USA > Minnesota > Wright County > History of Wright County, Minnesota > Part 55
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Henry A. Taft, retired farmer, Monticello, was born in How- ard eounty, Iowa, September 18, 1857, son of Alvin and Elizabeth (Lindsey) Taft, both natives of Michigan, who ended their days in Howard county, lowa, the father on June 29, 1910, and the mother in July, 1912. There were two children in the family : Henry A. and Allie, the wife of J. J. House. Henry A. farmed with his parents, and at the age of twenty-one went to North Dakota, where he proved up on two elaims and spent a year and a half. Then he returned to his home county. In 1896 he went to Chieago and entered the employ of the International Har- vester Company. In 1900 he again went back to Howard county. In 1906 he came to Wright county and bought 166 aeres of good land, on which he farmed until 1914, when he sold out and moved to the village of Monticello, where he now resides. IIe is a Repub-
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HISTORY OF WRIGHT COUNTY
lican in polities, and while in the township served in a number of local offices. The family faith is that of the Methodist Epis- copal church. Mr. Taft was married, December 31, 1878, to Viola J. Webster, who died in 1912. By this union there is one son, Lyell W., of Monticello. For his second wife Mr. Taft married Mrs. Eveline Paseo, widow of S. M. Paseo, and daughter of Shel- don M. and Adelaide (Sales) Webster, natives of Indiana, who came to Iowa in 1896, and to Monticello township, Wright county, in 1906.
Harry S. Whipple, lawyer, Monticello, was born in Waterloo, Jefferson county, Wisconsin, July 19, 1877, son of Henry P. and Julia A. (Shadduek) Whipple, natives respectively of New York and Pennsylvania. The father, a veterinary surgeon, still makes his home in Wisconsin. The mother died June 23, 1902. In the family there were five children: Herbert A., of Waterloo, Wis., a salesman; Edwin O., of Waterloo; Jeanette C., of St. Paul; Harry S., of Monticello ; and Laura G., wife of Charles R. Chad- bourne, of St. Paul. Harry S. Whipple received his early educa- tion in the graded and high schools of his native town. He taught school four years, studied law in an office in Waterloo two years, and then came to Minnesota and entered the St. Paul College of Law, where, after a year's course he was graduated in June, 1904, and admitted to the bar. After two years' employ- ment with the Great Northern Railway, he opened an office in Montieello in 1906. and has since been engaged in successful prae- tice here. In politics he is an independent voter. His fraternal associations are with the Blue lodge of the Masons. He is now Worshipful Master of the local lodge. The family faith is that of the Protestant Episcopal church. Mr. Whipple married May E. Harley, a native of Beaver Dam, Wis., September 18, 1901. Their two children died in infancy.
Fred Gee, merchant and undertaker, Monticello, was born in Cortland, N. Y., April 18, 1857, son of Josephus and Sally (Granger) Gee, both natives of New York state, and both now deceased. Of their twelve children there are now living five : Lavinia, Eliza, Ida, George B. and Fred. Fred Gee came to Lyon county, Minnesota, and located on a farm in 1878. Four years later he returned to New York state and worked on the home farm nine years. Then he returned to Lyon county and operated a farm near Marshall for eight years. Then he came to Monti- cello and engaged in the furniture and undertaking business. His business is housed in a sightly building which he erected. Mr. Gee enjoys the respect and confidenee of his fellow citizens. He has served as president of the Minnesota State Funeral Directors' Association. A Republican in polities, he has been elected mayor of the village, and has given the people a good administration. He is a member of the I. O. O. F. and of the
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HISTORY OF WRIGHT COUNTY
M. W. A. The family faith is that of the Baptist church. On May 4, 1881, Mr. Gee married Helen Canfield, a native of Min- nesota. They have three children: Claire J., an undertaker, of Brookings, S. D .; Gertrude L., principal of the high school at Grandview, Wash., and Howard C., of Winnefred, Mont., an attorney.
Joseph Merz, Civil war veteran, prominent musician, and estimable eitizen, was born in Baden, Germany, September 9, 1830, and there received his education, paying especial attention to music, for which he had a particular talent. In 1848 he came to America, and in 1856 found his way to Minnesota and located at Afton, in Washington county, where he worked in a mill. There he organized the first band and remained as its leader until 1861. In October, 1861, he enlisted in Company G, Third Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, as musician, and served through- out the conflict. At Chattanooga he was captured. He was dis- charged at Ft. Snelling, and found his way to Wright county, where he bought a farm of 160 acres in Monticello township. After a long and useful agricultural eareer he sold his farm in 1902 and moved to the village of Monticello, where he died February 21, 1906. During all the years of his residenee here he continued to be an enthusiastic musician. Ile organized the first band in Monticello and became its leader, a position in which he continued for many years. He was also mueh interested in the G. A. R., of which he was a prominent member. Joseph Merz was married, September 26, 1855, to Caroline Mast, who was born in Germany, December 25, 1838, came to America in 1847, and located in Illinois. She now resides in Monticello village, where she is highly respected and greatly admired for her many desir- able qualities. Mr. and Mrs. Merz had four children : Amelia L., Elizabeth, William O. and Augusta. Amelia L. died at four years of age. Elizabeth is the wife of C. B. Mane, of Monticello, and they have seven children: Roy, Gussie, Florence, Daniel, George, Amelia and Leo. William O. lives in North Dakota. He married Helen Hortonbach, and they have four children : Joseph, Leo, Caroline and Hazel. Augusta died at the age of twelve years.
Charles F. Merz, auctioneer and contractor, Monticello, was born in Will county, Illinois, October 22, 1855, son of Frank J. and Elizabeth (Mast) Merz, natives respectively of Baden, Germany, and New Bavaria. The father came to America in 1844, located in Chicago, and lived to be ninety years of age. The mother still lives in Chicago at the age of eighty-five years. The children in the family were : Peter, Lonisa, Frank (deceased), Charles F., August, Frederieka, Edward E., Elizabeth, Caroline, Richard, and George. Three died in infancy. Charles F. took up the burdens of life at the age of twelve years. For five years
CHARLES F. MERZ
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HISTORY OF WRIGHT COUNTY
he was on his grandfather's farm. Later he worked in a rolling mill at Joliet, Ill., and subsequently was employed four years as foreman on a stock farm in Franklin county, Iowa. In 1879 he came to Monticello, and farmed for three years. Then he went to Chicago, and was associated in the drug business with his brother for three years, after which he returned to Monticello where he has since been a successful auctioneer for some thirty years. Ile also does considerable business as a dredging and house-moving contractor. Ile is a Republican in politics, has served on the city council, and has been justice of the peace for some seven years. Hle belongs to the I. O. O. F. and the B. P. O. E. Mr. Merz was married February 16, 1881, to Flor- ence M. McCord, a native of Pennsylvania, daughter of Evan B. and Sarah M. (Clark) MeCord, natives of Pennsylvania, who settled in Maple Lake township, Wright county, in 1858. Mr. and Mrs. Merz have two sons, Edward H., born Angust 26, 1883, and Evan F., born October 11, 1889. These sons have a garage and automobile agency at Monticello.
Allan Hale Pike, station agent, Monticello, was born in Franklin county, Maine, April 7, 1852, son of Joshua and Dor- othy (Houghton) Pike, both natives of Maine, who came to Min- nesota in 1862, and located in Steele county, where they ended their days, the father, October 25, 1896, and the mother April 17, 1870. In the family there were eight children : Elias Gard- ner, of Glenwood, Minn .: Mary A., deceased; Judith E., wife of A. Haskill, of North Dakota; Thomas II., deceased; Allan Hale, of Monticello; Charles (deceased) : Edgar, of Steele county, Minn .; and Sarah, wife of John L. Houghton, of North Dakota. Allan llale Pike graduated from the high school at Owatonna, in 1871, and taught school for three years. Then he learned railroad telegraphy which he followed in various places for several years. In 1882 he came to Monticello as station agent, and here he has since made his home. He is one of the respected men in the community, belongs to the Masonic order, and votes the Republican ticket. Mr. Pike was married, Angust 26, 1884, to Mary A. Lewis, daughter of J. F. and Martha (Steele) Lewis, the pioneers. Mrs. Pike comes of a distinguished family, and is herself a well-known educator. She began teaching when she was fourteen years of age, graduated from the St. Cloud State Normal School, and has taught several terms in the county. Mr. and Mrs. Pike have one daughter, Hazel Torrey, now head of the Domestic Science department in the high school at On- tario, California. The family faith is that of the Methodist Episcopal church.
Josiah F. Lewis, a pioneer, Monticello, was born in Massa- chusetts, and came to Wright county, from Mississippi, about 1856. Later he returned to Mississippi, where for many years
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he was a professor in a ladies' seminary. His wife, Martha Steele, a native of that state, was a teacher in the same institu- tion. In 1865 they again eame to Wright county and seeured a farm. Although he devoted the remainder of his life to farming, he still maintained his interest in educational work. He taught in the Monticello High school, was principal of that institution, and for twelve years served as county superintendent of schools. He and his wife are both dead. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis had six children : J. H., Mattie J., R. S., Adelia Torrey, W. W. and Mary. John II. was born in Holly Springs, Miss., came to Min- nesota in 1864, entered the University of Minnesota in 1872; was graduated in 1878, taught village schools in Wright and Henne- pin counties for four years: was elected superintendent of schools of Hastings, Minn., in 1878, and served in that capacity until eleeted state superintendent of public instruction on the Democrat-People's ticket in 1899. IIe now owns and operates a ranch of 320 aeres in California. Mattie J. is the wife of E. B. Preble, a judge on the supreme bench in the state of Washington. R. S., for eight years lieutenant-governor of North Dakota, is now a retired banker of Fargo. Adelia Torrey is the wife of W. O. Dobsen, mayor and Great Northern agent at Snohomish, Washington. W. W., formerly cashier of the Red River Valley Bank at Fargo is dead. Mary is the wife of Allan Hale Pike, station agent at Monticello.
William A. Lippy, harness-maker, Monticello, was born in Fulton county, Ill., November 10, 1860, son of John and Sarah (Zepp) Lippy, both now deceased. Of the thirteen children in the family, ten are now living. At the age of nineteen, Mr. Lippy became interested in the harness business, an occupation to which he has since devoted his life. In 1890 he came to Mon- ticello, and entered the harness shop of Edward II. Sherwin, January 1, 1914, he took over the entire business. He is an ex- cellent workman and has a good trade. He has a full line of harness and horse furnishing goods, trunks, suit cases and hand bags. Everything is of the best, and modern in every respect. He is an independent voter, and belongs to the A. F. & A. M. and the M. W. A. Mr. Lippy was married, November 28, 1892, to Julia Bower, a native of Germany, and they have three chi !- dren : Orrie, wife of Lawrence Carr, of St. Paul; William A., who works with his father, and George J., who is at home.
John A. Brasie, insurance agent and real estate dealer, Mon- ticello, was born in Peoria county, Illinois, June 29, 1847, son of Rowe and Hulda Ann (Bettis) Brasie, the pioneers, both natives of New York state. From Illinois he was taken to Ripon, Wis., and from there in 1854 he was brought to a farm near Monti- eello, where he spent his youth. As a boy he was associated with his brother, Henry S., in the mercantile business in Monticello.
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HISTORY OF WRIGHT COUNTY
In 1869 he and Henry S. started a hotel in the Lower Town. In 1870 he sold to his brother and went to Princeton, Minn., where he engaged in the mercantile business for two years. In 1872 he moved to Delano, Minn., and engaged in the mercantile business there for several years. Then he sold out to his brother, C. A. Brasie, and engaged in the insurance business. In May, 1894, he returned to Montieello, and here engaged in the insurance business. He also owns farm lands and does some dealing therein. The home which he has built in Monticello is one of the sightliest residenees in the city. Mr. Brasie is a Demoerat in polities, and attends the Episcopal church. On October 18, 1870, Mr. Brasie married Fannie Berry, a native of England, who after her father's death was brought to Wright county with the rest of the family by the mother. Mr. and Mrs. Brasie have two sons, Frank R. and Albert S. Frank R. is engaged in the anto-truck business in Minneapolis. He married Minnie McDonald, who died Mareh 26, 1895, leaving a daughter, Muriel M., who is attending Stout's School of Domestie Seienee, at Menominee, Wis. Albert S. is a student in the University of Minnesota.
Rowe Brasie, pioneer, Monticello, was born in New York state in 1806, and served eight years in the regular army under General William Worth. In 1844 he went to Peoria county, Illinois, and farmed there for a few years, after which he went to Ripon, Wis., where he farmed and kept a hotel. In the fall of 1853 he eame to Monticello, looked over the land, went baek to Wiseonsin, and in the spring of 1854 brought his family and located on a farm a mile west of Monticello. Later he went to Big Lake, in Sherburne county. Then he returned to Montieello, and remained until 1872, when he moved to Delano, in this county. Then he went to Litchfield, in Meeker county. He was a prominent man, and served as county commissioner and county treasurer in Sher- burne county, and county commissioner of Wright county. Mr. Brasie died in 1896, his wife having passed away ten years earlier. They had four children: Henry S. (deceased) ; Worth W., of Denver, Colo .; John A., of Monticello; and Charles A., of Litchfield.
Albert N. Mitchell, retired farmer, Montieello, was born in Monroe, Waldo county, Maine, July 3, 1846, son of Alexander and Jerusha ( Webber) Mitchell, natives of Maine, now deceased, who came to Monticello township, Wright county, and settled on a claim in 1856. In the family there were nine children: Frank (deceased), a veteran of the Civil war; Louise (deceased) ; Henry (deceased) ; Albert N .; Augustus (deceased) : Laura, wife of William Chaffee, of Portland, Ore .; Freemont, of Monticello township, this eounty; Dora (deceased) ; and Edwin, of Monti- cello. Albert N. Mitchell was reared in Maine and in Minnesota.
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HISTORY OF WRIGHT COUNTY
As a boy he worked with a threshing outfit in the Black Hills of the Dakotas. In 1864 he enlisted in Co. E, Eleventh Minne- sota Volunteer Infantry, and did garrison duty to the end of the war, being mustered out at Nashville, Tenn. Then he took up farming. In 1866 he bought eighty aeres of land in Monticello township, but soon sold this and for two years engaged in the milling business in Monticello. Then he went with a threshing outfit to the Black Hills onee more and was there at the time of the Custer Massacre. Subsequently he worked in the pineries in northern Minnesota, and afterward took up farming in Mon- ticello township, devoting every autumn to threshing. In 1900 he retired and moved to the village. Mr. Mitchell is a Repub- lican and a member of the G. A. R. The family faith is that of the Methodist Episcopal church. Mr. Mitchell was married in June, 1884, to Freda G. Geiser, who died February 2, 1899. They have had five children : Grace, wife of James Mast, of Portland, Ore .; Lillian May, wife of Everett Walton, of Monticello; Frank, of Monticello; Laura, who keeps house for her father, and Gladys, who lives with her uncle, John Geiser, Jr.
David N. Davis was one of the honored pioneers of Wright county. With undaunted courage he brought his family into a thinly settled country where comforts were few, and by hard work, intelligent effort, and perseverance and integrity, he won for himself a competence, and achieved a place of honor, respeet and leadership in the community where he lived for so many years. He reared a large family, which is a credit to the com- munity, and to it he left the heritage of a blameless life and an unsullied name. Mr. Davis was born in England, and married Helen Bailey, a native of Canada. As a young man he located in Canada, and in 1858 he came to the United States and located in Monticello township, this county. He died in December, 1898, and since then, his widow, who has proved herself a devoted wife and loyal and affectionate mother, has made her home in Mon- ticello village with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Starmer. Mr. and Mrs. Davis were the parents of fourteen children. Martha is dead. David W., a retired farmer of Monticello village, is the father of three children, Mortimer, Mary and Hazel, and the grand- father of one, David. Sadie is dead. Jennie is the wife of Charles Lord, of Monticello, and they have two children, Clarice and Effie, and three grandchildren, Etheleen, Babe and Erma. George Alfred is a Monticello farmer, and has two children, Freeman and Echo. Walter Isaac lives in Dundurn, Saskatche- wan, Canada, and has one child, Wallace. Freeman is dead. Bert V. is a Monticello blacksmith, and has nine children, Violia, Lyle, Clifford, Brighton, Vera, Vernetta, Evelyn, David and Mer- rill. Ruby is the wife of Frank Drake of Minneapolis, and they have three children, Gerald, Ilelen and Ruth. Franklin W. lives
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MR. AND MRS. DAVID N. DAVIS
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HISTORY OF WRIGHT COUNTY
in Hancock, Mich. Fredriek is a Monticello farmer. Irving S., of Long Beach, Cal., has one child, Melvin. Chester is dead. Dora E. is the wife of Roy Starmer, and they have one child, Marjorie.
George Alfred Davis, farmer, Monticello township, was born in the township where he still resides, March 21, 1864, son of David and Helen (Bailey) Davis, the former a native of England and the latter of Canada. The father died in 1900 and the mother still lives in Monticello. George Alfred Davis remained with his parents until twenty-five years of age. Then he bought eighty acres in Monticello, section 6. In 1911 he bought 144 acres in the same township, section 36, where he has erected a new house and made many improvements. He also owns 192 acres in sec- tions 5 and 6, where he likewise has made many improvements. He is one of the best known dairymen in this part of the county, and in addition to his general farming, makes a specialty of thoroughbred Shorthorn cattle. In politics he is a Republican. Mr. Davis was married January 17, 1893, to Ina Rawn, a native of Denmark, and they have two children : Freeman E. and Echo V. The family faith is that of the Advent Church.
Frank J. Shierts, farmer, Monticello township, was born in Wabasha county, Minnesota, February 19, 1864, son of Joseph and Elizabeth (Rolen) Shierts, natives respectively of Bohemia and Germany, who came to America in 1854, located in Glasgow township, Wabasha county, this state, and there farmed until 1900, when they retired. They have lived to celebrate the Golden anniversary of their marriage, and are among the most respected people in their neighborhood. In their family there were eight children: Frank J .; Mary (deceased) ; Annie, wife of Henry Tushans, of Wabasha county; Kate, wife of Theodore Peters, of Wabasha county; John and Joseph, of Wabasha county; Peter, of Helena, Mont .; and George, a postal clerk with headquarters at St. Paul. Frank J. remained with his parents until his mar- riage. Then he purchased 120 aeres in Glasgow township, Wa- basha county. In 1900 he purchased 120 acres in Monticello township, this county. Ile now owns 200 acres in sections 21 and 28, Monticello township. He has made many improvements and earries on general farming on a successful scale. Hle also does considerable threshing. Ile is a Republican in politics, is now town supervisor and has served for some years as clerk of the school board of his district. He is secretary of the Green- wood Telephone Company. Fraternally he is affiliated with the Catholic Order of Foresters and with the St. Joseph Society. The family faith is that of the Catholic church. Mr. Shierts was married October 1, 1885, to Catherine Ziemetz, daughter of Nicholas and Margaret (Webber) Ziemetz, both natives of Ger- many. Mr. and Mrs. Shierts have had seven children : Nicholas
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F., now assessor of Monticello township; Joseph (deceased) ; Elizabeth, wife of Octave Dechaine, of Otsego township, this county ; and William, Thomas, Mary and Joseph, at home. Nich- olas Ziemetz came to America as a young man, and after living for a while in Illinois, came to Minnesota in 1867 and located in Wabasha county, where he engaged in farming. He died in September, 1907, his wife having died in February of the same year. In the Ziemetz family there were eleven children: Mary, wife of William Meyer, of Wabasha county ; John, of Salt Lake City ; Thomas, of Wabasha county; Catherine, wife of Frank J. Shierts, of Wright county; Elizabeth (deceased) ; Charles (de- ceased) ; Elizabeth (deceased) ; Emma, of Wabasha county ; George (deceased) ; Lucy, now Sister M. Boniface, of the Sisters of St. Joseph in the Seminary at St. Paul; and Margaret, wife of Josepb C. Schmidt, of Wabasha county.
Conrad S. Stengelin, farmer, Monticello township, was born in the township where he now resides, December 20, 1880, son of Jacob J. Stengelin and Bertha (Ileydeck) Stengelin. He was reared to farm pursuits, attended the public schools, and has spent his whole life, thus far, on the farm. He is a Republican in politics, and has served as clerk of the school board of his district. Mr. Stengelin was married May 3, 1911, to Telie Lilja, a native of Iowa. They have one child, Eleanor Constance, born March 1, 1914. The family faith is that of the Methodist Epis- copal church.
Jacob J. Stengelin, Jr., proprietor of Fair View Farm, Mon- ticello township, was born in the township where he now resides, September 17, 1876, son of Jacob .J. and Bertha (Heydeck) Sten- gelin, natives of Germany, who came to America in the early sixties, and to Wright county about 1874, locating on a farm in Monticello. In the family there were five children: Louise, wife of Gustave Schmidt, of Irons, Mich .; Bertha (deceased) ; and Jacob J., Jr., Augusta and Conrad, of Monticello. Jacob J. Stengelin, Jr., remained on his father's farm until about thirty- three years of age. Then he bought eighty acres in sections 24 and 25, Monticello, where he carries on general farming and stockraising. The place is well improved and is modern in every respect. Mr. Stengelin is a Republican in politics. December 15, 1909, Mr. Stengelin married Elizabeth Hanson, daughter of Peter and Hannah Hanson. The family faith is that of the Meth- odist Episcopal church.
Frank A. Townsend, farmer and stockraiser, Monticello town- ship, was born in Lake county, Illinois, December 27, 1857, son of John K. and Fidelia (Tower) Townsend, natives of New York state, who came to Wright county in 1902, and ended their days in Monticello. In their family there were six children: Frank A .; Carrie, wife of John Frost, of Monticello; Cora (deceased) ;
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Ada (deceased) ; Wilber, of Monticello; and Emory, of St. Paul. Frank A. Townsend was taken from Illinois to Wisconsin and there lived about twenty-five years. Then he spent about five years in South Dakota, and some fifteen years in Martin county, Minnesota. In 1902 he bought 160 acres in seetion 6, Monticello township, where he has made some splendid improvements, and where he now earries on general farming and stock raising. He votes the Republican tieket, and the family faith is that of the Methodist Episcopal church. Mr. Townsend was married March 29, 1877. to Mary Meyers, a native of Pennsylvania. She was born July 14, 1857, daughter of Frank and Martha (Cole) Meyers. Ilis father died November 19, 1898, and her mother now makes her home with her son, Frank A.
Ernest Oby, farmer and stoek raiser, Monticello township, was born in Switzerland, April 29, 1875, son of Ulrich and Eliza (Marty) Oby, both natives of Switzerland, who came to America in 1889, lived in Green county, Wisconsin, for about seven years, then went to Mower county, Minnesota, for six years, and sub- sequently came to Wright county and located in seetion 22, Mon- tieello township. The father died May 29, 1911, and the mother is now living in Monticello. In the family there were six chil- dren : Ernest ; Eliza, the wife of George Lukens, of Taopi, Minn .; Herman, of LeRoy, Minn .; Walter, of Stratford, Wis .; Lena, wife of Roy Wetherbee, of Annandale; and Charles, a farmer of Maple Lake township. Ernest followed the wanderings of his family, and has remained on the home farmn which he now con- duets. He was educated in the public schools, learned farming from his father, and now takes excellent eare of the 226 aeres which comprise the family estate. He carries on general farming and makes a specialty of thoroughbred Holstein-Fresian eattle and full-blooded Chester White swine. Ile is a Republican in polities, and has done excellent service on the town board, a position in which he is now serving. The family faith is that of the Dutch Reformed church. Mr. Oby was married February 25, 1903, to Emma Wolf, and this union has been blessed with three children: Irene, born April 8, 1904; Roy Ernest, born Deeember 6, 1906; and Lois, born September 10, 1909.
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