca when it suddenly nosed down and disappeared. Search | ofr the plane and its occupant began | immediately but rough s prevent- | cd thorough search. Seaplanes were | called on for help and yesterday at | noon they located the plane four | miles north of Sebastian, one half | mile off shore, with the tip of the | wing exposed. The plane appeared to be in a buevant position. Twe fishermen {ook off in a sea-skiff for | the scene and attempted fo get a line around the expofed wing but | unemiployed for some time. Junior Hi-Y Defeated | By Hartford Northends | The Junior Hi-Y of the local Y. M. C. A. was defeated in basketball | on tho local court Saturday after noon by the Northend Branch Hi-Y | of Hartford, colored. The local! team has defeated this team previ- | ously but the vigitors showed a burst of &peed during the third period to overcome the early lead of the New | Britain boys. B. Wosilus showed un- | usual good form for New Britain | with Captain Dan Wosilus and rown making baskets. Cicero of | the Hartford team made 14 points with L. Ross and O. Ross making | the rest of the field goals. The | score: New Britain Jr. Hi-Y. Fld " ™. | tting. f. | Brown, rf. | B. Wosilus, If. Finanee, If. .... D. Wositus (C Sexton, c. Tengston, rg. Kaplan, re. . Richter, | Hattin | ol | | 1 1 0 g 0 1 0 0 o 0 o 21 |sell & Erwin divicion of the Ameri- ! meeting Northend Hi-Y of Hartford Fla. Tl . { Cicero, rf. Newkirk, If. | were held back in picking it up by |00 perintendent fear that it would capsize their craft. | irooks apparently freed himself from the plane just before or after it hit the water, in the opinion of | Kenneth Flusher, of Melbourne, who | overed the plaue and who made | 2 careful examination of it. He said | it had apparently been left by the| receding tide and was Iving upside down on the beash, clear. of the water. Some of the instruments were missing, he &aid The safely straps were loose, as if they had been unbuckled by the pilot to free himself from the plane,” | said Flusher. Flushor had heen employed by the | Melhourne representative of the Ford Metor company {n patrel the ach by motorcyele PARKER ASSISTANT SUPT. | RUSSELL & ERWIN PLANT| Master Mechanic Promoted to High- Position—Harry Thibodeau or | | for several | in the R Chosen His Successor, Charles 1. Parker, years master mechanic ! ro Corporation, today duties of assistant su- | to which he has heen promoted. His place as master me- can ¥ L. Ross c. 0. Ross, 2. Killebrew, Ig % | ¢hanic has been filled by promotion 2| of Harry Thibodeau, formerly super- O lintendent of the door check depart- ol Brewer, Ig. .... Zetter- 7, New ! | Referee, Recanoe; scorer. man. Score at half time, 1 Britain. Big Oil Com;a;yi.l;mps Gas Three Cents Gallon An increaz2 of three cenfs in the | retail price of Socony gasoline came effective this morning at all Standard Oil stations. As far as can | Ve ascertained that brand is the only |, one to show an increas: in price so | far. It was further repcrted that ah increase of twa cents has hecome | effective on whol quantities. | The increase is oral throughout the state. Colonial, Pan-Am. Sinclair and Singer brands have not increased in price, to date, it was re- | ported at stations and at headquar- ters. Regarding Texaco gas it was reported at the local headquarters of the Texas Company that an increase i3 anticipated. Gulf, Texaco FIRE CAUS $2. Dam; estimated at approxi mately was done by fire in and around a chimncy on a building in the rear of 441-445 West Main street this forenoon. The building is owned by Mrs. Goldstein of Hartford and occupied by the New Britain Awn- ing Works. The fire depar twas called at 10:23 o'clock by from Box 113 at L Main streets, and sonnded six minutes i At 11:57 yesterday ford No. § responded 1o a sti a chimney fire in a hous tin strect ned by ond Agnes Bucl that an attempt had been made to send in an alarm from the hox at the corner of East and Austin streets, the glass having been broken but the lever not having been pulled. an and arm | West aon, DENTIST Dr. Henry R. Lasch Commercial Trust Bldg. \-Ray Pyoreheas Treatmes | ; | ment. | Finding of Bones in | Bag Puzzles Police Wakefield, R. I, Feb. 27 (UP)— Police were mystified to v over the tinding of a bag, containing haraan skulls and other bones, Y eld dump. to the idenfitv of the re-| s adult and on inded wered by fno while in a | o ¢ mains ha Thres and part s and a sknll The \anr ther two nat dizcover them till BUS FIGURES IN COLLISION bus by M Julia Farmington avenne alter Gwiazda of th with an auto- owned zda. of 121 and driven by same address, collided mobile owned and driven by Bruno Nosk of Lewis Plainville, at last night at West Main street er Mauric bus struck | the Nosk machine as the latter was coing west on West Main street, and Gwiazda said he was watching an- | other car and therafore did not ob- approach of the Nosk ma Slight damage resnited and fory as found street, serve the chir no canuse tion W gtop Getting Up Nights 17 you by reasor t up many times at night | of Biadder Trouble, have pains in back, weakness or dizziness, gener debility, painful, smarting | nd difficult jack of con- trol of urine, or symptoms of pros- troubie GLOB- A reatment v thous will gue treatmen ANy Battle Creck, Mich PRE ALV o Main St | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1928, EX-JANITOR FILES SUIT AGAINST CITY Williams Demands $3,000 on Unexpired School Contract Henry. Williams, janitor of the Northend school, who was dismissed from his job, today brought suit against the City of New Britain for $3,000 damages, claiming breach of contract. He has retained Attorney Monroe 8. Gordon to conduct the case for him. Papers in the action were served today by Deputy Sher- iff Martin 1. Horwitz. Willlams claims that on January 20, 1927, the defendant offered him the position of janitor at the North- end school for a period extending from September 1, 1927, to August 31, 1928. Tt was stipulated that the offer be accepted within a week of his reccipt of it. He was furnished with a slip of paper which was to be filled out and returned if he de- sired the position. That ‘was done. The plaintift claims that lhe has fulfilled all the terms of the offer. In February, 1928, he sets forth that he was discharged by an of the defendant, without just ca and without fault of the plaintiff. He states that the defendant has falled to pay the weckly install- ments on the contract, a salary of $1,500, plus competition for added work, having been specified. He claims that there has been a hreach of contract in that the de- fendant has failed to pay for serv- ices to he rendered. He states that he is still ready to perform his part. Tncluded in the copy of the specifications for job, signed by Superintendent Schools Stanley H. Holmes. GUEST IN OVERTURNED CAR is the of complaint BRINGS SUIT FOR $6,000 Alleges Fost Was to Blame For Tn- Juries (o Arms, Tegs, Fycs, Hands, Face, | John G. Rose claims that he was seriously injured when a car in which he was riding turned turtle in Andover on December 24, 1927, and he has brought suit for $6,000 damages against Frank A. Barboza, driver of the automobile. Both men are residents of New Britain and Attornoy 8. (. Casale has counsel for the pl Barboza is alleged to have at- tempted to pass another machine on the highway, whereupon the ma eliine left the road and turned over. ‘The plaintiff states that he received lacerations. contusions and abrasions about the head, face, eves, nose, arms, hands, legs and body. He states that his nose was broken and that he aleo received injurics to his back, and nervous shock. As a result of the accident he has a scar on his face, which will proebably prove premanent. he states. MORTGAG ORECLOSURE SUTT Seeking foreclosure of a mortgage, possession of premises on Glen street, the appointment of a receiv- er to collect rents, and such other remedies as may be adindged pro. per, Teadore Wohll, trustee of the estate of Elias Wohll, as snit against Hilma Toscano of Bris- tol. and others. Attorney H. H. Milkowitz represents the ntiff and Attorney Monroe S. Gordon is counsel for Toscano. Deputy Sher- iff Martin H. Horwitz served papers MASTER BUILDERS TO MEET Members of the Master Builders aseociation will Told their second and banquot March 6, at the Burritt hotel, din nrer being served at 6:15 o'clock speaker will be engaged to talk on matters of interest to the trade, Pile sufferers can only get quick, safe and lasting relief by removing the cause-—had blood circulation in the lower bowel. Cutting and salves four can’'t do this—an internal remedy | must be nsad. Dr. Leonhardt's Hem- Roid, a harmiess tablet because it relieves fhis gestion and strengthen parte. Hem-Roid vecord for quick. safe relief to File eufferers the =ame~ for vou Fair Drog Dept. and druggist sell Hem-Lioid with thi suceends blood con- the affected wonderful and lasting It Wil do hack. or money where Fuar- antes, brought | the | of the year, | SLOT MACHINE OWNER PAYS $85 FINE 10 GOURT Store Kceper Pleads Nolo Couten- dere to Charge of Having Gam- bling Device. Fleading nollo contendere to the | charge of violation of the act con- cerning gambling devices, Frank Gentile, proprietor of a store at the | corner of Ellis and South Main |streets, was fined $35 and costs by Judge M. D. Saxe in police court to- day, on recommendation of Prose- cuting Attorney J. G. Woods, who said the police arc making a deter- mined efforts to rid the city of slot machines and he hoped they would be successful. Four years ago a similar cam- palgn was undertaken and the ma- {chines were cleared out, he said. ! Gentile being the first to be arrested in the present drive, he was dealt with morc leniently than will others who may be arrested he added. Sergeant T. J. Feeney testified that he saw a slot machine being opes- ated in Gentile's store several days ago and found that the insertion of five cent pleces brought forth others or nothing. It differed from some slot machines in that nothing but money came out of it. Attorney Alfred Lo Witt, repre- senting Gentile, made no objection to the recommendation of the prosecut- ing attorney. FIVE OF THE SEVEN MAIL BANDITS ARE | (Continued From First Page) charge, by Carmody. Divide Loot The division of the loot took pi shortly after the robbery, according to information the police got in the Saturday night and Sunday ques- tioning of 25 men and women under ar There were seven shares of s b, The extra $14,000 | the n and Cleaver confessions were understood te have explained, was set aside as a legal fund. The quick work of the | solving the crime was attributed {partly fa the erime prevention bu- }yr‘,‘n]_ a seeret department of police | working nnder cover and secking to Hlearn of impending erin | that Cleaver had been h | he was planning a “big job” led (o the tapping of teleplione wires lead- {ing to his residence, 1t was rom constanily listening in to conversations over the Cleaver [iine that police got the names of several persons who, the talk indi- 1«‘I'nl|, were “in' on th big job." | The wire tappers learned that the [ robbery was to take place after (he ! train reached Harvey. n anticipa- tion of it there were Chicagn detec- tive squads concentrated in the su- burb. A ehange in plan made at a meeting of the plotte the Cleaver home. Thus, while the ctual rohbery canght officers unpre- parcd, the information obtained ly the crime prevention bureau befors its commission them leads which made solution prompt Wife Aids Officers Tmportant imformation was {eeived from Donovan's wife. “He was in on it she told offi- |eers, rd to say zave same place in 1926 when they got $135,000. From that he bhrought home $700 and T put it in the k. She said that when her husband came home Saturday night she ask- 2 him whers d been. He told her, she said, bing a train When the asked money was, that he left wyer in Beve led that he was |up.” she added | Some of the 25 arrested have been released as police questioning led 1o |the convietion that they were not |involved. Two others, whose names | police withheld, are being sought. | him where the said he answered at the home of a v Hills, Tle explain- atraid of being held <he i Firemarni’l‘nps on Stairs Hurrying to Answer Bell | Vieutenant Fred Linn of No. 1 [ hook and ladder company, narrowly escaped gerious iniu {ped and fell down a flight of stairs in the police building this forencon. {He heard the beil strike in fire head- quariers next to the police station and in Lishurey 4 recpond hiz font canght i th He went out with his com apparently i ¥ none the worse for his experience Safer By Far! NOW UNDER ARREST police in | A tip |, police sajd, was ! “He was in the robbery at the | that he had heen rob-| when he slip- | FUFLLESS MOTOR 15 NOT ‘HUMBU® (Continued From First Page} had decided to do nothing without first consulting the Guggenheim Foundation, and his attorney, Col. Henry Breckenridge, who also is Col. Lindbergh's attorney. Hendershot will go to New York Tuesday to confer with Colonel Lind- bergh and his backers, he said. He denied knowledge of a corporation reported to be in the process of formation to exploit his invention. He sald he had only one offer in | which money was tendered, and that from a news reel concern which tographi e sald he rights for one year. didu’t deal with them.” Licensed Pllot Hendershot is a licensed pilot and has done much of his experimenting at Bettis field here. He sald a gov- ernment plane had been ordered placed at his disposal whenever he needed it. He did not say whether ho would fly to New York to keep his appointment with Colonel Lind- bergh Tuesday. RETIRING MEMBERS SEEK RE-ELECTION { Four Members of School Board Will Be Candidates Again Four members of the school com- mittee whose terms of office expire this year will be candidates (o s ceed themselves iy (he April elec- tion. They are Louis W. Young and Aaron Danlelson, republicans: and George LeWitt and Mrs, Laura P. Mangan, democrats. Mr. Young 1s comploting his first term on the committee. His time {on the board has been one of many accomplishments. He is a member |of the scliool accommodations com- [mittee and the financo * committee. | After the death of Geo: Praut he was clected chairman of the finance committee, He is treasurer of the Stanley Works and is a graduate of Brooklyn Polytechnical school and | Harvard Universityw Mr. Daniclson was recently elect- led to the board by the republican Imembers of the commnon council to su Mr. Traut. He is a real . His election was over {four other candidates. Mr. LeWitt Lias been on the board |since 1 Tle has bieen a valuable man fo the school accommodations | committee because of his experience lin building. He is also on the eve- {ning school committee of which he [is chairman. He was graduated from [New York University and Yale Law {sehaol. | Mrs. Mangan is the enly woman {who has ever represented the demo- |eratic party on the hoard. She wa [elected in 1922 and should she suc jceed in winning the nomination for her party it will be her third term. She is valuable fo the Toard heeause of her experience as former teacher. the wife of Judge Wil | 1. Mangan | She mallvox Again Brea n. o> ses of sn the first ruary 7, were reporfed here to- day. Ona case was an adult and the |other a three weeks' old baby. The new cases bring the total number in Middlesex connty up to 127 gince the first case was reported % | Middleto | since To Cure a {| Cold in | | The tonic and lazative effect of Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets will fortify the eystem sgainst Grip, Influenza and other eerious ills result- ing from a Cold. Price 30c. The box bears thie signature G2 Frove | k=Proven Merit since 188 OUR things are actually safer in our hands th an in the hands of a laundress. Why? Because we understand what we arc doing; the laundress mevely goes by rule of thuml and force of habit. very plainly what we mean, Send us a trial bundle, and we'll show you HOMEWETWASH LAUNDRY 123 SMALLEY ST NEW BRITAIN. CONN. O I e P w mentioned $50,000 for exclusive pho- | Qut Over in Middletown | Two new | NEW INVENTION 1S INNEW YORK Hendershot's Motor to Be Ex- amined by Critical Eyes New York, Feb. 27 —The Hender- shot “fuelless motor’” was in New York today to be put under the cri- tical eyes of electrical experts as soon as a patent can be obtained. It has already mystified several men familiar with electricity, Major Thomas G. Lanphier, commandant of Selfridge Field, Mich., and leader of the first pursuit group, said at the Hotel Biltmore where he and ’tfolonrl Charles A, Lindbergh and a party of friends are staying, Difficulty in obtaining & patent was found, he said, as the government patent department could find no classification for the motor. Patent attorneys he said, have taken the matter in hand and as soon as & patent is obtained the motor will probably be tested under the super- vision of experts of the Guggenheim TFoundation for the Promotion of Aeronautics, Company Was Formed He denicd that company had been formed to produce the motor or that its practicability for use in airplancs had been proven, Major Lanphier also denied that Colonel Lindbergh was in anyway connected with the group which was backing the inventor, Lester J. Hen- dershot of West Elizabeth, Pa. “There are only Hendershot, D. Barr Peat, his friend, Colonel Henry Breckinridge and myself,” Major Lanphier said. “I put a little money into it and when we decided we ought to ser some one about patenting it T thought of Breckinridge whom T knew through Slim. Slim (Colonel Lindbergh) was my guest and I showed him the motor. That is all he has to do with it." Colonel Breckinridge a New York lawyer and was a tant sec- retary of war during President Wil- son's first administration. ‘he fact that Colonel Brecken- ridge is also Colonel Lindbergh's at- torney gave rise to a lot of false rumors that Lindbergh was interest- ed in this motor thing,” Major Lan- phier d Is a Generator The army officer, who d his only lknowledge of electricity was what he learned in his first year at West Point, ribed the “fuelless motor” as a generator. He said the linvention. which he called an en- ergy collector, gathered out of the power which Hendershot lie believes is energy generated by the rotation of the earth on its axis and around the sun.” Dr. Nikola Tesla, inventor of the induction mofor and who recently patented plans for a “helicopter-air- plane views the invention with skepticism. Dr. Tesla, who has spent many of his seventy-one years ex- ! perimenting in taking energy from the heat of the sun, earth and air, satd power obtained from these sources by a small motor “can only be measured in ‘mouse’ powe “There iz, apart. from lightning. no natural electrical source which could e exploited with the practical ol ject of developing power in amount required for the operation of machinery.” he said Major Lanphier declared, fhat “the whole thing 3 how ever, is g0 Price = PE=— Tura flame MEDIUM weenil i ¢l ly Also Sav 67c efficient | ( | | u and wire the | To get best results and save fuel with ANY “Wear-Ever” Utensil: SR ST, il Then REDUCE flame one- e D i odim el Do net increase flame to hurry cooking French-fried oysters, quettes, fritters, dou at their best when prepared in this Rccip:fiFaflfifr ERE,E" | Get yours today at any s New Britain—Fair Department Store—Kolodney Bros. mysterious and startling that it is posaible it has the appearance of being a fake."” . “I was extremely skeptical when 1 saw the first model,” he continued. “but I helped to build up the second one and witnessed the winding of the mfagnet. I am sure there is nothing phoney abeut it." He said the electrical man to whom they had shown the mo- tor “laughed at the way we wired & up and said that it violated all the principles and that it wouldn't work Then it did work. Not An Hendershot could not be consider- ed an electrical engineer. All his schooling was obtained in high school, the major said. “His ideas on eleéctricity cannot be called orth- odox,” he added, “but for just that reason I have a lot of faith in him, because in setting to work on this problem he didn’t fall into the ruts sclentifically trained men have been walking in for years.” The Seattle Post Intelligencer to- day quotes Alfred M. Hubbard of Seattle as believing the Hendershot motor is a development of a “free energy” motor he patented in 1919. He quoted as saying his appa- ratus extracted electrical cnergy from radium. He said he sold 75 per cent of his patent rights to the Radium Chemical company of Pitts- burgh in 1922, :Scouts Hendershot’s New Fuelless Motor Cambridge, Mass., The belief of Lester J. Hendershot, West Elizabeth, Pa., inventor that he | has discovered a fuelless motor, an | inventor which has engaged the in- | terest af Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and others with its possibilities for aviation, is not regarded seriously by Professor Dugald C. Jackson, head of the department of electrical en- | gincering at the Massachusetts In- | stitnte of Technology “The explanation of the o-called magic’ motor is obvious” Prof. Jackson declared. *Experts on elec- tric motors have not been permitted to examine the device. Power to run | motors curiously enough, must be supplied {0 motors and such energy is not derived from the earth or the it in sufficient intensity or quantity to run a large motor capable of driving an airplane.” He asserted that many laboratory experiments seen practical but that practical application of such experi- ments is impossible hecause of the Ligh cost of producing the experi- | ment on a scale that would e | useful. CHASE, HIT AND R DRIVER A police investigation is being | made into an accident ai the corner of North street. and Hartford ave- nue last JFriday afternoon at 5:30 lo'clock, when a truck owned by the {United Coal & Wood Co. and driven |by August. Newfield of 83 Beaver |street, was struck by a car owned | by William Litcher of 73 Madison avenue, Hartford. The truck was go- ing east on North street and the ear |was going north on Hartford avenue when the collision occurred, and the driver of the car failed to stop, ac- cording to Officer Bdward Carroll's report. 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The following employes of the | Connecticut Light & Power Come pany havereturned from the Frigle daire convention held last week in New York City: A. W. Borg, L. C, Schwartz, 8. M. Bayer, E. V. Read, George Olcott and Lee Clark, e READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Dust Breeds Germs . cedn:s sez:lle casily in rugs m:llbrut millions, spreading disease, vaeeping doesn’t banish or destroy them—just moves them around! The right way to clean hygienically is to use a Sylpho-Nathol solution. Add a tablespoonful of Sylpho-Nathol te every pail of water used for mopping, scrubbing and cleaning, Keeps whole | house healthful, Get Sylpho-Nathol at all dealers. GET THEM AT KOLODNEY’S “Wear-Ever” also—we offer this “Wear-Ever” French Fryer COMPANY. RETAIL “Wear-Ever”? ALUMINUM an Broiler @icularly ideal for broil metal makes possible the of chops, steak, etc., which seals in the valuable juices so often lost in the ordinary broiling operations. ” Fry Pan Broiler will make .mk.fl.ddm \ egss. 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