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— 1111 , n is not necessary for you to either “believe in the Electropoise” or “know how it works,” to receive its -
henenflcial effects. lon may not know how electricity runs a car, but you know that it does it, and you
f " """ also k “ ow A. 111 * * f 3;on got on you go. It is the same way with the ELECTKOPOISE ;it may he you have —■
P never heard of it, it you have, you do not see how that little instrument can possibly cure disease,” but if
that it can not only CURE DISEASE, but that it does
'k—so Al lEK ALL 01. HER MEI HODS I AIL. Write for fifty page book
“Atmospheric Oxygen by Absorption.” ATLANTIC ELECTKOI’OISE CO., Room 45, Gould Building, Atlanta, Ga. ——————
y-lisstmts |
I
MISS MARY E, WRIGHT, : t Editress
Hawkinsville.—Please announce
in your next issue that all the W.
M. and Ladies Aid Societies in the :
following associations are invited to
be represented in “The annual meet
ing of the W. M. Societies of the
4th District,” which will be held in
connection with the South Ga., Bap
tist convention at Mcßae beginning
Nov. 18th and lasting two days.
The district embraces the Bethel,
Friendship, Mallory, Summerhill,
Middle, Mercer, Bowen, New Ebe
nezer, Piedmont, Little River, Hous
ton, Homerville, New Sunburry
Miller, Daniel, Baptist Union and
Smyrna Associations. One delegate
from each society will be provided
with a home by sending name to
Mrs. Lou Davis, Mcßae, Ga.
Yours in the Work,
Mbs. R. G. Lewis,
Vice-Pres. 4th Dist. W. M. U.
FOR LITTLE ONES.
Our Little Ones is one of the
children’s papers published by the !
American Baptist Publication Socie
ty. It is bright and beautiful and at
tractive—just the paper to place (
in the hands of our children. It
shows careful preparation. Its pict
ures and poems and stories and Sun
day lessons are among the very
choicest. We plead for our little,
ones parent and Sunday-schools place
Our Little Ones in their hands.
DR. DOBBS AT MERGER.
Dr. Dobbs has been to see us. He
came to work. He did it. He gave
proof of his fitness, willingness and
ability to do good work. He deliv
ered three lectures to the ministerial
students. His topics were: (1.)
The Bible, its structure. (2.) The
Bible, its authority. (3.) Interpre •
tation, its relation to Homiletics
They were full of foundation truth
and well-suited to be the first of a
course of lectures which are to be
given to the class. The History of
the Book, and the Book of Histories
has been opened at a new place to
these young men and they are be
ginning to see new things in the re
markable records.
In addition to these lectures, he
delivered on Friday night a lecture
to the public. He had a very culti
vated and appreciative audience.
For one hour he entertained, de
lighted and instructed his hearers in
a chaste, beatiful and forcible review
of Arnold’s two poems, “The Light
of Asia” and “The Light of the
World.” I will not attempt any out
line of the admirable lectures, but
simply intimate, that if other col- '
leges would like to have a good 1
thing they would do well to ask Dr.
Dobbs to repeat it in their chapels.
After the lecture the young peo- !
pie repaired to the College Parlors
and Reading Room and spent an '
hour socially which will not soon be
forgotten. These rooms have not
yet been fully furnished but they ■
are neat and inviting and suggest an
atmosphere of home and social life 1
that is pleasing and beneficial to the 1
student. The possibility of mental i
and social culture through these ap
purtenances, which was manifested
in the evening of this formal open- ,
ing, assures another educational :
force at Mercer. Hundreds of visi- i
tors who have looked into these
apartments and considered their 1
adaptation to the needs of the insti- :
tution have expressed their delight <
at this innovation upon the college <
life of boys. With these superior
and well-furnished accommodations
there will be no need for the Classes,
Fraternities or Societies to go down 1
town for their entertainments and i
social gatherings. It is best for ev- <
erything that belongs to Mercer to <
be attached to Mercer, and for every <
expression of Mercer to proceed !
from Mercer. Make Mercer the re- ;
pository in which all her power
D’PRICE’S
©SKI
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia; No Alum.
Used in Millions of Homes— 40 Years the Standard*
| shall be stored. Make Mercer the
centre from which all her uplifting,
educating influences shall radiate.
G. A. Nunnally.
A MAN’S VIEW.
HOW HE BELIEVES IN BRINGING UP
HIS CHILDREN.
A man whose son and daughter
are models of behavior as regards
their perfect manners confided to
the writer that he had an unfailing
system in the bringing up of children
that had worked so well with his
own that he was trying the same
thing with his little granddaughter,
and so far with the success that at
tended his former efforts.
Said he: “Many children are de
prived of everything when they are
small and surfeited when they grow
older. The first glimpses of so much
that they have heretofore never
seen or tasted bewilders them and
they act most awkwardly and arc
self-conscious and embarrassed. With
my children I gave them everything
in great quantities at the start. If
I they liked candy they were given
more of it than they could eat, and
soon the little piecs sufficed.
( “With toys it was the same way.
Other children would go in a store
and want everything. Mine having
had so much either asked for noth
ing or discriminated in their choice.
. “Jewelry was never with held and
to-day my daughter is not seen with
overloaded hands and gems worn at
inappropriate times. On my table
was always used the best and it was
set in the most formal and elegant
manner; therefore, when my children
were old enough to go out in society
no form could disturb their usual
calm or no display appear over
whelming, as it often does to unac
customed eyes. It is the only way
to do. Surfeit them when little and
they will not make shows of them
selves when older.”
The scheme is all very well if
money is no object, but many a
parent has methods equally success
ful that are not quite so expensive,
but “Chacun a son gout.”
PUDDING SAUOES,
Cream Sauce (with wine). —One
quarter cupful butter creamed with
one half cupful powdered sugar.
Just before serving, add two table
spoonfuls white wine, one teaspoon
ful vanilla, and two tablespoonfuls
cream.
Substitute for Cream.—Boil
three fourths of a pint of sweet milk;
beat the yolk of one egg, and a level
teaspoonful of Hour with sugar
enough to make the cream very
sweet. When the milk boils, stir
this into it, and let it cool; flavor to
taste. For puddings in which eggs
are used, this is almost as good as
rich cream, and preferable to thin
cream.
Excellent Pudding Sauce.—
Two coffee cupfuls sugar, three
fourths of a coffee cupful of butter.
Rub to a cream. When well mixed,
stir in one half teacupful boiled cider,
a little at a time. Just before serv
ing, set in a kettle of boiling water
until hot, but not boiling.
Fruit Sauce.—Take one quart
of any kind of ripe fruit, as red
raspberries, strawberries, or peaches;
if the latter, they must be very ripe.
Pare and mash the fruit with a po
tato masher. Add one tablespoon
ful of melted butter and one cupful
of powdered sugar. Stir well togeth
er, and set on the fire until warm.
BED MAKING.
In a recent article by Maria Par
loa there are some suggestions in
regard to beds that must appeal to
every thoughtful housekeeper. The
custom of spreading up beds is so
common as to be almost universal.
Said a woman who sets herself up
as an experienced housekeeper: “I
always take everything off every bed
THE CHRISTIAN INDEX: THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 17. 1892.
in the house once a week.” As if
every article should not be taken off
and aired and the mattress turned
over every day in the week! Noth,
ing less than this is wholesome and
nothing else will insure sweet, health
giving sleep. In her article Maria
Parloa says: “In the morning take
each sheet and blanket from the
bed separately and hang over chairs
so that the wind will blow through
them. Shako up the pillows and
the bolsters and place them in tho
air and turn up the mattresses so
that the air will circulate about them.
Air tho room and bedding for at
least an hour.” She emphasizes that
all the belongings of the bed should
be placed smoothly and in such a
way that it will present a neat and
trim appearance. At least once a
month a bedstead should be taken to
pieces and thoroughly dusted and
the clothing hung out in the sun a
part of the day.
HOW TO OLEAN BRONZES.
A lady who has had some exper
ience in cleaning ornamental articles
in bronze says : “Do not put vinegar
on bronze. Vinegar or water takes
the bronzing off if imitation and
affects the gloss of real bronze. The
safest thing is pure salad oil, lightly
rubbed on (the dust being all re
moved first), then rubbed off with a
soft cloth and afterwards polished
with a chamois. Another way is to
plunge the object in boiling soap
suds, then in pure boiling water.
Afterwards expose the article to the
air, and when it is dry rub it very
lightly with a leather on which a
little whitening has been rubbed. 1
believe rinsing the articles in beer,
after having washed them in soap
and water, is very good. The beer
should not be wiped off, but allowed
to dry on in a warm place. But I
prefer the salad oil to any other ap
plication.”
A HUGE ROSE-BUSH.
The trunk of a rose bush or tree
which has been in full bloom at Ven
tura, Cal., all summer is three feet in
circumference at the ground. The
first branch, which juts out at a
height of about four feet from the
ground, is eight inches in diameter,
or about two feet in circumference.
It was planted in 1876 from a slip
obtained at the Centennial Exhibi
tion, and although several wagon
loads of limbs are annually pruned
off it now covers an area of nearly
2,000 square feet. It is predicted
that by the time it is 25 years old it
will have outstripped the gigantic
rose tree at Cologne, which is known
to be more than 300 years old, and
is less than four feet in circumfer
ence,
ADVICE FROM A TRAINED NURSE.
“It is well known that the skin
is a great absorbent, and nutrition
even can be conveyed through its
agency,” says a trained nurse. “A
physician once ordered a beef tea
bath for a baby I was nursing, who
was apparently dying of some ex
hausting bowel trouble, and with
admirable effect. And I myself
have found that rubbing delicate
persons with warm olive oil is an
excellent tonic. If I had charge of
a puny, sickly baby I should feel
inclined to give it oil baths instead
of water baths, and try the effect.
The oil is quite as cleansing, and it
stands to reason that such tiny be
ings, particularly if they are badly
nourished, shonld not have the natu
raloil of the body continually washed
away.”
ELEPHANT ON TOAST.
From the Detroit Free Press.
The young man from the country
took his green necktie and his best
girl into a restaurant on Woodward
avenue, and, like some young men
when the girls are around, he was
disposed to be facetious at the wait
er’s expense.
“Waiter,” he said, “bring mo a
broiled elephant.”
“Yassir,” replied the waiter, per
fectly unmoved.
“And, waiter, bring it on toast.”
“Yassir.”
Then he stood there like a statue
for a minute.
“Well,” said the young man, “are
you going to bring it?”
“Yassir.”
“Why don’t you do it, then ?”
“Orders is, sir, dat wo has to git
pay in advance for elephants, sir.
Elephants on toast, sir, am <(18,000.
25; cf you take it widout toast, sir,
it ain only 118,000, sir.”
The waiter never smiled, but the
girl did, and the young man climbed
down.
OLD, BUT GOOD AS NEW.
When I behold a fashionable table,
set out in all its magnificence, I
fancy I see gouts and dropsies, fevers
and lethargies, with other innumera
ble distempers, lying in ambuscade
among the dishes. Nature delights
in the most plain and simple diet.
Every animal but man keeps to one
dish. Herbs are the food of this
species, fish of that and flesh of a
third. Man feeds upon everything
that comes in his way; not the small
est food or excrescence of earth,
scarce a berry or a mushroom, can
escape him.—Addison.
Buckwheat Cakes.—-First, be
sure that you get perfectly pure
buckwheat, free from grit. The
adulterations with rye injure the
quality. Put one quart of cold wa
ter into a stone jar with a small neck;
add to it one teaspoonful of salt and
three quarter cups of buckwheat
flour; beat well until perfectly
smooth; then add a half-cup of yeast
or half a compressed cake, and mix
well; cover the top of the jar with a
saucer or plate; let stand in a moder
ately warm place (65 degree Fahren
heit) until morning. In the morning
dissolve a half-teaspoonful of salera
tus or soda in two tablespoonfuls of
boiling water; add this to the batter,
beat thoroughly and bake on a hot
griddle. The saleratus is simply to
improve the flavor. A cupful of
this batter may be, saved and added
to the cakes to-morrow instead of
fresh yeast, and may be so continued
all winter.
THE ADVERTISING
Os Hood’s Sarsaparilla is always
within the bounds of reason because
it is true; it always appeals to the so
ber, common sense of thinking peo
ple because it is true; and it is always
fully substantiated by endorsement
which in the finacial world would be
accepted without a moment’s hesita
tion.
For a general family cathartic we
confidently recommend Hood’s Pills.
THINGS ARE DIFFERENT NOW.
When coarse cloth and rough
leather were the materials for cloth
ing women’s feet, manufacturers had
a hard time of it. Shoemakers were
slow to take the chances of a new
and rather poor country. The meth
ods were very rude. The women
wore coarse leather shoes, bound
with white and black striped leather.
Children were kept shod by the con
tributions of old loot legs, discarded
by the fathers, and worked up into
small shoe uppers. The progress
made in the shoemaking art during
the last half century is not a whit
behind the aohievments of science
in other fields during that period.
SOHIFFMANN'S ASTHMA CURE
Instanly relieves the most violent
attack, facillitates free expection and
insures rest to those otherwise unable
to sleep except in a chair as a single
trial will prove. Send for a free
trial package to Dr. IL Schiffmann,
St. Paul, Minn., but ask your drug
gist first.
FOR EARACHE.
An excellent way to alleviate the
miseries of earache is to lay over a
stove-plate which is very warm a
thick cotton cloth which has just
been wrung out of water. A steam
immediately rises, over which the
person’s aching ear should be held-
The steam permeates all the crevices
as no other remedy will, and instan
taneous relief is experienced.
A CANAL REOPENED.
Health is largely dependent upon a
regular habit of body. Tho bowels
act as an important canal for the
carrying of waste matter of tho sys
tem. They, together with the kid
neys and pores, are outlets for de
bris whose presence is fatal to the
body’s well-being. Hostetter’s Sto
mach Bitters is no violent purgative
but a gentle laxative admirrbly adap
ted to tho wants of tho constipated
It never gripes and wrenches the in
testines as all drastric cathartics do,
but produces atf action akin to that
of an effort of nature. Biliousness,
indigestion, with their associate
manifestation, costiveness, aro speed
ily and completely remedied by this
line corrective, which also conquers
malaria sick headaches, kidnoy and
rheumatic troubles and checks pre
mature decay.
(Ghililr (Ooiner
A NOBLE COWARD.
“Yes,” cried one of tho boys, the
leader of the band, merry, fun-lov
ing, Harry Brown; “ it’s going to be
a jolly lark. You boys can slip over
the orchard fence and get all the ap
ples *you can carry, while I wait
outside and watch for tokens of old
Grimes. Os course, you all under
stand, boys, that I don’t approve of
stealing; only a trifle like this, done
just for the fun of tho thing, need
hurt nobody, and Grimes will never
miss the fruit.”
“Ben,” he added, turning to a
manly-looking young lad, who had
been an eager listener with the oth
ers, “just take a sack with you. You
are stronger than the others, and
ought to be able to carry off more.”
“But I am not going,” said Ben.
“Not going!” cried the boys; “you
don’t mean to say you are going to
miss such rare sport ?”
Ben shook his head, and a pink
flush covered his face. “Boys,” he
said, “it isn’t right to do this thin<u
You can’t make me believe it’s any
thing less than stealing. Wo all
know that Grimes is choice of his
fruit, aud it isn’t treating him as we
would like to be treated.”
“Coward ! coward 1” said one and
another of the boys.
“I’ll admit, boys, that Grimes is
mean. He would sooner see his
apples rot than give one away. But
I can’t do it! I had a mother, once,
boys, and she taught me to pray.
Even if Grimes did not see us, I
think that wo are told that God’s
eye is everywhere.”
Oh, come, now, preacher,” said
Harry Brown, “just help us through
just this once. We’ll admit that it
isn’t quite right, but boys often play
worse pranks than this. Say you’ll
help us 1 Don’t bo sissy !”
Ben’s face grew bright with the
courage of a hero. “Boys, I dare
not,” he said. “You are right; lam
afraid to do it. But it is not Grimes
of whom lam afraid—it is my moth
er’s God. I’ve never said much
about it—it’s not my way to talk—
but, boys, lam a Christian. You all
know what that means. My Bible
says, ‘Do all to the glory of God.’ I
don’t think I should glorify God
much to-night if I should go and
steal Grime’s apples, do you ?”
“See here,’.’ he continued, as one
or two of tho boys laughed, and tho
others stood silent around him, “this
is prayer-meeting night, and I, for
one, am going. If you fellows will
go with me there, instead of visiting
Grimes’ orchard, I’ll take you to fa
ther’s after service, and treat you
to apples the like of which Grimes
has never seen.”
The boys demurred a moment.
“Well, I don’t care,” said Harry
Brown, “since you are bound to spoil
the fun any way.”
That night the pastor of the church
of P felt a great thrill of happi-
ness when Ben entered the class
room, followed by ten young boys.
But a moment before he had looked
at tho empty chairs and wondered,
with heavy heart, where the young
lads were. After the service, as he
grasped one and another of the boys
by the hand, giving them warm
words of welcome, they felt it was
not such a bad place to be after all.
“I guess Ben Wood isn’t much of
a coward,” said Harry Brown to the
boys at the close of a happy evening
spent in his home.
“No; I guess not,” they answered.
Such cowardice as that shown by
youthful Ben is grand. Give us
such cowards, who dare not commit
a wrong deed, and we will show you
a future generation of noble men, fit
to rule tho nation.—Kind Words.
A YODNG AFRICAN HERO.
Some of you have hard words to
bear at times because you love the
Lord Jesus. But in some parts of
tho world people who say they be
lieve in Him aro beaten cruelly, and
even put to death.
In Central Africa, a few years
ago, some boys were burned to death
by order of the king because they
were Christians. Yet, in spite of
this, a boy of about sixteen years
was brave enough to wish to become
a Christian. He came to the mis
sionary, and said in bis own lan
guage:—
“ My friend, I wish to be baptized.”
“Do you know what you aro ask
ing?” said tho missionary in surprise.
“ I know, my friend.”
“ But if you say you are a Chris
tian, they will kill you.”
“ I know, my friend.”
“ But if they ask you if you are a
Christian, will you tell a lie, and say
‘No’?”
Bravely and firmly came the boy’s
answer : “I shall confess, my friend.’
A little talk followed, in which he
showed clearly that he understood
what it was to be a Christian; so the
missionary baptized him by the name
of Samweli, which is the same as
our Samuel.
The king found him so useful that
he employed him to collect the taxes,
which are paid in cowries,—little
shells which in Africa are used in
stead of money.
One day, when he was away on
this business, the king again got
angry with the Christians, and’order
ed that all the leading ones should
be killed. Samweli’s name was
found upon the list. As he came
back he heard of the death that was
awaiting him. That night, when it
was quite dark, the missionary was
awakened by a low knocking at the
door. It was Samweli and his
friends, come to know what he should
do. Should he run away, or must
he go and hand over the money ho
had collected ? After a silence the
missionary said: “Tell me what you
think.”
Looking up, Samweli replied: “My
friend, I cannot leave the things of
the king.”
His friends earnestly begged him
to fly, but the missionary said: “No,
he is right. He has spoken well; he
must deliver up the money.”
They all knelt down in prayer
together, the missionary wondering
sadly if be should ever see the young
hero again.
“My friend, I will try to start
early, and leave the cowries with
the chief,” said the lad, as he set off;
“but I fear my carriers will not be
ready till after daylight, and if I am
seen I shall be caught. Good-by.’’
But God kept him. He went
boldly to the chief’s hut, put down
the cowries, and walked away He
went again a few nights after to tell
the missionary, who said : “You ran
when you got outside.”
•‘No, my friend, for I should have
been noticed at once. I walked
quite slowly until I got out of sight,
and then I ran as fast as I could,
and so I escaped.”
This is a true story, taken from
Mr. Ashe’s book, “Two Kings of
Uganda.” It shows the love of
Christ can make a boy brave to do
his duty even in the face of danger
and death. “In the fear of the
Lord is strong confidence.”
A LAUGHABLF INCIDENT.
A writer in the New York World,
tells the following. He says;
“It happened in the spring of
1873. The four of us had gone to
Europe together—Dr. McVickar
of Philadelphia, Phillips Brooks and
Mr. Robinson the builder of Boston’s
Trinity church. Robinson stands
six feet two inches in his stockings.
Dr. McVickar measures six feet four
inches and Brooks exceeds six feet
in height. Robinson is sensitive
about his length; and suggested
that in order to avoid comment tho
three tall men avoid being seen to
gether. Arriving in England, they
went direct to Leeds, where they
learned that a lecturer would ad
dress the working class on “America
and Americans.” Anxious to hear
what Englishmen thought of tho
great Republic, they went to the
hall. They entered separately and
took seats apart. The lecturer, after
some uninteresting remarks, said
that Americans were as a rule short
and seldom if ever rose to the height
five feet ten inches. He did not
know to what cause ho could attrib
ute this fact, but he wished he could
present examples to tho audience.
Phillips Brooks rose to his feet
and said: “I am an American, and,
as you see about six feet in height,
and sincerely hope that if there bo
any other representative of my coun
try present he will rise.
After a moment’s interval, Mr.
Robinson rose and said: “I am
from America, in which country my
height—six feet two—is the subject
of no remark. If there be any other
American here, I hope he will rise.’
The house was in a jolly humor.
Waiting until the excitement could
abate in some degree, and the lectu
rer regain control of his shattered
nerves, Dr. McVickar slowly drew
his majestic form to its full height,
and exclaimed: “I am an .”
But ho got no further. The au
dience roared, and the lecturer said
no more on that subject.
AN UNTIMELY DEATH
An untimely death so often follow
deglect of a slight cough or cold. If
Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gum and Mullein is taken in time
it will prevent any evil results. It
cures coughs, colds and consump
tion.
SEMINARY NOTES.
It does a Georgia boy good to re
ceive his home paper, The Chris
tian Index.
Dr. Stapler from North Georgia
has joined our ranks. Dr. J. Wil
liam Jones is here doing some good
preaching on missions. Dr. Powell
is still here and moving the city,
from center to circumference on the
centennial of missions. The semi
nary students have raised over SSOO
for Mexico. Dr. Powell will soon
be in Georgia.
fa| CURESWHtRE Alt ELSE FAILS. UEI
fed Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
j In time. Sold by druggists.
DO YOU WANT DO YOU WANT
Teachers ? Schools ?
The oldest and the best. The first to be es
tablished in the South.
Has supplied more Touchers with positions
than all other teachers’ agencies in
the South combined.
Southern School End Teachers’ Agency
Nashville, Tenn.
24deolv
ROSETOBACCO
A quick, cheap, pleasant g H flB
and absolute cure for Mel "fl I Btw
TOBACCO HABIT in a// I JB jfl OF
its forms. For proof write'*®' B B SkQ
BRAZEAL & CO., 2105 & 2107 3d Ave.,Birmingham, Ala
Macon and Biimiiijliaiii Railroad
CONNECTIONS.
Schedule in Effect October 18,1892.
RcadD’nj Stations? Read Up.
6 4SamLv Macon Ar 2 00pm
800 “ Sofkee 110 “
840 “ Lizella 12 30 “
000 “ Montpelier-... 12io “
1000 “ -...Culloden 1123 “
Hoo " Yatesville 11 oo “
12 oo N’n ••••Thomaston,.... 1000 “
12 45 p m Thunder’s Spri'gs. 901 “
130 “ Woodbury .... 842 “
9'5 pm Ar Columbus Lv 6ooa. tn
550 “ Griffin 917 ’*
„ 2oop m Ar --.-HarrisCity Lv 715a.m
Columbus-.■. 1025a.m
630 pm Ar Greenville Lv TOO "
2 30 p m Odessa 6 50 a. m
250 “ Mountville.... 630 “
320 " Ar LaGrange Lv 6ooa. m
Connections with Atlanta & West Point
Railroad.
H. BURNS. A. C. KNAPP.
Trav. Pass. Agt., Traffic Manager,
Macon, Ga. Macon, Ga.
Double Daily Schedule
-TO-
FLORI DA.
VIA
Central Railroad of Genrgia.
1 . -
Leave Atlanta, 6:50 pm 7:10 ijm
“ Macon Junc.lo:3o pm 10:40 am
Ar. Jacksonville, 7:40 am 8:30 pm
Pullman Buffet Sleeper
On Trains Leaving at 6:50 pm.
8. B. WEBB, T. P. A.
D. G. HALL,
City Ticket Agt., 16 Wall St.
W. F. SHELLMAN, T. M.
J. O. HAILE, G. P. A.
Mu | BJKJKhUKMumI
RELIEVES all Stomach Distress.
REMOVES Nausea, Sense of Fullnes%
Congestion, Pain.
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