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DO THYSELF NO HAEM
SUIC'.DE THE SUBJECT OF REV DR.
TALMAG7 S SERMON.
De.lnria Tit At a Man Who Taken Ills
Own lite hat . , I U.K hli-j
» C»n.<> «,f Stif si r Enter Kl«r-
nitj Through <»<«. ■> ■ <inun>m.l
t»'<.pyii, lit. !<■ <>-. ’.m li ~i. l’r- Arso-
Wa >nx«;n X, J :!v . • -ini.-. . •.“.11(111
Dr r.’.liit.v'c which .i » nd out t day
hcciiih • .rt.!;i, .iy iqq.’opriaii 1 b> this th.’iue
when s<> ninny are I. a ing tin- lift* by
thcli own hand, an . vil .-.li.mt .■’tiich all
rrtanttn.'ible puple are ;q-r. < <1; text, Acts
xvl, 28, “Do thy«.i If n> hari:i.”
Here is a would b ;t;L idi arrested in
hia deadly att.'iiq.t, II w.is .1 sn.‘ri:t, and.
according to the Roman law. a baflifl
hiniM'lf mu t shi.'cr ttie pun! hinrnt due
an cHriqtctl pi-lM.ner. and it th.- prisoner
breaking jail was - r.U'iit.d tok ondun
guoniii O r threw or four years then the
sherilT Binst I cndiinjteohcd for three or
four years, and if tin prisoner breaking
jail was to h;p suffered < .pita! punish
nmnt th< n the sheriff must suffer capital
punishment. The sheriff hud received
csjx'clal charge toT- epa sharp lookout for
Paul and Silas The government had not.
much confidence in bolts and bars to keep
safe these two clergymen, atsmt whom
there seemed to be something strange and
supernntural. Sure enough, by mlracu
lous jsiv.'er, they are free, and the sheriff,
waking out of a sound sleep and suppoa
jng the*»e ministers have runaway and
knowing that they w. re to die for preach
ing Christ and re.-flizing that he must
therefore dl<>, rati er than go under the
executioner's ax on the morrow and suffer
public disgrace resolves to pre<:ipitat< his
own deemse. But before the sharp, keen,
glittering dagger of the sheriff could
st rike his heart one of the unloosened pris
oners arrests the Blade by the command,
“Do thyself no harm.”
Suicide Among the Ancients.
In olden t imes and where Christianity
had not Interfered with it suicide was con
siih red honorable and a sign of courage.
Do'iioslhem s poisoned himself when told
t hat Alexander's embassador had demand
ed the surrender of the Athenian orators.
JsiH iatc killed himself rather than sur
render to Philip of Macedon. Cato, rather*
than submit to Julius Csesar, took his
»wn life, and three times after his wounds
had been dressed tore them open and per
ished. Mithridates killed himself rather
than submit to Pompey, the conqueror,
llainiibal destroyed hislife by poison from
his ring, considering life unbearable. Ly
curgus a suicide, Brut us a suicide After
the disaster of Moscow Napoleon always
carried with him a preparation of poison,
and one night his servant heard the ex
onqieror arise, put. something in a glass
ami drink It, ami soon after the groans
aroused nil the attendants, and it was
only through utmost medical skill that he
was resuscitated, 'limes have changed,
and yet the American conscience uc.xls to
lie toned up on the subject of suicide.
Have y< u seen a p iper in the last month
that did not announce the passage out of
life tiy one's own Is’hest? Defaulters,
nlnrmed at the idea of exposure, quit lilO
precipitately. Men losing large fortunes
go out. of the v.orld is cause they cannot
endure earthly existence. Frustrated af
fection, domestic infelicity, dyspeptic im
patience, anger, remorse, envy, jealousy,
destitution, misanthropy, are considered
MUilieient causes for absconding from this
life by purls gns'H, by laudanum, by bel
ladonna, by Othello’s tin,.ger, by halter,
by leap from the a but i.ier.l of a bridge, by
firearms. Nb i ■ v.i.s s of fvh> de se in the
last, two years titan any two years of t'io
world's existence, and more in the last
month t han in any 12 months. The evil
is more and more spreading.
' A pulpit not long ago expressed some
doubt us to whether there was really any
thing wrong about quitting this life when
it. ber.imodisagri •■aide, and there are found
in respectable circles people apologetic for
the crime which I’at’l in t lie text arrested,
jt shall show you before 1 get through that
suicide is the worst, of all crimes, and 1
shall lift a warning unmistakable. But
in the early part ot this sermon 1 wish to
admit that some of the IChristians
thut have ever lived have committed self
destruction, but always in dementia ,'till}
not rc;qs msibh'. 1 have no more doubt
about their eternal felicity t han 1 have of
tile Christian who dies in his bed in the
delirium of typhoid fever. While tiro
shock of the catastrophe is very great, I
charge all those who have had Christian
friends under cerebral aberration step off
tlm boundaries of lids life to have no
doubt about their happiness. The dear
Lord took t hem rigid, out of their dazed
and frenzied state into perfect safety.
How Christ feels toward the insane you
may know from the way he treated the do
monL'W of Gadara and the child lunatic,
and the potency with which he hushed
tenqusts either of sea or brain.
Merciful Allowance.
Scotland, the land prolific of intellectual
giants, had none grander than Hugh Mil
ler, great foi t'cie’ice and great for God.
He was an elder in St. John's Prcsbyte
rinn church. He came of the best highland
blood and was a descendant of Donald
Hoy, a man eminent for piety and the rare
gift of second sight. His attainments,
climbing upas he did from the quarry
and the wall of the stonemason, drew
forth the astonished admiration of Buck
land and Murchison, the scientists, and
Dr. Chalmers, the theologian, and held
universities speilhmiud while he told them
the story of what lie had seen of Godin
“The Old Bed Sandstone.” That man did
inure than any other being that ever lived
to show that the God of the hills is thi)
God of the Bible, and bestruck his timing
fork on the lin ks of Cromarty until he
brought geology and theology accordant
in divine worship. His two lawks, enti
fil'd "Footprints of the Creator” and
“The Testimony of the Rocks,” proclaim
ed the banns of an everlasting marriage
between genuine science ami revelation.
On this latter book he toiled day anil
night, through love of nature and love of
God, until he could not sleep and his
brain gave w ay, anil he was found dead
with a revolver by his side, the cruel in
strument having had two bullets—one for
him and the other for the gunsmith who !
nt the coroner's inquest was examining it 5
and fell dead. Have you any doubt of the i
IkatilleatJ.»n of Hugh Miller after his hot
brain had *-.«usixi throbbing that winter
night in his s' udy at Pormliello* Among ;
the mightiest of earth, among the mighti- ;
est of heaven.
No one doubtixl the piety of William j
Cowper, the author of those three great
hymns, “O For a Closer Walk With !
God,” “What Various Hindrances We j
Meet,” "There Is a Fountain Filled With j
iliood”—William Cowper, who shares I
with Isaac Watts and Charles Wesley the ‘
chief honors of Christian hymnology. In i
hypochondria he resolved to take his own
life and rode ta the river Thames, but I
found a man seated on some gooils at that ■
very point from which he expected to I
spring and rode back to his home, and |
that night threw himself upon his own
knife, but the blade broke, and then he
hanged him*. If to the celling, but the rope
broke. No wonder that when God merci
fully delivered him from that awful de
mentia he sat down and wrote taut othsr
hymn just as memorable:
God moves in a mysterious way
His wonders to
He plants his to .-.st, ps in the sea
And rides upon the storm.
Blind unbelief is sure to err
And scan his work in vain.
God is his own interpreter.
And he will make it plain.
Treason to the Almighty.
While we maj»e this merciful and right- i
eous allowamx* in regard to those who ’
were plunged into xir.-ntal inixihereib-e 1
declare that the man w ho in the use ot his j
rwison, by his own a, t. .-me s ine bond be
tween his body anil his s.-ul. goes straight
into jxTilition. 1 prove itt Benia- .
tion xxi, K, “Murderers shall have their
part in the lake whi< h burin-th with tiro .
and brimstone.” lievelatioJi xxii, 15,
"Without are dogs and sorcerers and j
whoremongers and murderers.” You do •
not lielievc the New Testament? Then
perlmps you believe the Ten Command
mints, “Thon shult not kill.” Do you ;
Bay that ult the.- px -zg-'S rekrti’ti e tak
ing of the life of others!' Tima 1 ask you .
u you axe avt a- re.- for own j
life as for the life of others? God gave
you a special trust In life and made you
the custodian of your life, and he made
you the custodian of no other life. He
gave you as weapons with which to de
fend it two arms to strike back assailants,
two eyes to wauch for invasion, and a nat
ural love of Hfe which ought ever to be on
the alert. Assassination of others is a
mHd crime compand with the assassina
tion of yourself, because in the latter case
it is tnwhery to an especial trust It is
the surrender of a castle you were especial
ly apphnted to keep. It is treason to a
natural law, and it is treason to God added
to ordinary murder. .
To show how Gori In the Bible looked
upni this crime I pjint you to the rogues’
picture gallery in some parts of the Bible,
the pictures of the people who have com
mitted this unnatural crime. Here is the
headless trunk ol Saul on the walls of
Bathshan. Here is a man who charts!
little David—lo feet in stature chasing 4.
Hen. l is the man whocousulted a clairvoy
ant, witch of Endor. Here is a man who,
wb4pp<xi in buttle, instead of surrendering
his sword with dignity, us many a man has
done, asks his servant to slay him, and
when that servant declined, then the giant
plants the hilt of his sword in the earth,
the slsurp point sticking upward, and he
throws his body on it and expires—the
coward, the suicide! Here is Ahltophel,
the Machiavelli of olden times, betraying
his lx*st friend, David, in prder that he
may become prime minister of Absalom,
and joining that fellow in his attempt at
parricide. Not getting what he wanted by
change of politics he takes a short cut out
of a disgraceful life into the suicide’s
et< rnity. There he is, the iugrate!
H> i is Abimelecb.. practically a suicide.
He is with an army, bombarding a tower,
when a woman in the tower takes a grind
stone from its place ami drops it upon his
head, ami with what life he has left in his
< i.i :ked skull he commands his armor
bearer, “Draw thy sword and slay me,
li .-A men say a woman slew me.” There
is his post mortem photograph in the book
of Scmuel.
But the lu roof this group is Judas Is
cariot. Dr. Donne says he was a martyr,
and we have in our day ajiologists for him.
And what wonder, in this day when we
have a liook revoaling Aaron Burr as a
pattern of virtue, and this day when we
uncover a statue of George Sand us the
benefactress of literature, and in this day
when there are betrayals of Christ on the
part of some of his pretended apostles—a
. betrayal so black it makes the infamy of
.Judas Iscariot white! Yet this man by
his own hand hung up for the execration
of all ages, Judas Iscariot.
Imrc«ie of Self Murder.
• All the good men and women of the BI
LL l if‘ to God the decision of their earthly
terminus, and they could have said with
Job. who had a right to commit suicide if
ai...’ man ever had, wh.it with his destroy
ed property and his body all aflame with
insalferable carbuncles and everything
gone from his homo except the chief curse
of it, a pestiitaous wife ami four garrulous
people pelting him with comfortless talk
while he, sits on a heap of ashes scratching
his scabs with a piece of biokcn pottery,
yet crying out in triumph, “All the days
of my appointed time will I wait till my
change comes. ’ ’
Notwithstanding the Bible is against
this < vil and the aversion which it creates
by the loathsome and ghastly spectacle of
those who have hurled themselves out of
life, and notwithstanding Christianity is
against it ami the arguments and the use
ful lives and the illustrious deaths of its
disciples, it is a fact alarmingly patent
that suicide is on the increase. Wnat is
the cause? 1 charge upon infidelity and
agnosticism t his whole thing. If there be
no hereafter, or if that hereafter be bliss
ful without reference to how we live and
how we die, why not move back the fold
ing doors between this world and the
next? And when our existence here be
comes troublesome why not pass right
over into eiysium? Put this down among
your most solemn reflections. There has
never been a case of suicide where the
operator was not either demented and
therefore irresponsible or an infidel. I
challenge all the ages anil I challenge the
universe. T here never has been a case of
self destruction while in full appreciation
of his immortality and of the fact that
that immortality would be glorious or
wretc.b.ed ticcording as he accepted Jesus
Christ or rejected him.
You say it is ti business trouble or you
say it is electrical currents or it is this or
it is that or it is the other thing. Why not
go clear bock, my friend, and acknowledge
that in every ease it is the abdication of
reason or the teaching of ii)fidel..y, which
practically says, “If you don’t like this
life, get out of it, and you will land either
in annihilation, whore there are no notes
to pay, no persecutions to sulier, no gout
to torment, or you will land where there
will be everything glorious and nothing
to pay for it.” Infidelity has always been
apologetic for self immolation. After Tom
Paine’s ‘■ Ago of Reason” was published
and widely read there was a marked in
crease of self slaughter.
Evils of Viibelief.
A man in London heard Mr. Owen de
liver his infidel lecture on socialism and
went homo, sat down and wrote those
W ords, ‘ Jesus Christ is one of the weakest
characters in history, and the Bible is the
greatest possible deception,” and then
shot himself. David Hume wrote these
words: “It would be no crime for me to
divert the Nile or the Danube from its
natural lied Where, then, can Ik 1 the
crime in my diverting a few drops of blood
from their ordinary channel?” And, hav
ing written the <s-iy, ho loaned it tan
friend, the frie.id read it. wrote a letter of
thanks and admiration and shot himself.
Appendix to the some book.
Rousseau. \ olt.iire, Gibbon, Montaigne,
wore apiilogovie Ser self l.nmoiation. Ln
fidelity puts up no bar to people rushing
out Irani this worl.t into the next. They
teach us it does not make any difference
how you live here or go out of ibis world.
You will land cither In an oblivious no
where or a glorious somewhere. And in
iliieliry holds the upper end of the rope for
the suicide ami aims the pistol with which
a man blows his brains out and mixes the
strychnine for the last swallow. If infidel
ity could carry the u.;y and persuade the
majority of people in this country that it
does net make any difference how you go
out of this world you will land safely, the
Potomac would be so full of corpses the
boats would be impeded in their progress,
and the cracl> of the suicide’s pistol would
Ik- no more ularming than the rumble of
a str-vet car.
1 have sometimes heard it discussed
whether the great dram..i>i.->t was a Chris- ‘
tian or nut. He was a Christian. In ids
last will and testament he commends his
soul to God through tiie s;Krifiee of Jesus
Christ. 1 know that he considered appre
ciation of a future existence the mightiest
hindrance to self destruction:
For who would bear the whips and scorns ot
time,
The uppr< ssor’s wtong, the proud man's con
tumely.
The nanes of dwmi.-od love, the law’s delay,
The in 'i li-m-e of ouiee i n.i Hie spurns
’I '-.at p.-itii at i-iaß of the unwortiij takes
VCi.en b< him.-K-If l;i.<t)l-:vius make
Wiih si laii- bollkin? Who would faiavls bear,
To grunt and sweat tin:!- r a v t ary lite,
Cu: that the dread of something after death —
Tiie' smdis.xtvei iil country from whose bourr«
N.i traveler returns—puzzles the will?
Would God that the coroners would be
brave in rendering the right verdict, and
when in a case of irresponsibility they
«■ y, • \\ aite this man was demented he
took his fife,” in t’ae other ease say, “Hav
ing i ad infidel books and attended infidel
lectures, which obliterated from this
man s mind all appreciation of future
retribution, he committed self slaughter. ”
liiliuion’s Light.
Have nothing to do with an infidelity so
cruel, so demising. Come out of that load
conqiuny into the company of those who
beheve the Bible. Benjamin Franklin
wrote, "Os thisJesusof Naiareth I have
to say that Ihe system of morals he left
and the religion he has given us are the |
best things the world has ever seen or is i
lively to see." Patrick Henry, the electric
ch; pion ot liberty, says, “The bpok ;
v. r.h ail other books put together is thy i
Bcn.-amin Rush, the leading
physiologist aud anatomist of his day, the I
gr methcal scientist—what did he say?
./, true and perfect religion is 1
Chris.mnhy. Isaac Newton, the leading I
p'.imsopher of his time—what did he say?
“ 1 he sublimest philosophy on earth is the
philosophy of the gospel. ” David Brew
ster. at the pronunciation of whose mono
i every scientist the world over bows his
head—David Brewster saying, “Oh, this
religion has been a great light to me, a
very great light all my days.” President
Thiers, the great French statesman, ac
| knowledging that he prayed when he said,
i “I invoke the Lord God. in whom lam
glad to believe.” David Livingstone, able
I to conquer the lion, able to conquer the
panther, able to conquer the savage, yet
I conquered by this religion, so when they
! find him dead they find him on his knees.
Salmon P. Chase, chief justice of the
supreme court of the United States, ap
pointed by President Lincoln, will take
the witness stand. “Chief Justice Chase,
’ please to state what you have to say about
the txxik commonly called the Bible.”
, The witness replies: “There came a time
in my life when I doubted the divinity of
the Scriptures, and I resolved as a lawyer
and judge 1 would try the book as I would
try anything in the courtroom, taking evi
dence for and against. It was a long and
serious and profound study, and, using the
same principles of evidence in this reli
gious matter as I always do in secular mat
ters, I have come to the decision that the
Bible is a siqs-rnatural book, that it has
come from God, and that the only safety
for the human race is to follow its teach
ings. ” “Judge, that will do. Go back
again to your pillow of dust on the banks
of the Ohio. ” Next I put upon the wit
ness stand a president of the United
States—John Quincy Adams. “President
Adams, what have you to say about the
Bible and Christianity?” The president
replies: "I have for many years made it a
practice to read through the Bible once
a year. My custom is to read four or five
chapters every morning immediately after
rising from my bed. It employs about an
hour of my time and seems to me the most
suitable manner of beginning the day- I n
what light soever we regard the Bible,
whether with reference to revelation, to
history or to morality, it is an invaluable
and inexhaustible mine of knowledge and
I virtue. ” “Chancellor Kent, what do you
think of the Bible?” Answer: “No other
book ever addressed itself so authorita
tively and so pathetically to the judgment
and moral sense of mankind.” “Edmund
Burke, what do you think of the Bible?”
Answer: “I have read the Bible, morn
ing, noon and night and have ever since
been the happier and the better man for
such reading.”
Seutence of Infidelity.
Young men of America, come out of
the circle of infidels—mostly made up of
cranks and imbeciles—into the company
of intellectual giants and turn your back
on an infidelity which destroys body and
soul.
Ah, infidelity, stand up and take thy
sentence! In the presence of God, angels
and men, stand up, thou monster! Thy
lip blasted with blasphemy, thy cheek
scarred with uncleanness, thy breath foul
with the corruption of the ages! Stand
Up, satyr, filthy goat, buzzard of the na
tions, leper of the centuries! Stand up,
thou monster, infidelity! Part man, part
panther, part reptile, part dragon, stand
up and take thy sentence! Thy hands red
with the blood in which thou hast washed,
thy feet crimson with the human gore
through which thou hast waded, stand up
and take thy sentence! Down with thee
to the pit and sup on the sobs and groans
of those thou hast destroyed and let thy
music be the everlasting miserere of those
whom thou hast damned! I brand the
forehead of infidelity with all the crimes
of self immolation for the last century on
the part of those who had their reason
My friends, if ever your life, through
its abrasions and its molestations, should
seem to be unbearable, and you are tempt
ed to quit it by your own behest, do not
consider yourself as worse than others.
Christ himself was tempted to cast him
self from the roof of the temple, but as he
resisted so resist ye. Christ came to medi
cine all wounds. In your trouble I pre
scribe life instead of death. People who
have had it worse than you will ever have
it have gone songfully on their way. Re
member that God keeps the chronology of
your life with as much precision as he
keeps the chronology of nations, yous
grave as well as your cradle.
Rewards of Christianity.
Why was it that qt midnight, just at
midnight, the destroying angel struck the
blow that set the Israelites free from bond
age? The 430 years were up at 12 o’clock
that night The 430 years were not up at
11, and 1 o’clock would have been tardy
and too late. The 4jo years were up at 13
o’clock, and the destroying angel struck
the blow, and Israel was free. And God
knows just the hour when it is time to
leail you up from earthly bondage. By
his grace, make not the worst of things,
but the bust of them. If you must take
the pills, do not chew them. Your ever
lasting rewards will accord with your
earthly perturbations, just as Caius gave
to Agrippa a chain of gold as heavy as had
been a chain of iron. For the asking you
may have the same grace that was given
the Italian martyr, Algerius, who down in
the darkest of dungeons dated his letters
from “the delectable orchard of the Leon
ine prison.” And remember that this
brief life is surrounded by a rim—a very
thin but very important rim—and close
up to that rim is a great eternity, and you
had better keep out of it until God breaks
that rim and separates this from that. To
get rid of the sorrows of earth do not rush
into greater sorrows. To get rid of a
swarm of summer insects leap not into a
jungle of Bengal tigers.
There is a sorrowless world, and it is so
radiant that the noonday sun is only the
lowest doorstep, and the aurora that lights
up our northern heavens, confounding
astronomers as to what it can be, is the
waving of the banners of the procession
come to take the conquerors home from
church militant to church triumphant,
and you and I have 10,000 reasons for
wanting to go there, but we will never get
there either by self immolation or impen
iteney. All our sins slain by Christ who
came to do that thing, we want to go in
at just the time divinely arranged, and
from a couch divinely spread, and then
the clange of the scpul. hral gates behind
us will be overpowered by the clang of the
opening of the solid pearl before us. O
God, whatever others may choose, give
me a Christian’s life, » Christian’s death,
a Christian's burial, a Christian’s immor
tality !
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MACON NEWS MONDAY EVENING, JULY n 1898.
SUNDAY AT
CAMP PRICE.
The Soldiers are All Satisfied
The Guns Have Been
Issued.
The soldiers at Camp Price have de
cided to told a bicycile race on July 25 for
the benefit of the regiment.
The races will be only between the mem
bers of the regiment and the prizes will be
paid in canteen checks. The first prize
will be $5 and the second 53.
The camp has many fast riders and it
is expected that some fast records will be
made.
A small admission fee will be charged.
Sunday was a quiet day with the men
at Camp Price. All the soldiers seem to
enjoy Sunday as there are no drills held
on that day.
The guns were issued to the company
commanders Saturday afternoon and the
men are all happy.
The guns are the Springfield rifles, model
1875, and were packed at the Rock Island
arsenal in 1882. The guns had never been
opened since 1882. They are very pretty
guns .and while the model Is a very old
one they will do all right as they are
practically new.
The officers and non-commissioned of
ficers will not have their hardest battles
to fight—learning the men the manual of
arms. It is a very easy matter for men to
learn the marching drill, but for a new
recruit who has seen nothing of the life
of a soldier and who has only been In
camp for two weeks, It is very hard for
him u> learn the use of a gun.
The different movements in the new
manual* of arms are very complicated and
no doubt they w?ll be a puzzle to some of
the officers.
The belts and bayonets will bo Issued
today and then the regiment will be com
pletely fitted out. When the men, who are
now in camp learn completely the manual
of arms and the marching drill and when
a little of the green which now bedecka
some of the gallant officers wears off the
regiment will be one of the best volunteer
regiments In the country.
Some changes were made in the regi
ment by the colonel Saturday. The first
battalion, composed of companies D. H. B,
and C, was placed in command of Lieuten
ant Colonel Reaves. The second battalion,
composed of companies A, L, M, and F,
was placed in command of Major Gardner.
The third battalion composed of companies
G. E, K, and I, were placed in command
of Major Wylly.
These changes put the regiment on bet
ter footing than ever as the men who were
at one time at loss to know to which bat
talion they belonged now know.
The officers’ dining hall and club room
has been completed and the officers will
begin taking their meals In camp today.
The club room is in the upper story of the
main building. It is a real pretty place
and a person must be a very good friend
of an officer or he don’t go up.
Captain Colquitt was ordered before the
examining board again last week and pass
ed the examination successfully, to the de
light of his company and his many friends
in camp and in the city.
Captain Maddox, of company (M, has re
turned from Atlanta and is now In charge
Company M. is one ’of the best companies
in camp and it also has its full quota of
men.
Company A, Captain Marion Harris, is
also one of the best companies In camp.
About thirty men were confined in the
guard house yesterday for the violation of
camp rules. The officers are beginning to
be more strict on the men and the men
are finding it out, consequently the discip
line is better.
The officers say that as soon as the men
learn the manual of arms that the regi
ment will give a dress parade every after
noon and that this formation will be more
Interesting to the people than the company
drills.
A great many of the soldiers attended
the 'Mulberry street church last night in
charge of their officers, where a sermon
was preached by Rev. Mr. Smith an old
Confederate soldier.
Discovered by a Woman.
Another great discovery has been made
and that, too, by a lady in this country.
“Disease fastened its clutches upon her
and for seven years he withstood its se
verest tests, 'but her vital organs were
undermined and her death seemed immi
nent. For three months she coughed in
cessantly and could not sleep. She finally
discovered away to recovery by purchas
ing of us a bottle of Dr. King’s New Dis
covery for Consumption, and was so much
relieved on taking the first dose that she
slept all night and with two bottles has
been absolutely cured. Her name is Mrs.
Luther Lutz.” Thus writes Mr. W. C.
Hammick & Co., of Shelby, N. C. Trial
bottles free at H. J. Lamar & Sons’ drug
store. Regular size 50c and >1- Every
hottie guaranteed.
CHEAP EXCURSION.
Macon to Tybee, $2.75 Round Trip, July
16th.
On July 16 the Central of Georgia Rail
way Company will run the largest excur
sion of the season. Macon to Ty’oee, only
$2.75 round trip, under auspices of Macon
Post D, T. P. A. Tickets good on all regu
lar trains returning up to and including
(train leaving Savannah 9:00 p. m. Mon
day.
J. G. CARLISLE, T. P. A.
H. P. BONiNER, U. T. A.
CALL FOR TICKETS.
Subscribers who are entitled to tickets
on the prizes which are to be given away
by The News can obtain them on Wednes
day Thursday of Friday of each week by
calling or sending to the office of the sub
scription department. Office hours 8:30
a. m. to 6:30 p. in. Remember that sub
scription must be paid when due to secure
tickets. G. W. TIDWELL.
Manager City Circulation.
CHEAP RATES.
Baptist Young People’s Union, Buffalo,
N. Y., July 14 to 17, 1898.
Account of the above occasion the
round trip tickets to Buffalo at one fare,
half rate, tickets on sale July 11, 12 and
13, with final limit July 20, 1898. An ex
tension of the final limit may be obtained
to leave Buffalo not later than August 3,
provided tickets are deposited with joint
us at Buffalo between July 17 and 19th
and on payment of 50 cents.
C. S. White, T. P. A.
Burr Brown. C. T. A.
WANT TO GO TO THE FRONT.
Soldiers at Chickamauga Anxious to Meet
the Spaniards.
“The only grumbling to be heard at
Chickamauga,” said a Macon soldier at
home on a furlough this morning, “is that
the men want to be iu the game. They
are all anxious to get to work and finish
up the job and. then return home. The
men do not like the delays that have been
necessitated by failure of contractors to
supply and equip the troops
“I am of the opinion that we will all get
In the game yet. Everyone of us is anx
ious to get to the front. We have a number
of “regular’ officers with us at Chick
amauga. and every day they read that
some of their friends have met death or
been wounded in front of Santiago. They
become greatly stirred up over the matter
and are eager to get to the front to help
their friends. Then many of the volunteer
officers have friends at the front, and the
feeling among all the boys is that of anx
iety to get to work.”
Oton x A .
Bears the Ths Kind YflO Haw Alffirs Boagftt
Signature
’ mn IWlalUlliH
WfctajMi.hiie KM You Have
”iiO Always Bought
Preparation fcr As- I ©I *
slmilaiingthePvodciCsdlk^uki- _ ~ <•
ting the Stomachs amt Bowls of |: Jj 1588;iS 1110 V *
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Promotes DigestioaGKeri ui~
Opium.Mcrphine nor Mineral. ■ fp] CI #n£ 1f §*
NOTNAIiCUTfC. iS MV-alU’
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Aperfect Remedy ior LotisPpa-1[ ig %1 tiC 4 St !Is O
lion, Sour Stoniach,Diarrhoea,! !;si ft VLa 'f
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- j$ I If-' V •■* j < ! I «» <-
ncss and Loss ov Sleep. p-^’Lj® I ol| HOvB
facsimile Signature of
’ I >ll £" i‘ V C ’t 5 ! ‘S t
TJEViT "i OR K• _ j 1 ■'*■.■ ia a £'s ir£ w US U lail g
RHW e
OIV £ iifi! «8
EXACT CO?r OF WBAPRER.
~h_ . _ Ml -.- . ... a _V.
< • ' :.<rAf*Y, .VFUJ VOKX Ci TV.
-Xfii Southern R’y.
Schedule in Effect July 6, 1898
CENTRAL TIME
“READ DOWN. * ‘ READ UP. ’ *
No. 7 | No. 15 | No. 9 | No. 13 | We st. j No. 14 | No. 10 | No. 8 | No. 10
7 l"6pm| 4 45pm| 8 00am| 2 05am|Lv.. Maoon . .Ar| 2 *osam| 8 29am|io 55am] 7 10pm*
9 45pm| 7 45pm|10 40am| 4 15am|Ar.. Atlanta. Lv|ll 55pm| 5 20am| 8 10am| 4 20pm
7 50am|10 00pm| 4 00pm| 4 20amjLv.. Atlanta. Ar|ll 50pm| 5 00am| |ll 40am
10 20am| 100 am; 6 25pm| 6 30am|Lv.. Rome.. Lv| 0 40pm| 1 44am| j 9 00am
11 30am| 2 34am| 7 34pm| 7 22am|Lv.. Dal ton.. .Lv 8 42pmjl2 10am| | 750 am
1 00pm| 4 15am| 8 50pm| 8 40am|Ar Chat’ nooga Lv| 7 30pmfl0 00pm| | 8 00pm
7 lOpmj 7 10pm| 7 40am| |Ar .Mvmphls . Lv| | 9 15am| | 8 00pm
4 30pm| | 5 00am| (Ar Lexington. Lv| |lO 50am| [lO 40pm
7 50pm| | 7 50am| [Ar Louis ville. Lv| | 7 40am| | 745 pm
7 30pm| | 7 30am[ |Ar 71nci nnati Lv[ | 8 30am| I 8 00am
9 25pm| | 7 25pm| |Ar Anniston .. Lvj | 6 32pm| | 8 00am
11 45am| |lO 00pm| | Ar Birm ’ham Lv| | 4 15pm| i 6 Ooam
8 05am| | 1 10am| 7 45pm|Ar Knoxville. Lvj 7 00am| 7 40pm| | 740 pm
.T|7 | Nol 14 ; No. 10 I I ~So“utie ]”No7lsrrNo. ’l3 |1.... “7[?T.T.77r
I 7 10pm| 2 10am| 8 35am|Lv.. Macon .. Ar| 8 20am| 2 00am|.I |........ ~
i | 3 22am|10 05am|Lv Cochran.. Lv| 3 20pm|12 55am| !
I | 1 10 45amjAr Hawk’ville Lv| 2 50pmj | [
I | 3 54am|10 50am[Lv. Eastman. Lv| 2 41pm|12 25am| [....•....
I | 4 29<amjll 3Gam|Lv.. Helena.. Lv| 2 03pm|ll 54pm| |
I i 7 30am| 3 30pmjLv Everret't.. LvjlO 45am| 9 Oopmj |
•—_••<••! I 8 30am| 4 30pm|Ar Brunswick. Lv| 9 30am| G 50pm| I
I | 9 40am| 9 25am|Ar Jack’ville. Lv| 8 00am| 6 50pm| [
| N 0.7 | No. 9 j No. 13 | East. |~N0716 |* No. 10 | .{7.T.T77T
I 7 10pm| 8 30am[ 2 05am|Lv.. IMa con.. Ar| 8 20am| 7 10pm[........ I ..T.T.77
i 9 45pm|ll 10am| 4 15am|Ar ..Atlanta. Lv| 5 20amj 4 20pm| |
| 9 25am| 8 30pm| 6 10pm|Lv Charlotte Lv|lo 15am| 9 35am| |
I 1 30pm|12 OOn’tjll 25pm,Lv . Dan ville. Lyj 6 07pm| 5 50am| |
| 6 25pmj 6 40am| [Ar. Richmond Lv|l2 01n’n|12 10n,n| |
| 5 30pm| 7 35am| |Ar.. Norfolk. Lv| 9 30am|16 66pm| j
| 3 50| 1 53am| [Lv. .Lynch burg Lv| 3 55pm| 3 40am| |
| 5 48pm| 3 35am[ |Lv Chari’ville Lv| 2 15pm| 1 50pmj |
| 9 25pm| 6 42am| [Ar Washgton. Lv[ll 15am[10 43pm| |
| 3 00am|10 15am| |Ar Phila dlphia Lv 3 50am| 6 55pm| |
| 6 20am|12 45n ’n[ |Ar New York Lv|l2 15am| 4 30pm| |
| 3 pm| 8 30pm) |Ar .. ..Boston Lvj 5 00pm[10 OOamj j
THROUGH CAR SERVICES, ETC.
Nos. 13 and 14, Pullman Sleeping Cars between Chattanooga and Jacksou/ille.
also between Atlanta and Brunswick. Berths may be reserved to be taken at
Macon.
Nos. 15 and 16, day express trains, bet ween Atlanta and Brunswick.
Nos. 9 and 10, elegant free Observatior cars, between Macon and Atlanta, also
Pullman Sleeping cars between Atlanta and Cincinnati. Connects in Union depot,
Atlanta, with “Southwestern Vestibuled Limited,” flnest and fastest train in tht.
South.
Nos. 7 and 8, connects in Atlanta Union depot with “U. S. Fast Mail Train” to and
from the East.
Nos. 7 and 6, Pullman sleeping cars between Macon and Asheville.
FRANK S. GANNON, 3d V. P. <t G. M., J. M. CULP, Traffic Manager,
Washingon, D. C. Washington, D. C.
W. A. TURK, G. P. A., S. H. HARDWICK, A. G. P. A.,
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga.
9JKND4J.L CLIFTON, T. P. A., BURR BROWN, C. T. A.,
Macon. Ga. 565 Mulberry St., Macon, Ga.
Central of Georgia
a ’’ ’ w a y Om P 3n y
WGEORGIA Schedules in Effect Feb. 25, ibsß Standard Tin c
90th Meridian,
5 ! 7 *! No - 1 *■ STATIONS [ No. 2 ♦[ No. 8 *1 N.. i
“ am i 740 pm| 750 am!Lv Macon .. .Ari 725 pm) 740 am 350 ».m
12 24 pm| 840 pm| 8 t>o am|Ar ....Fort Valley Lv| 627 pm 639 am 242 pm
330 pmj. j!10 20 am)Ar. .. Perry Lv)! 500 pm[,.... 11l 30 am
’.•rt-."-- 1 1, 5 50 pmjAr. . .B’mham. . .Lv| 9 30 am |
■I 3 52 nmi "mm’ ■“ l 940 am : Ar ••■•Perry.. ..Lv[ 445 pm. [lll3O am
, 7 pn3i J 9 ? 1 pm |Ar ..Americus ....Lv; |5 18 pm.’ 107 pm
■ o o- pm ! A? pm ‘ i Ar - ••Smithville ..Lvl j 4 55 am;f 12 42 pm
32' pm, H 0o pm! [Ar ....Albany ...Lv,. [ 4 15 am; 11 35 am
, pm; >... j ~;A”r ..Columbia .... Lv; | [ 855 am
“ pm t i, |Ar ....Dawson ....Lv | [ 11524011
f pm I )Ar ..."uthbert ...Lv, j, | 11 11 am
aOO pm, ; No 9 * [Ar .. .Fort Gaines ..Lvj No 10 *| | 955 am
’ P®,i 1 745 amj Ar ....Eufaula ....Lvj 730 pm, jIO2O am
8 14 pm |Ar Ozark .. ..Lv, [ I 650 am
prings. Lvj 600 pm; | 905 am 600 pm, |9 05 am,Ar ..Un S
_7 2o pm| ] |Ar Troy. . ..Lvi.... ....! ’ 755 a rr>
7 30 pm; | 10 35 am|Ar.. Montgomery ~Lv| 420 pm[ | 740 am
No ‘ 3 ‘*i No. l.*| | No. 2.*| No. 4.‘i No l£*~
U 2? am l e?? pm i LT -- • -Macon. . ..Ari 11 10 amj 11 iu pins 720 pm
922 am| 547 ami 04z pmiLv. .Barnesville . .Lvj 945 r 945 pur 605 nm
*l2 06 am, | 7 40 pmlAr.. .Thomaston. ..Lri 7 00 ami..........!| 3 an Dm
955 am. 6 16 amj 6 13 pmlAr. . . Griffin. . ..Lv- 9 12 am; 9 15 pm; 5 3C pm
-11 and |Ar.. ..I'eWi.aa. . .Lv; j m % »«
1 Vo pm| ..[Ar.. ..Carrollton. .Lv ;....? ;• “ 10
‘ 45
No. 6. !l No. 4. •[ No. 2•[ w e 1 •< ja. -•> (51 £ ,
7 30 pm 11 38 pml 11 26 amjLv. .. .Macon. . ..Arj .’....[ 355 am’ 745 am
8 10 pm 12 19 am 12 ofc pm[Ar. . ..Gordon. .. .Arj 500 pmi 3 10 ami 7 10 e-n
’‘ M pm 4 pm,Ar. .Mihedgeviile .Lv|! 345 pmj 630 rm
10 Oo pm * 3 00 pmlAr.. ..Eatonton. . .Lvj! 1 30 pmf 0 25 am
I U 6 60 Pm[Ar. .. Covington^..Lvi't 920 amj
»il 25 am;*3l 38 pm *ll 25 am[Lv. .. .Macon. . .. A r|* 345 pmj* 3 55*amj**3*45* pa
1 H pCI ! o am,£ * l7 pmjAr. .. .lennille Lv| 156 pm 152 amj 156 nrs
2 .. 3 ? pmi , 2 ,.*f, ami i 2 r 3 - pm Ar - • -Hadley. .. .Lvifl2 55 pm 12 50 am, 12 55 pm
2 ol pm| -44 am| 261 pru|Ar. . .Midville. . .Lvj 12 11 pm 12 30 am| 12 >• pta
3jo pm, 310 am 3jo pm;Ar. .. .. 11 34 am ix 58 pmj 11 34 am
b 4 13 pm; 4 42 am! 5 10 pm,Ar .Waynesboro.. .Lvj 10 13 am 10 37 pmtsiO 47 am
•6 30 pm- 633 am,! 635 pmiAr... .Augusta. . .Lv ’ 120 am a4O pm,s 9» am
I 3 <2 am; 3 50 pm;Ar. .Rocky Ford. .Lvl 11 10 am 11 19 pm1....
I 358 amj 4 08 pm,Ar.. . .Dover. . ..Lvl 10 5 2am 11 00 pmj Z’”
I 600 am, 600 pm,Ar.. .Savannah. ..Lv[ 845 am; 900 pm-
| No. 16. •[ 7 No. 15. •) | *
I 7 50 amjLv.. .. Macon.. .. Ar[ 7 30 pmj j
i 9 40 anifAr.. Monticelio .. Lvj 5 45 pmj
I 10 05 am. Ar. .. .Machen .. ..Lvj 5 27 pmj ""[j'-*--”'*
I 10 45 amlAr. ...Madison. . Lv] 440 pmi
i j 12 20 pmjAr. ... Athens .. ..Lvj 3 30 pmjjj'
• Daily. ! Dally except Sunday, fMe al station, s Sunday only.
Solid trains are run to ands from Macon and Montgomery via Eufaula Savaa>
aah and Atlanta via Macon, Maron and Albany via Smithville, Macon and Blnidn*
ham via Columbus. Elegant sleeping ears on trains No. 3 and 4 between rd sen;
sad Savannah and Auiaata and Savannah. Sleepers for bavannah are ready to r
pancy in Macou depot at 9;00 p. m. Pas-teugers arriving in Macon on No. 3 and Sc
vannah on No. 4. are allowed to remain lusleepar until 7a. m. Parlor care between
Macon and Atlanta on trains Nos. 1 and 1. Seat far; 26 cr-nta. Pass-agers for i
Wrtgktaviil rhir.liii and i-andersvtne Uk e il:2s. Train arrives Fort Gaine*
4.10 p. m.» and leaves 10:10 a. m. Sundays. For Ozark arrives 7:30 p. m. and leaver
a 3» m ’ &r further Information or sch edules to points beyond our lines, addrear
J. G. CARLISLE, T. P. A., Macon, Ga. E. P. BONNER, U. T. A.
M. H. HAN X UK, Traffic Managsr j. <j. HAILE, G. P. a j
£HIU. D. iuLINE, G enerai Ssupvrint&udent.
HOT SPINGS, Nort Carolina
Mountain Park HoH &nd Batt®—Modern Hotel tdeax in Every
and Service Lkiexcetk'd.
SAimining Pool, Bowling, Tennis, Golf, Pool and Billiards. Photographer's dart
room, Rlulng. Driving, Tennis. Large Ball Room and Auditorium. Special reduced
summer rate®.
BEARDEN'S Orchestra. T. D. Gveai. Manager.
POPULAR SUMMER RESORT.
<r 3-. is now one the most popular summer resorts in the South—
° delightful, scenery supert>, beautiful drives, good livery. Hotel Dalton Is
bells P’?' >rt seeker and the com mercial traveler. Elegantly birtM, electric
famiii ■« At " tele i*hone, hot anl cold baths on ewry floor. Sj.eolal i»ate« to
formation given r aud Uhydtla. Further in-
D. L. DERnKYR. Proprietor q*.
Newport ol the South.
SEASON OF 1898.
Hotel St. Simon
St. Simons Island, Georgia.
Newly equipped. Rates SIO.OO per week. Sea bath
ing, Pishing, Boating, Gawn Tennis, Driving, Dancing,
bihiards and Pool. Two germans weekly. 25 mile bicycle
path, xvxcellent orchestra. Hotel lighted by electricity.
Table the best.
W. B. ISAACS, Lessee.
Keep out of Reach of the Spanish Gun.
TAKE THE
C H. & D TO MICHIGAN.
3 Trains Daily.
Finest Trains in Ohio.
Fastest Trains in Ohio.
Michigan and the Great Lakes constantly growing in pofoiarity.
Everybody will be there this summer. For information inquire
of your nearest ticket agent.
WarniSprings, Ga.
H UiOUHTfiIN BESOBT.
The health and pleas
ure resort of the South.
With better bathing than on the edast.
Swimming Pool, 50x150 Feet.
of wa«-m mineral water, 90 degrees tem
perature. ALo individual pools. 1,200 feet
above sea level.
Delightfully Cool Climate. Ab
solutely pure air. No mos
quitoes .
First-class accomodations and ser
vice. Electric lights, excellent or
chestra
Board, per day, $2.00 to $2.50,
week $ll.OO to $14.00. Four weeks
$36.00 to $44.00
ONYY 3 HOURS FflQjH JRRGON.
Write for booklet with full in
formation
DHHS. L DHVIS, Proprietor.
®i Hon
And Cottages.
Tallulah Falls, Ga.
Open for the season. Board from sls to
S3O per month, according to room. Six
hundred feet of shade piazzas in center of
finest scenery at Tallulah.
Climate unsurpassed. Hight elevation.
All modern improvements. Table excel-
lent.
‘MRS. B. A. YOUNG, Proprietress,
Tallulah Falls, Ga.
Glenn Springs
Hotel,
Glenn Springs, S. C.
Queen of Southern Summer
Resorts.
There is but one Glenn Springs and it
has no equal on the continent for the stom
ach, liver, kidneys, bowels and blood.
Hotel open from June Ist to October Ist.
Cuisine and Service excellent. Water
Bbipped the year round.
STMPSON & SIMPSON,
Managers.
Bedford Alum, Iron and lodine
Springs of Virginia.
Fvom whose water the celebrated “Mass”
so extensively known and used, is manu
facteured. Opens June 15, and is the most
home-like place in Virginia for recuper
ating.
A modern writer on the mineral waters
of Europe and America says: “Bedford
Springs water cures when all other reme
dies have failed, and especially in derange
ments peculiar to females.”
Long distance teiepfaone connecffons,
send for a 50-page interesting phamplet of
proofs. P. O. Bedford Springs, Va.
J, K. MABEN, JR., Propiietor.
§ Broadway ?<’ •; t ; b St,, New York,, g
§ Amerlc. -t & E*; •gx-en plan. Wil- p
H liam F. Dang, >io?»rtetor Br
S way cable cars passing th" dcot K
g transfer to ail pa its of the CH, •??
I
r Saratoga Springs j
THE KEN SINGTON, |
and oottages.
I H. A. f.’ W. F. BANG, Proprietor’s, §
I New York Office, Sturtevant House. ■
Ocean View House.
St. Simon’s Island Beach, Ga
Fine suns bathing, good table, artesian
water. A. T. ARNOLD,
Proprietor.
I For Business Men
In the heart of the wtioleetUe di# < ►
trict. <,
For Shoppers <►
8 mlnutee walk to Warvwiirtkirß; g
> 8 minutes walk io S4e»?e4-Coopers "W
> Big Store. Eiusy of arcess to the <
Z great Dry Goods Stoios. V
j For Sightseers <
€ One Mock from cars, giving < ’
« easy traneportistion to all points 4,
IM AM
I New York.
Cor. 11th 9t. and University j
Maxse. Only one block fvom .
Broadway. <
ROOMS, $1 UP. RESTAVRAN»P, < ,
Pricee Reason able. * >
MACON AND BIRMINGHAM R. R. 00.
(Pine MomrCaln Route.)
Effective June 5, 1898.
4 20 pmiLv Macon Ar|lo 36 am
4 20 pm Lv Sofkee LvjlO 14 am
5 4ti pmiLv . ...CoModen.... Lvi 9 09 am
5 57 pni Lv ...YateevlWe... Lvj 8 SI am
6 27 pm*Lv ...Thomaston... Lvi 8 28 am
7 07 pmjAr ...Woodbury... Lvj 7 48 am
SOUTHERN RA rL/WAYI "
7 25 pmlAr. Warm Springs. Lvj 7 M arn
603 'pmjAr ... .Cohjminus... Lvi 600 am
8 0? pm Ar# Griffin Lvj 6 50 am
9 45 pmfAr Atlanta Lvj 9 30 am
SOUTHER.. ftAILAVAY"
4 20 amjLv .... Atlanta ....Ar] 9 40 am
6 03 pmfLv Griffin 9 B 2 am
5 25 pmfLv ....Cohmffbue.... ZtvJ 9 oO mi
6 49 pm.Lv .Wann Springs. Lvj 8 06 am
707 pmfLv.. ..Woodbury.... Arj 7 48 am
727 pmjAr . .Harrta City.. Lvj 728 aan
CB.WRAL"OF* <~J®ORdLA
7 46 pmjAr ...Greenville... Lv[ 7 X) am
5 20 pmfLv ....Co)uminis.... Arj 9 40 um
7 27 pratLv ..Warrie City.. Avj 7 28 am
8 20 pmnAr .... LaGrange.... Lvj 6 36 am
Close connection at Macon and Bofkee
with the Georgia Southern ar>d Florida
Central of Georgia lor Savannah, Atbaair.
Southwest Georgia poltrte and MocHgom
ery, Ala., at Yatcevllle frxr Roberta and
points on the Atlanta and Florida 01-
visktu of the Southern railway, a* Harris
City City with Central at Georgia raftwojr,
for Greenville and Columbia, at Wood
bury with Southern railway for Colunj
buß and Griffin, at LaGrange wfUi t£e
AQauta audAjyea* Point railway.
fr JWAAM R. LANE,
GtfJtral Manager,
Macon, Ga.
R. G. STONE,
Gen. Pass. Agt.
PULLMAN CAR LINE
BETWEEN • • r
Cincinnati, Indianapolis, or
Louisville and CSilcago and
THE NORTHWEST.
Pulman Buffet Sleepers on night trains.
Parlor chairs and dlnisg cars on day
trains. The Monon trains make the fast
est time between the Southern winter re
sorts and the summer resorts of the
Northwest.
W. H. Mc-DOEL, V. P. & G. M.
FRANK J. REED, G. P. A.,
CMoego, 111.
For further particulars address
U. W. GLADiINIG, Gen. Agt.
Tbomas-riWe, Ga.
,at HL O In * non-pri»onon»
r-'.i -h lor ■ Oonorrhroa,
tliES[.nK»torrh<»»,
Sa 1 V? 5 Whites, nnnatnra.l dis-
Ounnoei » eixargis, or auy inSatntna
not x »CTtet-r<». lion, irritation <rr nl-w»-
pa-—p.-r-venw e.n-igion. tion of tiiir.ct mem
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New Steam
DYE WORKS,
F. H. JOHNSON, Prop’r.
25c Second Street, Macon, Ga.
Ladies’ dresses nicely cleaned
and pressed. Also Gcms’ Linen
Suits.
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